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         Congressional Research Service
~ Informing the legislative debate since 1914


                                                                                            Updated  May 19, 2025

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. Child welfare agencies also aim to prevent
abuse or neglect of children in their own homes. If this has
already occurred, the agencies are expected to identify and
offer needed services or referrals to ensure children do not
reexperience 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 as 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
must work to find a new permanent adoptive or legal
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 FY2023,  public child protective services (CPS)
agencies screened abuse or neglect allegations involving 7.9
million children and carried out investigations or other
responses involving 3.1 million of those children. Among
children receiving CPS services after such responses, most
(an estimated 84%) received them while living at home.
Some  175,000 children entered foster care during FY2023.
Neglect and/or parental drug abuse are the concerns most
often linked with entry. Among the more than 343,000
children in care on the last day of FY2023, most (79%)
lived in foster family homes, including with kin or
nonrelatives providing regular, shelter, or therapeutic care.
Some  (11%) were in group, institutional, or residential care.
More  than 184,000 children left foster care during FY2023.
About half (51%) returned to their parent(s) or went to live
informally with a relative; 37% left care for a new family
via adoption or legal guardianship. Most of the remainder
(9%) aged out; some went to another agency or ran away.
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. State and local public
child welfare agencies work with an array of private and
public entities-including the courts and health, mental
health, education, social service, 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
meet federal program rules, such as permanency planning
for children in foster care. Compliance is monitored via
federal plan approvals, audits, and reviews.
The Children's Bureau in the U.S. Department of Health
and Human  Services (HHS) administers most federal child
welfare programs. At the state level, administration is often
within a human services department. Some states' programs
are county-administered with state agency supervision.

Child   Welfare Spending and Programs
State child welfare agencies spent about $31.4 billion on
child welfare activities during state FY2020, according to a
survey by researchers at Child Trends. More than half of
those dollars came from state and local coffers (51%). Of
the remainder, 30% was supplied by federal child welfare
programs included in the Social Security Act; 18% was
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).
Less than 1% was from offsets or private and in-kind support.
P.L. 119-4 generally provides FY2025 funding at levels
authorized or appropriated (as applicable) for FY2024 (see
Figure 1). Most Title IV-E funding is authorized on an
open-ended mandatory  basis, and amounts expended may
be more or less than in FY2024. Funding for certain Chafee
or child and family services is authorized on a capped
mandatory  basis and is made available at the FY2024 level.
The remaining programs received discretionary FY2024
funding; with limited exceptions, this support was included
in broader accounts with program-specific amounts given
only in an explanatory statement. Exact FY2025 funding
levels for these programs is not specified by P.L. 119-4.
Figure  I. Federal Child Welfare Funding  by Purpose
(FY2024 total: $11.0 billion. Dollars shown in millions.)


Source: CRS, based on P.L. 118-47, P.L. 118-42, or, for IV-E funding
only, the FY2024 current law budget authority given in the FY2025
President's budget. Amounts are post-sequestration, which mostly
impacts some IV-B funds. * Includes IV-B and CAPTA formula grants.


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