Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 105— - COMMUNITY SERVICES PROGRAMS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - HEAD START PROGRAMS › § 9840
The Secretary must write rules that say who can take part in Head Start. Children from low-income families whose income is below the poverty line, or who are eligible (or would be eligible if no child care were available) for public assistance, must be eligible. Homeless children are eligible. Programs can include up to 10 percent of participants who live in the area and would benefit but are not otherwise eligible. Programs may add up to 35 percent more participants from families with income below 130 percent of the poverty line, but only if the agency proves it is serving the poorer and homeless children first, sets priority rules to do that, and files an annual report about outreach, enrollment, local demographics, selection rules, numbers served by eligibility type, waiting-list info, and enrollment levels. A child found eligible and enrolled stays eligible through the end of the next program year. Agencies may use family income from the past 12 months or the prior calendar year, whichever shows the family’s needs better. Small communities with 1,000 people or less can get special treatment if no other preschool exists, the area is medically underserved or remote, and at least 50 percent of families are eligible. Definitions: “dependent,” “member,” and “uniformed services” have the meanings given in title 37. Certain military special pay for hostile fire or imminent danger and basic housing allowance are not counted as income for dependents. Agencies may convert part-day to full-working-day sessions after showing community need. A Head Start agency may apply to use funds to serve infants and toddlers; the application must include budget information, a community needs plan, program descriptions, assurances of technical assistance, and proof it meets eligibility rules. If the application is complete, the Secretary must approve unless the agency lacks capacity or the information is inadequate. No fees may be set unless future law allows, though families can pay the full cost if they choose. Agencies working with partners may collect a copayment for extended-day services, but it cannot be higher than what similar families pay elsewhere. Programs may serve a child for more than one year and recruit year-round. Indian tribes that run Head Start and enroll all low-income local children, and can enroll more, must follow rules made after consultation and may move funds between Head Start and Early Head Start during a grant year without that change reducing their base grant later.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 9840
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73