Title: Chafee National Youth in Transition Database NYTD Proposed Rule
1Chafee National Youth in Transition Database
(NYTD) Proposed Rule
Presentation Developed by The Childrens
Bureau Administration on Children, Youth, and
Families Administration for Children and
Families, Department of Health and Human
Services
2Statutory Background
- Public Law 106-169 established the John H. Chafee
Foster Care Independence Program (CFCIP). - Most provisions of the CFCIP can be found in 477
of the Social Security Act (the Act). - CFCIP provides States with flexible funding to
carry out programs that assist youth in making
the transition from foster care to
self-sufficiency.
3 Data Requirements in Law
- The statute requires ACF to develop a data
collection system (477(f) of the Act) that
allows us to - Track the number and characteristics of children
receiving independent living services, - Track the type and quantity of independent living
services States provide to youth, and - Develop outcome measures to assess States
performance. - The statute also requires ACF to impose a penalty
for a States noncompliance with data collection
reporting requirements (477(e)(2) of the Act)
4Consultation - Stakeholders
- ACF consulted with a variety of stakeholders over
several years to gather information regarding
outcomes, measures, and reporting, including - Child welfare agency administrators
- State, Tribal, local independent living
coordinators - Public private youth services providers
- Child welfare advocates
- Current former foster youth parents
- Information systems managers (public and private
sector) - Developers, managers, users of AFCARS, NCANDS,
RHYMIS
5Consultation Pilot Test
- ACF conducted a pilot test through the assistance
of a contractor which helped to inform the draft
regulation. The pilot - involved seven (7) pilot States and an Indian
tribe - served as a field test of some data elements,
definitions and procedures - assisted CB in defining the data collection
burden and, - allowed CB to assess the capacity of pilot States
to collect data.
6Overview of NYTD Proposed Rule
- We propose that States will engage in two data
collection reporting activities that relate to - Youth who receive independent living services
- The outcomes of youth who are aging out or have
aged out of foster care - States will collect independent living services
information continuously, and outcomes
information on a periodic schedule. - States will report the data collected (services
and outcomes information) to ACF on a semi-annual
basis.
7Proposal Information on Youth Services
- States will collect information on any youth
receiving an independent living service during
the 6 month report period. - Service data are collected regardless of the
youths age (e.g., could be 14 or 22 years old
depending on the States eligible service
population) - Service data are collected regardless of whether
the youth is in foster care at the time of the
service - For the purposes of collecting information, the
term independent living services means - An independent living service paid for or
provided by the State CFCIP agency, and - Includes an independent living service regardless
of the manner in which it is delivered (e.g.,
inclusive of services provided through a foster
parent, contracted service provider, other public
agency, etc. ).
8Proposal Information on Youth Services
States will report that a youth received an
independent living service during the report
period in one or more of the following 11
categories
- Housing education home management training
- Health education risk prevention
- Family support healthy marriage education
- Mentoring
- Supervised independent living
- Independent living needs assessment
- Academic support
- Post-secondary educational support
- Career preparation
- Employment programs or vocational training
- Budget and financial management
9Proposal Information on Youth Outcomes
- To gather information on youth outcomes, we
propose that States will collect and report data
over time (i.e., longitudinal design) - States will collect data on a cohort of youth,
with a new cohort beginning every three years.
The cohort consists of the - Baseline population All youth who are in
foster care at 17 years of age. - Follow-up population - The same 17-year olds,
who are surveyed as they age at 19 years old and
again at 21 years old, regardless of whether they
remain in foster care. - States will need to institute procedures to track
youth as they age out of foster care.
10Proposal Information on Youth Outcomes
- States will have the option to follow a sample of
youth who participated in the outcome data
collection and collect subsequent follow-up
outcome information (19 and 21 year olds) on the
sample - States must use simple random sampling procedures
and a specific statistical formula for sampling. - Many States, but not all, will be able to take
advantage of the sampling option. States with
very small numbers of 17 year olds in foster care
will not benefit from sampling. - States that opt to sample youth for outcomes
information will report to ACF which youth
comprise the sample during the year baseline
information is reported.
11Proposal Information on youths Outcomes
- States will survey youth and report to ACF
regarding six outcome areas. - States must develop surveys using questions
specified by ACF, but we are not proposing to
regulate the manner in which the State
administers the survey. - Therefore, States may employ the survey during
meetings with an agency caseworker/youth
specialist, via a contractor, by phone or via the
internet/e-mail, etc.
12Proposal Information on youths Outcomes
13Proposal Demographic Characteristics of youth
In addition to services/outcomes information,
States will collect demographic and
characteristics information, depending on the
reporting population
Elements for youth reported for either services
or outcomes
State, ID , DOB, Sex Race, Ethnicity Foster
care status
Tribal membership Adjudicated delinquent Last
grade completed Special education
status Independent living assessment
Date of outcome collection, Outcome reporting
status Sample status
14Proposal - NYTD Reporting Schedule
15Proposal NYTD Compliance Standards
- States will have to meet both file submission
standards and data standards to be in compliance
with NYTD rules. - File submission standards include
- Submitting data on time
- Submitting data in a format that meets ACF
specifications - Reporting demographic information without errors
- File submission requirements are minimal and must
be met for us to assess whether the State met the
data standards.
16Proposal NYTD Compliance Standards
- Data standards relate to quality of the data and
include - Error standard - 90 error-free data in most data
elements (inclusive of services information,
outcomes and characteristics information). - Outcomes universe standard States are to
provide outcome survey results or indicate why
there are no survey results for all youth
previously identified in the baseline population
(i.e., in foster care at age 17). - Outcomes participation rates States are to
collect and report outcome information on at
least 80 of the youth still in foster care and
60 of the youth who are no longer in foster care
at the time of the follow-up survey.
17Proposal Correcting Data Penalties
- ACF will assess whether the States data complies
with the standards and will notify States if it
does not. - The State will have an opportunity to submit
corrected data by the end of the next report
period. - Failure to comply with the file submission and
data standards after the opportunity to correct
data will result in a penalty. - The law requires ACF to impose a penalty of
between 1 and 5 percent of the States annual
allotment under CFCIP, depending on the degree of
noncompliance. The NPRM assigns different
penalty amounts for different areas of
noncompliance.
18NYTD Penalty Structure
19State Examples of Potential NYTD Penalties
Total Allotment includes the States general
Chafee Foster Care Independence Program allotment
plus their Education Training Vouchers.
20Proposed Rule
- The regulation can be viewed/downloaded at the
following locations - Regulations.gov
- www.regulations.gov
- The Childrens Bureau Website
- www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/cb
- The National Resource Center on Child Welfare
Data and Technology - www.nrccwdt.org/
- Comments cannot be submitted via these websites
21Comment Submissions
- Comments must be received (not postmarked/sent)
on or before September 12, 2006. - Please only comment via one method
- E-mail to CBcomments_at_acf.hhs.gov
- 2) Via the internet at http//www.regulations.acf
.hhs.gov - OR
- 3) Hard copy comments to
- Kathleen McHugh, Director
- Division of Policy/CB/ACYF/ACF
- 1250 Maryland Avenue, SW, 8th floor
- Washington, DC 20024
- It is helpful to us if you identify yourself,
your role, and the specific sections of the NPRM
on which you are commenting. It is also helpful
if you identify the provisions you support and if
you do not support a provision, why not and any
preferred alternatives.
22Disclaimer
- This presentation was developed to assist Federal
staff explain the highlights of the NPRM. The
NPRM as published in the Federal Register is the
only official and comprehensive description of
the proposed National Youth in Transition
Database (NYTD). - Any comments provided should be based on a review
of the NPRM and not on this presentation or any
other materials. - Since the NYTD is not final, all proposed
provisions are subject to change.