Full Text of HR0362 101st General Assembly
HR0362 101ST GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
| | HR0362 | | LRB101 12288 ALS 60060 r |
|
| 1 | | HOUSE RESOLUTION
| 2 | | WHEREAS, The Family First Prevention Services Act was | 3 | | signed into law as part of the Bipartisan Budget act on | 4 | | February 9, 2018; and
| 5 | | WHEREAS, Young people involved in the child welfare system | 6 | | do best in families, in a safe and stable environment that | 7 | | supports their long-term well-being, according to research; | 8 | | the passage of Family First took a large step toward this | 9 | | vision by restructuring how the federal government spends money | 10 | | on child welfare to ensure that more children in foster care | 11 | | are placed with families; the law also provides more support | 12 | | for critical services, such as mental health and substance | 13 | | abuse treatment, in-home training, and family therapy that can | 14 | | help prevent the need for foster care in the first place; and
| 15 | | WHEREAS, The law provides an opportunity for positive | 16 | | change and supports ongoing efforts to transform our child | 17 | | welfare system by keeping children and teens safely with their | 18 | | own family and to avoid the often-traumatizing experience of | 19 | | unnecessary placement into the foster care system; its name | 20 | | reflects the elements of the legislation: a family first for | 21 | | children and teens with prevention services to keep kids safe | 22 | | and growing up in their family; prevention services, including | 23 | | in-home, skills-based training for parents, mental health |
| | | HR0362 | - 2 - | LRB101 12288 ALS 60060 r |
|
| 1 | | care, including family therapy, and substance abuse and | 2 | | treatment programs are important parts of Family First; when | 3 | | the courts determine that children need to enter foster care, | 4 | | Family First specifically calls for them to be placed in the | 5 | | least restrictive, most family-like setting to meet their | 6 | | individual needs; the law recognizes that treatment programs | 7 | | can provide short-term, customized therapeutic support while | 8 | | kids are living in families; this could be with birth parents, | 9 | | other relatives, close friends, or foster caregivers; | 10 | | residential treatment may be needed for short-term | 11 | | stabilization, usually less than 90 days, with follow-up | 12 | | services when children return to their family; | 13 | | federally-reimbursed services are meant to support and | 14 | | strengthen families, so children don't enter care; they are | 15 | | also meant to maintain child and family connections when | 16 | | children enter foster care or require short-term residential | 17 | | treatment, and they provide six months of aftercare when a | 18 | | child has transitioned home from either setting; the focus is | 19 | | on helping children and families live and grow together safely | 20 | | and successfully; and
| 21 | | WHEREAS, This Act reforms the federal child welfare | 22 | | financing streams, Title IV-E and Title IV-B of the Social | 23 | | Security Act, to provide services to families who are at risk | 24 | | of entering the child welfare system; and
|
| | | HR0362 | - 3 - | LRB101 12288 ALS 60060 r |
|
| 1 | | WHEREAS, This Act aims to prevent children from entering | 2 | | foster care by allowing federal reimbursement for mental health | 3 | | services, substance use treatment, and in-home parenting skill | 4 | | training; it also seeks to improve the well-being of children | 5 | | already in foster care by motivating states to reduce placement | 6 | | of children in congregate care; and
| 7 | | WHEREAS, With an approved Title IV-E plan, the State would | 8 | | have the option to use Title IV-E funds to prevent the | 9 | | placement of children and youth into the foster care system and | 10 | | to provide up to 12 months of mental health services, substance | 11 | | abuse treatment, and in-home parenting training to families at | 12 | | risk of entry into the child welfare system; additionally, the | 13 | | State could use Title IV-E reimbursement for up to 12 months | 14 | | for a child who has been placed with a parent in a licensed | 15 | | residential family-based treatment facility for substance | 16 | | abuse, regardless of whether the child meets the AFDC | 17 | | income-eligibility requirement for Title IV-E; and
| 18 | | WHEREAS, A competitive grant for recruitment and retention | 19 | | of high-quality foster families is provided and made available | 20 | | through 2022; parameters for states to expand funding | 21 | | eligibility for youth "aging out" of foster care are provided; | 22 | | and
| 23 | | WHEREAS, Decreasing the number of children newly enrolled |
| | | HR0362 | - 4 - | LRB101 12288 ALS 60060 r |
|
| 1 | | in the foster care system by providing federally-reimbursable | 2 | | services to families at risk of entering the child welfare | 3 | | system will benefit the State of Illinois; therefore, be it
| 4 | | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE | 5 | | HUNDRED FIRST GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that | 6 | | we urge the State to support the Family First Prevention | 7 | | Services Act to help decrease the number of children entered | 8 | | into foster care.
|
|