Title 42 › Chapter 119— HOMELESS ASSISTANCE › Subchapter VI— EDUCATION AND TRAINING › Part B— Education for Homeless Children and Youths › § 11433
State education agencies must give federal subgrants to local school districts and similar local education agencies to help find, enroll, keep, and support homeless children and youths so they can do well in school. These services can happen on school sites or other safe places. Schools should use existing programs when they can and include homeless students with other students instead of isolating them. The extra services must add to a school’s normal teaching, not replace it. Grants last no more than 3 years. To get a grant, a local agency must apply to the State. The application must show a review of local homeless students’ needs, a clear plan of the services requested, proof that local and State spending per student for the prior year was at least 90 percent of the spending from the year before that, and promises to follow rules that protect homeless students, to avoid stigmatizing or separating them, and to share requested data with the State. State agencies award these grants competitively based on how much help a district needs and how good the application is. States look at how many homeless children are in preschool through high school, how the funds will help find and keep students in school, and whether the district coordinates with other local and State services. They also check for plans to involve parents, integrate homeless students into regular classes, evaluate results, and use the grant to get more outside funding or cover transportation. Local agencies may use grant money for many kinds of support, including tutoring and extra instruction tied to state standards; fast evaluations for special programs; teacher training about homeless students’ needs and rights; health and mental health referrals; paying necessary transportation costs; preschool for homeless young children; outreach to enroll and keep out-of-school youths in school; before- and after-school, mentoring, and summer programs; fees and help getting records needed for enrollment; parent education; coordination with service providers; counseling and services for issues like domestic violence or parental substance abuse; adapting non-school sites and buying supplies; giving school supplies at shelters; and other emergency help that lets homeless children attend and take part in school.
Full Legal Text
The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 11433
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60