HR-5191-116
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 582.
What it does
This bill would reauthorize and modify the Runaway and Homeless Youth Act through fiscal year 2025. It would extend federal grants — in five-year terms — to community organizations providing shelter, counseling, and long-term housing to runaway and homeless youth. It would also require grant recipients to offer trauma-informed and culturally competent services, collect demographic data on participants, and make services accessible to youth who have experienced sexual abuse or trafficking.
Who benefits
Runaway and homeless youth, particularly those who are victims of sexual abuse, exploitation, or human trafficking. Older homeless youth (ages 18–21) would benefit from expanded long-term residential (transitional living) services. Youth at risk of family separation would gain eligibility for home-based services. Regional nonprofit organizations would receive technical assistance grants. Families of runaway youth would benefit from an improved national communications system to reconnect with their children.
Who is hurt
Federal taxpayers would bear the cost of reauthorized and expanded grant programs through FY2025, though the specific appropriations level is not specified in the bill text. Grant applicants that cannot meet the new requirements — such as trauma-informed care standards, staff training mandates, and data collection obligations — may face increased administrative burdens or risk losing eligibility. Organizations currently receiving grants on shorter terms would face a shift to five-year grant cycles, which could affect funding flexibility.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that runaway and homeless youth are among the most vulnerable populations in the country, with estimates suggesting hundreds of thousands of young people experience homelessness each year, and that many are at acute risk of trafficking and sexual exploitation. They contend that requiring trauma-informed and culturally competent services would make programs more effective by addressing the root causes of youth homelessness rather than just its symptoms. Supporters also argue that five-year grant terms provide stable, long-term funding that allows community organizations to plan and deliver consistent services, rather than facing annual uncertainty. They further contend that prioritizing research into the overlap between trafficking and youth homelessness would generate evidence to improve future policy, and that the data collection requirements would help identify gaps in service delivery.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that reauthorizing and expanding a federal grant program adds to long-term federal spending obligations without a demonstrated accounting of whether existing programs have achieved measurable outcomes. They contend that shifting grant administration to five-year terms reduces the government's ability to redirect funding away from underperforming programs and toward more effective ones. Opponents may also argue that imposing specific service mandates — such as trauma-informed care standards, staff training requirements, and data collection protocols — increases administrative costs for local nonprofits, potentially diverting resources away from direct services to youth. Some may further argue that youth homelessness and family services are areas traditionally managed by state and local governments, and that expanding federal grant conditions encroaches on that authority under the Tenth Amendment.