Title 29 › Chapter 32— WORKFORCE INNOVATION AND OPPORTUNITY › Subchapter I— WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES › Part D— National Programs › § 3225a
The Secretary of Labor, working with the Secretary of Health and Human Services, must run a competitive pilot that gives grants to help areas hit hard by high rates of substance use disorders. Grants go to eligible entities (a State workforce agency, an outlying area, or a Tribal entity) and must be between $500,000 and $5,000,000 for a fiscal year. Eligible entities mostly must pass the money to local workforce boards as subgrants, may use up to 5% for admin, and must award subgrants fairly across places. Applicants must show which counties or local areas were seriously hurt and that those areas had an increase in substance problems at least as big as the national increase from 1999 to 2016 (or the latest year available). The application must also show the substance use problem caused or happened with an economic or job downturn, using data like overdose deaths, hospital visits, arrests, layoffs, job vacancy problems, or other local economic indicators. An eligible entity must send subgrant funds to a local board by the later of 90 days after the Secretary makes funds available or 15 days after the entity makes the subgrant. Local workforce boards must run the work through written partnerships that include the local board plus partners such as treatment providers, employers, schools, law enforcement, community groups, tribes, or other local agencies. Short definitions: education provider = a college or postsecondary vocational school; treatment provider = a licensed health care provider that treats substance use disorders and accepts insurance (may include peer recovery groups, community health centers, Indian health programs, or Native Hawaiian centers); program participant = a worker from the targeted groups who signs up for services; Secretary = Secretary of Labor. Partnerships may serve workers affected by substance use disorders or train workers to enter treatment and support jobs. Funded activities can include working with employers, screening and assessment, written treatment-and-employment plans with case managers, outpatient treatment and recovery services, wraparound supports (like help getting health, housing, transportation, peer recovery, and other benefits) for at least 12 months as needed, and career and training services before and after hiring plus job-retention help in the first 6 months. No more than 10% of a subgrant can be used for partnership admin, 10% for treatment services, and 10% for supportive services. Grant recipients must report quarterly and the pilot must have an independent evaluation using random assignment when possible. Funding for the pilot may come from certain WIOA sources, and no more than $100,000,000 may be used for the pilot in any covered fiscal year (fiscal years 2019 through 2030).
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Labor — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
29 U.S.C. § 3225a
Title 29 — Labor
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60