This bill aims to help youth in or from foster care who are pregnant or raising a child. It links them more directly to proven home visiting programs for new parents and allows states to tailor case management for them.
Key changes:
Makes it a goal of the Chafee Foster Care Program to connect eligible foster youth who are expecting or parenting with evidence-based home visiting services (programs shown by research to help parents and babies).
Requires states to have a process to inform eligible foster youth about home visiting and related support services available in their state.
Clarifies that states can use Chafee funds to provide tailored case management and resource coordination for expectant and parenting foster youth.
Keeps existing flexibility for states to use Chafee funds for any purpose that furthers the program’s goals.
Takes effect one year after the bill becomes law and applies to state plans approved after that date.
The bill does not create new federal funding. It adjusts goals and allowed uses of existing Chafee funds and encourages referrals to the existing federal home visiting program (MIECHV).
States may face some added administrative work to set up processes and train staff, covered by existing program funds.