Title 29 › Chapter 16— VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION AND OTHER REHABILITATION SERVICES › Subchapter I— VOCATIONAL REHABILITATION SERVICES › Part B— Basic Vocational Rehabilitation Services › § 732
The Secretary must give money to states so they can run client assistance programs. These programs must tell people with disabilities about benefits and services under this law and under Title I of the Americans with Disabilities Act. They must help people apply for services, speak up for them with rehabilitation programs, and, if asked, help them use legal, administrative, or other remedies to protect their rights. The help can be about getting services that lead to work. States must have a program with the power to seek legal and other remedies and must follow rules for how the program is chosen and run. The Governor picks a public or private agency to run the program, usually one that is independent from agencies that provide services. The Governor must consult with vocational rehabilitation and protection-and-advocacy leaders and with consumer groups. The agency is responsible for proper use of funds and may not bring class actions. After some required reservations, the rest of the annual money is divided among the states by population, with no state getting less than $50,000. American Samoa, Guam, the Virgin Islands, and the Northern Mariana Islands each get $30,000. If total funds exceed $7,500,000, the minimums become $100,000 for states and $45,000 for territories. If appropriations grow from one year to the next, minimums can be raised by up to the same percentage increase. The Secretary may reserve the same amount for the American Indian Consortium’s protection and advocacy system as for a territory, and when total funding is at least $14,000,000 may set aside 1.8%–2.2% for training and technical help. States must apply for grants and follow rules: program staff cannot also work for rehab providers, programs must have access to decisionmakers, must offer options to try to resolve disputes without court, and do not have to give out clients’ identities in audits. Authorized yearly appropriations are $12,000,000 for 2015; $12,927,000 for 2016; $13,195,000 for 2017; $13,488,000 for 2018; $13,805,000 for 2019; and $14,098,000 for 2020. Defined terms used in the section (briefly): "State" (for allotments) excludes the four territories listed; "American Indian Consortium" and "protection and advocacy system" are defined in other federal laws.
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Citation
29 U.S.C. § 732
Title 29 — Labor
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60