Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 105— - COMMUNITY SERVICES PROGRAMS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - HEAD START PROGRAMS › § 9839
Requires Head Start agencies to run their programs with clear rules so they work well, honestly, and without political or family favoritism. Agencies must make staff accountable, give the public reasonable access to information and hearings, and publish an annual public report. That report must show the total public and private funds received and their sources; explain spending and the next year’s budget; give counts and enrollment rates for children and families served (including percent of eligible children); report results of the Secretary’s last review and the financial audit; show what percent of children had medical and dental exams; describe parent involvement and kindergarten-preparation efforts; and include any other items the Secretary requires. Reports must not reveal personally identifiable information about a child or parent. Agencies must also set rules on pay and benefits, hire and promote people for competence and integrity, prevent conflicts of interest, and set job duties that stop employees from taking illegal picketing or protest actions while working. Limits how much can be spent on running a program. No federal help if the Secretary finds development and administration costs are more than 15% of total program costs (including required non‑Federal contributions). The Secretary will make rules for counting costs, can require fixes if costs seem excessive (for example, sharing a director), and can waive the 15% limit for up to 12 months. The Secretary will issue binding rules, may simplify rules for small or rural agencies, and will require fair sharing of indirect costs. New rules and forms must be published in the Federal Register and sent to grantees at least 30 days before they take effect so grantees can comment. Funds cannot be used to promote or oppose union organizing. Agencies need Secretary approval to buy facilities (including purchases after December 31, 1986), meeting specific information requirements. The Secretary may approve purchases or capital construction for tribes, rural, and low‑income areas when needed and cost‑effective, and may pay no more than fair market value. Workers on construction must receive prevailing wages under sections 3141–3144, 3146, and 3147 of title 40. For the American Indian Programs Branch, the Secretary must give tribal members the same hiring preference given to a disabled veteran (see section 2108(3)(C) of title 5) and work to recruit them.
Full Legal Text
The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 9839
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73