Foster youth and young adults who were in care
- You may be able to get free legal help to clear or seal certain records, fix identity documents, or deal with fines that block jobs or housing.
- Your case plan should now ask about legal needs that affect school, work, housing, and staying connected to family.
- You could get help with leases, evictions, school enrollment issues, driver’s licenses, name changes, or background check problems.
Caregivers, relatives, and mentors
- Case plans should more directly address legal steps to keep family connections, guardianship, or adoption on track.
- You may see more referrals to legal aid to resolve paperwork or court issues that delay permanency.
Caseworkers and child welfare agencies
- You will need to consider legal barriers in case planning and document efforts to address them.
- You may partner more with legal aid groups and build referral pathways for common issues (IDs, records, housing, school).
- Planning updates start one year after enactment; more time is allowed if state legislation is needed.
Legal aid and community organizations
- You may become eligible to receive Chafee funds to provide legal counseling and services to eligible youth.
- Expect demand focused on record relief, identification, housing law, education access, and family law related to permanency.