Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 106— - COMMUNITY SERVICES BLOCK GRANT PROGRAM › § 9907
States must use at least 90 percent of the money they get under these programs to give grants to eligible groups for the program’s purposes. Grant money can be spent in the year it is given and the next fiscal year. Starting October 1, 2000, if a grantee has more than 20 percent of its grant left unspent at the end of a fiscal year, the State may take back those unused funds and give them to another eligible group or require the original grantee to pass them to a local private nonprofit that will use them for the same goals. If a State does not use all of its grant money for those grants, it must spend the rest on approved statewide activities like training and technical help, coordinating programs, studying where funds are needed most, asset-building programs, and other anti-poverty projects. A State may not spend more than the larger of $55,000 or 5 percent of the grant for administrative costs. If a State has a charity tax credit, it may use available funds for other purposes up to the amount allowed, but not more than the State’s revenue loss from that credit as measured by the Treasury (ignoring losses before January 1, 1999). Charity tax credit means a state tax credit for donations. Qualified charities are generally 501(c)(3) groups or similar organizations that serve low-income people, spend at least 75 percent of their payroll on poverty programs, and meet state certification and reporting rules. Funds used under the charity rule cannot pay startup/admin costs (except as allowed), legal services, or tuition tied to compulsory school attendance, and cannot replace nonfederal funds that would have offset the revenue loss from the tax credit.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 9907
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73