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Expand Housing Support for Foster Youth

Full Title:
Foster Youth Housing Opportunity Act

Summary#

This bill aims to help young people who were in foster care find and keep safe housing. It updates the federal Chafee program so states can better support housing needs and work more closely with housing agencies.

  • Lets states use Chafee funds for “supportive services” tied to housing, like help with deposits, utility hookups, moving costs, and basic money and lease counseling.
  • Extends these housing supports up to age 26 for eligible youth who have special Section 8 foster youth housing vouchers.
  • Encourages stronger partnerships between child welfare agencies and local public housing authorities that run foster youth voucher programs.
  • Gives states more flexibility by averaging the 30% cap on “room and board” spending over five years instead of each year.
  • Requires federal guidance from Health and Human Services (HHS) and Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to align services, plus a report to Congress on outcomes.
  • Takes effect one year after enactment.

What it means for you#

  • Former foster youth (ages 18–26)

    • If you have a foster youth housing voucher (like Foster Youth to Independence or Family Unification Program), you could get help with move‑in costs, utility setup fees, rental insurance, and money management.
    • You can receive these supports up to your 26th birthday to help you keep stable housing.
    • You may see clearer pathways and referrals from child welfare to local housing programs.
  • Current foster youth age 18 or older (including those in extended care)

    • Housing access becomes an explicit goal of transition services.
    • You may get earlier coaching on leases, credit, and budgeting to prepare for housing.
  • Landlords and property managers

    • More young renters may arrive with deposits, fees, and renter education covered, which can lower risk of unpaid costs and early lease problems.
  • State child welfare agencies

    • New authority to fund housing‑related supports for youth with Section 8 foster youth vouchers, and those costs do not count against the “room and board” cap.
    • The 30% “room and board” limit can be averaged over five years, giving flexibility to meet higher needs in some years.
    • Expected to build or strengthen partnerships with local public housing authorities.
  • Public housing authorities

    • Joint HHS‑HUD guidance will clarify roles, best practices, and how to coordinate with child welfare.
    • May receive more referrals and collaboration on supportive services for youth using foster youth vouchers.
  • Taxpayers

    • The bill changes how existing funds can be used and improves coordination; it does not add new funding in the bill text.
    • A federal report in three years will track how many youth get housing help and their outcomes.

Expenses#

No publicly available information.

Proponents' View#

  • Helps reduce homelessness among youth leaving foster care by covering real‑world barriers like deposits and utility fees.
  • Extends help through age 25, matching the age when many youth still need support to stay housed.
  • Improves coordination between child welfare and housing agencies, making it easier for youth to get and keep vouchers.
  • Provides states flexibility to respond to spikes in housing need without breaking annual caps.
  • Focuses on practical life skills so young renters can manage leases, credit, and budgets.

Opponents' View#

  • Could shift Chafee funds away from other needs (like education, jobs, or transportation) toward housing supports.
  • Supports are tied to specific foster youth housing vouchers, so eligible youth without a voucher may see little direct benefit.
  • Added coordination duties may strain small agencies without extra staff or funding.
  • Averaging the “room and board” cap over five years could allow high spending in some years, limiting funds for other services.
  • Does not increase the number of housing vouchers or available units, so local housing shortages may still block access.