Title 20 › Chapter 33— EDUCATION OF INDIVIDUALS WITH DISABILITIES › Subchapter IV— NATIONAL ACTIVITIES TO IMPROVE EDUCATION OF CHILDREN WITH DISABILITIES › Part C— Supports To Improve Results for Children With Disabilities › § 1471
The federal government gives money and contracts to private nonprofit parent groups to run parent training and information centers. A qualifying parent group is not a college, has a board mostly made up of parents of children with disabilities (ages birth through 26), includes special‑education professionals and people with disabilities, and represents the local population (including low‑income and limited English proficient families). Its main purpose must be to serve families of children with the full range of disabilities listed in federal law. These centers must train and inform parents in their area, especially underserved parents and those whose children may be wrongly identified, so the children can meet goals and become as independent as possible. Centers must serve infants through age 26, help low‑income and limited English proficient parents, explain disabilities and education/early‑intervention rights, help parents work with school staff and take part in IEPs/IFSPs, explain dispute‑resolution options (including mediation), and connect with other community and national resources. Centers can also share information with teachers. Applications must show plans to reach underserved families. The Department must fund at least one center per State (more in large States if coordinated). Boards must meet quarterly and send an annual written review when asking to continue funding.
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Education — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 1471
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60