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Updated April 18, 2024
U.S. Repatriation Program for Citizens Returned from Abroad

Introduction
Section 1113 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. §1313)
permanently authorizes the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS) to provide temporary aid to certain
repatriated U.S. citizens and their dependents. To be
eligible, citizens must (1) be without available resources
and (2) be identified by the Department of State (DOS) as
having returned or been brought back from a foreign
country because the citizen was destitute, because the
citizen (or a dependent) was ill, or because of war, threat of
war, invasion, or a similar crisis. Temporary aid is generally
provided as a loan. The Social Security Amendments of
1961 (P.L. 87-64) established the program following the
repatriation of a substantial number of American citizens
from Cuba (S.Rept. 87-425). Jurisdiction for the program
has traditionally been exercised by the House Ways and
Means Committee and the Senate Finance Committee.
Federal Administration
Since August 2018, the program has been operated by the
Office of Human Services Emergency Preparedness and
Response within the HHS Administration for Children and
Families (ACF). (Previously, the program was administered
elsewhere within ACF.) ACF coordinates with DOS in
operating the program. Under its own statutory authorities,
DOS assists U.S. citizens abroad by providing for their
evacuation or return when their lives are endangered (22
U.S.C. §4802) or when they are destitute (22 U.S.C.
§2671). This is generally done via loans. Once individuals
arrive in the United States, ACF assumes responsibility for
providing temporary aid under Section 1113 to eligible
repatriates referred by DOS. Some responsibilities for the
reception, temporary care, or transportation of eligible
repatriates may be carried out by states through repatriation
agreements with ACF or by a nongovernmental
organization under a cooperative agreement with ACF.
be Costs and Services
The program provides temporary assistance to eligible
repatriates and may also cover administrative costs incurred
by states or other entities. Temporary assistance is defined
as money payments, temporary billeting, transportation,
medical care, and other services (e.g., counseling) needed
for the health or welfare of an individual. The resource test
for eligibility looks at whether resources are immediately
accessible to meet an individual's needs. In general,
temporary assistance may not be provided for more than 90
days. An exception may be made if an individual is
handicapped in attaining self-support or self-care for
reasons such as age, disability, or lack of vocational
preparation. In such cases, aid may be extended by nine
months with prior approval. In addition to providing aid to
repatriates, HHS is also authorized to engage in a process,
in consultation with DOS and other agencies, to develop

plans and make arrangements for the provision of
temporary assistance.
Repayment of Temporary Assistance
Section 1113 generally requires recipients of temporary
assistance to repay the federal government. However, the
law also gives HHS the authority to waive repayment.
Federal regulations establish factors for such waivers. For
instance, repayment may be waived due to financial
hardship or if recovering funds would be against equity
and good conscience. ACF reports that relatively few
waivers are granted each year (typically fewer than a
dozen) and that loans are generally repaid in full. In the
event costs are not recovered within 30 days of billing,
loans begin accruing interest; further penalties may apply to
debts delinquent by over 90 days. Costs recovered via loan
repayments do not directly offset program expenditures.
mergency Repatriations
In addition to routine repatriations (e.g., for individuals or
families due to destitution or illness), the program responds
to emergency repatriation events, often resulting from war
or natural disasters. For example, the program supported
mass repatriations from Lebanon amidst the Hezbollah-
Israel War in 2006. During a mass emergency repatriation,
ACF or participating states or other entities typically set up
a processing reception center at applicable ports of entry.
This is done in coordination with DOS, as well as states
selected to receive repatriates. At these centers, repatriates
who do not have immediate access to resources complete an
intake form and loan repayment agreement. Repatriates are
interviewed to determine what assistance they need (e.g.,
travel costs, cash assistance). Later, states or other entities
submit claims for the administrative costs incurred and for
temporary assistance provided directly to repatriates.
Fundin Cap for Temporary Assistance
The repatriation program receives mandatory funding in
annual HHS appropriations acts. Statute caps the amount of
funding that may be used for temporary assistance at $1
million per fiscal year. Statute does not explicitly apply this
cap to other program costs (e.g., HHS planning activities,
administrative costs incurred by states). The current cap
was put in place in FY1990 (P.L. 101-382). It has been
temporarily waived or raised multiple times since then,
usually in response to emergency repatriation events (see
Table 1). In most cases, Section 1113 was amended to raise
or waive the cap in its entirety, not for limited purposes
(i.e., extra funds were not limited to a particular event or
activity, regardless of what prompted the cap adjustment).
In two cases, however, the cap was effectively waived by
provisions in supplemental appropriations acts that allowed
for additional spending notwithstanding the cap. In both
cases, spending in excess of the cap was restricted to

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