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New Authority Allows DCFS to Strengthen and 
Preserve FamiliesFederal waiver grants DCFS flexibility to better care 
for fostered youth
 
 
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            [January 27, 2017]  
			
			SPRINGFIELD 
			- The Federal Administration for Children, Youth, and Families has 
			granted Illinois a waiver of restrictions on federal foster-care 
			funds to let the Illinois Department of Children and Families 
			address family problems without having to remove children from their 
			homes and putting them in foster care. | 
        
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			 “It’s a win-win,” said Illinois DCFS Director George Sheldon. “We 
			sought this waiver because it helps us strengthen and preserve 
			families instead of breaking them apart. We can avoid the much 
			greater financial cost to taxpayers as well as the trauma to 
			children that results from having a child in foster care. It’s a 
			better deal for taxpayers, and the right thing for the children.” 
 The waiver is known as a IV-E waiver after the section of law that 
			provides federal support for foster care. Because Illinois has 
			longer average stays in foster care and because of the long-term 
			costs for children in foster care, the flexibility is likely to 
			produce long-term savings for the state.
 
			 “Children love their parents, even when their parents are less than 
			perfect, and taking them from their homes should be a last resort, 
			when we can’t ensure their safety any other way,” Sheldon said. 
			“Congress allows for waivers like this because there is bipartisan 
			agreement that strengthening and preserving families is the right 
			policy for children.”
 Illinois has had a waiver for specific programs in Cook County, but 
			the new waiver extends the program statewide. The waiver expires is 
			2019. Under current Federal Law, it cannot be renewed. After that, 
			federal funds would again be limited to supporting only children 
			actually in foster care.
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Illinois received $192 million in Federal foster-care funds in fiscal 2016. The 
Administration on Children, Youth and Families is part of the U.S. Department of 
Health and Human Services. In December, the Administration for Children, Youth 
and Families also awarded DCFS federal planning dollars to begin the development 
of a new statewide child welfare technology system. The Request for Proposals to 
implement that project will go out later this month.
 About the waiver: In 1994 Congress passed Public Law 103–432, which 
established Section 1130 of the Social Security Act (SSA) and gave the Secretary 
of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) the authority to approve 
State demonstration projects involving the waiver of certain provisions of 
titles IV-E and IV-B of the SSA. These provisions govern Federal programs 
relating to foster care and other child welfare services. Conceived as a 
strategy for generating new knowledge and innovation, these waivers grant States 
the flexibility in the use of Federal funds for alternative services and 
supports that promote safety, permanency, and well-being for children in the 
child protection and foster care systems.
 
				 
			[Department of Children and Family 
			Services] |