Title 20 › Chapter 33— EDUCATION OF INDIVIDUALS WITH DISABILITIES › Subchapter III— INFANTS AND TODDLERS WITH DISABILITIES › § 1440
Money from section 1443 must not pay for services that another public or private program should pay for. If waiting for the other program would delay needed early intervention services for an infant, toddler, or family, the money can be used to pay the provider temporarily until the agency that is really responsible pays back the cost. The state's top executive (or their designee) must make sure there is a written agreement between each public agency and the lead agency. The agreement must say who provides services and who pays, follow the rules in section 1435 and the State’s application under section 1437, and match the State’s arrangement under section 1412(a)(12) when appropriate. If a public agency other than an educational agency does not provide or pay, the local education or State agency must provide the services and can seek reimbursement under the agreement. These agreements can be a law, a regulation, signed agreements, or another written method approved by the State and the Secretary. States may not reduce medical or other help or change Medicaid or maternal and child health eligibility under title V or title XIX of the Social Security Act.
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 1440
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60