Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 106— - COMMUNITY SERVICES BLOCK GRANT PROGRAM › § 9908
States that want a community services grant must pick a state agency to lead and must send a plan to the Secretary. The lead agency writes the plan, holds at least one public hearing with enough notice, and reviews local groups that might get money. The State must also hold at least one legislative hearing every 3 years while making the plan. Starting in fiscal year 2000, the plan must cover 1 to 2 fiscal years and be sent at least 30 days before the plan period starts. The plan must promise the money will help low-income people (including those on welfare, the homeless, farmworkers, and low-income seniors) and must list goals like removing barriers to self-sufficiency, helping people get and keep work, improving education and literacy, stretching income, getting housing, giving emergency help, and boosting community involvement and partnerships (including with local police). The plan must address youth programs (like violence-free zone projects and after-school care), say how discretionary funds will be used, include local service descriptions and coordination plans, and promise emergency food and services when needed. It must show how the State will coordinate programs, allow federal investigations, protect prior-year funding unless there is "cause" after notice and a hearing, let low-income groups seek board representation, require community action plans with needs assessments, and by fiscal year 2001 join ROMA or a similar performance system and list outcome measures. The Secretary can set review procedures. Governors may revise plans and must make plans available for public review. For fiscal year 2000, States follow the rules that were in effect the day before October 27, 1998.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 9908
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73