Title 42 › Chapter 110— FAMILY VIOLENCE PREVENTION AND SERVICES › § 10406
The Secretary gives money to States to help start, keep, and grow programs that prevent family, domestic, and dating violence, provide immediate shelter and support for victims and their dependents, and offer special services for children, underserved groups, and victims from racial or ethnic minorities. A State may use up to 5 percent of the grant for its own administrative costs. The rest must be passed on as subgrants to eligible groups for approved uses. Any non-State or non-tribal group getting a grant must provide at least $1 in non-Federal money or services for every $5 of Federal funds. No one can be charged fees or turned away from services because of income. Federal grant money must add to, not replace, other public funds. Grantees must send an annual report that describes what they did, evaluates how well it worked, and gives other information the Secretary asks for. Grantees and subgrantees may work with Federal, State, local, and tribal officials to make policies, but they must protect victims’ privacy. Programs paid with these funds are treated as programs getting Federal financial help under the Age Discrimination Act, section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, Title IX, and Title VI, so they must follow those anti‑discrimination rules and may not exclude or discriminate based on sex or religion. If a State or tribe does not follow those rules, the Secretary will notify its chief executive and give up to 60 days to fix it; after that the Secretary can refer the case to the Attorney General or use other civil‑rights tools, and the Attorney General can file suit. Grantees must keep personally identifying information private and only share it with the person’s informed, written, time‑limited consent (the person, or a minor plus parent/guardian, or a guardian); an abuser cannot give that consent. Required exceptions include court or statutory orders (with notice and safety steps when possible), sharing non‑identifying aggregate data for reporting, sharing court or law‑enforcement registry information for protective orders, and sharing law‑enforcement or prosecution information for those purposes. Shelter addresses that are kept secret must not be made public without written permission from the shelter operator.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 10406
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60