Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 7— - SOCIAL SECURITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - GRANTS TO STATES FOR AID AND SERVICES TO NEEDY FAMILIES WITH CHILDREN AND FOR CHILD-WELFARE SERVICES › Part Part B— - Child and Family Services › Subpart subpart 2— - promoting safe and stable families › § 629e
Require regular checks and reports. The Secretary must review how well the programs under this part are working and send a report to Congress every two years. The report, due April 1 every other year beginning in 2003, must say how much money was used, what evaluations are happening, what has been found so far, and what help was given to States. The Secretary must set rules for these reviews after talking with State agencies, nonprofit program leaders, and evaluation experts. The Secretary should try to line up federal evaluations with State reviews. Each year, from the money set aside for this purpose, the Secretary must spend at least $1,000,000 to give technical help to current or past grantees and to support local evaluation work or publishing of past data, and at least $1,000,000 to help carry out the Indian Child Welfare Act and related State plan work. When funds allow, the Secretary must also give technical help to States and tribes to build screening tools, create treatment models (especially for families with substance use issues), run programs with clear goals, match services to the model, improve post-adoption supports and lower adoption disruptions, and coordinate these grants with other federal money for families affected by substance use disorder. Run and study a recovery coach replication project. The Secretary must fund and evaluate a family recovery and reunification project that uses recovery coaches to help parents or guardians with a substance use disorder reunite with their children after custody loss. The program must follow the elements shown to work in earlier, well-tested recovery coach models and provide assessments, help getting benefits, goal-setting and planning, home visits, case management to remove barriers and re-engage parents, ways to monitor compliance, frequent information-sharing among agencies, and recovery coach reports to caseworkers about progress and child safety to help courts make permanency decisions. The Secretary will award grants or contracts to organizations that have enough local treatment providers and potential participants to form a control group and produce early results within 4 years, and that can be monitored for at least 5 years after people are randomly assigned. The evaluation will have three parts: a pilot phase to make sure the program is run correctly and random assignment works; an impact study using random assignment that measures outcomes over multiple periods including 5 years (measuring things like safe reunification, time to reunification, permanency, safety, parent treatment engagement, substance use, juvenile delinquency, cost, and other agreed measures); and an implementation study that describes how closely the program followed proven models and what services each group received. The Secretary must publish reports on each part of the evaluation and a final analysis saying whether the program should be copied, how to replicate it, and any recommended laws or actions. Congress provided $15,000,000 for this project for fiscal year 2019, and that money is available through fiscal year 2026. The Secretary may also make competitive grants to evaluate certain child welfare services and kinship navigator programs, giving priority to work that fills gaps, produces evidence fast, and adds programs to the federal clearinghouse. Grant recipients must report within 1 year of receiving funds and then every year for the next 5 years. Up to 5 percent of available funds may be used for technical help, and unused funds remain available until spent. Eligible applicants include States, local governments, tribes, and other entities the Secretary approves.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 629e
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73