HR-9076-118
Became Public Law No: 118-258.
Sponsored by Darin LaHood (R-IL)
What it does
This law extends federal funding through FY2029 for two major child welfare programs — the Stephanie Tubbs Jones Child Welfare Services program and the MaryLee Allen Promoting Safe and Stable Families program — while updating how those programs operate. It expands eligibility for family preservation services to young adults up to age 26, allows virtual caseworker visits for consenting youth over 18 in foster care, and creates new grants for programs connecting foster children with incarcerated parents. It also gives tribal child support agencies access to the Federal Tax Refund Offset Program and allows the IRS and Social Security Administration to share certain tax data with tribal agencies to help locate and collect past-due child support.
Who benefits
Children and youth in the foster care system, including those aging out of care up to age 26; families affected by parental substance use disorders; kinship caregivers (relatives raising children not their own); Indian tribes and tribal child support enforcement agencies, which gain new access to federal tax offset tools; custodial parents and guardians owed past-due child support; children owed support from noncustodial parents; foster children with incarcerated parents; state and tribal child welfare agencies receiving streamlined administrative requirements and new grant funding.
Who is hurt
Noncustodial parents who owe past-due child support may have a larger portion of their federal tax refunds intercepted, now including collection by tribal agencies. Contractors and agencies handling newly shared tax data face increased compliance and data-security obligations. States may face new reporting and program-evaluation requirements, which could increase administrative workload even as the law directs the ACF to explore reducing compliance burdens.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that this law closes critical gaps in the child welfare system by extending proven programs that keep families together and protect vulnerable children from abuse and neglect. They contend that raising the age cap for family preservation services to 26 reflects research showing that young adults aging out of foster care face disproportionate rates of homelessness, unemployment, and poverty, and that continued support during this transition period produces measurable long-term benefits. Supporters also argue that giving tribal agencies access to the same federal child support collection tools already available to states corrects a longstanding inequity, ensuring that children in tribal communities receive the financial support they are legally owed. They point to the grants for foster children with incarcerated parents as a targeted, evidence-based approach to maintaining family bonds that reduce recidivism and improve child outcomes.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that reauthorizing these programs without fundamental structural changes simply extends a federal child welfare system that has repeatedly failed to protect children or reunify families effectively, rewarding bureaucratic inertia rather than demanding accountability. They contend that expanding eligibility to age 26 significantly broadens the federal government's role in what has traditionally been a state and local responsibility, setting a precedent for open-ended dependency on federal support rather than building self-sufficiency. Critics also raise privacy concerns about authorizing the IRS and Social Security Administration to share tax return data with tribal child support agencies and their contractors, arguing that expanding access to sensitive financial information increases the risk of misuse or data breaches. They further argue that adding new grant programs and reporting requirements will increase federal spending and administrative complexity without clear evidence that the new programs will produce better outcomes than existing ones.