[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 45 Volume 4]

[Revised as of October 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 45CFR1355.20]



[Page 263-266]

 

                        TITLE 45--PUBLIC WELFARE

 

CHAPTER XIII--OFFICE OF HUMAN DEVELOPMENT SERVICES, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH 

                           AND HUMAN SERVICES

 

PART 1355_GENERAL--Table of Contents

 

Sec.  1355.20  Definitions.



    (a) Unless otherwise specified, the following terms as they appear 

in 45 CFR parts 1355, 1356 and 1357 of this title are defined as 

follows--

    Act means the Social Security Act, as amended.

    ACYF means the Administration on Children, Youth and Families, 

Administration for Children and Families (ACF), U. S. Department of 

Health and Human Services.

    Adoption means the method provided by State law which establishes 

the legal relationship of parent and child between persons who are not 

so related by birth, with the same mutual rights and obligations that 

exist between children and their birth parents. This relationship can 

only be termed ``adoption'' after the legal process is complete.

    Child abuse and neglect means the definition contained in 42 U.S.C. 

5106(g)(2).

    Child care institution means a private child care institution, or a 

public child care institution which accommodates no more than twenty-

five children, and is licensed by the State in which it is situated or 

has been approved by the agency of such State or tribal licensing 

authority (with respect to child care institutions on or near Indian 

Reservations) responsible for licensing or approval of institutions of 

this type as meeting the standards established for such licensing. This 

definition must not include detention facilities, forestry camps, 

training schools, or any other facility operated primarily for the 

detention of children who are determined to be delinquent.



[[Page 264]]



    Commissioner means the Commissioner on Children, Youth and Families, 

Administration for Children and Families, U.S. Department of Health and 

Human Services.

    Date a child is considered to have entered foster care means the 

earlier of: The date of the first judicial finding that the child has 

been subjected to child abuse or neglect; or, the date that is 60 

calendar days after the date on which the child is removed from the home 

pursuant to Sec.  1356.21(k). A State may use a date earlier than that 

required in this paragraph, such as the date the child is physically 

removed from the home. This definition determines the date used in 

calculating all time period requirements for the periodic reviews, 

permanency hearings, and termination of parental rights provision in 

section 475(5) of the Act and for providing time-limited reunification 

services described at section 431(a)(7) of the Act. The definition has 

no relationship to establishing initial title IV-E eligibility.

    Department means the United States Department of Health and Human 

Services.

    Detention facility in the context of the definition of child care 

institution in section 472(c)(2) of the Act means a physically 

restricting facility for the care of children who require secure custody 

pending court adjudication, court disposition, execution of a court 

order or after commitment.

    Entity, as used in Sec.  1355.38, means any organization or agency 

(e.g., a private child placing agency) that is separate and independent 

of the State agency; performs title IV-E functions pursuant to a 

contract or subcontract with the State agency; and, receives title IV-E 

funds. A State court is not an ``entity'' for the purposes of Sec.  

1355.38 except if an administrative arm of the State court carries out 

title IV-E administrative functions pursuant to a contract with the 

State agency.

    Foster care means 24-hour substitute care for children placed away 

from their parents or guardians and for whom the State agency has 

placement and care responsibility. This includes, but is not limited to, 

placements in foster family homes, foster homes of relatives, group 

homes, emergency shelters, residential facilities, child care 

institutions, and preadoptive homes. A child is in foster care in 

accordance with this definition regardless of whether the foster care 

facility is licensed and payments are made by the State or local agency 

for the care of the child, whether adoption subsidy payments are being 

made prior to the finalization of an adoption, or whether there is 

Federal matching of any payments that are made.

    Foster care maintenance payments are payments made on behalf of a 

child eligible for title IV-E foster care to cover the cost of (and the 

cost of providing) food, clothing, shelter, daily supervision, school 

supplies, a child's personal incidentals, liability insurance with 

respect to a child, and reasonable travel for a child's visitation with 

family, or other caretakers. Local travel associated with providing the 

items listed above is also an allowable expense. In the case of child 

care institutions, such term must include the reasonable costs of 

administration and operation of such institutions as are necessarily 

required to provide the items described in the preceding sentences. 

``Daily supervision'' for which foster care maintenance payments may be 

made includes:

    (1) Foster family care--licensed child care, when work 

responsibilities preclude foster parents from being at home when the 

child for whom they have care and responsibility in foster care is not 

in school, licensed child care when the foster parent is required to 

participate, without the child, in activities associated with parenting 

a child in foster care that are beyond the scope of ordinary parental 

duties, such as attendance at administrative or judicial reviews, case 

conferences, or foster parent training. Payments to cover these costs 

may be: included in the basic foster care maintenance payment; a 

separate payment to the foster parent, or a separate payment to the 

child care provider; and

    (2) Child care institutions--routine day-to-day direction and 

arrangements to ensure the well-being and safety of the child.

    Foster family home means, for the purpose of title IV-E eligibility, 

the home of an individual or family licensed or



[[Page 265]]



approved as meeting the standards established by the State licensing or 

approval authority(ies) (or with respect to foster family homes on or 

near Indian reservations, by the tribal licensing or approval 

authority(ies)), that provides 24-hour out-of-home care for children. 

The term may include group homes, agency-operated boarding homes or 

other facilities licensed or approved for the purpose of providing 

foster care by the State agency responsible for approval or licensing of 

such facilities. Foster family homes that are approved must be held to 

the same standards as foster family homes that are licensed. Anything 

less than full licensure or approval is insufficient for meeting title 

IV-E eligibility requirements. States may, however, claim title IV-E 

reimbursement during the period of time between the date a prospective 

foster family home satisfies all requirements for licensure or approval 

and the date the actual license is issued, not to exceed 60 days.

    Full review means the joint Federal and State review of all 

federally-assisted child and family services programs in the States, 

including family preservation and support services, child protective 

services, foster care, adoption, and independent living services, for 

the purpose of determining the State's substantial conformity with the 

State plan requirements of titles IV-B and IV-E as listed in Sec.  

1355.34 of this part. A full review consists of two phases, the 

statewide assessment and a subsequent on-site review, as described in 

Sec.  1355.33 of this part.

    Legal guardianship means a judicially-created relationship between 

child and caretaker which is intended to be permanent and self-

sustaining as evidenced by the transfer to the caretaker of the 

following parental rights with respect to the child: protection, 

education, care and control of the person, custody of the person, and 

decision-making. The term legal guardian means the caretaker in such a 

relationship.

    National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System (NCANDS) means the 

voluntary national data collection and analysis system established by 

the Administration for Children and Families in response to a 

requirement in the Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act (Pub. L. 93-

247), as amended.

    Partial review means:

    (1) For the purpose of the child and family services review, the 

joint Federal and State review of one or more federally-assisted child 

and family services program(s) in the States, including family 

preservation and support services, child protective services, foster 

care, adoption, and independent living services. A partial review may 

consist of any of the components of the full review, as mutually agreed 

upon by the State and the Administration for Children and Families as 

being sufficient to determine substantial conformity of the reviewed 

components with the State plan requirements of titles IV-B and IV-E as 

listed in Sec.  1355.34 of this part; and

    (2) For the purpose of title IV-B and title IV-E State plan 

compliance issues that are outside the prescribed child and family 

services review format, e.g., compliance with AFCARS requirements, a 

review of State laws, policies, regulations, or other information 

appropriate to the nature of the concern, to determine State plan 

compliance.

    Permanency hearing means:

    (1) The hearing required by section 475(5)(C) of the Act to 

determine the permanency plan for a child in foster care. Within this 

context, the court (including a Tribal court) or administrative body 

determines whether and, if applicable, when the child will be:

    (i) Returned to the parent;

    (ii) Placed for adoption, with the State filing a petition for 

termination of parental rights;

    (iii) Referred for legal guardianship;

    (iv) Placed permanently with a fit and willing relative; or

    (v) Placed in another planned permanent living arrangement, but only 

in cases where the State agency has documented to the State court a 

compelling reason for determining that it would not be in the best 

interests of the child to follow one of the four specified options 

above.

    (2) The permanency hearing must be held no later than 12 months 

after the date the child is considered to have entered foster care in 

accordance with the definition at Sec.  1355.20 of this part or



[[Page 266]]



within 30 days of a judicial determination that reasonable efforts to 

reunify the child and family are not required. After the initial 

permanency hearing, subsequent permanency hearings must be held not less 

frequently than every 12 months during the continuation of foster care. 

The permanency hearing must be conducted by a family or juvenile court 

or another court of competent jurisdiction or by an administrative body 

appointed or approved by the court which is not a part of or under the 

supervision or direction of the State agency. Paper reviews, ex parte 

hearings, agreed orders, or other actions or hearings which are not open 

to the participation of the parents of the child, the child (if of 

appropriate age), and foster parents or preadoptive parents (if any) are 

not permanency hearings.

    State means, for title IV-B, the 50 States, the District of 

Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, Guam, the Virgin Islands, the 

Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa. For 

title IV-E the term ``State'' means the 50 States, the District of 

Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin 

Islands, Guam, and American Samoa.

    State agency means the State agency administering or supervising the 

administration of the title IV-B and title IV-E State plans and the 

title XX social services block grant program. An exception to this 

requirement is permitted by section 103(d) of the Adoption Assistance 

and Child Welfare Act of 1980 (Pub. L. 96-272). Section 103(d) provides 

that, if on December 1, 1974, the title IV-B program (in a State or 

local agency) and the social services program under section 402(a)(3) of 

the Act (the predecessor program to title XX) were administered by 

separate agencies, that separate administration of the programs could 

continue at State option.

    Statewide assessment means the initial phase of a full review of all 

federally-assisted child and family services programs in the States, 

including family preservation and support services, child protective 

services, foster care, adoption, and independent living services as 

described in Sec.  1355.33(b) of this part, for the purpose of 

determining the State's substantial conformity with the State plan 

requirements of titles IV-B and IV-E as listed in Sec.  1355.34 of this 

part.

    (b) Unless otherwise specified, the definitions contained in section 

475 of the Act apply to all programs under titles IV-E and IV-B of the 

Act.



[48 FR 23114, May 23, 1983, as amended at 57 FR 30429, July 9, 1992; 58 

FR 67924, Dec. 22, 1993; 61 FR 58653, Nov. 18, 1996; 65 FR 4076, Jan. 

25, 2000; 66 FR 58675, Nov. 23, 2001]