ACL 05-02 – Changes in Law Affecting Subsidized Child Care for 11 And 12 Year-old Children (February 2, 2005)

The new law provides for a preferred placement for 11-12 yo children, except for children with exceptional needs, in an after school program. (Children with exceptional needs are not prohibited from participating in these programs/changing their care arrangements.) The parent is to certify in writing that the after school program will meet their child care needs. Children receiving and/eligible for subsidized child care services shall continue to receive subsidized child care if the after school programs do not meet the families’ child care needs. CalWORKs families should also be informed if they choose to transfer their child(ren) to an after school program, and subsequently find the program doesn’t meet their needs, the family will receive priority to transfer back to subsidized child care as funding permits. [Download]

Food Stamps Administrative Notice 05-03 – Eligibility of Victims of Severe Trafficking (October 1, 2004)

The categories of noncitizens eligible to participate in the Food Stamp Program (FSP) under the Trafficking Victims Protection Act have been expanded to include the minor children, spouses and in some cases the parents and siblings of victims of severe trafficking, as well as the originally included victims themselves. Victims of severe trafficking are eligible to participate in the FSP under the same conditions as noncitizens classified as refugees. (Regs @ is not quite sure what “non-severe” human trafficking is.) Also attached is a fact sheet on establishing TVPA eligibility. [Download]

HUD PIH Notice 2005-05 – New Freedom Initiative, Executive Order 13217: “Community-Based Alternatives for Individuals with Disabilities,” and the Housing Choice Voucher Program (February 1, 2005)

Explains Bush’s New Freedom Initiative and Executive Order and guides PHAs and HUD field staff regarding initiatives that can be implemented to assist persons with disabilities and their families searching for housing under the Section 8 Voucher program. Among other things, this Notice instructs PHAs to be “generous” in establishing the permitted search time for a unit, permitting PHAs to go beyond 120 days so long as the time period is not indefinite. The Notice also encourages PHAs to provide families with lists of organizations and agencies offering supportive services, including “state protection and advocacy agencies, Centers for Independent Living, State Medicaid agencies, and disability advocacy groups that represent individuals with a variety of disabilities.” [Download]

Revisions and Update to Consolidated Plan – Proposed Rule 24 C.F.R. Part 91, Federal Register, Vol. 69, No. 250 (December 30, 2004)

The Consolidated Plan on “ConPlan” is a document that jurisdictions must submit to HUD in order to obtain HOME, CDBG and other federal monies to fund programs that primarily benefit lower income persons. Among other things, the proposed regulations require more consistency between the ConPlan and PHA (Public Housing Agency) Plan, “clarify” the definition of “chronic homelessness” purportedly to bring the ConPlan regs in line with the Administration’s goal of ending homelessness by 2012, and require jurisdictions to described specifically what steps they will take to remove barriers to affordable housing. Comments due January 31, 2005. [Download]

Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property Acquisition for Federal and Federally-Assisted Programs – 49 C.F.R. Part 24, Federal Register, Vol. 70, No. 2 (January 4, 2005)

This is the first comprehensive update of these regulations since they were first issued in 1989. Among the objectives of the regulations is to ensure that persons displaced as the direct result of federal or federally assisted project are treated fairly and equitably – “that they will not suffer disproportionate injuries as the result of projects designed for the benefit of the public as a whole.” 49 C.F.R. 24.1(b). The regulations govern 18 federal agencies, including HUD. (Adapted in part from the National Low Income Housing Coalition (NLIHC) summary in the NLIHC newsletter published January 7, 2005.) [Download]