Title: Fostering Connections and Education: Funding Transportation
1- Fostering Connections and Education Funding
Transportation - Kathleen McNaught
- American Bar Association Center on Children and
the Law - Fostering Connections Resource Center - Webinar
Series - July 13, 2010
2Overview of Webinar
- Review of webinar features and QA tools
- Overview of Fostering Connections Resource Center
- Review of Fostering Connections law and education
stability provisions of the Act - Focus on addressing transportation to keep
children in their current schools. - Wrap-up
3Webinar logistics and QA
- Control Panel features
- Grab tab click on the arrows to open/close
control panel throughout the presentation. - Questions pane
- How to ask a question
- Type a question for presenters into the text box
at the bottom of the question pane and hit SEND - If we are unable to respond to you during the
session, we will follow up after the presentation
4About the Fostering Connections Resource Center
- Mission The Fostering Connections Resource
Center is dedicated to providing timely and
reliable tools and information on all aspects of
the Fostering Connections Act to ensure that
state, tribal and local decision makers are
well-informed about the new law and that they
receive maximum support as they plan for and
carry out its implementation. - Supported through generous contributions of
- The Annie E Casey Foundation
- Casey Family Programs
- Dave Thomas Foundation for Adoption
- Duke Endowment
- Eckerd Family Foundation
- Jim Casey Youth Opportunities Initiative
- Sierra Health Foundation
- Stuart Foundation
- Walter S. Johnson Foundation
5What does the Resource Center provide?
- Nonpartisan data and resources on each section of
the bill - A user-friendly website at www.fosteringconnection
s.org serves as a central clearinghouse of
customized tools and information, such as policy
and budget analyses, an up-to-date list of
federal guidance, implementation toolkits,
research briefs, and examples of best practices
and legislative approaches.  - Individualized technical assistanceÂ
- The Resource Center responds directly to
questions from state and tribal leaders and can
connect decision makers with other experts and TA
providers - Â
- Monitoring of implementation activity
- Visitors to www.fosteringconnections.org can stay
up-to-date on federal regulatory activity on
implementation, events in the field,
congressional oversight hearings and learn about
best practices and state and tribal approaches to
implementation - Opportunities to communicate with experts and
peers - Subscribe to mailing lists, join webinars and
online discussion forums and stay informed about
major events and conferences hosted by the
Resource Center and its many collaborating
organizations.
6Resource Center Networks Collaborating Partners
- Partners play a central role in the efforts of
the Resource Center. The Resource Center hosts
and manages six national networks of state-based
stakeholders who help us stay abreast of key
questions and concerns regarding implementation,
identify best practices, and assist in the
delivery and dissemination of tools and
resources. - Networks are managed by issue experts at the
Resource Center who work with a leading partner
organization - Kinship/Guardianship Jennifer Miller/Childrens
Defense Fund - Education Madelyn Freundlich/ABA Legal Center for
Foster Care and Education - Adoption Kerry DeVooght/North American Council on
Adoptable Children - Health Marci McCoy-Roth/National Academy for
State Health Policy - Older Youth Barbara Langford/National Foster Care
Coalition - Tribal Madelyn Freundlich/National Indian Child
Welfare Association - More than 25 national organizations serving as
collaborating partners - We welcome the opportunity to feature resources
by and contact information for state tribal
organizations. Contact us at info_at_fosteringconnec
tions.org
7Legal Center for Foster Care and Education
- Created by the ABA and the Juvenile Law Center
and Education Law Center, in collaboration with
Casey Family Programs, and, most recently, the
Annie E. Casey Foundation. - A national technical assistance resource and
information clearinghouse on legal and policy
matters affecting the education of children and
youth in out-of-home care - Website www.abanet.org/child/education
- Listserv, Conference Calls, Publications,
Searchable Database
8Sweeping federal reforms for children and families
- The Fostering Connections to Success and
Increasing Adoptions Act (P.L. 110-351) - Signed into law on October 7, 2008
- Most significant federal reforms for abused and
neglected children in more than a decade
9Education Stability Provision of FC
- The childs case plan must include
- assurances that the placement of a child in
foster care takes into account the
appropriateness of the current educational
setting and the proximity to the school in which
the child is enrolled at the time of placement.
10Keeping Children Living in Their School
Communities
- This is best practice, even outside of the school
context. School stability is added benefit. - Need for targeted recruitment of resource
families within school communities and
boundaries. - Examples from field
- GEO mapping
- Illinois- School Minder program
11Education Stability Provisions of FC
- assurance that the state or local child welfare
agency has coordinated with appropriate local
education agencies to ensure that the child
remains enrolled in the school in which the child
was enrolled at the time of placement. - If remaining in the same school is not in the
best interest of the child, assurances by the
State agency and the local education agencies to
provide immediate and appropriate enrollment in a
new school, with all of the education records of
the child provided to the school.
12Topics Not the Focus of this Call
- How to determine best interest
- School Selection for Students in Out-of-Home
Care This brief provides a framework for for
assessing best interest when selecting a school
for students in out-of-home care.
http//www.serve.org/nche/downloads/briefs/school_
sel_in_care.pdf - Reminder cost of transportation CANNOT be a
factor in determining best interest. - Immediate Enrollment in a new school
- Decision making and dispute resolution
- Liaisons and points of contact in the agencies
13How Many Children Will Need Transportation?
- Remember Not all children in care will require
transportation to remain in their same
school. - Total of children in care
- minus not yet school age minus
graduated/left HS - minus placed within the school
boundaries - minus in their BI to be immediately
enrolled in new school - minus covered under McKinney Vento
- minus have transport. in IEP
- EQUALS of children who may need
transportation to remain in current school
14McKinney Vento
- McKinney Vento Homeless Assistance Act
- 42 U.S.C. 11431 et. seq.
- Purpose ensure that children and youth in
homeless - situations receive a free, appropriate public
education, and - remove obstacles that delay enrollment or prevent
access. - Student remains in school of origin if in best
interest to do so or gains immediate access to
new school. - School of Origin defined - the school the child
or youth attended when permanently housed or the
school last enrolled. - Best interest determinations must be made
- Once eligible applies for remainder of school
year or for period of eligibility - Transportation must be provided to remain in
school
15McKinney-Vento and Foster Care
- Homeless children and youth means individuals
who lack a fixed, regular, and adequate nighttime
residence and includes - children living in emergency or transitional
shelters - children abandoned in hospitals
- Unaccompanied homeless youth
- children awaiting foster care placement
- No federal definition of children awaiting
- foster care placement (AFCP)
- up to states to determine
16MV and FC Resources
- State AFCP Chart
- For a list of all states with an AFCP definition,
please see http//www.abanet.org/child/education/p
ublications/afcp_chart_5_11_10.doc - Q A Overlap between MV and FC
- For a factsheet detailing the overlap of the two
laws, please see - http//www.abanet.org/child/education/publication
s/qa_fc_and_mv_overlap_final.pdf - Two Issue Briefs
- Clearing the Path to School Success for Students
in Out-of-Home Care - This brief provides basic
information about the McKinney-Vento Act and
Fostering Connections Act and provides case
studies to outline the overlap of these laws in
providing for school success. - When Working Together Works - This brief is
designed to help educators and child welfare
advocates work together to support the academic
success of children and youth in out-of-home
care. The brief offers practical, proven
strategies for implementing the Fostering
Connections and McKinney-Vento Acts
collaboratively.
17Summary Comparing McKinney-Vento to Fostering
Connections
- McKinney-Vento Act (Education Law NCLB)
- Requires school districts to ensure school
stability, provide transportation to school of
origin, pendency in school of choice while
disputes are resolved, immediate enrollment, help
of school liaisons to enroll, access to Title I,
comparable services etc. - Fostering Connections (Child Welfare Title IV-E)
- Requires caseworkers to consider proximity and
appropriateness of prior school in placing
children AND to ensure school stability unless
remaining in same school is not in childs best
interest. Transportation is permissible CW cost
no liaisons, no clear mandate on Education
HOWEVER, they have a duty to cooperate to ensure
stability.
18Special Education transportation in an IEP
- When a child in care is eligible for special
education services under the IDEA, he/she must
have an Individualized Education Program (IEP)
developed that outlines the childs education
needs and services, including related services. - Related services are services that will allow the
child benefit from his/her special education
program. - Transportation is an allowable related service in
an IEP, as long as the IEP team determines it is
necessary for the child to benefit from the
special education program. - Therefore, while the inclusion of transportation
as a related service in an IEP might help support
school stability, the core reason for that
transportation to be included must be related to
the special education needs of the child.
19Focus for Today
- Children who it is in their best interest to
remain in the school enrolled at the time of
placement - AND
- Continuing that enrollment will require some form
of transportation. -
20Big Picture
- Education stability requirements apply to all
children in care, not just IV-E eligible kids - If child welfare agencies must ENSURE children
stay in their current school, (and it is in their
best interest to do so), then it follows that
they are ultimately responsible to ENSURE, when
it is needed, that transportation is provided. - Costs must be addressed can be through Child
Welfare or Education funding alone, or
collaboration across agencies to fund this
transportation. - Fostering Connections requires collaboration
across agencies. Intent is that collaboration
occur around the issue of transportation. - The dependency court has the ability to ensure
school stability for children in care, including
ensuring child welfare agency has a documented
plan for education stability, and ensuring
transportation is provided when necessary.
21Some Examples of Additional Transportation
Needed, but No Additional Cost
- Child moves within same school district to
different school, but transportation exists
across district for other reasons. - Child moves to new school district, but can cross
street or be dropped at a bus stop close by to
access old districts existing transportation
system. - Adding a bus stop to a preexisting bus route.
- School district bus routes converge
- Example Louisiana
- Adult in the childs life whose existing commute
complements the childs transportation need
22Example of Transportation that Does Require
Additional Costs
- Foster parent, relative or other significant
adult provides transportation but needs
reimbursement for mileage - Agency provides youth or caretaker bus passes or
other public transportation vouchers - Agency contracts with private transportation
company to provide bus/van/car - School reroutes, or adds bus to fleet to
accommodate new transportation need
23What FC Says about Transportation Costs
- The term foster care maintenance payments
includes reasonable travel for the child to
remain in the school in which the child is
enrolled at the time of placement.
24IV-E Transportation Reminders and Issues
- REMINDERS
- Use of IV-E dollars applies only to IV-E eligible
children (although case plan requirement to
ensure school stability applies to ALL children
in care) - Permissible use of Administrative OR Maintenance
Dollars (although to ensure child stays in same
school is a requirement) - Requires state to fund match for IV-E eligible
children - No federal reimbursement to support
transportation for non IV-E eligible children. - ISSUES
- What about other transportation costs related to
remaining in school at the time of placement? - How can reimbursements be calculated?
- How is all of this working in states?
25Administrative Cost AND Maintenance Cost
- Oct 2008 FCSIAA added school transportation to
foster care maintenance payment definition. - July 2010 Fostering Connections Program
Instruction - Clarified these costs include initial placement
in care as well as subsequent placements. - Clarified that payment can be paid to the childs
provider, or a separate payment directly to the
transportation provider. - Clarified that transportation for a child to
remain in their school of origin is also an
allowable Title IV-E administrative cost (CWPM
8.1B). - Guidance confirms that this transportation is
allowable under either cost. This would allow
for greatest flexibility for the states to
achieve education stability for children.
26Administrative Cost or Maintenance Cost?
- For both maintenance or administrative
- Only can be used for IV-E eligible children.
- To find out what percentage of children are IV-E
in your state check here - http//cwla.org/advocacy/childreninfostercarerepo
rt08.pdf - Differences between maintenance and
administrative costs - Maintenance match rate varies by state between
50 and 83 Administrative rate for all states
is 50 - For your state maintenance match rate check here
- http//aspe.hhs.gov/health/fmap11.pdf
- Before the ARRA bump, 23 states had FMAP rates
between 50 and 55 these states may prefer to
claim as administrative costs.
27Maintenance Payments
- Transportation for reasonable travel for the
child to remain in the school in which the child
is enrolled at the time of placement is an
allowable separate item of expense under IV-E
maintenance. - The cost of local transportation associated with
providing food, clothing, shelter, daily
supervision, school supplies, and a childs
personal incidentals is allowable and presumably
included in the basic title IV-E foster care
maintenance payment. - CWPM 8.3B, QA 4
28Transportation to Extra Curricular Activities
- other transportation associated with the childs
attendance at his/her school of origin is an
allowable administrative cost under Title IV-E
because such transportation is related to case
management and therefore necessary for the proper
and efficient administration of the title IV-E
state plan CWPM 8.1B - cost of transportation to and from extra
curricular activities that substitute for daily
supervision is also allowable and presumed to be
included in the basic title IV-E foster care
maintenance payment. CWPM 8.3B Q4.
29How to Calculate Reimbursements
- Can you use IV-E dollars to reimburse other
entities that provide transportation for the
child? - Short answer is yes, BUT
- When using IV-E dollars, must be able to connect
directly to the IV-E eligible child. - May need to devise formulas for determining cost
per child - Much will depend on how your state designs and
structures your IV-E maintenance and
administrative payments.
30Transportation Checklist Answers You Need to
Know about Your State
- TRANSPORTATION GENERALLY
- How many school aged foster children do we have?
- What percent are placed within school boundaries?
- What percent are placed at such far distances, or
have other reasons for it not to be in best
interest to remain in original school? - What is our state MV policy and/or definition of
AFCP? - What of children in care with IEPs have
transportation as a related service? Of those,
what percent of those would address school
stability? - What are our state and school district policies
for all students about transporting children
within a school district? Between school
districts? What about unique policies for
children in care?
31Transportation Checklist Answers You Need to
Know about Your State
- IV-E SPECIFIC
- What of children in care are IV-E eligible?
- What is your state FMAP rate?
- How are your IV-E maintenance payments
structured? Can transportation costs be added to
core payment? Can a separate payment be made? - How are your IV-E administrative payments
structured? Does it make sense in your state to
claim transportation costs as administrative or
maintenance costs? - Who will be actually providing the additional
transportation needed to keep kids in their same
schools? Will there be a number of methods used?
- When schools or other entities are providing the
additional transportation, do you have a formula
that allows for calculation of the specific costs
for that IV-E eligible child? - If you are in a IV-E waiver state, do provisions
of your waiver impact how these payments can be
calculated or made?
32Key Themes from our State Examples
- Collaboration is critical to success of laws and
policies - Flexibility is necessary to allow for most
effective implementation - Need to articulate clear responsibility for costs
and in what circumstances - Designation of additional dollars, beyond the use
of IV-E, is necessary to serve all children in
care who may need transportation
33Example Connecticut
- New school stability law effective July 1, 2010
SB 31 - http//www.cga.ct.gov/2010/ACT/PA/2010PA-00160-R0
0SB-00031-PA.htm - When in the child's best interests to remain in
his or her school of origin (SOO) - DCF and the board of education for such SOO shall
collaborate on a transportation plan for such
child from the town in which the child is placed
to such SOO. - The DCF shall be responsible for any additional
or extraordinary cost of such transportation
beyond that to which the child would otherwise
have access. - The DCF shall maximize federal reimbursements
under Title IV-E of the Social Security Act, as
amended, for costs of transporting Title IV-E
eligible children. - The DCF and the board of education for the SOO
shall consider cost-effective, reliable and safe
transportation options.
34Connecticut cont
- Approximately 3 million dollars allocated in the
state budget to support child welfare agencies in
providing transportation to keep children in
their same schools. - State child welfare agency is developing an RFP
to seek bidders for the transportation contract
contract will require - A transportation coordinator
- Various configurations of transportation must be
provided, including buses with monitors various
sized passenger vans, and private car options.
35Example Minnesota
- DHS Bulletin 10-68-05 issued June 14, 2010
- Education Stability for Children in Foster Care
- http//www.dhs.state.mn.us/main/groups/publication
s/documents/pub/dhs16_150905.pdf - Financial Claims for Transportation Costs
- Child welfare agency should work with foster
parents to provide transportation - Can be an increase in Difficulty of Care level
of care - Can be a separate payment to the foster parent
- Can be a separate payment to another provider
- Could be the local school district
- Allowing for retroactive reimbursement from Oct
2008 will have data systems updated to allow for
future electronic submissions
36Examples Butte San Diego Counties, CA
- Both are models of collaborative approaches to
ensuring foster children and youth receive
transportation, using a case-by-case strategy,
and access McKinney-Vento funds when applicable.
Otherwise, costs are distributed among many
parties. - In San Diego, the cost of transportation is
usually covered by an equal split between the
school district of residence and the school
district of origin. Social workers coordinate
transportation for individual foster children and
youth, which may take the form of reimbursing
foster parents for mileage, paying for public
transportation, or allowing child welfare or
school district personnel to provide
transportation. - Butte County relies on a 5-way cost sharing plan
among the Butte County Office of Ed, the
Childrens Service Division of the Department of
Social and Employment Services, the foster family
agency, the district of attendance, and the
district of residency. The logistics are
coordinated through a central person in the
Office of Ed who determines the type of
transportation necessary.
37Example Philadelphia, PA
- Department of Human Services (DHS), School
District of Philadelphia, and Family Court
collaborative - Joint Protocol between DHS and School District
- Children placed in new home within 1.5 radius of
school - Foster parent/provider responsible for taking
child to school - Eligible for reimbursement
- Children placed outside of 1.5 radius of school
District pays - Public transit explored
- DHS submits request to guidance counselor to
submit busing form (up to 6th grade) - DHS submits request for counselor to provide
transpass (7th grade and up) - Emergency, overnight, respite, or temporary
placements - Child automatically remains in school of origin
- Complex cases
- Consultation with DHS Education Support Center
38Contact Information
- ABA Center on Children and the Law
- Legal Center for Foster Care and Education
- www.abanet.org/child/education
- Kathleen McNaught
- Project Director
- mcnaughk_at_staff.abanet.org
-
39We invite your questions
- The Resource Center is pleased to answer
questions about any topic related to
implementation. Please email questions to
info_at_fosteringconnections.org - The Resource Center can also broker or offer
limited technical assistance to agencies. Again,
please send inquiries to info_at_fosteringconnections
.org. - You can also contact the Legal Center for Foster
Care and Education directly at ccleducation_at_staff.
abanet.org.
40More than 500 state and national resources
available
- Fostering Connections Resource Center
- Visit www.fosteringconnections.org to access
tools, analyses, and other information on each
provision of the Act. - Legal Center for Foster Care and Education
- Visit http//www.abanet.org/child/education/public
ations/fosteringconnections.html to access
numerous tools and resources related to state
implementation of the education provisions of the
Act. -
41Thank you please come again
- Copies of this presentation, as well as an audio
recording, will be available on
www.fosteringconnections.org - Next FCRC webinars August 10th at 1pm and August
12th at 330pm on Tribal issues (presented by
the Resource Center and the National Indian Child
Welfare Association) Sign up at
www.fosteringconnections.org - Discussion forum We invite you to join a new
LinkedIn Group Discussion Forum Fostering
Connections Implementation Working Group. You
can find a user guide to LinkedIn and register
for the Fostering Connections Group at
http//www.fosteringconnections.org/resources?id0
007 - The Fostering Connections Discussion Group offers
subgroups on kinship, guardianship, adoption,
older youth, education, health, training and
Tribal topics. - Contact us
- - Fostering Connections Resource Center,
info_at_fosteringconnections.org - Legal Center for Foster Care and Education,
network partner - mcnaughk_at_staff.abanet.org
- Madelyn Freundlich, Network Manager
mdf_at_excalconsulting.com -