HR-8566-119
Referred to the House Committee on Education and Workforce.
Sponsored by Don Bacon (R-NE)
What it does
This bill would direct the Secretary of Health and Human Services to create a competitive grant pilot program awarding up to 5 grants over 5 years to eligible entities — including state child welfare agencies, tribal and local agencies, faith-based organizations, and nonprofits — to develop specialized foster care programs for large sibling groups (3 or more children), sibling groups with wide age ranges, and sibling groups with complex needs such as disabilities, serious mental health conditions, or trauma histories. Grant recipients would be required to use funds only for evidence-based placement programs and to submit outcome reports to HHS. The bill authorizes up to $10 million in appropriations over the 5-year period.
Who benefits
Children in foster care who are part of sibling groups — particularly those in groups of 3 or more, those with wide age gaps, and those with complex needs such as disabilities or mental health conditions — who would have a greater chance of being placed together rather than separated. Foster families and organizations that take in sibling groups, who would receive additional programmatic support. State and tribal child welfare agencies, nonprofits, and faith-based organizations that could receive grant funding to expand their capacity. Children with half-siblings or trauma histories who currently face additional barriers to joint placement. Indirectly, adoptive and foster families who benefit from better-matched placement infrastructure.
Who is hurt
Organizations that apply for but do not receive one of the 5 available grants, given the highly limited number of awards. States or localities with high need but less developed grant-writing capacity may be disadvantaged in the competitive process. Individual foster children not in qualifying sibling groups would not benefit from this program. Taxpayers bear the cost of the $10 million authorization, though the amount is modest. Existing foster care programs not selected may face indirect competitive disadvantage if the pilot draws attention and resources toward sibling-focused models.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that research consistently shows sibling separation in foster care causes lasting psychological harm, and that the foster care system currently lacks specialized infrastructure to accommodate large or complex sibling groups. They contend that the bill's evidence-based requirement and outcome reporting mandate ensure accountability, while the competitive grant structure directs limited federal dollars to the most capable organizations. With roughly 400,000 children in U.S. foster care at any given time, and sibling groups representing a significant share of hard-to-place children, even a targeted pilot could generate replicable models that states can scale.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that authorizing only 5 grants nationwide over 5 years is too narrow to produce meaningful systemic change and may amount to a symbolic gesture rather than a substantive policy solution. They contend that the $10 million ceiling — spread across up to 5 recipients over 5 years — may be insufficient to develop, staff, and sustain specialized programs, particularly for sibling groups with complex needs that require intensive services. Critics may also argue that foster care is primarily a state responsibility and that federal pilot programs can distort state priorities or create dependency on grant funding that disappears after the 5-year window.