child welfare federal finance reform christine calpin joan smith jooyeun chang

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Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

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Page 1: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform

• Christine Calpin• Joan Smith• JooYeun Chang

Page 2: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Overview of Child Welfare Finance Reform

Page 3: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Overview of Child Welfare Finance Reform

• Federal child welfare finance reform is a strategy to achieve Casey Family Programs 2020 goal of safely reducing the need for foster care by preventing child abuse and neglect and finding safe, permanent and loving families for all children.

• The federal government must significantly change the way child welfare is financed so that it facilitates measurable outcomes.

Page 4: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Finance Reform: Why is it a Focus Area?

• Funding influences what the system offers vulnerable children and families

• Availability of needed services impacts placement decisions

• States should have the opportunity to invest resources in the most effective way

Page 5: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Federal-State Dynamics in Child Welfare

• State has primary responsibility to ensure child welfare.

• Federal role in child welfare.– Financial assistance to states for certain activities and

populations – Majority of dedicated federal child welfare dollars

support foster care.– Receipt of federal assistance is tied to state

performance measures of safety, permanency and well-being (CFSR).

Page 6: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Child Welfare Spending

• States receive federal dollars for child welfare activities from a variety of sources.

• States spent $29.4 billion in federal, state, and local funds for child welfare purposes in State Fiscal Year 2010.– $13.6 billion in federal funds (46%)– $12.5 billion in state funds (43%)– $3.3 billion in local dollars (11%)

Page 7: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Dedicated Federal Child Welfare Funding

• Title IV-E of the Social Security Act ($7.0 billion in SFY2010).– Supports foster care as well adoption assistance and

guardianship assistance.

• Title IV-B of the Social Security Act ($614 million in SFY2010).– Supports prevention and family support services.

Page 8: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Other Federal Child Welfare Funding

• Temporary Assistance for Needy Families

($3 billion in SFY2010)

• Medicaid ($1 billion in SFY2010)

• Social Services Block Grant ($1.6 billion in SFY2010)

Page 9: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

National Child Welfare Funding, SFY2010

52%

22%

12%

7%

5% 3%

Title IV-E

TANF

SSBG

Medicaid

Title IV-B Other

Page 10: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

California Child Welfare Funding, SFY2010

76%

10%

6%5%

3%

Title IV-E

TANF

SSBG

MedicaidTitle IV-B

Page 11: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Federal Funding: Why Must it Change?

• Dedicated Funding– Title IV-E primarily pays for maintaining eligible children

in licensed settings.– None of this funding can be used for prevention or

post-reunification.

• Other Child Welfare Funding– Other funding sources provide flexibility, but are limited.– Child welfare is not the primary focus.

Page 12: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Federal Funding: Why it must change?

• Current funding and policy goals are not aligned

• Inability to reinvest federal “savings” to sustain positive outcomes

Page 13: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Finance Reform: Key Aspects

• Federal dedicated child welfare funding should be available for a broader array of services.

• These services should be available to a broader population of vulnerable families.

• Federal funding should be flexible to address the unique needs of families in their communities and achieve improved outcomes.

Page 14: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Casey’s Goal: Finance Reform by 2015

• Activities to help achieve this goal – Support implementation of Title IV-E waivers and

capture in real-time information to inform child welfare finance reform efforts.

– Focus on and communicate the urgent need for finance reform.

– Develop new champions at federal, state, and local level.

– Elevate voice of families and children to inform policy development.

Page 15: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

What Casey is Doing to Support this Effort…

Page 16: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

What the IV-E Waiver Is…• Tool to innovate child welfare practice and spend dollars

more flexibly to improve outcomes

• Exempts states from requirement that all Title IV-E funding be spent almost solely on foster care

• Several states utilizing IV-E Waivers to implement multi-year demonstration projects under initial Waiver authority (FL, CA, IN, OH, OR)

• Recent reauthorization allows up to 10 additional states per year between 2012 - 2014 to begin multi-year IV-E Waiver demonstration projects

Page 17: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

How IV-E Waiver Demonstrations Inform the Case for Comprehensive Finance Reform

• Demonstrates how serious states are about the need for comprehensive finance reform

• Demonstrates how states can use current federal dollars to achieve better outcomes

• Engages state leaders about the need for federal finance reform

• Lays out the importance of making finance reform permanent and comprehensive

Page 18: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

FY2012 Approved States

WA

AR SC

DC

DE

RI

MA

VT

NH

MD

OR

CA

NV

TX

MN

NJ

NY

ME

CT

GA

OK

MO

AZ

KY

IN

PA

WY

NE

ID

HI

AK

CO

FL

KS

MSAL

TNNC

OH

WV

MIWI

IL

LA

NM

UT

MT ND

SD

IA

VA

PR 2012 Approved states

Map as of October , 2012

Existing waiver states

Page 19: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

FY2013 Applications

• Some 15 states have either applied, been working on an application or expressed an interest in applying

• If 25 or more states are implementing a waiver, it makes a strong case for comprehensive finance reform

Page 20: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Work with Partners around Finance Reform

Page 21: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Key Partners

• Partnership to Protect Children and Strengthen Families

• American Public Human Services Administrators (APHSA) and National Association of Public Child Welfare Administrators (NAPCWA)

Page 22: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Key Partners

• National Council of State Legislators (NCSL)

• National Governor's Association (NGA)

Page 23: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Key Partners

• National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges (NCJFCJ) and National Center for State Courts (NCSC)

• Child Trends• Constituents

Page 24: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Progress through Partnerships

• Casey convening of Congressional staff, state child welfare leadership, and key stakeholders to outline finance reform next steps

Page 25: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

The Path to Child Welfare Finance Reform

Page 26: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Overview of Finance Reform Discussions

• Widespread, bipartisan agreement that federal child welfare dollars should be focused on federal goals of safety, permanency, and well-being.

• Widespread, bipartisan agreement that waivers are an interim step and that comprehensive reform is necessary.

Page 27: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Challenges to achieve finance reform

• No clear consensus has emerged, although numerous proposals have been floated.– Pew Commission on Children in Foster Care.

• No clear consensus on whether additional resources are necessary.

• Political agenda is crowded, with little willingness to undertake any “heavy lift” ideas.

Page 28: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Common themes among reform proposals

• Most proposals recognize the population served needs to expand and agree the AFDC-link is outdated.

• Most proposals expand the service array – Extent to which federal resources support prevention or

intervention activities varies.

Page 29: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Major differences remain

• Retaining the open-ended entitlement versus a capped allocation

• Defining safety, permanency and well-being in an appropriate way to ensure accountability

• Ensuring finance reform also supports quality improvements.

Page 30: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Activities to help inform any reform proposals

• Lessons learned from states will heavily influence finance reform.

• Important to ensure dollars are vested in evidence-based or evidence-informed programs.

• Capturing outcomes from dollars spent is key.• Encourage and elevate voices of child welfare

workers, families and children in policy development.

Page 31: Child Welfare Federal Finance Reform Christine Calpin Joan Smith JooYeun Chang

Opportunity to inform proposals exists• Significant Opportunity - Historically a few states experimenting

with waivers was seen only as informative, but today we have the opportunity to inform proposals particularly if 50% or more of the states engage in a waiver.

• Maintaining federal support – Current structure means every year fewer children will be eligible for federal funding.

• Issue is urgent – Child welfare is broader than foster care, and it is urgent we ensure necessary changes to federal financing are implemented.