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                                                                                             Updated  February 23, 2024

Child Welfare: Purposes, Federal Programs, and Funding


The   Work of Child Welfare Agencies
Children depend on adults-usually their parents-to protect
and support them. The broadest mission of public child welfare
agencies is to strengthen families so that children can depend
on their parents to provide them with a safe and loving home.
More  specifically, child welfare agencies aim to prevent abuse
or neglect of children in their homes. If this has already
happened, the agencies are expected to offer aid, services, or
referrals to ensure children do not re-experience maltreatment.
For some children, this means placement in foster care.

  Federal child welfare policy has three primary goals:
  ensuring children's safety, enabling permanency   for
  children, and promoting the well-being   of children
  and their families.

Foster care is understood to be a temporary living situation.
When  a child enters care, the first task of the child welfare
agency is to provide services to enable the child to safely reunite
with family. If that is not possible, then the agency works to find
a new permanent adoptive or guardianship family for the child.
Youth in care who are neither reunited nor placed with a new
permanent family are typically emancipated at their state's legal
age of majority. These youth are said to have aged out of care.
Children   Served
During FY2021,  public child protection agencies screened
allegations of abuse or neglect involving 7.2 million children,
and carried out investigations or other protective services
responses involving 3.0 million of those children. Follow-up
services were provided in the homes of some 900,000 children.
Some  children are removed from their homes following an
investigation; roughly 207,000 children formally entered foster
care during FY2021. Neglect and/or parental drug abuse are
the circumstances most often associated with foster care entry.
Among   the 391,000 children in foster care on the last day of
FY2021,  most (83%) lived with families (nonrelative or
relative foster family homes and pre-adoptive homes), 9%
lived in a congregate setting, 7% were on trial home visits or in
supervised independent living, and 1% had run away.
Of the 215,000 children who formally left foster care during
FY2021,  the largest share returned to their parents or went to
live informally with a relative (53%), while 37% left care for a
new permanent  family via adoption or legal guardianship. At
the same time, 9% aged out of care, while most of the
remainder (1%) were transferred to the care of another agency.
Who bears public responsibility for this work?
Under the U.S. Constitution, states are considered to bear the
primary public responsibility for ensuring the well-being of
children and their families. Public child welfare agencies at the
state and local levels work with an array of private and public
entities-including the courts and social service, health, mental
health, education, and law enforcement agencies-to carry out
child welfare activities. This work is done consistent with state


laws and policies. At the same time the federal government has
long provided technical support and funding that is intended to
improve state child welfare work. As part of accepting this
funding, states must agree to meet certain federal program
rules, such as required permanency planning for all children in
foster care. Compliance with these child welfare requirements
is monitored via federal plan approvals, audits, and reviews.
The Children's Bureau within the U.S. Department of Health
and Human  Services (HHS)  administers most federal child
welfare programs. State level administration may be housed in
the state human services department, or at an independent,
state-level child and family services agency. Some states have
county-administered programs supervised by the state agency.

Child   Welfare Spending and Programs
State child welfare agencies spent about $31.4 billion on child
welfare purposes during state FY2020, according to a survey
by researchers at Child Trends. Most of that spending drew
from state and local coffers (51%). Of the remainder, 30% was
supplied by federal child welfare programs included in the
Social Security Act (SSA);18% came from other federal
programs, most of which are not solely child welfare-focused
(principally, the Social Services Block Grant and Temporary
Assistance for Needy Families); and less than 1% of the
funding came from offsets, and private and in-kind support.
For FY2023,  about $12.0 billion was provided for federal
programs that are wholly dedicated to child welfare.
Figure  I. Federal Child Welfare   Funding  by Purpose
(FY2023 total: $12.0 billion. Dollars shown in millions)













Source: Prepared by CRS based on Division B, H, and N of P.L. 17-328.
Notes: Funding for IV-E activities is shown as definite budget authority (BA);
IV-E prevention services amount taken from the foster care BA (as estimated
for the FY2023 President's Budget). Actual funds spent may vary.
* Includes formula funding in IV-B and CAPTA plus $10 million in supplemental
CWS  funding for areas affected by Hurricanes Ian and Fiona; ** Includes
competitively awarded funding and incentives in IV-E, IV-B, CAPTA, and the
Victims of Child Abuse Act; *** Includes Chafee general and ETV funding.
Title IV E  Foster  Care,  Prevention,  Permanency
Title IV-E helps support provision of foster care, adoption
assistance, or guardianship assistance to children who meet
federal IV-E eligibility rules. The IV-E program may also fund
kinship navigators and selected services intended to prevent

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