CFS-101, PART II Attachment B
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services OMB Approval #0980-0047
Administration for Children and Families Approved through July 31, 2011
This form summarizes the State Agency's and eligible Indian Tribal Organization’s (ITO) estimated expenditures on Child and Family Services programs, including the Child Abuse Treatment and Prevention Act (CAPTA) programs and the Chafee Foster Care Independence Program (CFCIP) including Education and Training Vouchers (ETV) for the next Federal fiscal year. This information is an integral part of the Child and Family Services Plan and should be discussed by the ACF Regional Office, State Agency Representatives, and Tribes. States and Tribes should list estimated expenditures and other information in the category that best fits their programs.
For each of the services/activities listed, indicate in the appropriate columns the estimated expenditures by program, the estimated number of clients to be served, the population to be served and the geographic area to be served.
Services/Activities:
1. Prevention and Support Services (Family Support): Community-based services which promote the safety and well-being of children and families and are designed to increase the strength and stability of families (including adoptive, foster, and extended families), to increase parents' confidence and competence in their parenting abilities, to afford children a safe, stable, and supportive family environment, and to enhance child development. These services may include respite care for parents and other caregivers; early developmental screening of children to assess the needs of these children and assistance in obtaining specific services to meet their needs; mentoring, tutoring, and health education for youth; a range of center-based activities (informal interactions in drop-in centers, parent support groups); services designed to increase parenting skills; and counseling and home visiting activities.
2. Protective Services: Services designed to prevent or remedy the abuse, neglect, or exploitation of children. Services include investigation and emergency medical services, emergency shelter, legal action, developing case plans, counseling, assessment/evaluation of family circumstances, arranging alternative living arrangements, preparing for foster placement, if needed, and case management and referral to service providers.
3. Crisis Intervention (Family Preservation): Services for children and families designed to help families (including adoptive and extended families) at risk or in crisis. The types of services within this category include:
Pre-Placement Prevention: Services to prevent family disruption and unnecessary removal of children from their homes (as appropriate). These services may include intensive family preservation, post-adoptive support services, case management, counseling, day care, respite services, homemaker services, services designed to increase parenting skills, family budgeting, coping with stress, health, and nutrition.
Reunification: Services to help children, where appropriate, return to families from which they have been removed, or be placed for adoption or legal guardianship. These services may include day care services, homemaker or caretaker services, family or individual counseling for parent(s) and child, follow-up care for families to whom a child has been returned after placement and other reunification services the State identifies as necessary.
4. Time-Limited Family Reunification Services: Services and activities that are provided to a child who is removed from the child's home and placed in a foster family home or a child care institution, and to the parents or primary caregiver of such a child, in order to facilitate the reunification of the child safely and appropriately within a timely fashion, but only during the 15-month period that begins on the date that the child, pursuant to section 475(5)(F) of the Social Security Act (the Act), is considered to have entered foster care. The services and activities are the following:
Individual, group, and family counseling.
Inpatient, residential, or outpatient substance abuse treatment services.
Mental health services.
Assistance to address domestic violence.
Services designed to provide temporary child care and therapeutic services for families, including crisis nurseries.
Transportation to or from any of the services and activities described above.
5. Adoption Promotion and Support Services: Services and activities designed to encourage more adoptions out of the foster care system, when adoptions promote the best interests of children, including such activities as pre- and post-adoptive services and activities designed to expedite the adoption process and support adoptive families.
6. Other Service Related Activities: Planning, service coordination, preparation or follow-up to service delivery such as the recording of progress notes or other activities, other than direct services or administration, supporting the delivery of services under the program etc.
7. Foster Care Maintenance: Expenditures for “room and board” for children/youth in foster care.
a) Foster Family and Relative Foster Care: Payments to cover food, clothing, shelter, daily supervision, school supplies, a child's personal incidentals, liability insurance with respect to a child, and reasonable travel to the child's home for visitation and reasonable travel for the child to remain in the school in which the child is enrolled at the placement in foster care as well as the cost of providing these services.
b) Group/Institutional Care: This includes the reasonable costs of administration and the operation of institutional/group home care that are required to provide food, clothing, shelter, daily supervision, school supplies, a child's personal incidentals, liability insurance with respect to a child, and reasonable travel to the child's home for visitation; the cost of reasonable travel for the child to remain in the same school he or she was attending prior to placement in foster care and the cost of the items themselves.
8. Adoption Subsidy Payments: Funds provided to adoptive parents on a recurring and non-recurring basis to assist in the support of special needs children.
9. Guardianship Assistance Payments: Funds provided to kinship legal guardians on a recurring and non-recurring basis to assist in the support of children formerly in foster care placed in their care.
10. Independent Living Services: Services designed to help youth expected to remain in foster care until the age of 18, youth who after age 16 leave foster care for kinship guardianship or adoption and former foster care recipients between 18 and 21 years of age, make the transition to self-sufficiency. Services may include: education, career exploration, vocational training, job placement and retention, training in daily living skills, training in budgeting and financial management skills, substance abuse prevention, and preventive health activities.
States and Tribes are allowed to expend up to 30 percent of their allotments under the Chafee Foster Care Independence Program for room and board (including rental deposits, utilities and other expenses that may be included with rent) for children who have left foster care because they have attained 18 years of age, and who have not yet attained 21 years of age.
11. Education and Training Vouchers: Include the amount of funds the State or Tribe plans to utilize for the Education and Training Vouchers (ETV) program in this line item
12. Administrative Costs: Include the amount of funds the State or Tribe plans to utilize for administrative costs.
For States and Tribes, administrative costs under title IV-B, subpart 1 may not be more than ten percent of title IV-B, subpart 1 expenditures. Allowable costs for title IV-B, subpart 1 may include procurement, payroll processing, personnel functions, management, maintenance and operation of space and property, data processing and computer services, accounting, budgeting, auditing, and travel expenses. Applicable costs exclude administrative costs related to the provision of services by caseworkers or the oversight of programs funded under Title IV-B, subpart 1 (Section 422(c)(1) of the Act).
For States only, administrative costs under title IV-B, subpart 2 (including Monthly Caseworker Visit grants) may not be more than ten percent of title IV-B, subpart 2 expenditures. Allowable costs for title IV-B, subpart 2 may include, but are not limited to procurement, payroll processing, personnel functions, management, maintenance and operation of space and property, data processing and computer services, accounting, budgeting, and auditing. Allowable costs may also include indirect costs allocable in accordance with the agency's approved cost allocation plan (45 CFR 1357.32(h)).
13. Staff and External Partners Training: Includes the cost of short and long-term training to increase the ability of staff and external partners (other than foster/adoptive parents (see #14 & #15 below)) to provide assistance and support to children and families, but does NOT include the costs specifically related to supporting the monthly caseworker visit requirement (see #17 below).
14. Foster Parent Training and Recruitment: Includes the cost of short-term training to increase foster parent's ability to provide assistance and support to foster and adoptive children, and those costs associated with/resulting from the recruitment of potential foster parents.
15. Adoptive Parent Training and Recruitment: Includes the cost of short-term training to increase adoptive parent's ability to provide assistance and support to foster and adoptive children, and those costs associated with/from the recruitment of potential adoptive parents.
16. Child Care Related to Employment/Training: Includes licensed day care purchased for the purpose of supporting the employment of one or both of the parents.
17. Monthly Caseworker Visits: Includes costs related to supporting monthly caseworker visits with children who are in foster care under the responsibility of the State, with a primary emphasis on activities designed to improve caseworker retention, recruitment and ability to access the benefits of technology.
18. Total: The total amount of funds estimated for the year (equal to the sum of lines 1 through 18) for each column.
1. Federal Funds (columns a - g): Indicate for each service/activity the amount to be expended from the Federal program indicated in columns (a) through (g).
2. State, Local, and Donated Funds (column h): Indicate the estimated amount of State, local, and donated funds to be expended, even if they are not used to match Federal funds
3. Estimated Number to be Served (column i): Estimate, as accurately as possible, the number of individuals and families to be served by service/activity with the total estimated funding indicated.
4. Population to be Served (column j): Indicate the population that has been targeted for the designated services. Targeting may include a range of vulnerable populations such as:
Children at imminent risk of placement;
All children in foster care;
Families with children returning home following placement;
All eligible children, eligible children under 21 years, or eligible children requiring treatment;
Families with a child abuse or neglect investigation;
Children in contracted care; or
Families in crisis.
5. Geographic Area to be Served (column k): Indicate both the number and type of areas identified within the State where services are to be provided for each program. Areas may include specific regions, counties, cities, reservations, communities, census tracts, or neighborhoods. For example, if the State is operating family preservation programs in six counties, indicate by noting "6 counties"; if the State is operating 12 community-based family support programs, indicate by noting "12 communities".
File Type | application/msword |
File Title | CFS-101, PART II: ANNUAL SUMMARY OF CHILD AND FAMILY SERVICES |
Author | Angelina Palmiero |
Last Modified By | Gail E. Collins |
File Modified | 2011-03-07 |
File Created | 2011-03-04 |