HR-7995-119
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 559.
What it does
This bill would amend the John H. Chafee Foster Care Program for Successful Transition to Adulthood by adding two new stated purposes: (1) helping youth who entered foster care at age 14 or older build and maintain lasting relationships with adults, mentors, and peers; and (2) supporting those youth in exercising their rights to participate in their own permanency planning and connecting them to peer support and mentoring services. It would also require the Secretary of Health and Human Services to issue guidance to states and tribal child welfare agencies within one year, covering best practices, eligible services, outreach standards, and documentation requirements.
Who benefits
Youth who entered foster care at age 14 or older — particularly those aging out of the system without permanent family placements. Kin and fictive kin caregivers who would be formally recognized as relationship resources. Mentors and peer support providers who would gain clearer federal guidance and funding eligibility. Tribal communities whose sibling and community connections would be explicitly supported. Child welfare agencies that would receive clearer federal guidance on allowable services. Researchers and advocates focused on foster care outcomes who would see their evidence base reflected in statute.
Who is hurt
States and tribal agencies that may face administrative costs to update case plans, documentation systems, and outreach protocols to comply with new guidance. Child welfare agency staff who would need training on new documentation and referral requirements. Existing service providers whose programs do not align with the new best-practice standards and may lose referrals. Federal and state budgets could face modest increased administrative burdens, though no new mandatory spending is created.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that research consistently shows youth who age out of foster care without stable adult connections face significantly worse outcomes — including higher rates of homelessness, unemployment, and involvement in the justice system — and that the Chafee Program's existing purposes failed to reflect this evidence. They contend that incorporating the input of youth with lived experience directly into the program's statutory goals ensures services are designed around what actually helps, and that formalizing peer support, mentoring, and kin connections as program purposes gives states clearer authority to fund these proven interventions.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that adding new statutory purposes without accompanying mandatory funding creates an unfunded mandate that states — many already under-resourced in child welfare — may struggle to implement meaningfully. They contend that the bill's reliance on HHS guidance rather than enforceable standards gives the federal government broad discretion to define "best practices" in ways that may not reflect local conditions, and that the documentation and case plan requirements could increase administrative burdens on caseworkers, diverting time away from direct services to youth.