Employment and Training Services for Noncustodial Parents in the Child Support Program, 100789-100810 [2024-29081]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 240 / Friday, December 13, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
(1) The standards identified in
paragraph (c) and (d) of this section.
(2) The following standards:
(i) Retail pharmacy drugs. The
NCPDP Telecommunication Standard
Implementation Guide Version F6,
January 2020 and equivalent NCPDP
Batch Standard Implementation Guide,
Version 15, October 2017 (both
incorporated by reference in § 162.920).
(ii) Dental, professional, and
institutional request for review and
response. The ASC X12 Standards for
Electronic Data Interchange Technical
Report Type 3—Health Care Services
Review—Request for Review and
Response (278), May 2006, ASC X12N/
005010X217, and Errata to Health Care
Services Review—Request for Review
and Response (278), ASC X12 Standards
for Electronic Data Interchange
Technical Report Type 3, April 2008,
ASC X12N/005010X217E1 (both
incorporated by reference in § 162.920).
(f) For the period on and after
February 11, 2028, the standards
identified in paragraph (e)(2) of this
section.
■ 6. Section 162.1802 is amended by—
■ a. In paragraph (c), by removing the
phrase ‘‘For the period on and after the
January 1, 2012,’’ and adding in its
place the phrase ‘‘For the period from
January 1, 2012 through August 11,
2027’’;
■ b. In paragraph (d), by removing the
phrase ‘‘For the period on and after
September 21, 2020,’’ and adding in its
place the phrase ‘‘For the period on and
after September 21, 2020 through
August 11, 2027’’; and
■ c. Adding paragraphs (e) and (f).
The additions read as follows:
§ 162.1802 Standards for coordination of
benefits information transaction.
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*
*
*
*
*
(e) For the period from August 11,
2027 through February 11, 2028, both of
the following:
(1) The standards identified in
paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section.
(2) The following standards:
(i) Retail pharmacy drug claims. The
NCPDP Telecommunication Standard
Implementation Guide Version F6,
January 2020 and equivalent NCPDP
Batch Standard Implementation Guide,
Version 15, October 2017 (both
incorporated by reference in § 162.920).
(ii) Dental health care claims. The
ASC X12 Standards for Electronic Data
Interchange Technical Report Type 3—
Health Care Claim: Dental (837), May
2006, ASC X12N/005010X224, and
Type 1 Errata to Health Care Claim:
Dental (837) ASC X12 Standards for
Electronic Data Interchange Technical
Report Type 3, October 2007, ASC
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16:42 Dec 12, 2024
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X12N/005010X224A1 (both
incorporated by reference in § 162.920).
(3) Professional health care claims.
The ASC X12 Standards for Electronic
Data Interchange Technical Report Type
3—Health Care Claim: Professional
(837), May 2006, ASC X12N/
005010X222 (incorporated by reference
in § 162.920).
(4) Institutional health care claims.
The ASC X12 Standards for Electronic
Data Interchange Technical Report Type
3—Health Care Claim: Institutional
(837), May 2006, ASC X12N/
005010X223, and Type 1 Errata to
Health Care Claim: Institutional (837)
ASC X12 Standards for Electronic Data
Interchange Technical Report Type 3,
October 2007, ASC X12N/
005010X223A1 (incorporated by
reference in § 162.920).
(f) For the period on and after
February 11, 2028, the standards
identified in paragraph (e)(2) of this
section.
7. Section 162.1902 is revised to read
as follows:
■
§ 162.1902 Standard for Medicaid
pharmacy subrogation transaction.
The Secretary adopts the following
standards for the Medicaid pharmacy
subrogation transaction:
(a) For the period from January 1,
2012 through August 11, 2027—The
NCPDP Batch Standard Medicaid
Subrogation Implementation Guide,
Version 3.0, July 2007 (incorporated by
reference at § 162.920).
(b) For the period from August 11,
2027 through February 11, 2028—
(1) The standards identified in
paragraph (a) of this section; and
(2) The NCPDP Subrogation
Implementation Guide for Batch
Standard, Version 10, September 2019
(incorporated by reference at § 162.920).
(c) For the period on and after
February 11, 2028, the standard
identified in paragraph (b) of this
section.
Xavier Becerra,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services.
[FR Doc. 2024–29138 Filed 12–12–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4150–28–P
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100789
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Administration for Children and
Families
45 CFR Parts 302, 303, 304, and 309
RIN 0970–AD00
Employment and Training Services for
Noncustodial Parents in the Child
Support Program
Office of Child Support
Services (OCSS), Administration for
Children and Families (ACF),
Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS or the Department).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
In an effort to make the child
support program more effective, OCSS
(or the Office) issues this final rule to
allow State and Tribal child support
agencies the option to use Federal
financial participation (FFP) available
under title IV–D of the Social Security
Act to provide the following
employment and training services to
eligible noncustodial parents: job search
assistance; job readiness training; job
development and job placement
services; skills assessments; job
retention services; work supports; and
occupational training and other skills
training directly related to employment.
DATES: This rule is effective on January
13, 2025.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Chad Edinger, Program Specialist, OCSS
Division of Regional Operations, at mail
to: ocss.dpt@acf.hhs.gov or (303) 844–
1213. Telecommunications Relay users
may dial 711 first.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Statutory Authority
This rule is published under the
authority granted to the Secretary of
Health and Human Services by section
1102 of the Social Security Act (the Act)
(42 U.S.C. 1302). Section 1102 of the
Act authorizes the Secretary to publish
regulations, not inconsistent with the
Act, as may be necessary to the efficient
administration of the functions with
which the Secretary is responsible
under the Act.
This rule is also authorized by
sections 452(a)(1) and 454(13) of the Act
(42 U.S.C. 652(a)(1) and 654(13)).
Section 452(a)(1) of the Act expressly
delegates authority to the Secretary’s
designee requiring the designee to
‘‘establish such standards for State
programs for locating noncustodial
parents, establishing paternity, and
obtaining child support . . . as he
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determines to be necessary to assure
that such programs will be effective.’’
Section 454 of the Act establishes
requirements that States must include in
their title IV–D 1 State plans, the costs of
which are eligible for FFP under section
455 of the Act (42 U.S.C. 655).
Specifically, section 454(13) of the Act
provides the Secretary with delegated
authority to require the State’s title IV–
D plan to ‘‘provide that the State will
comply with such other requirements
and standards as the Secretary
determines to be necessary to the
establishment of an effective program
for locating noncustodial parents,
establishing paternity, obtaining support
orders, and collecting support payments
. . . .’’ State plans may be updated at
any time and a State would submit
updates to their State plan at the time
of electing to provide employment and
training services.
This rule is further published in
accordance with section 455(f) of the
Act (42 U.S.C. 655(f)) which authorizes
the Secretary to make child support
funding available to Tribes and Tribal
organizations operating child support
programs and to issue regulations
establishing requirements for Tribal
child support programs.
The rulemaking is also consistent
with section 451 of the Act, which
authorizes Federal funding to States for
enforcing support obligations, obtaining
child support payments, and assuring
that assistance in obtaining support is
available to all children.
Background
The purpose of this rule is to allow
State and Tribal child support agencies
the option to use FFP under title IV–D
of the Act to provide certain optional
and nonduplicative employment and
training services for eligible
noncustodial parents in the child
support program.
In 1975, Congress established the
child support program under title IV–D
of the Social Security Act (Pub. L. 93–
647) to provide funding to States for
effective enforcement of child support
obligations. The child support program
is administered at the Federal level by
the OCSS and functions in all States and
over 60 Tribes.2 The program has
evolved over the past 50 years and has
been guided by the changing needs of
families, by Federal legislation, and by
research and data that contribute to
OCSS’s understanding of the standards
and requirements necessary to establish
1 Sections 451–469B of the Social Security Act, 42
U.S.C. 651–669b.
2 Throughout this final rule, States include the 50
States, the District of Columbia, Guam, Puerto Rico,
and the Virgin Islands.
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an effective child support program.
Today the program is focused on
delivering child support services that
improve the financial support of
children, by collecting and facilitating
consistent child support payments
based on the noncustodial parents’
ability to pay.
Families and labor market
opportunities have fundamentally
changed since 1975. The percentage of
children who need child support
services has increased and the ability of
noncustodial parents to pay child
support has declined.3 In calendar year
2021, 40 percent of births were to
unmarried women, up from 14 percent
in 1975.4 In calendar year 2023, 25
percent of children lived with a single
parent, up from 17 percent in 1975.5 In
fiscal year 2023, the child support
program served one in five children in
the United States, or 12.7 million
children.6 The labor market has been
particularly difficult for less-educated
men during this period, leaving them
with significantly fewer job
opportunities and less income than
before. In 2015, the real hourly earnings
for men 25–54 years old with only a
high school degree was 18 percent lower
than it was in 1973.7 As of 2018, over
70 percent of noncustodial parents had
not attended college.8 In 2017, more
3 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services,
National Center for Health Statistics, ‘‘Nonmarital
Childbearing in the United States, 1940–99,’’
National Vital Statistics Reports, 48: 16 (October 18,
2000), available at https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/
nvsr/nvsr48/nvs48_16.pdf. Osterman, Michelle J.K.,
Brady E. Hamilton, Joyce A. Martin, Anne K.
Driscoll, and Claudia P. Valenzuela, ‘‘Births: Final
Data for 2021,’’ National Vital Statistics Reports, 72:
1 (January 31, 2023), available at https://
www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr72/nvsr72-01.pdf.
U.S. Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency
Prevention. ‘‘OJJDP Statistical Briefing Book,’’
(March 2024) available at https://www.ojjdp.gov/
ojstatbb/population/qa01201.asp?qaDate=2023.
Binder, Ariel J. and John Bound, ‘‘The Declining
Labor Market Prospects of Less-Educated Men,’’
Journal of Economic Perspectives, 33: 2 (2019),
available at https://pubs.aeaweb.org/doi/pdfplus/
10.1257/jep.33.2.163. Sanders, Patrick,
‘‘Demographic and Socioeconomic Characteristics
of Nonresident Parents,’’ Washington, DC:
Congressional Research Service, R46942 (October
2021) available at https://crsreports.congress.gov/
product/pdf/R/R46942.
4 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
(October 18, 2000). Osterman, Michelle J.K., et al.
(January 31, 2023).
5 U.S. Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency
Prevention (March 2024).
6 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services,
Administration for Children and Families, Office of
Child Support Services, ‘‘2023 Child Support: More
Money for Families,’’ undated, available at https://
www.acf.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/documents/
ocse/2023_infographic_national.pdf.
7 Binder, Ariel J. and John Bound (2019). See page
163 of the article where the authors note that they
use the Personal Consumption Expenditure deflator
when reporting real hourly earnings.
8 Sanders, Patrick (October 2021). This report
uses the term ‘‘nonresident parent’’ rather than
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than one-third of noncustodial parents
(3.4 million) lived in families with
incomes below 200 percent of the
official poverty thresholds, and 43
percent did not work full-time, yearround.9 Stable employment is
particularly important for a parent to be
able to make reliable consistent child
support payments for their children.
Other societal changes have also
affected the child support program,
including greatly elevated incarceration
rates. Incarceration rates increased
dramatically between 1980 and 2008
and have since declined, but the percent
of the U.S. population incarcerated in
2020 was more than double the figure in
1980.10 It is estimated that six percent
of all children in the United States have
a parent who is or has been
incarcerated.11 Research shows that the
subgroup of noncustodial parents who
participate in employment and training
programs have high rates of prior
arrests, convictions, and incarceration.12
For example, 65 percent of noncustodial
noncustodial parent. It defines a nonresident parent
as a person 15 years or older who does not reside
for a majority of nights in the same household as
one or more of his or her biological, adopted, or
stepchildren under age 21. This definition is very
similar to the definition of a noncustodial parent
used by the child support program. For purposes of
the child support program, a noncustodial parent is
a parent who does not have primary care, custody,
or control of the child, and who may have an
obligation to pay child support (see Office of Child
Support Services, Glossary of Common Terms
available at https://www.acf.hhs.gov/css/
glossary#N).
9 Id.
10 Kluckow, Rich and Zhen Zeng ‘‘Correctional
Populations in the United States, 2020—Statistical
Tables’’ (March 2022), Lauren E. Glaze,
‘‘Correctional Populations in the United States,
2010’’ (December 2011), and Louis W. Jankowski,
Louis W., ‘‘Correctional Populations in the United
States, 1990’’ (July 1992), U.S. Department of
Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice
Statistics, all available at https://bjs.ojp.gov/library/
publications/list?series_filter=Correctional%20
Populations%20in%20the%20United%20States.
Historical U.S. population data available at https://
www.census.gov/data/tables/time-series/dec/
popchange-data-text.html.
11 The Annie E. Casey Foundation, ‘‘Children
Who Had a Parent Who Was Ever Incarcerated by
Race and Ethnicity in United States’’ (May 2023)
available at https://datacenter.aecf.org/data/tables/
9734-children-who-had-a-parent-who-was-everincarcerated-by-race-and-ethnicity#detailed/1/any/
false/2043,1769,1696,1648,1603/10,11,9,12,1,13/
18995,18996.
12 Miller, Cynthia, and Virginia Knox, ‘‘The
Challenge of Helping Low-Income Fathers Support
Their Children: Final Lessons From Parents’ Fair
Share,’’ New York: Manpower Demonstration
Research Corporation (MDRC) (2001), available at
https://www.mdrc.org/sites/default/files/full_
529.pdf. Barden, Bret, Randall Juras, Cindy
Redcross, Mary Farrell, Dan Bloom, ‘‘New
Perspectives on Creating Jobs: Final Impacts of the
Next Generation of Subsidized Employment
Programs,’’ New York: MDRC (May 2018), available
at https://www.mdrc.org/sites/default/files/ETJD_
STED_Final_Impact_Report_2018_508Compliant_
v2.pdf.
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parents who enrolled in a recently
completed national demonstration of
child support-led employment and
training programs reported that they had
been previously incarcerated.13 Having
an incarceration record is a barrier to
employment that diminishes earnings
potential, reducing a parent’s ability to
work and pay child support.14
In 1996, Congress enacted the
Personal Responsibility and Work
Opportunity Reconciliation Act
(PRWORA, Pub. L. 104–193), which
made significant changes to the child
support program.15 These changes
included the introduction of a new
‘‘family first’’ child support payment
distribution policy, which required that
families who previously received cash
assistance must receive certain child
support arrearage payments before the
State and Federal governments retain
their share of collections.16 PRWORA
also amended the Social Security Act to
allow courts and child support agencies
to require noncustodial parents owing
past-due child support for a child
receiving assistance under the
Temporary Assistance for Needy
Families (TANF) program to participate
in work activities. Specifically, section
466(a)(15) of the Act requires States to
have laws and procedures under which
the State has the authority to issue an
order requiring an individual to
participate in work activities, as defined
by section 407(d) of the Act.17
13 Maria Cancian, Maria, Angela Guarin, Leslie
Hodges, and Daniel R. Meyer, ‘‘Characteristics of
Participants in the Child Support Noncustodial
Parent Employment Demonstration (CSPED)
Evaluation,’’ Madison, WI: Institute for Research on
Poverty (December 2019), Appendix Table C3,
available at https://www.irp.wisc.edu/wp/wpcontent/uploads/2019/05/CSPED-FinalCharacteristics-of-Participants-Report-2019Compliant.pdf.
14 Travis, Jeremy, Bruce Western, & Steve
Redburn, (Eds.) The Growth of Incarceration in the
United States: Exploring Causes and Consequences.
Washington, DC: The National Academies Press,
(2014), available at https://nap.national
academies.org/catalog/18613/the-growth-ofincarceration-in-the-united-states-exploring-causes.
15 Legler, Paul, The Coming Revolution in Child
Support Policy: Implications of the 1996 Welfare
Act Family Law Quarterly, Vol. 30, No. 3 (Fall
1996), pp. 519–563, available at https://
www.jstor.org/stable/25740093.
16 Congressional Research Service, ‘‘The Child
Support Enforcement Program: Summary of Laws
Enacted Since 1950,’’ Washington, DC:
Congressional Research Service, R47630 (July 2023)
available at https://crsreports.congress.gov/
product/pdf/R/R47630.
17 In section 407(d) of the Act, work activities are
defined as: (1) unsubsidized employment; (2)
subsidized private sector employment; (3)
subsidized public sector employment; (4) work
experience (including work associated with the
refurbishing of publicly assisted housing) if
sufficient private sector employment is not
available; (5) on-the-job training; (6) job search and
job readiness assistance; (7) community service
programs; (8) vocational educational training (not to
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In 1997, Congress authorized a total of
$3 billion for the Welfare-to-Work
(WtW) Grants program as part of the
Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (Pub. L.
105–33). Administered by the U.S.
Department of Labor, these grants were
intended to help long-term welfare
recipients and noncustodial parents of
children whose custodial parents met
certain criteria find and keep good
jobs.18 Congress appropriated funds for
fiscal years 1998 and 1999, and grantees
were allowed five years to spend their
funds, which ended in 2004. OCSS
encouraged IV–D and IV–A agencies
(TANF agencies) to work together to
increase the participation of
noncustodial parents in WtW programs
and encouraged States to make ‘‘special
efforts to inform potentially eligible
noncustodial parents about the
existence and availability of WtW
services.’’ 19
In addition, OCSS issued policy
guidance in PIQ–98–03 20 and AT–00–
08 21 to respond to State inquiries about
the availability of FFP under title IV–D
to pay for the costs of work activities for
noncustodial parents under section
466(a)(15) of the Act. OCSS concluded
that because section 466(a)(15) of the
Act did not require that IV–D programs
establish, provide, or administer work
activity programs for noncustodial
parents, the costs of these activities
could not be attributed to the IV–D
program. In guidance, OCSS stated that
under section 466(a)(15) of the Act FFP
was available ‘‘for the identification and
referral of unemployed noncustodial
parents to job training, coordination
with courts regarding compliance with
court orders, tracking participation, and
data collection,’’ but was not available
for ‘‘training and services provided by
exceed 12 months with respect to any individual);
(9) job skills training directly related to
employment; (10) education directly related to
employment, in the case of a recipient who has not
received a high school diploma or a certificate of
high school equivalency; (11) satisfactory
attendance at secondary school or in a course of
study leading to a certificate of general equivalence,
in the case of a recipient who has not completed
secondary school or received such a certificate; and
(12) the provision of child care services to an
individual who is participating in a community
service program. Available at https://www.ssa.gov/
OP_Home/ssact/title04/0407.htm.
18 U.S. Department of Labor, ‘‘Training and
Employment Guidance Letter No. 15–01, General
Program Questions,’’ Reissued March 22, 2002,
available at https://www.dol.gov/sites/dolgov/files/
ETA/advisories/TEGL/2002/TEGL15-01_GP.pdf.
19 See AT–00–08, available at https://
www.acf.hhs.gov/css/policy-guidance/questionsand-responses-regarding-collaborative-efforts-iv-dagencies-and.
20 PIQ–98–03 is available at: https://
www.dshs.wa.gov/sites/default/files/ESA/dcs/
documents/OCSE_PIQ_90_99.pdf.
21 AT–00–08, supra note 17.
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100791
entities other than the IV–D agency.’’ 22
OCSS viewed the determination of
eligibility for and cost of participation
in WtW programs as ‘‘the
responsibilities of the WtW grantees, not
the courts or the IV–D agency.’’ 23
This final rule allows FFP for
employment and training services for
noncustodial parents under the separate
authority provided to the Secretary in
sections 451(a)(1) and 454(13) of the
Act. As mentioned above, sections
451(a)(1) and 454(13) of the Act provide
the Secretary with delegated authority
to establish requirements and standards
that the Secretary determines to be
necessary to the establishment of an
effective child support program. Upon
reviewing the results of research studies
detailed below, and described in the
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking,
indicating that providing employment
and training services for noncustodial
parents can lead to more reliable and
regular child support payments, the
Secretary has determined that allowing
funding under title IV–D for such
services improves the effectiveness of
the child support program.
In the decades that followed OCSS’s
policy guidance of 1998 and 2000,
national demonstrations and state-based
programs have examined the
effectiveness of providing employment
and training services to unemployed
and underemployed noncustodial
parents. Collectively, these
demonstrations and programs found
positive outcomes in employment rates,
earnings, child support payment rates,
the amount of child support paid, and
payment regularity.24
22 Id.
23 Id.
24 Miller, Cynthia, and Virginia Knox (November
2001). Perez-Johnson, Irma, Jacqueline Kauff, Alan
Hershey, ‘‘Giving Noncustodial Parents Options:
Employment and Child Support Outcomes of the
SHARE Program,’’ Princeton, NJ: Mathematica
Policy Research (October 2003), available at https://
aspe.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/migrated_legacy_
files/39936/report.pdf. Pearson, Jessica, Nancy
Thoennes, Lanae Davis, David Price, Jane Venohr
and Tracy Griffith, ‘‘OCSE Responsible Fatherhood
Programs: Client Characteristics and Program
Outcomes,’’ Denver, CO: Center for Policy Research
and Policy Studies Inc. (September 2003), available
at https://www.frpn.org/asset/ocse-responsiblefatherhood-programs-client-characteristics-andprogram-outcomes. Martinson, Karin, Demetra
Smith Nightingale, Pamela A. Holcomb, Burt S.
Barnow, and John Trutko, ‘‘Partners for Fragile
Families Demonstration Projects: Employment and
Child Support Outcomes and Trends,’’ Washington,
DC: The Urban Institute (September 2007), available
at https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/
publication/46816/411567-Partners-for-FragileFamilies-Demonstration-Projects.PDF. Schroeder,
Daniel and Nicholas Doughty, ‘‘Texas NonCustodial Parent Choices: Program Impact
Analysis,’’ Austin, TX: Lyndon B. Johnson School
of Public Affairs, University of Texas (September
2009), available at https://sites.utexas.edu/
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Research shows that reliable child
support depends on the economic
stability of noncustodial parents. For
example, in Wisconsin, noncustodial
fathers who paid at least 90 percent of
their order during the first year after it
was established were 9 times as likely
to work all four quarters that year than
those who paid nothing.25 Nationally,
over 70 percent of child support
collections are made through wage
withholding by employers.26
Noncustodial parents with irregular
employment are particularly unlikely to
pay the full amount of their child
support order.27 As a result, substantial
arrears accrue.
Data regarding unpaid child support
debt shows that 78 percent of the $114
billion in child support arrears that was
owed in fiscal year (FY) 2022 was owed
by parents who had annual reported
raymarshallcenter/files/2005/07/NCP_Choices_
Final_Sep_03_2009.pdf. Lippold, Kye, Austin
Nichols, and Elaine Sorensen, ‘‘Strengthening
Families Through Stronger Fathers: Final Impact
Report for the Pilot Employment Programs,’’
Washington, DC: Urban Institute (October 2011),
available at https://www.urban.org/sites/default/
files/publication/26676/412442-StrengtheningFamilies-Through-Stronger-Fathers-Final-ImpactReport-for-the-Pilot-Employment-Programs.PDF.
Born, Catherine E., Pamela Caudill Ovwigho, and
Correne Saunders, ‘‘The Noncustodial Parent
Employment Program: Employment and Payment
Outcomes,’’ Baltimore, MD: Family Welfare
Research and Training Group, University of
Maryland, School of Social Work (April 2011),
available at https://www.ssw.umaryland.edu/
media/ssw/fwrtg/child-support-research/csinitiatives/npep.pdf?&. Pearson, Jessica, Lanae
Davis and Jane Venohr, ‘‘Parents to Work! Program
Outcomes and Economic Impacts,’’ Denver, CO:
Center for Policy Research (February 2011),
available at https://centerforpolicyresearch.org/wpcontent/uploads/ParentsToWork.pdf. Davis, Lanae,
Jessica Pearson, and Nancy Thoennes. ‘‘Evaluation
of the Tennessee Parent Support Program,’’ Denver,
CO: Center for Policy Research (November 2013),
available at https://centerforpolicyresearch.org/wpcontent/uploads/EvaluationTennesseeParent
SupportProgram.pdf. Sorensen, Elaine, ‘‘What We
Learned from Recent Federal Evaluations of
Programs Serving Disadvantaged Noncustodial
Parents.’’ Washington, DC: Office of Planning,
Research, and Evaluation, Administration for
Children and Families, U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services (November 2020), available at
https://www.acf.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/
documents/opre/OPRE%20NCP%20
Employment%20Brief_508.pdf. Wasserman, Kyla,
Lily Freedman, Zaina Rodney, and Caroline
Schultz, ‘‘Connecting Parents to Occupational
Training: A Partnership Between Child Support
Agencies and Local Service Providers,’’ New York:
MDRC (April 2021), available at https://
www.mdrc.org/sites/default/files/FamiliesForward_
Report_0.pdf.
25 Cancian, Maria, Yoona Kim, and Daniel R.
Meyer, ‘‘Who Is Not Paying Child Support?’’
Madison, WI: Institute for Research on Poverty
(September 2021), available at https://
www.irp.wisc.edu/wp/wp-content/uploads/2021/
11/CSRPA-2020-2022-T2.pdf.
26 DCL–23–06, OCSS Preliminary FY 2022 Data
Report and Tables, available at https://
www.acf.hhs.gov/css/policy-guidance/fy-2022preliminary-data-report-and-tables.
27 Cancian, Maria, et al. (September 2021).
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incomes below $20,000, which is
consistent with earlier published
research that examined child support
debt in nine States and found a similar
result.28 Studies have also shown that
owing large amounts of child support
arrears among low-income noncustodial
parents can be counterproductive to the
goals of the child support program as it
can push these parents further away
from the formal labor market, reduce
their child support payments, and
distance them from their children.29
Parents who owe large amounts of
arrears can be discouraged from working
in jobs that withhold income for child
support, especially if they can easily
turn to other means of earning money
where child support is not typically
withheld, such as self-employment or
working off the books.30
Based on the previously discussed
research and evidence and the
discussion below, OCSS has a greater
understanding of the effectiveness of
providing employment and training
services to noncustodial parents in
improving their ability to obtain
employment and make regular child
support payments. In allowing FFP for
such employment and training services,
28 The data regarding child support debt is based
on a random sample of noncustodial parents who
owed arrears in the OCSS Debtor File as of April
2022, which was matched to data from the National
Directory of New Hires. Reported income is the
amount of quarterly earnings and unemployment
insurance reported for the noncustodial parent in
the National Directory of New Hires for FY 2021.
The $113.4 billion figure is from the Office of Child
Support Services FY 2022 Preliminary Data Tables,
Table P–98 available at https://www.acf.hhs.gov/
css/policy-guidance/fy-2022-preliminary-datareport-and-tables. Sorensen, Elaine, Liliana Sousa,
and Simon Schaner, ‘‘Assessing Child Support
Arrears in Nine Large States and the Nation,’’
Washington, DC: Urban Institute (2007), available at
https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/
publication/29736/1001242-Assessing-ChildSupport-Arrears-in-Nine-Large-States-and-theNation.PDF.
29 Miller, Daniel P. and Ronald B. Mincy. ‘‘Falling
Further Behind? Child Support Arrears and Fathers’
Labor Force Participation,’’ Social Service Review
86:4 (2012), available at https://www.journals.
uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/668761. Cancian, Maria,
Carolyn Heinrich, and Yiyoon Chung,
‘‘Discouraging Disadvantaged Fathers’ Employment:
An Unintended Consequence of Policies Designed
to Support Families,’’ Journal of Policy Analysis
and Management 32:4 (2013), available at https://
www.researchgate.net/publication/264476066_
Discouraging_Disadvantaged_Fathers’_
Employment_An_Unintended_Consequence_of_
Policies_Designed_to_Support_Families. Kimberly
Turner and Maureen Waller, ‘‘Indebted
Relationships: Child Support Arrears and
Nonresident Fathers’ Involvement with Children.’’
Journal of Marriage and Family 79:1 (2017),
available at https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/
full/10.1111/jomf.12361.
30 Turetsky, Vicki and Maureen Waller. ‘‘Piling on
Debt: The Intersections Between Child Support
Arrears and Legal Financial Obligations.’’ UCLA
Criminal Justice Law Review, 4(1) (2020), available
at https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7vd043jw.
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we have not disregarded our previous
interpretation of section 466(a)(15) of
the Act. Section 466(a)(15) neither
authorizes nor prohibits the child
support program from providing
employment and training services to
noncustodial parents under title IV–D,
and is not the legal basis for this final
rule. OCSS bases this rule on sections
452(a)(1), 454(13) and 455(f), providing
the Secretary with broad delegated
express authority to establish standards
and requirements for State and Tribal
child support programs that make the
program more effective in ensuring that
children receive financial support from
their parent. This rule allows State and
Tribal expenses for providing these
services under their IV–D plan to be
eligible for FFP under section 455 of the
Act.
Relevant Studies of Employment and
Training Services
Since the 1990s, a significant body of
research has examined the effectiveness
of providing employment and training
services to unemployed and
underemployed parents who owe child
support.31
The first large-scale effort was
conducted by MDRC and was called
Parents’ Fair Share (PFS). PFS was first
implemented as a pilot program in nine
sites in 1992–1993, followed by a
national random assignment
demonstration implemented in seven
sites in 1994–1996. More than 5,500
noncustodial parents were randomly
assigned to PFS or a control group
during the national demonstration.32
The PFS demonstration gave
participating courts and child support
agencies the ability to refer noncustodial
parents facing contempt for nonpayment
of child support to the PFS program
where they received the following four
31 Employment and training programs for
noncustodial parents described here were evaluated
using one of three evaluation methods: evaluating
the outcomes of individuals randomly assigned to
the program (i.e. the treatment group) or receive
business as usual (i.e. the control group), typically
referred to as a random control trial (RCT) or an
experimental evaluation; evaluating the outcomes
of individuals who enrolled in the program
compared to a group of individuals who did not
enroll in the program but are similar to those who
did enroll, referred to here as a quasi-experimental
evaluation; and evaluations that examine the
outcomes of individuals who enrolled in the
program, typically before and after they entered the
program, which are often referred to as outcome
evaluations. The first two evaluation methods are
considered impact evaluations, which draw causal
inferences, while the third evaluation method is not
designed to attribute causality. Experimental
evaluations are considered to be the most rigorous
evaluation method, followed by quasi-experimental
evaluations. Outcome evaluations are considered
the least rigorous evaluation method.
32 Miller, Cynthia, and Virginia Knox (November
2001).
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core services: employment and training
services, enhanced child support
services, peer support, and mediation.
The employment and training services
included job search assistance/job clubs,
job development, classroom-based
education and training, on-the-job
training, and job retention services. The
enhanced child support services
included assigning smaller caseloads to
child support workers who handled PFS
cases, expediting modification of child
support orders, and offering flexible
rules that allowed child support orders
to be reduced while noncustodial
parents participated in PFS. Peer
support consisted of participating in a
facilitated support group built around a
responsible fatherhood curriculum
developed by MDRC. The lead agency
for these demonstration projects varied,
however, two were led by a local child
support agency.
The PFS demonstration found that
PFS significantly increased the
likelihood of paying child support
during the two-year follow-up period.
The average quarterly payment rate was
12 percent higher for parents who
enrolled in PFS than those who did
not.33 While the final PFS report did not
examine the regularity of child support
payments, the interim report did. It
found that parents who enrolled in PFS
during the first year of the
demonstration were 19 percent more
likely than the control group to pay
child support in at least four of the six
quarters during the 18-month follow-up
period.34
As noted earlier, in 1997, Congress
authorized the WtW Grants program to
help welfare recipients and
noncustodial parents find and keep
good jobs. A descriptive study
conducted as part of the national
evaluation of WtW grant programs
examined the strategies that 11
purposively selected WtW programs
used to provide employment services to
noncustodial parents. The study found
that a variety of organizations could
successfully operate employment and
training programs for noncustodial
parents.35 Eight of 11 programs
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33 Id.
34 Doolittle, Fred, Virginia Knox, Cynthia Miller,
and Sharon Rowser, ‘‘Building Opportunities,
Enforcing Obligations: Implementation and Interim
Impacts of Parents’ Fair Share,’’ New York: MDRC
(1998), table 6.3, available at https://www.mdrc.org/
sites/default/files/full_38.pdf.
35 Martinson, Karin, John Trutko, and Debra
Strong, ‘‘Serving Noncustodial Parents: A
Descriptive Study of Welfare-to-Work Programs,’’
Washington, DC: Urban Institute (December 2000),
available at https://www.urban.org/sites/default/
files/publication/62761/410340-ServingNoncustodial-Parents-A-Descriptive-Study-ofWelfare-to-Work-Programs.PDF.
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partnered with the State or Local child
support agency. Child support agencies
provided referrals, designated specific
staff to work with the program, and
offered flexible payment options and
debt reduction options for participants.
The principal employment services that
all of the WtW programs provided were
employability assessments,
individualized employment plans, job
search assistance, job readiness
activities, job retention services, and
assistance with transportation and work
expenses. Some of the WtW programs
also provided job development and
placement services, on-the-job training,
skills training, General Educational
Development (GED) instruction, basic
skills training, and work experience.
One WtW program that served
noncustodial parents was evaluated as
part of the national evaluation of the
WtW grants program.36 This program,
called Support Has A Rewarding Effect
(SHARE), operated in Yakima, Kittitas,
and Klickitat counties in the State of
Washington from July 1998 through
September 2001. It was led by the TriCounty Workforce Development Council
(WDC) and involved a strong
collaboration among Tri-County WDC,
the State’s Division of Child Support,
and the office of the Yakima County
prosecuting attorney (YCPA). SHARE
provided the courts and YCPA the
ability to offer WtW services to
noncustodial parents during a child
support contempt hearing for failure to
pay child support. WtW services
consisted of employability assessments,
individualized employment plans, and
other WtW services structured to meet
the needs of the noncustodial parent.
Job search workshops and referrals for
job openings were the principal service
offered, but noncustodial parents could
be offered pre-employment education,
vocational training, or on-the-job
training. After the noncustodial parent
had secured a job, WtW case
management continued for at least 90
days, during which time job retention
services were provided. WtW funds
were also available to help with work
supports such as transportation,
uniforms, work supplies, and other
short-term emergency needs. The
outcome evaluation examined
employment and child support payment
trends for 574 noncustodial parents who
were referred to the SHARE program.
The evaluation found that the earnings
and child support payments of
noncustodial parents referred to SHARE
increased substantially after being
referred to the program.37
36 Perez-Johnson,
Irma, et al. (October 2003).
37 Id.
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100793
In 1998, OCSS launched an eightState demonstration to test the
effectiveness of fatherhood programs.38
The purpose of these programs was to
assist unemployed or low-income
noncustodial parents in paying their
child support by improving their
employment and earnings and
encouraging more involved parenting.
States were given wide latitude in
program format, services provided, and
client eligibility. Most States partnered
with community-based organizations to
lead the project and most projects
offered employment services. The exact
package of employment services varied
by project, but employment services
across all projects included job search
assistance, job readiness services, job
development and placement, work
supports, and vocational skills training
and assessments. This demonstration
was evaluated by comparing participant
outcomes before and after enrollment in
the program. The outcome evaluation
found that the percent of participants
paying child support increased after
enrollment in every participating State,
by amounts ranging from four percent to
31 percent.39 The average amount of
child support due that was paid also
increased after enrollment in every
participating State, by amounts ranging
from one percent to 16 percent.40
In 2000, OCSS and the Ford
Foundation launched a national
demonstration called Partners for
Fragile Families (PFF), which was
conducted in 13 sites and ended in
2003.41 The goals of this demonstration
were to promote voluntary paternity
establishment; improve the parenting
and relationship skills of young fathers;
and help young fathers secure and
retain employment. It targeted fathers
between the ages of 16 and 25 years old
who had not yet established paternity
and did not have extensive involvement
in the child support program. The lead
agency in all 13 sites was a communitybased organization, but each site
partnered with the local child support
agency and typically other
organizations, such as workforce
development agencies. The primary
service consisted of a series of
structured workshops on topics such as
fatherhood, parenting, job readiness and
38 Pearson,
39 Pearson,
Jessica, et al. (June 2000).
Jessica, et al. (September 2003).
40 Id.
41 Martinson, Karin, John Trutko, Demetra Smith
Nightingale, Pamela A. Holcomb, and Burt S.
Barnow, ‘‘The Implementation of the Partners for
Fragile Families Demonstration Projects,’’
Washington, DC: The Urban Institute (June 2007),
available at https://www.urban.org/sites/default/
files/publication/46576/411511-TheImplementation-of-the-Partners-for-FragileFamilies-Demonstration-Projects.PDF.
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job search, and child support. The exact
package of employment services varied
across projects, but the following
employment services were offered
across all projects: job readiness
instruction, job search assistance, job
referral and placement, job
development, on-the-job training, GED
classes, and job skills training. PFF
enrolled over 1,470 noncustodial
parents.42 The outcome evaluation of
PFF examined child support outcomes
of participants at the time of enrollment
and over the next two years. It found
that the percentage of participants with
child support orders increased from 14
percent to 35 percent during the first
two years after program enrollment.43 It
also found that the average number of
months participants paid child support
increased from 4.2 months to 5.2
months, and the average annual amount
of child support paid increased by 43
percent from $1,238 to $1,775 between
the first and second year after
enrollment.44
In 2005, the Child Support Division of
the Office of the Attorney General of
Texas and the Texas Workforce
Commission established the
Noncustodial Parent (NCP) Choices
program.45 The goal of the program is to
help parents make regular child support
payments and become financially
stable.46 This program remains in
operation today and is currently
operating in 21 of the 28 workforce
development board areas in Texas.47 To
be eligible to receive services,
noncustodial parents must be courtordered to participate. When a
noncustodial parent enters the program,
workforce development staff perform an
assessment of needs and barriers and
create an individual employment plan
designed to move that individual into a
stable employment situation. Additional
employment and training services
offered to noncustodial parents mirror
those provided to TANF recipients
under the Texas’ Choices Program.48
The services emphasize Work First,
providing job referrals and job search
assistance, and may include
development, support services, shortterm training, subsidized employment/
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42 Id,
Exhibit 2.1.
43 Martinson, Karin, et al. (September 2007).
44 Id.
45 Schroeder, Daniel and Nicholas Doughty
(September 2009).
46 Texas Workforce Commission, Noncustodial
Parent Choices Program, available at https://
www.twc.texas.gov/programs/noncustodial-parentchoices#:∼:text=The%20goal%20of%20NCP%20
Choices,A Alamo.
47 Id.
48 Texas Workforce Commission, Choices
Program, available at https://www.twc.texas.gov/
programs/choices.
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work experience, GED and English as a
Second Language classes, and job
retention and career advancement
assistance.
NCP Choices was evaluated during
the initial years of its operation.49 The
impact evaluation was based on data
from 2005 to 2009 and ten local
workforce development areas. It used a
quasi-experimental evaluation design.50
A total of 2,296 noncustodial parents
who participated in NCP Choices were
included in the evaluation. The
evaluation found monthly child support
collection rates among NCP Choices
participants were 47 percent higher than
the comparison group in the first year
after program enrollment, and the
amounts collected averaged $57 per
month higher.51 In addition, those
ordered into NCP Choices paid their
child support 50 percent more
consistently over time than the
comparison group.52 All of these
positive impacts continued well into the
second through fourth years after
program enrollment.53
In 2006, the New York State
Legislature enacted the Strengthening
Families Through Stronger Fathers
Initiative, a pilot program to help lowincome noncustodial parents find work
and pay their child support.54 The
legislation authorized funding for five
programs to provide employment and
other supportive services to low-income
noncustodial parents, which operated
from 2006 to 2009. Employment
services offered by the five programs
consisted of job search and placement
assistance, job readiness training, job
development, job skills training, and
49 Schroeder, Daniel and Nicholas Doughty
(September 2009).
50 Quasi-experimental designs aim to assess
causal relationships without using random
assignment. When evaluating a program, they
compare the group of individuals who participated
in the program to a group of individuals who did
not participate in the program who are as similar
as possible to those who participated in the
program in terms of pre-intervention characteristics.
For further information, see Handley, Margaret A.,
Courtney Lyles, Charles McCulloch, and Adithya
Cattamanchi, ‘‘Selecting and Improving QuasiExperimental Designs in Effectiveness and
Implementation Research’’ Annual Review of
Public Health 39 (2018), available at https://
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8011057/
pdf/nihms-1671041.pdf.
51 Schroeder, Daniel and Nicholas Doughty
(September 2009).
52 Id.
53 Id.
54 Tannehill, Tess G., Carolyn T. O’Brien, and
Elaine J. Sorensen, ‘‘Strengthening Families
Through Stronger Fathers Initiative: Process
Evaluation Report,’’ Washington, DC: Urban
Institute (July 2009), available at https://
www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/
28106/1001412-Strengthening-Families-ThroughStronger-Fathers-Initiative-Process-EvaluationReport.PDF.
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employment-related supports.55 One
program provided subsidized
employment and job retention and
career enhancement services. The pilot
programs served 3,668 noncustodial
parents.56 The impact evaluation used a
quasi-experimental design. It found that
Strengthening Families Through
Stronger Fathers increased the percent
of parents paying child support by 22
percent, and the amount of child
support paid by 35 percent in the first
year after enrollment compared to the
comparison group.57
In 2006, Maryland began the
Noncustodial Parent Employment
Program (NPEP), a joint effort of the
Child Support Enforcement and Family
Investment Administrations of the
Maryland Department of Human
Resources.58 The purpose of this
program is to provide employment
services to noncustodial parents who
are behind in their child support so that
they can be a reliable source of income
for their children. NPEP was a statewide
program in its initial years and still
operates today, but not in all counties.59
During its initial phase, each NPEP
program provided employment services
similar to those offered in WtW grants
programs. An evaluation of NPEP was
conducted, which examined 3,900
noncustodial parents referred to NPEP
in 2007 and 2008.60 Outcomes for these
participants were examined one year
before and after enrollment. The
outcome evaluation found that the
average amount of child support paid
increased from $1,094 in the year prior
to enrollment to $1,246 in the year after
enrollment, a 14 percent increase.61 It
also found that the average number of
months that a participant paid child
support rose from 3.7 months in the
year prior to enrollment to 4.5 months
in the year after enrollment, a 22
percent increase.62
In 2008, the Arapahoe County
Division of Child Support Enforcement,
the Arapahoe/Douglas Workforce
Center, and the 18th Judicial District
Court in Colorado established the
Parents to Work program to secure jobs
for unemployed and underemployed
55 Id.
56 Lippold,
Kye, et al. (October 2011).
57 Id.
58 Born,
Catherine E., et al. (April 2011).
is currently referred to as the
Noncustodial Party Employment Program.
Maryland Department of Human Services, Child
Support Administration. ‘‘Noncustodial Party
Employment Programs,’’ available at: https://
dhs.maryland.gov/child-support-services/
noncustodial-parents/noncustodial-parentemployment-programs/.
60 Born, Catherine E., et al. (April 2011).
61 Id.
62 Id.
59 NPEP
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noncustodial parents and generate child
support payments.63 The program is still
in operation today.64 An evaluation of
this program was conducted, which
examined the first two years of
operation. During that time the
following employment services were
offered: intensive job search assistance,
job readiness training, job placement,
job development, on-the-job training,
work experience, occupational and
vocational training, subsidized
employment, pre-GED or GED
preparation, and assistance with
transportation, work clothes and tools.
The quasi-experimental evaluation
examined the outcomes of participants
one year before and after enrollment and
compared them to a group of
noncustodial parents who did not
participate in Parents to Work.65 It
found that the average percentage of
child support due that was paid by the
treatment group rose from 36.6 percent
in the year prior to enrollment to 41.3
percent in the year following
enrollment, but it did not improve for
the comparison group.66 Payment
regularity also improved significantly
for the treatment group, rising from an
average of 5.3 payments in the year
prior to enrollment to 5.7 payments in
the year following enrollment, but again
payment regularity did not improve for
the comparison group.67
In 2009, the Tennessee Department of
Human Services was awarded a grant
from OCSS to develop, implement, and
evaluate a program providing
employment, parenting time, and case
management services to low-income,
unwed parents in the child support
program in three Tennessee judicial
districts. The program, called the Parent
Support Program (PSP), placed child
support staff known as Grant Program
Coordinators in each of the three local
child support offices to provide services
to families. These staff were the primary
63 Pearson,
Jessica, et al. (February 2011).
Works Workforce Center.
‘‘Parents to Work’’, available at: https://
www.adworks.org/job-seekers/programs/parents-towork/.
65 Pearson, Jessica, et al. (February 2011). Parents
to Work was intended to be evaluated using random
assignment, but the treatment group was
disproportionately selected from case worker and
court referrals, while the comparison group was
disproportionately selected from ad hoc reports.
Because of this difference in procedures, the two
groups were statistically significantly different prior
to program entry. In an effort to offset this
limitation, the study examined the outcomes of
noncustodial parents in both groups after
controlling for observed differences in pre-program
earnings, child support payments, and other
characteristics. The sample size for the evaluation
was 601 parents in the treatment group and 349 in
the comparison group.
66 Id.
67 Id.
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providers of employment, parenting
time, and case management services.
The Grant Program Coordinators
conducted a needs assessment at
enrollment and developed a service
plan for each participant. They also
provided job search and job readiness
assistance, job development, and
financial assistance with work-related
expenses. For other employment
services, such as job training,
participants were referred to other
service providers. Enrollment began in
January 2010 and ended in March 2013.
During that time, PSP enrolled 1,016
noncustodial parents. The evaluation
examined participant outcomes in the
year before and after enrollment. The
outcome evaluation found that the
average percentage of child support due
that participants paid rose from 33
percent in the year prior to enrollment
to 36 percent in the year after
enrollment.68
Many more States than those
discussed above have operated
employment and training programs for
noncustodial parents, but they have not
been able to use FFP to pay for these
services. This has limited the potential
impact and reach of these services. In
February 2014, 30 States and the District
of Columbia were operating 77
employment and training programs for
noncustodial parents with active child
support agency involvement. Three of
these States were operating statewide
programs—Georgia, Maryland, and
North Dakota. But only a few of these
programs have been able to secure
resource commitments to fund these
services in an ongoing, consistent, or
statewide basis. As a result, many
programs that were operating in 2014
are no longer in operation. Other
programs have had to scale back
because of reduced funding.
Nonetheless, because of the continued
work of child support agencies, some
new programs have emerged but there
are fewer States in 2024 that have
employment and training programs for
noncustodial parents with active child
support agency involvement than in
2014.69
Further Studies in Support of This Final
Rule
OCSS previously issued a notice of
proposed rulemaking on November 17,
2014, that included regulatory changes
similar to those included in this final
68 Davis,
Lanae, et al. (November 2013).
of Child Support Services. ‘‘Child
Support-led Employment Programs by State,’’
available at: https://www.acf.hhs.gov/css/trainingtechnical-assistance/child-support-ledemployment-programs-state.
69 Office
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100795
rule.70 Although the 2014 proposed rule
received overwhelming support from
States, many Members of Congress, and
the public, FFP for employment and
training services was not included in
the final rule issued on December 20,
2016, in order to allow for further study.
The final rule stated, ‘‘While we
appreciate the support the commenters
expressed, we think allowing for
Federal IV–D reimbursement for job
services needs further study and would
be ripe for implementation at a later
time.’’ See Flexibility, Efficiency, and
Modernization in Child Support
Enforcement Programs, Final Rule, 81
FR 93492, 93496 (December 20, 2016).
Since 2016, findings from two new
national demonstrations that offered
employment and training services to
noncustodial parents have been
released. They are the Child Support
National Parent Employment
Demonstration and Families Forward
Demonstration (FFD). These two
demonstrations added considerably to
OCSS’s understanding of the
effectiveness of employment programs
for noncustodial parents and further
informed the development of this rule.
Child Support National Parent
Employment Demonstration (CSPED)
CSPED was a randomized control trial
(RCT) demonstration designed to test
the effectiveness of child support-led
employment programs for noncustodial
parents. It was funded by OCSS, which
awarded demonstration grants to eight
State child support agencies in 2012.
These child support agencies operated
employment programs for noncustodial
parents in 18 local jurisdictions from
2013 to 2017. A total of 10,173
noncustodial parents enrolled in the
demonstration.71 CSPED was able to
reach a large number of noncustodial
parents in part because it recruited
noncustodial parents administratively
as well as during contempt hearings.
Key services included employment
services, enhanced child support
services, and parenting classes.
Employment services consisted of oneon-one job counseling, job search
assistance, job readiness training, and
job placement and retention services.
Programs were encouraged to offer
short-term job skills training and
70 See Flexibility, Efficiency, and Modernization
in Child Support Enforcement Programs, Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking, 79 FR 68548, 68556
(November 17, 2014).
71 Cancian, Maria, Daniel R. Meyer, Robert Wood,
‘‘Final Impact Findings from the Child Support
Noncustodial Parent Employment Demonstration,’’
Madison, WI: Institute for Research on Poverty
(March 2019), available at https://www.acf.hhs.gov/
sites/default/files/documents/ocse/csped_impact_
report.pdf.
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vocational educational training, but not
required to do so. Enhanced child
support services were expected to
include initiating order modifications if
needed, removing license suspensions,
and holding other enforcement remedies
in abeyance while parents participated
in the program, and reducing state-owed
arrears if permitted by State law.72
CSPED increased the effectiveness of
the child support program by increasing
noncustodial parents’ employment and
earnings as measured by quarterly
earnings, which, in turn, increased the
likelihood of paying child support
through wage withholding. Specifically,
it increased participants’ employment
rate by three percent during the first two
years after enrollment, and increased
their earnings by four percent during the
first year after enrollment, both of which
are measured using quarterly earnings.73
This, in turn, increased the likelihood of
participants paying child support
through income withholding by eight
percent during the first year after
enrollment.74 It also increased
noncustodial parents’ satisfaction with
the child support program, increased
noncustodial parent-child contact, and
improved noncustodial parents’
attitudes about responsibility for
children, all of which contributed to an
improved image of the child support
program and helped overcome
significant distrust among noncustodial
parents, paving the way for better
communication, more cooperation, and
a more effective child support
program.75 Finally, a benefit-cost
analysis of CSPED found that the
72 Office of Child Support Enforcement, ‘‘National
Child Support Noncustodial Parent Employment
Demonstration Projects,’’ Washington, DC: U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services,
Administration for Children and Families, HHS–
2012–ACF–OCSE–FD–0297 (2012), available at
https://www.acf.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/
documents/ocse/hhs-2012-acf-ocse-fd-0297_
csped.pdf.
73 Sorensen, Elaine (November 2020).
74 Id. While CSPED was successful at increasing
the likelihood of paying child support through
income withholding, it did not increase the amount
of child support paid. As noted in the text, CSPED
provided both employment and enhanced child
support services. It appears that these services
worked at cross-purposes to one another. As part of
enhanced child support services, child support
agencies offered order modification services to
participants, which reduced their average amount
of child support orders. Reducing child support
orders will necessarily reduce income withholding
orders, which reduces the amount of child support
paid since most child support is paid via income
withholding. In contrast, employment services are
designed to increase the employment and earnings
of noncustodial parents, which, in turn, are
expected to increase child support payments. Thus,
it appears that one service reduced the amount of
child support paid while the other increased it,
resulting in no impact on the amount of child
support paid.
75 Cancian, Maria, et al. (March 2019).
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benefits of CSPED outweighed its costs
within two years when the costs of
employment and parenting services
received by members of the regularservices group were taken into
account.76
Families Forward Demonstration
FFD was designed to test the
effectiveness of offering free
occupational training to increase
reliable child support payments. It
operated in five locations from 2018 to
2020 and enrolled 761 noncustodial
parents. FFD was funded through a
grant from the W. K. Kellogg
Foundation, local funding raised by
participating child support agencies,
and matching Federal funds through
section 1115 waivers 77 approved by the
Office of Child Support Services.78 FFD
provided the following three services to
noncustodial parents: free occupational
training, other employment services and
wraparound supports, and responsive
child support services. Free
occupational training targeted demanddriven occupations, which varied by
location. Other employment services
focused on job search and placement
assistance and career planning. The
most common wraparound supports
were work-related, such as assistance
with work-related transportation costs
or other work-related expenses.
Responsive child support services
included child support navigation,
arrears compromise programs, order
modification if needed, and suspension
of enforcement action.79 The evaluation
of this demonstration consisted of an
implementation study and an analysis
of child support outcomes for program
participants prior to and after program
enrollment.80 It found that the trends in
child support payments for
noncustodial parent participants
improved relative to their preenrollment trends.81 While this study
was not designed to attribute causality,
these findings suggest that offering free
training to noncustodial parents may
have a positive impact on child support
payments, providing further evidence
that offering training services to
76 Cancian, Maria, Daniel R. Meyer, and Robert G.
Wood, ‘‘Carrots Work Better than Sticks? Results
from the National Child Support Noncustodial
Parent Employment Demonstration,’’ Journal of
Policy Analysis and Management. 41:2 (2022),
available at https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/
epdf/10.1002/pam.22370.
77 See section 1115(a) and (b) of the Social
Security Act, 42 U.S.C. 1315(a) and (b).
78 The FFD program in New York was
additionally supported by the Robin Hood
Foundation.
79 Wasserman, Kyla, et al. (April 2021).
80 Id.
81 Id.
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noncustodial parents increases the
effectiveness of the child support
program.
Informed by the child support
program’s positive experience with
providing employment and training
programs, and the positive outcomes of
three decades of national
demonstrations and State evaluations,
OCSS has determined that providing
FFP under title IV–D for employment
and training services improves the
effectiveness of the child support
program. Thus, this final rule allows
States and Tribal child support
programs to access FFP for these
services and establishes standards and
requirements for States and Tribes or
Tribal organizations when opting to
provide federally funded employment
and training services under their IV–D
plans. This final rule provides
additional stability and support for
States and Tribal child support
programs to increase the effectiveness of
their respective programs for collecting
child support payments.
Summary Description of Regulatory
Changes
The following is a summary of the
regulatory provisions included in this
final rule and, where applicable, how
these provisions differ from the notice
of proposed rulemaking (NPRM). The
NPRM was published in the Federal
Register on May 31, 2024 (89 FR 47109
through 47120). The comment period
ended July 30, 2024.
This final rule allows States and
Tribes the option to use FFP to provide
certain employment and training
services designed to supplement
traditional enforcement tools to help
noncustodial parents find and retain
employment so they can support their
children.
Section 302.76 Employment and
Training Services
This rule adds a new optional State
plan provision at 45 CFR 302.76,
Employment and training services, to
allow States to provide certain
employment and training services to
eligible noncustodial parents in
accordance with the newly designated
§ 303.6(c)(5). This State plan provision
is optional as each State will need to
determine the level of resources the
State wishes to commit in order to draw
down Federal matching funds under
title IV–D.82 If a State chooses this
82 Under section 455 of the Social Security Act
(42 U.S.C. 655), the Federal government provides
reimbursement to each state program (including the
District of Columbia and territorial programs) of
66% of all allowable child support program
expenditures.
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option, § 302.76 requires that the State
include a description of the
employment and training services and
eligibility criteria in its State plan. In
addition, to ensure the IV–D agency is
providing well-coordinated and nonduplicative employment and training
services, it also requires that States
include in their State plan an
explanation of how the State child
support program has consulted with,
and taken into consideration services
provided by, the State agencies
administering the following programs:
TANF (45 CFR part 261), the
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance
Program Employment and Training
program (7 CFR 273.7 and 273.24), the
Adult, Dislocated Worker, and Youth
programs under Title I of the Workforce
Innovation and Opportunity Act (20
CFR parts 675 through 688), the Adult
Education and Family Literacy Act
program (34 CFR part 463), the
Employment Service program (20 CFR
part 652), and the Vocational
Rehabilitation program (34 CFR part
361). The final rule revises § 302.76 by
removing the reference included in the
NPRM to the ‘‘six core programs of the
state’s workforce development system
established under the Workforce
Innovation and Opportunity Act
(WIOA)’’ and instead identifies, by
name, the six core programs. These core
programs are the three programs for
Adults, Dislocated Workers, and Youth
under title I, the Adult Education and
Family Literacy Act program under title
II, the Employment Service program
under title III, and the Vocational
Rehabilitation program under title IV.
The final rule also requires that States
electing the option to provide
employment and training services using
FFP under title IV–D must comply with
future reporting requirements
prescribed by the Office.
States are required to consult with,
and take into consideration services
provided by, the State agencies
administering the listed programs in
order to provide the most appropriate
mix of services that ensures effective
service delivery for addressing the
multiple barriers to employment often
faced by low-income noncustodial
parents in their caseload, while
minimizing costs to the child support
program. We strongly encourage States
to partner with high-quality training
programs and other evidence-based
training models that have been shown to
lead to sustained earnings gains—to
increase noncustodial parents’ ability to
meet their financial obligations to their
children. Partnering with other
programs at the State and local level can
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allow child support programs to
broaden the types of services they
provide to noncustodial parents in their
caseload. OCSS’s policy goals are to
make it possible for State child support
agencies to provide employment and
training services to noncustodial parents
who need and lack access to services,
while minimizing unnecessary
duplication of services that are already
successfully being provided by the
listed federally-funded programs. We
encourage child support agencies to
partner wherever possible with local
American Job Centers to leverage their
specialized experience and knowledge
of job development and to partner with
labor organizations to access
employment and training services that
they provide.
OCSS anticipates that many State
child support agencies will purchase
employment and training services by
entering into contracts with public,
private and community-based
employment, fatherhood, and reentry
programs, community action agencies,
community colleges, or other service
providers, rather than offer these
services in-house, in accordance with 45
CFR 304.22, Federal financial
participation in purchased support
enforcement services. However, this
does not preclude a child support
agency from providing employment and
training services to noncustodial parents
directly.
Section 303.6 Enforcement of Support
Obligations
We redesignate existing § 303.6(c)(5)
as new § 303.6(c)(6) and add new
§ 303.6(c)(5) to provide program
standards related to the optional State
plan provision § 302.76.
Employment and Training Services
The final rule establishes basic
eligibility requirements that must be
met for States to provide employment
and training services to noncustodial
parents. Eligibility for employment and
training services is limited to
noncustodial parents who: have an open
IV–D case; have a child support order or
have been determined by the IV–D
agency to be fully cooperating with the
IV–D agency to establish a child support
order; and are unemployed or
underemployed or at risk of not being
able to comply with their support order.
In addition, the IV–D agency must have
adopted policies and procedures for
determining that the noncustodial
parent is not receiving the same
employment and training services under
the following programs: TANF (45 CFR
part 261), the Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program (SNAP)
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100797
Employment and Training program (7
CFR 273.7 and 273.24), the Federal Pell
Grant program (34 CFR part 690), the
Adult, Dislocated Worker, and Youth
programs under title I of the Workforce
Innovation and Opportunity Act (20
CFR parts 675 through 688), the Adult
Education and Family Literacy Act
program (34 CFR part 463), the
Employment Service program (20 CFR
part 652), or the Vocational
Rehabilitation program (34 CFR part
361). States may establish additional
criteria not in conflict with those
required by this rule.
The final rule does not allow States to
provide a noncustodial parent the same
employment and training services that
he or she is already receiving from a set
list of federally-funded employment and
training programs. Child support
programs will need to adopt policies
and procedures for determining that the
noncustodial parent is not receiving the
same employment and training services
from the other federally-funded
programs listed in § 303.6(c)(5). We
recognize the challenges for States to
verify non-duplication of services due to
the limited availability of data needed
for verification. In the NPRM, OCSS
suggested that attestation may be used
to verify non-duplication of services.
However, many commenters expressed
concern that requiring attestation would
create a barrier to program participation
and requested that OCSS allow States
flexibility to determine the verification
approaches. In response to these
comments, the final rule does not
prescribe a verification method for child
support agencies to use, but leaves it to
States to establish a process for how best
to confirm that a noncustodial parent is
not already receiving the same services
under the programs listed in
§ 303.6(c)(5). For example, to meet this
requirement, the child support agency
may obtain a verbal or other
confirmation from the noncustodial
parent that the parent is not receiving
the same employment and training
services under the Federal programs
listed in § 303.6(c)(5) and document the
confirmation in the case record. This
will allow a noncustodial parent who
may be receiving services from the
American Job Center to also receive
nonduplicated employment and training
services through the child support
program.
Under new § 303.6(c)(5), allowable
employment and training services are
limited to:
• Job search assistance;
• Job readiness training;
• Job development and job placement
services;
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• Skills assessments to facilitate job
placement;
• Job retention services;
• Work supports, such as
transportation assistance, uniforms, and
tools; and
• Occupational training and other
skills training directly related to
employment, which may also include
activities to improve literacy and basic
skills, such as programs to complete
high school or a high school
equivalency certificate, or English as a
second language.
We recognize that providing these
services may require case management.
Thus, consistent with OCSS PIQ–12–02,
FFP may also be used to provide case
management for these allowable
services.83
We have included a focused set of
employment and training services
because our review of research found
that employment and training programs
for noncustodial programs tended to
provide this package of employment
and training services in their effort to
improve the effectiveness of child
support program. The list of allowable
services includes those services that
were most frequently provided in
various demonstrations, research
evaluations, and state-based programs
detailed in the rule.
We have included work supports and
job retention services as allowable
expenditures because, as described
above, many of the employment and
training programs for noncustodial
parents that have been evaluated
included these services as part of a
package of employment and training
services, which were found effective at
improving child support outcomes.
Work supports consist of costs incurred
for bona fide services and assistance
provided to noncustodial parents so that
they may find and retain employment or
participate in employment and training
services. For example, a common form
of work supports is transportation
assistance, such as bus tokens and gas
vouchers. Work supports may also
include the cost of providing emergency
child care assistance for children on the
child support case associated with the
noncustodial parent receiving
employment and training services if that
emergency inhibits participation in
employment and training services or
finding or retaining work. Other eligible
work supports may include, but are not
limited to costs incurred for bona fide
83 PIQ–12–02, Partnering with other programs,
including outreach, referral, and case management
activities, is available at: https://www.acf.hhs.gov/
sites/default/files/documents/ocse/piq_12_02_
partnering_with_other_programs_and_
activities.pdf.
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services and assistance such as: workrelated tools; work-related clothing or
uniforms; emergency vehicle repairs if
affordable transportation alternatives are
not available; referrals for child care
assistance; referrals to health care,
mental health counseling or drug
treatment; license fees; application fees;
and other costs of employment and
training tests or certifications. Job
retention services are services that assist
a job holder with retaining employment
and can include regular check-ins with
job holders as well as supporting
managers who hired job holders with
on-the-job issues. Job retention services
can be offered directly to the job holder
or to the employer to serve the job
holder.
The proposed rule included language
at § 303.6(c)(5)(vii) about an
employment and training services plan.
We have revised this section and no
longer use the term ‘‘employment and
training services plan’’ because
commenters found this requirement
confusing. OCSS does not believe an
employment and training plan is
necessary to meet the requirements of
the rule.
In the NPRM, OCSS proposed not to
allow employment and training services
for noncustodial parents with arrearsonly cases because, as stated in the
NPRM, the primary goal of offering
employment and training services is to
increase the consistency of current
support payments to families with
minor children. Many commenters
urged OCSS to allow noncustodial
parents with arrears-only cases to be
eligible for these services, noting that
many of them are of working age,
unemployed, and could benefit from
employment and training services to
help them find work and pay their
overdue child support. OCSS agrees
with the commenters that noncustodial
parents with arrears-only cases are still
responsible for paying overdue child
support and may face barriers to
employment that limit their ability to
pay and thus could benefit from
employment and training services,
which, if provided, could lead to
employment and increased child
support payments to custodial families.
In response to comments, we removed
the word ‘‘current’’ in proposed
§ 303.6(c)(5) describing the eligibility
criteria to allow noncustodial parents
with child support orders in arrearsonly cases to be eligible for employment
and training services funded under title
IV–D.
In the NPRM, a list of costs that
would not be eligible for FFP was
included in the proposed language of
§ 303.6(c)(5). In the final rule, these
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prohibited costs are moved to § 304.23,
Expenditures for which Federal
financial participation is not available,
as described below.
Section 304.20 Availability and Rate
of Federal Financial Participation
We redesignate existing
§ 304.20(b)(3)(vii) as new
§ 304.20(b)(3)(viii), and add new
§ 304.20(b)(3)(vii) allowing FFP for
employment and training services when
they are provided in accordance with
§ 303.6(c)(5).
Section 304.23 Expenditures for Which
Federal Financial Participation Is Not
Available
The final rule adds new § 304.23(k) to
move the list of costs related to
employment and training services that
the NPRM said would not be eligible for
FFP under proposed § 303.6 (c)(5) to
§ 304.23, Expenditures for which
Federal financial participation is not
available. Specifically, under
§ 304.23(k) this final rule prohibits
expenditures under title IV–D for
payments of cash, checks,
reimbursements, or any other form of
payment that can be legally converted to
currency provided to the noncustodial
parent. The final rule also prohibits FFP
for costs of subsidized employment for
noncustodial parents. The NPRM
proposed that these costs not be eligible
for FFP in § 303.6(c)(5), but also
requested comments on all of the
employment and training services in
§ 303.6(c)(5). A few commenters argued
FFP should be available for these costs,
but these arguments did not overcome
the concerns that the Federal
government has with allowing FFP for
these costs as discussed in response to
Comments 13 and 31 below.
Section 309.65 What must a Tribe or
Tribal organization include in a Tribal
IV–D plan in order to demonstrate
capacity to operate a Tribal IV–D
program?
In response to comments received in
support of FFP for Tribes to offer
employment and training services, we
redesignate existing § 309.65(b) as new
§ 309.65(c) and add new § 309.65(b) to
add a new optional Tribal plan
provision to allow Tribes to provide
certain employment and training
services to eligible noncustodial
parents.
This Tribal plan provision is optional
to Tribes and Tribal organizations. This
final rule adds provisions in the Tribal
regulations at part 309, specifically new
§§ 309.65(b), 309.121, 309.145, and
309.155 to clarify, in response to
comments, that this final rule makes
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 240 / Friday, December 13, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Federal funding available to Tribes for
employment and training services. If a
Tribe or Tribal organization chooses this
option, § 309.65(b) requires that the
Tribe or Tribal organization include a
description of the employment and
training services and eligibility criteria
in its Tribal IV–D plan. In addition, to
ensure the IV–D agency is providing
well-coordinated and non-duplicative
employment and training services,
§ 309.65(b) also requires that the Tribe
or Tribal organization include in its
Tribal IV–D plan an explanation of how
the Tribal child support program has
consulted with, and taken into
consideration the services provided by,
federally-funded employment and
training programs administered by the
Tribe. It also requires that Tribes
electing the option to provide
employment and training services using
FFP under title IV–D must comply with
future reporting requirements
prescribed by the Office.
Consistent with Executive Order
14112, 88 FR 86021 (December 6, 2023),
Reforming Federal Funding and Support
for Tribal Nations to Better Embrace
Our Trust Responsibilities and Promote
the Next Era of Tribal SelfDetermination, the final rule takes into
account the unique needs, capacity, and
barriers faced by Tribal IV–D programs,
and thus does not provide a set list of
federally-funded programs that Tribes
must coordinate with to ensure
noncustodial parents are not receiving
duplicative employment and training
services. Tribes must consult with, and
take into consideration the services
provided by, federally-funded
employment and training programs
administered by the Tribe to ensure
effective service delivery and to provide
the most appropriate mix of services
that address the multiple barriers to
employment faced by low-income
noncustodial parents in their caseload,
while minimizing costs to the child
support program. To meet this
requirement, Tribal IV–D agencies have
flexibility to coordinate with any of the
federally-funded employment and
training programs administered by the
Tribe. OCSS’s policy goals are to make
it possible for Tribal child support
agencies to provide employment and
training services to noncustodial parents
who need them but are not available to
them, while minimizing unnecessary
duplication of services that are already
successfully being provided by other
federally-funded programs administered
by the Tribe.
OCSS anticipates that many Tribal
child support agencies will purchase
employment and training services by
entering into contracts with public,
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private and community-based
employment, fatherhood, and reentry
programs, community action agencies,
community colleges, or other service
providers, rather than offer these
services in-house, in accordance with 45
CFR 309.60(c), Who is responsible for
administration of the Tribal IV–D
program under the Tribal IV–D plan.
However, this does not preclude a
Tribal child support agency from
providing employment and training
services to noncustodial parents
directly.
Section 309.121 Employment and
Training Services
This rule adds a new optional Tribal
plan provision, § 309.121, Employment
and training services, to allow Tribes to
provide certain employment and
training services to eligible noncustodial
parents in accordance with the newly
designated § 309.65(b).
The final rule establishes basic
eligibility requirements that must be
met for Tribes to provide employment
and training services for noncustodial
parents. Eligibility for employment and
training services is limited to
noncustodial parents who: have an open
IV–D case; have a child support order or
have been determined by the IV–D
agency to be fully cooperating with the
IV–D agency to establish a child support
order; and are unemployed or
underemployed or at risk of not being
able to comply with their support order.
In addition, the IV–D agency must have
adopted policies and procedures for
determining that the noncustodial
parent is not receiving the same
employment and training services under
other federally-funded employment and
training program administered by the
Tribe. Tribes and Tribal organizations
may establish additional criteria not in
conflict with those established in the
rule.
Consistent with Executive Order
14112, the final rule takes into account
the unique needs, capacity, and barriers
faced by Tribal IV–D programs, and thus
does not include a set list of programs
for Tribes to verify non-duplication of
services. Tribal child support programs
will need to adopt policies and
procedures for determining that the
noncustodial parent is not receiving the
same employment and training services
from other federally-funded program
administered by the Tribe. The final
rule does not prescribe a method for
child support agencies to use, but leaves
it to Tribes and Tribal organizations to
determine how best to confirm that a
noncustodial parent is not already
receiving the same services from
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100799
another federally-funded program
administered by the Tribe.
The list of allowable services includes
those services that were most frequently
provided in various demonstrations,
research evaluations, and state-based
programs detailed in the rule. Other
eligible work supports may include, but
are not limited to costs incurred for
bona fide services and assistance such
as: work-related tools; work-related
clothing or uniforms; emergency vehicle
repairs if affordable transportation
alternatives are not available; referrals
for child care assistance; referrals to
health care, mental health counseling or
drug treatment; license fees; application
fees; and other costs of employment and
training tests or certifications.
Section 309.145 What costs are
allowable for Tribal IV–D programs
carried out under § 309.65(a)?
As a result of the comments received
concerning the applicability of this rule
for Tribal child support programs, we
add new § 309.145(c)(5) allowing FFP
for certain employment and training
services when they are provided in
accordance with § 309.121.
Section 309.155 What uses of Tribal
IV–D program funds are not allowable?
To address comments received in
support of the availability of funds for
Tribal child support programs, we
redesignate existing § 309.155(f) as new
§ 309.155(g), and add new § 309.155(f)
to provide a list of costs related to
employment and training services that
the NPRM said would not be eligible for
FFP.
Responses to Comments
OCSS received 58 sets of comments
from States, 2 previous Federal Office of
Child Support Commissioners, national
child support associations, fatherhood,
research and other non-profit
organizations, private companies and
other interested individuals. We posted
54 sets of comments on
www.regulations.gov, three of which
were duplicates; 4 sets of comments
were not posted because they were not
related to the NPRM. All expressed
overwhelming support for the NPRM.
Section 302.76 Employment and
Training Services
Comment 1: We received multiple
comments about statewide requirements
related to the State plan. All of these
commenters requested that the final rule
not require States to implement
employment and training services
statewide. Commenters noted that the
labor market conditions and outlook can
vary substantially within a State,
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affecting the need for employment and
training services. Other commenters
noted that the capacity to provide
employment and training services can
vary substantially within a State. Still
others noted that available resources to
draw matching FFP to pay the nonFederal share of costs for employment
and training services can vary
substantially by county within a State.
For these reasons, the commenters
urged OCSS to allow States to tailor
employment and training services to
local conditions. The commenters
suggested the final rule should waive
the statewide requirement for optional
employment and training services, if
permissible. If not permissible, they
suggested the final rule should clarify
that a State may indicate in its State
plan that the option to use FFP for
employment and training services is
available to all counties within the State
and may be used at county option.
Response 1: OCSS appreciates the
concerns about States being required to
offer employment and training services
statewide given these services are
optional under the State plan. The
regulations at 45 CFR 302.10 implement
section 454(1) of the Act and requires in
§ 302.10(a) the State plan be in
operation on a statewide basis in
accordance with equitable standards for
administration that are mandatory
throughout the State. The regulations at
45 CFR 302.10(c) require the IV–D
agency will assure that the plan is
continuously in operation in all
appropriate offices or agencies through
(1) methods for informing staff of
policies, standards, procedures, and
instructions and (2) regular planned
examination and evaluation of
operations in local offices. As 45 CFR
302.10 requires IV–D State plans to be
in operation on a statewide basis, States
electing to provide employment and
training services using FFP must make
at least a minimum level of services
available statewide. These services for
some jurisdictions could be virtual job
readiness trainings that individuals
could access online or at their local
child support services offices (e.g.,
online training on how to interview,
prepare a resume, navigating job
announcement websites, or
occupational training and other skills
training directly related to employment
such as programs to complete high
school or a high school equivalency
certificate), while other jurisdictions
may offer more intensive employment
and training services. States, however,
will have the flexibility to determine
what additional services are appropriate
in their jurisdictions based on local
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conditions, resources, and needs. OCSS
encourages States to review and
consider successful programs operated
by other States, some of which have
included piloting employment and
training services in select areas first and
then expanding to other service areas.
Comment 2: We received various
comments regarding the requirement
that States must comply with future
reporting requirements prescribed by
OCSS if they elect to provide
employment and training services.
Some commenters suggested that OCSS
consult with States about any reporting
requirements and give States the
opportunity to provide feedback to
OCSS ahead of the adoption of these
requirements, especially if system
changes would be required to meet
these reporting requirements. One
commenter suggested OCSS address the
reporting requirements in the regulation
or in supplemental guidance released
before the regulation is finalized, while
another commenter suggested reporting
requirements be provided before States
elect the option. Another commenter
urged that the reporting requirements
closely match existing IV–D agency
requirements to reduce the likelihood of
burdensome or negative impacts on a
State’s child support system, while
another commenter argued that
consideration should be given to the
practical utility of the reporting
measures and the ability of States to
easily obtain and maintain the
mandated data. Other commenters
recommended that OCSS align reporting
requirements with the performance
measures of existing employment and
training programs. Still others
recommended specific items be
included in the reporting requirements,
and one commenter recommended that
reporting be disaggregated by
characteristics such as race, ethnicity,
disability status, and gender. One
commenter encouraged OCSS to include
reporting requirements that would allow
States to conduct program analysis and
evaluation of their employment and
training services. Other commenters
suggested FFP be available for system
enhancements to capture any required
data elements.
Response 2: OCSS clarifies there are
no Federal reporting requirements that
are specifically related to employment
and training programs at this time. We
understand that commenters are
concerned about the potential burden
that future reporting requirements may
have. After the rule is published, we
will consult with States and Tribes
about Federal reporting requirements
under this rule, and in accordance with
the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C.
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3501 et seq., OCSS will publish the
proposed information collection in the
Federal Register providing States,
Tribes, and the public the opportunity
to comment on the reporting
requirements.
Comment 3: Two commenters
expressed support for Tribal child
support programs receiving FFP for
employment and training services.
Response 3: OCSS appreciates and
agrees with the commenters and has
included amendments in the Tribal
child support regulations at 45 CFR part
309 to specifically allow FFP for Tribal
child support programs’ employment
and training activities. This final rule
amends part 309 to expressly include
FFP for Tribes and Tribal organizations
operating IV–D programs that elect to
implement optional employment and
training services. This change aligns
with President Biden’s Executive Order
14112.
Allowing FFP for Tribal child support
programs to provide employment and
training services promotes equity and
honors Tribal sovereignty and the trust
relationship between the Federal
Government and Tribal Nations. As set
out by the 1977 Senate report of the
American Indian Policy Review
Commission, ‘‘The purpose behind the
trust is and always has been to insure
the survival and welfare of Indian
Tribes and people. This includes an
obligation to provide those services
required to protect and enhance Indian
lands, resources, and self-government
and also includes those economic and
social programs which are necessary to
raise the standard of living and social
well-being of the Indian people to a
level comparable to the non-Indian
society.’’ 84
Child support programs adding
employment and training services help
Tribal communities support parental
financial responsibility, so children
receive economic support from both
parents even when they live in separate
households. Allowing Tribal child
support programs to receive FFP for
employment and training service
activities will help to ensure that Tribal
Nations can offer culturally appropriate
and affirming services to their
communities. Tribes and Tribal
organizations exercising their
sovereignty to operate their own child
support programs is, in fact, what
Congress intended when it authorized
funding under PRWORA. Allowing FFP
for Tribal child support programs to
84 See American Indian Policy Review
Commission Final Report (May 1977), page 130
available at https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/
ED164229.pdf.
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deliver employment and training
services helps to achieve this and to
ensure the continued focus on
promoting parenting responsibility and
support for child well-being.
Allowing Tribal child support
programs to receive FFP for
employment and training service
activities is also important because
many Federal programs that assist
Tribal Nations and promote Tribal
sovereignty are underfunded, according
to the 2018 U.S. Commission on Civil
Rights report on Federal funding for
Native Americans.85 The changes to
expressly include Tribal child support
programs honors and reflects the trust
relationship and doctrine, which
requires the Federal Government to
support Tribal self-government and
economic prosperity.86
This final rule allows Tribes and
Tribal organizations, at their option, to
provide employment and training
services to eligible noncustodial parents
and provides that such services are
eligible for FFP at the applicable
matching rate.
Comment 4: We received multiple
comments related to the requirement to
coordinate with other federally-funded
employment and training programs to
ensure that noncustodial parents are
receiving well-coordinated employment
and training services across these
programs and that services are not being
duplicated. Some commenters requested
specific guidance on how to comply
with coordination requirements, while
others requested additional guidance
about how to co-enroll a parent paying
child support into multiple training
programs and how to allocate costs
across programs. Some asked for
guidance about selecting which funding
stream is utilized when and whether
each program could pay a percentage of
costs. One commenter recommended
State child support agencies be included
as optional partners of WIOA State
plans and that State child support
agencies should leverage State
workforce agencies. Another commenter
suggested requiring partnership with
State workforce agencies and
encouraged OCSS to work closely with
the U.S. Department of Labor and other
Federal agencies in the development
and implementation of the final rule.
85 See U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Broken
Promises: Continuing Federal Funding Shortfall for
Native Americans (December 2018) at https://
www.usccr.gov/files/pubs/2018/12-20-BrokenPromises.pdf.
86 See Administration for Children and Families,
American Indians and Alaska Natives—The Trust
Responsibility Fact Sheet at https://
www.acf.hhs.gov/ana/fact-sheet/american-indiansand-alaska-natives-trust-responsibility.
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Another commenter suggested
eliminating the coordination
requirement because it would be unduly
burdensome. Other commenters asked if
the coordination requirement results in
an additional requirement to have
cooperative agreements in place with
the other federally-funded employment
programs listed in § 302.76 and whether
the prohibition against duplicative
services prevents a State from offering
different but related services from more
than one agency.
Response 4: This final rule provides
States and Tribes flexibility regarding
how they will coordinate with State and
Tribal agencies that administer
federally-funded programs, as States
and Tribes may structure their
employment and training service
delivery differently. States and Tribes
have discretion to implement
coordination efforts with other
federally-funded employment and
training service providers that best
support successful program execution
and stable employment outcomes for
eligible noncustodial parents while
preventing duplication of services.
States and Tribes also have discretion to
establish enrollment policies and
processes for employment and training
services programs they provide for
eligible noncustodial parents. We
encourage child support programs to
work with partner agencies to educate
noncustodial parents regarding partner
agencies’ enrollment policies. OCSS’s
website includes Knowledge Works and
Tribal Employment Pathways resources
for child support agencies who have
interest or already provide employment
and training services to noncustodial
parents.87
This rule allows States and Tribes
discretion to determine the
appropriateness of who they should
target as partners to provide
employment and training services. This
final rule does not require child support
agencies to partner with workforce
agencies as the providers of job services,
only that they consult with, and take
into consideration the services provided
by, other federally-funded employment
and training programs. We do not want
to restrict the ability of States, Counties,
Tribes, and Tribal organizations to
determine the most appropriate partner
to offer employment and training
services tailored to local conditions, the
employment needs of noncustodial
parents, labor market outlook, and
87 OCSS’s Knowledge Works website is available
at: https://www.acf.hhs.gov/css/employmentprograms; OCSS’s Tribal Employment Pathways
website is available at: https://www.acf.hhs.gov/css/
child-support-professionals/tribal-agencies/tribalemployment-pathways.
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100801
existing capacity within local
employment programs.
We disagree with comments
requesting that OCSS remove the
coordination requirement as we believe
it is important for a child support
program to explain how they have
consulted with, and taken into
consideration the services provided by,
other federally-funded employment and
training programs to ensure
noncustodial parents are receiving wellcoordinated employment and training
services across these programs, and that
services provided to noncustodial
parents are not being unnecessarily
duplicated.
The coordination requirement does
not require IV–D agencies to have
cooperative agreements in place with
other federally-funded employment and
training programs and does not prevent
a State or Tribe from offering different
services to a noncustodial parent from
more than one agency.
Comment 5: One commenter
suggested OCSS encourage coordination
with fatherhood programs. Another
commenter suggested OCSS provide
examples and guidance related to
coordinating with criminal justice
agencies, especially during reentry into
communities, and provide guidance on
how to align protections for individuals
already in place through Civil Rights
offices with the services in the NPRM.
Another commenter said States are
interested in opportunities for peer-topeer learning and knowledge transfer
and mentioned that both the National
Association of State Workforce Agencies
(NASWA) and the American Public
Human Services Association (APHSA)
have such networks.
Response 5: We recommend that child
support programs build robust
partnerships with existing education
and workforce programs and providers
of supportive services, such as
workforce agencies, TANF and SNAP
agencies, the Native Employment Works
program, Public Law 102–477 programs,
community colleges, labor
organizations, criminal justice agencies
including probation, parole and
corrections, fatherhood programs and
other community-based organizations.
Partnering with other programs can
allow child support agencies to broaden
the types of services they provide to
noncustodial parents in their caseload.
States and Tribes are permitted and
encouraged to provide additional
services under different funding streams
to complement the limited set of
services funded under title IV–D to help
noncustodial parents with significant
barriers to employment obtain and
retain stable employment that prevent
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them from making full and regular child
support payments.
OCSS has Knowledge Works and
Tribal Employment Pathways resources
on our website for child support
agencies who have interest or already
provide employment and training
services to noncustodial parents.88
Several of these resources assist with
peer-to-peer learning and knowledge
transfer and highlight the successful
programs operating in various
jurisdictions. These resources share
documents compiled by various
jurisdictions and include a peer-to-peer
training series that includes an ability to
view all previously recorded webinars.
OCSS will endeavor to develop and
expand both websites after the
publication of this rule. Further we
encourage child support agencies to
consider participating in the networks
of NASWA and APHSA.
Section 303.6 Enforcement of Support
Obligations
Comment 6: Numerous commenters
recommended extending eligibility
criteria for employment and training
services in § 303.6(c)(5) to noncustodial
parents with arrears-only cases. Many
noted that noncustodial parents with
arrears-only cases are still responsible
for paying child support and may face
barriers to employment that limit their
ability to pay. Many of them are of
working age, unemployed, and could
benefit from employment and training
services to help them find work and pay
their child support. Some commenters
noted that they currently operate
employment and training programs for
noncustodial parents and do not
exclude arrears-only cases and have
found their programs to be effective at
getting noncustodial parents into paying
status. They argued that since these
programs are effective, child support
agencies should be able to provide these
services regardless of whether the
parent owes current support.
Commenters also noted that excluding
noncustodial parents with arrears-only
cases is unfair to custodial parents who
could receive increased arrears
payments if the noncustodial parent
received employment and training
services. Some noted that these
custodial parents went without child
support payments when their children
were young through no fault of their
own, so they shouldn’t be denied the
opportunity to receive these payments
simply because their children had
emancipated. Still others noted that this
exclusion was unfair to noncustodial
parents with arrears-only cases who
88 Id.
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were never given the opportunity to
receive employment and training
services when they had a current
support order. If they had been given
that opportunity, their child support
debt may not exist today. Thus, it is
unfair to deny these parents
employment and training services that
they needed then and still need.
Some commenters agreed with OCSS
that noncustodial parents with a current
support order should be given priority
for employment and training services
since they are responsible for
supporting minor children, but they
noted that both the custodial parent and
the noncustodial parent may have other
minor children that could benefit from
the increased financial stability that
noncustodial parents with arrears-only
cases could achieve if they received
employment and training services.
Some commenters noted that
prohibiting noncustodial parents with
arrears-only cases from employment and
training services was an administrative
burden for the child support agency
since it would require child support
agencies to keep track of a parent’s order
status. It would also require the child
support agency to terminate services if
a noncustodial parent’s child
emancipates while the parent is
receiving services, which is disruptive
for the parent and may undermine the
success of the services.
If OCSS continues to prohibit
noncustodial parents with arrears-only
cases from receiving employment and
training services, some commenters
recommended that OCSS allow certain
exceptions to a strict prohibition. The
most common exception suggested was
for noncustodial parents who have
custody of the minor children covered
by the arrears-only case.
Response 6: OCSS is persuaded by
these comments and has revised the
eligibility criteria in §§ 303.6(c)(5) and
309.121 to clarify that a noncustodial
parent with an arrears-only case is
eligible to receive employment and
training services. As noted in the
NPRM, OCSS wanted to prioritize
noncustodial parents who have a
current support order for employment
and training services since the primary
goal of offering these services is to
increase the consistency of current
support payments to families with
minor children. However, we agree that
noncustodial parents with arrears-only
cases are still responsible for paying
child support and may face barriers to
employment that limit their ability to
pay and thus could benefit from
employment and training services,
which, if provided, could lead to an
improved employment situation and
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increased child support payments to
custodial families. In response to these
comments, we removed the word
‘‘current’’ in proposed § 303.6(c)(5)
describing the eligibility criteria to
allow States and Tribes the option to
provide noncustodial to allow
noncustodial parents with child support
orders in arrears-only cases to be
eligible for employment and training
services funded under title IV–D in
addition to noncustodial parents with a
current support order.
Comment 7: Some commenters
suggested extending eligibility criteria
for employment and training services in
§ 303.6(c)(5) to custodial parents.
Response 7: OCSS disagrees with
these comments. The purpose of
allowing child support programs to
provide employment and training
services to noncustodial parents is to
obtain child support payments, which
will benefit custodial families and that
is the focus of this rule. OCSS
encourages child support agencies to
develop robust referral networks with
other programs that provide
employment and training services to
custodial parents.
Comment 8: One commenter
suggested extending eligibility for
employment and training services in
§ 303.6(c)(5) to noncustodial parents
who do not have a support order.
Response 8: This final rule limits
eligibility criteria for employment and
training services to noncustodial parents
who have a child support order or have
been determined by the IV–D agency to
be fully cooperating with the IV–D
agency to establish a child support
order, however the child support agency
must have an open IV–D case in
accordance with section 454(4) of the
Act and 45 CFR 302.33. OCSS leaves it
to States, Tribes, or Tribal organizations
to determine if a noncustodial parent is
fully cooperating with the IV–D agency
to establish a child support order.
Comment 9: We received multiple
comments regarding the language in the
preamble of the NPRM that a State may
obtain an attestation from the
noncustodial parent that he or she is not
receiving the same employment and
training service from the programs listed
in § 303.6(c)(5). Some commenters
suggested that OCSS should allow
States to determine the process to
confirm whether the noncustodial
parent is receiving the same services.
Other commenters suggested a verbal
confirmation from the noncustodial
parent that they are not receiving the
same services, documented in case
record, should be sufficient. Some
commenters suggested that if attestation
is required, the attestation requirement
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should be added to the regulatory
language.
Response 9: OCSS disagrees with the
need to prescribe the method by which
States and Tribes confirm that
duplicative services are not provided in
any particular case, including adding
specific attestation requirements. As
indicated in response to comments
above, this final rule provides States
and Tribes flexibility to adopt policies
and procedures for determining that the
noncustodial parent is not receiving
duplicative services from federallyfunded employment and training
programs.
Comment 10: A commenter
recommended that OCSS clarify that if
a noncustodial parent confirms they are
not receiving the same services from
another program and is later found to
have received duplicated services, the
IV–D agency will not be liable for
repayment of such costs.
Response 10: OCSS appreciates the
commenters concerns, and in response
to comments regarding the nonduplication of services requirement for
individual cases, we made changes in
§ 303.6(c)(5) of the final rule to clarify
that to meet this requirement States and
Tribes must adopt policies and
procedures for determining that a
noncustodial parent is not already
receiving the same services under
federally-funded programs. States and
tribes have broad discretion to
determine what policies and procedures
to adopt for determining that services
are not being duplicated. An
unallowable expenditure would not
occur so long as the IV–D agency adopts
and implements such policies and
procedures.
Comment 11: Two commenters
recommended adding legal services or
legal assistance to the list of allowable
services in § 303.6(c)(5). While one
commenter suggested including legal
services focused solely on child support
issues such as order modification and
enforcement petitions, the other
commenter suggested including legal
assistance that addressed employment
barriers more broadly, including help
with expungement, reinstating revoked
driver’s licenses, and other common
barriers people have to securing and
keeping a job.
Response 11: OCSS disagrees that
legal services or legal assistance should
be separately added to the list of
allowable services in §§ 303.6(c)(5) and
309.121. Child support agencies already
have authority to initiate a review and
adjustment of child support orders and,
if necessary, enforcement actions.
However, we agree that noncustodial
parents may need legal assistance
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incidental to removing employment
barriers, such as expungement or
reinstating a driver’s license, which may
be considered work supports under
§§ 303.6(c)(5)(vi) and 309.121(b)(6).
Comment 12: One commenter
suggested this rule require States to
incorporate domestic violence
prevention and awareness into
employment and training services
programs to reduce the incidence of
domestic violence in the future and
suggested that training staff about
domestic violence and the
characteristics of healthy relationships
would enhance the delivery of services
to noncustodial parents.
Response 12: OCSS requires all States
to have and use a Family Violence
Indicator on appropriate cases, work
diligently to ensure they appropriately
screen referrals and applications, flag
affected cases in automated systems,
and restrict information sharing with
other data collection systems. OCSS
reminds child support programs they
are responsible for providing domestic
violence safeguards in operating any
aspect of the child support program. See
45 CFR 303.21, 307.11, and 307.13.
Additionally, OCSS offers training to
child support programs regarding
domestic violence.
Comment 13: Five commenters
recommended including subsidized
employment as an allowable service,
emphasizing the need for this service
and the multiple benefits generated by
this service.
Response 13: We are not including
subsidized employment as an allowable
service. OCSS appreciates and
understands the potential need for
subsidized employment especially for
some noncustodial parents facing a
specific set of barriers. However,
including subsidized employment can
significantly increase the cost of
providing employment and training
services. Although subsidized
employment is not included as an
allowable service under this final rule,
as referenced in PIQ–12–02,89 child
support agencies may partner with other
agencies that can fund subsidized
employment and other employment and
training activities beyond those allowed
under this rule. Additionally, a State
can consider submitting an exemption
request to the Secretary to reinvest IV–
D incentive payments and States,
Tribes, or Tribal organizations can apply
89 PIQ–12–02 is available at: https://
www.acf.hhs.gov/css/policy-guidance/partneringother-programs-including-outreach-referral-andcase-management.
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100803
for a section 1115 waiver to provide
subsidized employment.
Comment 14: Various commenters
asked about the definitions used to
describe the allowable employment and
training services found in § 303.6(c)(5).
One commenter recommended that
OCSS seek to better align its definitions
of employment and training services
with existing programs, asking, for
example, whether ‘‘vocational education
training,’’ a core activity within the
TANF program, would be considered
within ‘‘occupational training and other
skills training directly related to
employment.’’ Another commenter
asked why OCSS combined
occupational training with activities to
improve literacy and basic skills. A
third commenter offered definitions for
some of the employment and training
services that are allowable under this
rule, including job search assistance, job
readiness training, occupational
training, job retention services, and
work supports.
Response 14: OCSS selected the list of
allowable employment and training
services found in §§ 303.6(c)(5) and
309.121 based on research that
examined the effectiveness of
employment and training programs for
noncustodial parents described in this
rule. Through further research, OCSS
decided on the term ‘‘occupational
training’’ since it is more encompassing
than ‘‘vocational education training.’’
Thus, OCSS would consider ‘‘vocational
education training’’ within
‘‘occupational training and other skills
training directly related to
employment.’’ OCSS combined
occupational training with activities to
improve literacy and basic skills
because both of these activities increase
a person’s employment skills. OCSS has
included descriptions for job retention
services and work supports in the
Summary Description of the Regulatory
Changes in the preamble to the rule.
OCSS has not provided definitions of
job search assistance, job readiness
training, and occupational training. We
defer to reasonable State and Tribal
definitions for these terms.
Comment 15: One commenter
recommended including attainment of a
‘‘general educational diploma (GED)’’ as
an allowable training service in
§ 303.6(c)(5). Another commenter
recommended including comprehensive
training programs that are aligned with
market demands and offer certifications
that enhance employability in
§ 303.6(c)(5).
Response 15: OCSS has included
programs to complete a high school or
a high school equivalency certificate as
an allowable training service, which
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includes attainment of a ‘‘general
education diploma (GED).’’ OCSS uses
the phrase ‘‘high school equivalency’’
instead of ‘‘General Education
Development (GED)’’ since it is a more
encompassing term that includes GED
programs as well as other programs
similar to GED. OCSS has also included
occupational training and other skills
training directly related to employment,
which includes comprehensive training
programs that are aligned with market
demands and offer certifications that
enhance employability.
Comment 16: One commenter asked
for clarification regarding the term
‘‘employment and training services
plan,’’ which is used in
§ 303.6(c)(5)(vii).
Response 16: We have revised this
section and no longer use the term
‘‘employment and training services
plan’’ because commenters found this
requirement confusing. OCSS does not
believe an employment and training
services plan is necessary to meet the
requirements of the rule.
Comment 17: One commenter
recommended that the definition of job
retention services, one of the allowable
services in § 303.6(c)(5), be expanded to
include support for re-employment
should a job be lost and advancement
services to support the job holder’s
career growth.
Response 17: OCSS disagrees with
this recommendation. We believe that
the list of allowable employment and
training services that are included in
§§ 303.6(c)(5) and 309.121 are sufficient
for child support programs to support
maintaining employment or reemployment should the noncustodial
parent experience job loss. We did not
include job advancement services since
they are not needed to find and
maintain employment to pay child
support consistently. However, we do
value investments in career
development and education as an
effective route out of poverty for parents
and their children. We encourage child
support programs to partner with other
programs and agencies with a long-term
career development mission. States,
Tribes, and Tribal organizations are
permitted and encouraged to provide
additional services under different
funding streams to complement the
limited set of services provided in
§§ 303.6(c)(5) and 309.121 to help
noncustodial parents succeed in the
workforce.
Comment 18: Several commenters
requested further clarification regarding
work supports, one of the allowable
services in § 303.6(c)(5). One commenter
requested that OCSS provide States with
adequate flexibility to use funding for
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work supports to meet individual and
population-specific needs. One
commenter asked whether work
supports could include cell phones.
Another asked if it included educational
materials (e.g. books, supplies, reading
glasses, etc.) and fees (e.g. motor vehicle
records fees, application and enrollment
fees, physicals, and drug screenings,
etc.). One commenter asked that OCSS
prescribe how States would determine if
an ancillary expenditure is an approved
work support.
Response 18: OCSS describes work
supports in the preamble of the rule as
costs incurred for bona fide services and
assistance provided to noncustodial
parents so that they may find and retain
employment or participate in
employment and training services. We
believe this description provides States,
Tribes, and Tribal organizations with
adequate flexibility to meet individual
and population-specific needs. OCSS
considers expenditures for cell phones,
educational materials, and the fees
mentioned by the commenter as
allowable work supports if they are
needed to find or retain employment or
participate in employment and training
services.
Comment 19: One commenter asked
that OCSS define ‘‘emergency child
care,’’ which, under certain
circumstances, is an allowable work
support in § 303.6(c)(5).
Response 19: OCSS considers
emergency child care to be the provision
of child care services for a limited
period of time due to a sudden and
unplanned interruption in the regular
child care routine.
Comment 20: One commenter
recommended adding financial literacy
to the list of allowable services in
§ 303.6(c)(5), noting that financial
literacy can help individuals prevent
devasting financial mistakes, prepare for
financial emergencies, reach their goals,
and gain fiscal confidence.
Response 20: OCSS disagrees that
financial literacy should be separately
added to the list of allowable services in
§§ 303.6(c)(5) and 309.121 as a standalone service. However, when financial
literacy is integrated into job readiness
training, the financial literacy
component of the training is eligible for
FFP under §§ 303.6(c)(5)(ii) and
309.121(b)(2).
Comment 21: Various commenters
asked for further clarification regarding
the eligibility criteria for receiving
employment and training services. Two
commenters asked whether
noncustodial parents with support
orders set at zero dollars were eligible
for employment and training services.
Other commenters asked for
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clarification regarding the eligibility
criteria that says noncustodial parents
are eligible if they are ‘‘unemployed or
underemployed or at risk of not being
able to comply with their child support
order’’.
Response 21: OCSS clarifies that
noncustodial parents who have zerodollar child support orders meet the
eligibility criteria in §§ 303.6(c)(5) and
309.121. OCSS hasn’t defined
unemployed, underemployed, or at risk
of not being able to comply with their
child support order. This final rule
provides child support programs
discretion and flexibility to define these
terms based on the employment
conditions in their jurisdictions.
Comment 22: One commenter asked
OCSS about the confidentiality and
security requirements for the partner
agencies that provide the employment
and training services. Specifically, the
commenter asked whether these
agencies can use their own policies and
procedures for confidentiality and
security of program participants’ data. If
not, commenters asked if the partner
agencies are required to follow IV–D
requirements for storing, transmitting,
sharing, and maintaining electronic and
hard-copy IV–D data.
Response 22: States need to meet the
requirements of § 303.21, Safeguarding
and disclosure of confidential
information, and adhere to all
appropriate Federal, State, and local
reporting and safeguarding requirements
regarding data and information related
to the provision of employment and
training services. Tribes and Tribal
organizations need to meet the
requirements of § 309.80, What
safeguarding procedures must a Tribe or
Tribal organization include in a Tribal
IV–D plan, and adhere to all appropriate
Federal and Tribal reporting and
safeguarding requirements regarding
data and information related to the
provision of employment and training
services.
Comment 23: One commenter
recommended adding an eligibility
criterion to the rule that would permit
States to exclude noncustodial parents
who receive Social Security
Administration (SSA) benefits from
receiving employment and training
services listed in § 303.6(c)(5).
Alternatively, the commenter
recommended including the Ticket to
Work Program among the federallyfunded programs detailed in
§§ 303.6(c)(5) and 302.76 to ensure child
support agencies are establishing a
coordinated, nonduplicative set of
employment and training services with
other federally-funded programs. The
commenter noted that individuals who
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receive Social Security Disability and/or
Supplemental Security Income benefits
are eligible to participate in the Social
Security’s Ticket to Work Program,
which provides services similar to those
in this rule.
Response 23: While OCSS appreciates
this commenter’s interest in ensuring
that employment and training services
provided under §§ 303.6(c)(5) and
309.121 are well targeted and
nonduplicative, we do not think
noncustodial parents who are receiving
Social Security benefits should be
excluded from receiving employment
and training services in §§ 303.6(c)(5)
and 309.121 if they meet the other
eligibility criteria for employment and
training services. We do not see any
benefit to the child support program to
exclude parents from these services
simply because they receive government
benefits in general, or Social Security
benefits in particular. We also think that
the final rule already includes the major
federally-funded programs that provide
employment and training services that
child support agencies need to
coordinate with to ensure noncustodial
parents are not receiving duplicative
employment and training services.
However, we note that the rule allows
child support agencies to add eligibility
criteria when offering employment and
training services provided under
§§ 303.6(c)(5) and 309.121, and agencies
are welcome to coordinate with other
federally-funded programs that provide
employment and training services not
listed in §§ 302.76 and 309.65(b).
Comment 24: Various commenters
noted the importance of implementing
employment and training programs for
noncustodial parents that are supportive
and transparent to help overcome the
apprehension and distrust that
noncustodial parents can have toward
the child support program. One
commenter suggested lowering the
monthly obligation during participation
and establishing clear and consistent
communication channels to inform
noncustodial parents about their rights,
obligations, and available support
services. Another commenter suggested
forgoing certain enforcement remedies
for parents who are cooperating with the
employment and training program and
relaxing certain Federal requirements
for cooperating parents, such as forgoing
credit reporting or arrearage payments
on income withholding notices. It was
also suggested that OCSS encourages
States to perform a review of
participating noncustodial parents’
child support orders.
Response 24: OCSS agrees that it is
important to implement employment
and training programs for noncustodial
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parents that are supportive and
transparent to help overcome the
apprehension and distrust that
noncustodial parents can have toward
the child support program. States,
Tribes and Tribal organizations
currently have discretion to initiate the
review and adjustment of child support
orders where appropriate and suspend
or suppress certain enforcement
remedies during program participation.
These practices were successfully
utilized during the Child Support
Noncustodial Parent Employment
Demonstration (CSPED). OCSS
encourages child support agencies to
incorporate these practices into their
employment and training programs.
OCSS also encourages child support
agencies to establish clear and
consistent communication channels to
inform noncustodial parents about their
rights, obligations, and available
support services. With regard to Federal
requirements, a State, Tribe, or Tribal
organization may request a waiver
under section 1115 of the Social
Security Act to waive Federal
requirements for noncustodial parents
who are cooperating with the
employment and training program.
Comment 25: One commenter
recommended that OCSS should
provide clear and detailed guidance on
how to implement employment and
training programs for noncustodial
parents after the rule goes into effect so
that States can establish effective
programs and avoid costly challenges.
Guidance was encouraged around
service delivery, monitoring,
coordination between child support
agencies and other service providers,
performance measurement, evaluation,
and continuous improvement.
Response 25: OCSS currently
provides technical assistance to States,
Tribes, and Tribal organizations that are
implementing employment and training
programs for noncustodial parents
through its Knowledge Works! and
Tribal Employment Pathways web
pages. OCSS may issue additional
guidance as needed to assist child
support programs implement the rule.
Comment 26: One commenter
expressed interest in OCSS—in
partnership with the U.S. Department of
Labor—supporting opportunities for
state workforce and human services
agencies to research and evaluate
various approaches for using FFP to
deliver employment and training
services.
Response 26: OCSS appreciates this
commenter’s interest in continuing to
develop the evidence base for delivering
employment and training services to
noncustodial parents. OCSS encourages
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States, Tribes, and Tribal organizations
to use IV–D funds to evaluate the
success of the employment and training
services and make adjustments
accordingly to maximize the efficiency
and effectiveness of such services in
increasing child support payments to
families. These activities are allowable
under 45 CFR 304.20(b)(1)(ii) and
309.145(a)(2).
Comment 27: One commenter
recommended offering enhanced FFP
for costs associated with programming
data exchanges that child support
agencies might undertake with
workforce agencies to avoid duplication
of services. This commenter thought
that the States’ ability to meet the
nonduplication requirement would
depend upon a robust and timely data
exchange between child support and
other programs.
Response 27: We appreciate the
comment. However, OCSS has no
authority to increase the FFP rate
through the regulatory process. This
would require a statutory change by
Congress. The final rule does not require
automated data exchanges between
these agencies. As discussed in
comment and response 9, child support
programs will make case-by-case
determinations about whether a
noncustodial parent is receiving the
same employment and training services
from federally-funded programs, but the
final rule allows States, Tribes, and
Tribal organizations to determine the
method it will use to avoid duplication
of these services with these programs.
Comment 28: Two commenters
requested clarification regarding the use
of incentive funds for employment and
training services. One comment
requested clarification that States can
use incentive payments for allowable
employment and training services
without the need to request an
exemption to reinvest incentive
payments.
Response 28: OCSS clarifies that since
employment and training services will
be eligible for title IV–D funds as an
allowable activity under title IV–D, an
exemption is not necessary for States to
use incentive dollars to provide the
allowable services included in
§ 303.6(c)(5) to eligible noncustodial
parents. Those services would be an
allowable activity for FFP. However, an
exemption is necessary if a State wants
to provide employment and training
services other than those listed in
§ 303.6(c)(5) or wants to serve parents
who are not eligible for employment
and training services under this rule.
Comment 29: One commenter
recommended that OCSS clarify if FFP
is available for administrative costs
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associated with implementing
employment and training services in
§ 303.6(c)(5), such as costs associated
with start-up, staffing, technology,
training, outreach, and rent.
Response 29: This rule allows child
support agencies to use FFP to provide
employment and training services in
accordance with §§ 303.6(c)(5) and
309.121, which includes costs of
associated administrative activities,
such as grant administration costs
associated with start-up, staffing,
technology, training, outreach, and rent,
provided those costs are necessary,
reasonable and appropriately allocable
to the employment and training services
and comply with 45 CFR parts 304, 307,
and 310 and HHS’ uniform grant
administration requirements.
Comment 30: A commenter asked if
FFP would be available for partner
agencies to make systems
enhancements.
Response 30: FFP is not available for
partner agencies to make enhancements
to existing workforce systems.
Comment 31: A few commenters
opposed the prohibitions against using
FFP for the cost of cash payments,
checks, reimbursements, or any other
form of payment that can be legally
converted to currency and
recommended eliminating the
prohibition. Another commenter
suggested allowing reimbursement for
time critical, de minimus expenses up to
a set dollar threshold, and pointed out
that this prohibition is not consistent
with other federally-funded
employment and training programs such
as those funded under WIOA.
Section and purpose
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Added optional requirement § 302.76
Employment and
training services.
State plan amendment.
One time for 33
States.
A State, Tribe, or Tribal organization
may submit a plan amendment for the
optional and nonduplicative
employment and training services at any
time. But not all States, Tribes, and
Tribal organizations will implement
these optional services. Out of the 54
States, we estimate 33 will eventually
submit plan amendments for these
optional services. Out of the 63 Tribes
and Tribal organizations, we estimate
that 35 will eventually submit plan
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Average burden
hour per
response
Number of
respondents
Instrument
90 Schroeder, Daniel and Nicholas Doughty
(September 2009).
Response 31: We thank the
commenters but have determined to
maintain the NPRM restriction
providing that FFP may not be used to
provide cash payments, checks,
reimbursements, or any other form of
payment that can be legally converted to
currency. Nothing prohibits State and
Tribal child support agencies from
forming collaborations with
organizations (e.g., community-based
groups; workforce system entities, such
as those funded through WIOA systems;
and others) that do provide resources
such as emergency assistance and
reimbursement of expenses.
Comment 32: One commenter asked
for clarification that FFP is available for
employment and training services when
the noncustodial parent is ordered to
participate and the noncustodial parent
voluntarily agrees to participate.
Response 32: This final rule allows
child support agencies to determine
their enrollment process for providing
employment and training services. In
the past, some State child support
agencies have limited enrollment to
noncustodial parents who appear at a
show cause or civil contempt hearing
for failure to pay child support and are
encouraged or ordered to participate in
the employment and training program
as an alternative sentencing option.
Research shows that this approach to
enrollment yields positive outcomes in
terms of noncustodial parent
employment and child support
payments.90 Other State child support
agencies have enrolled noncustodial
parents on a voluntarily basis as part of
early intervention efforts. This approach
3 hours × $66.82 ×
33 States.
amendments for these optional services.
Additionally, we estimate that States
will take 3 hours to draft the required
information to amend their State plans.
The cost to respondents was calculated
using the Bureau of Labor Statistics job
code for State Government Management
Analyst [13–1111] and wage data from
May 2021, which is $33.41 per hour. To
account for fringe benefits and
overhead, the rate was multiplied by
two, which is $66.82. The total
91 Davis,
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Frm 00086
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has also been found to be associated
with positive improvements in
noncustodial parent employment and
child support outcomes.91 Still other
State child support agencies have used
a no wrong door approach to enrollment
and research shows this approach can
also be effective.92 Because the research
shows that various approaches to
enrollment can generate positive results,
we have decided to allow child support
agencies to determine their enrollment
process. However, OCSS encourages
States, Tribes, and Tribal organizations
to consider using a no wrong door
approach to enrollment because it
increases the number of noncustodial
parents who can potentially benefit
from employment and training services.
Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
(PRA) (Pub. L. 104–13), all Departments
are required to submit to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
review and approval any reporting or
recordkeeping requirements inherent in
a proposed or final rule. There is one
new State plan and one new Tribal plan
reporting requirement because of this
final rule for States, Tribes, or Tribal
organizations that choose to implement
the optional and nonduplicative
employment and training services. The
description and total estimated burden
on the ‘‘State Plan for Child Support
Collection and Establishment of
Paternity Under Title IV–D of the Social
Security Act,’’ and the State Plan
Transmittal Form [OMB 0970–0017] are
described in the chart below.
Total cost
National Federal
share
National State
share
$4,366.02
$2,249.16
$6,615.18
estimated cost is $6,615.18 with a State
share of $2,249.16. OCSS reimburses
States for 66 percent of the
administrative costs incurred to
administer the State plan.
The description and total estimated
burden on the ‘‘Tribal Child Support
Enforcement Direct Funding Requests’’
are described in the chart below.
92 Lippold,
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Section and purpose
Added optional requirement § 309.65(b) Employment and training
services.
Instrument
Number of respondents
Tribal plan amendment ..
One time for 35 Tribes ..
We estimate that Tribes will take 6
hours to draft the required information
to amend their Tribal plans. The cost to
respondents was calculated using the
Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) job
code for Social and Community Service
Managers [11–9151] and wage data from
May 2022, which is $38.13 per hour
(mean). To account for fringe benefits
and overhead, the rate was multiplied
by two, which is $76.26. The total
estimated cost is $16,014.60. Tribal
child support programs receive 100%
FFP so there is no Tribal share incurred
to administer the Tribal plan.
This final rule would revise two
approved information collections (State
Plan for Child Support Collection and
Establishment of Paternity Under Title
IV–D of the Social Security Act; OMB #:
0970–0017 and Tribal Child Support
Enforcement Direct Funding Requests;
OMB #0970–0218), as States, Tribes,
and Tribal organizations that elect to
participate in Employment and Training
Services for Noncustodial Parents in the
Child Support Program may submit a
State and Tribal plan amendment to
OCSS. To account for States, Tribes, and
Tribal organizations that elect to
provide employment and training
services in accordance with this rule
submitting revisions to their State or
Tribal Plans and as required by PRA, we
will submit the proposed revised data
collections to OMB for review and
approval. This will include an updated
description in the Supporting Statement
A justification and an updated burden
table to show an estimated number of
States, Tribes, or Tribal organizations
that might submit amendments
annually. The request to revise the title
IV–D plan pages will include a
comment period inviting comments on
the new data collection and related
burden. The public comment period
will be announced through separate
notices published in the Federal
Register.
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Regulatory Impact Analysis
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
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Average burden hour per
response
6 hours × $76.26 × 35
Tribes.
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). Executive Order 13563
emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits, of
reducing costs, of harmonizing rules,
and of promoting flexibility. This rule
meets the standards of Executive Order
13563 because providing employment
training and services benefits the public,
particularly children and families
whose economic security would be
improved by increasing family income
and improving financial stability. These
services help to reduce the need for and
cost of providing public assistance. This
rule was designated by OMB as a
significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866, as amended by
Executive Order 14094. This rule will
not result in economic impacts that
exceed the monetary threshold in
section 3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866
(as amended by Executive Order 14094).
For the chosen regulatory approach, it
is estimated that the fiscal impact of the
final rule against a baseline of no action,
accounting for existing trends, will
increase Federal expenditures in FY
2025 by $17.8 million, the anticipated
first fiscal year of implementation. As
more child support programs use this
authority, the estimated fiscal impact
will increase. By FY 2034, the estimated
fiscal impact is expected to be $98.5
million per budget year. These estimates
do not reflect the potential benefits to
the Federal Government of
implementing this program, such as
reducing the cost of providing child
support enforcement services and
reducing reliance on means-tested
programs; they only reflect the
estimated cost of providing employment
and training services to noncustodial
parents in accordance with this final
rule.
ACF also assessed and considered a
regulatory alternative of finalizing the
proposed rule as published. As an
example of the differences, in contrast
to the final rule, the proposed rule did
not contain a provision explicitly
authorizing Tribal child support
programs to receive FFP for
employment and training service
activities. It also did not allow child
support programs to receive FFP for
employment and training service
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Fmt 4700
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Total cost
100807
National Federal
share
$16,014.60
$16,014.60
activities for noncustodial parents with
arrears-only cases. Compared to a
baseline scenario of no regulatory
action, adopting this policy alternative
would result in an increase of $15.1
million in Federal expenditures during
FY 2025, the first fiscal year of
implementation, increasing to $74.0
million by FY 2034. These estimates are
slightly different than those included in
the NPRM because the current estimates
use more recent caseload information
than used when estimating the fiscal
impact of the NPRM. Compared to our
estimated impacts of the final rule, this
regulatory alternative would result in a
lower increase in Federal expenditures
by $2.7 million in the first year, and a
lower increase in Federal expenditures
by $24.5 million in the final year of the
time horizon of our analysis. We note
that, compared to the final rule, this
regulatory alternative would be less
likely to ensure that Tribal Nations can
offer culturally appropriate and
affirming services to their communities.
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
The Secretary has determined that,
under 5 U.S.C. 605(b), as enacted by the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (Pub. L. 96–
354), this rule will not result in a
significant impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The primary
impact is on State and Tribal
governments. State and Tribal
governments are not considered small
entities under the Regulatory Flexibility
Act.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4) requires
agencies to prepare an assessment of
anticipated costs and benefits before
issuing any rule that may result in an
annual expenditure by State, local, and
Tribal governments, in the aggregate, or
by the private sector, of $100 million or
more (adjusted annually for inflation).
That threshold level is currently
approximately $177 million. This rule
does not impose any mandates on State,
local, or Tribal governments, or the
private sector, that will exceed this
threshold in any year.
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Assessment of Federal Regulations and
Policies on Families
Section 654 of the Treasury and
General Government Appropriations
Act of 1999 requires Federal agencies to
determine whether a proposed policy or
regulation may affect family well-being.
If the agency’s determination is
affirmative, then the agency must
prepare an impact assessment
addressing seven criteria specified in
the law. We certify that we have
assessed this final rule’s impact on the
well-being of families. This rule will
have a positive impact on family wellbeing as defined in the legislation by
proposing evidence-informed policies
and practices that help to ensure that
noncustodial parents support their
children more consistently and reliably.
Congressional Review
This final rule is not a major rule as
defined in 5 U.S.C. chapter 8.
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Executive Order 13132
Executive Order 13132 prohibits an
agency from publishing any rule that
has federalism implications if the rule
either imposes substantial direct
compliance costs on State and local
governments and is not required by
statute, or the rule preempts State law,
unless the agency meets the
consultation and funding requirements
of section 6 of the Executive order. This
rule does not have federalism impacts as
defined in the Executive Order 13132.
Tribal Consultation Statement
Executive Order 13175, Consultation
and Coordination with Indian Tribal
Governments, requires agencies to
consult with Indian Tribes when
regulations have ‘‘substantial direct
effects on one or more Indian Tribes, on
the relationship between the Federal
Government and Indian Tribes, or on
the distribution of power and
responsibilities between the Federal
Government and Indian Tribes.’’
Similarly, ACF’s Tribal Consultation
Policy says that consultation is triggered
for a new rule adoption that
significantly affects Tribes, meaning the
new rule adoption has substantial direct
effects on one on more Indian Tribes, on
the amount or duration of ACF program
funding, on the delivery of ACF
programs or services to one or more
Indian Tribes, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities between the
Federal Government and Indian Tribes.
This rule does not meet either standard
for consultation. Executive Order 13175
does not apply to this rule because it
does not impose any burden or cost on
Tribal IV–D agencies, nor does it impact
the relationship or distribution of power
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:42 Dec 12, 2024
Jkt 265001
between the Federal Government and
Indian Tribes. Rather, it provides IV–D
agencies an option for claiming Federal
financial participation (FFP) for the
provision of employment and training
services to noncustodial parents.
Although not required for this final rule,
ACF is committed to consulting with
Indian Tribes and Tribal leadership to
the extent practicable and permitted by
law.
In April 2023 OCSS held a
consultation where tribal leaders shared
concerns with high unemployment and
expressed a need for additional funding
in employment and training for
noncustodial parents. During that same
consultation leaders expressed there
was no reason for Tribes to not have the
same enforcement measures as States.
At the June 2023 ACF Tribal Advisory
Committee (TAC) OCSS shared it was
exploring ways to fund employment and
training services. Members of the TAC
expressed support for funding
employment and training services.
Meg Sullivan, Principal Deputy
Assistant Secretary for the
Administration for Children and
Families, performing the delegable
duties of the Assistant Secretary for
Children and Families, approved this
document on December 3, 2024
List of Subjects
45 CFR Part 302
Child support, Grant programs—
social programs, Penalties, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements,
Unemployment compensation.
45 CFR Part 303
Child support, Grant programs—
social programs, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
45 CFR Part 304
Child support, Grant programs—
social programs, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
45 CFR Part 309
Child support, Grant programs—
social programs, Indians-tribal
government, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: December 6, 2024.
Xavier Becerra,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the Department of Health and
Human Services amends 45 CFR parts
302, 303, 304, and 309 as set forth
below:
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Frm 00088
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
PART 302—STATE PLAN
REQUIREMENTS
1. The authority citation for part 302
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 651 through 658,
659a, 660, 664, 666, 667, 1302, 1396a(a)(25),
1396b(d)(2), 1396b(o), 1396b(p), and 1396(k).
■
2. Add § 302.76 to read as follows:
§ 302.76 Employment and training
services.
The State plan may provide for
employment and training services for
eligible noncustodial parents in
accordance with § 303.6(c)(5) of this
chapter. If the State chooses this option,
the State plan must include a
description of the employment and
training services and the eligibility
criteria. In addition, to ensure the IV–D
agency is providing well-coordinated
and non-duplicative employment and
training services, the State plan must
explain how the IV–D agency has
consulted with, and taken into
consideration the services provided by,
the State agencies administering the
following programs: the Temporary
Assistance for Needy Families program
(45 CFR part 261), the Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program
Employment and Training program (7
CFR 273.7 and 273.24), the Adult,
Dislocated Worker, and Youth programs
under title I of the Workforce Innovation
and Opportunity Act (20 CFR parts 675
through 688), the Adult Education and
Family Literacy Act program (34 CFR
part 463), the Employment Service
program (20 CFR part 652), and the
Vocational Rehabilitation program (34
CFR part 361). States electing the option
must comply with future reporting
requirements prescribed by the Office.
PART 303—STANDARDS FOR
PROGRAM OPERATIONS
3. The authority citation for part 303
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 651 through 658,
659a, 660, 663, 664, 666, 667, 1302,
1396a(a)(25), 1396b(d)(2), 1396b(o), 1396b(p),
1396(k), and 25 U.S.C. 1603(12) and 1621e.
4. Amend § 303.6 by:
a. Removing the word ‘‘and’’ at the
end of paragraph (c)(4)(iii);
■ b. Redesignating paragraph (c)(5) as
paragraph (c)(6); and
■ c. Adding a new paragraph (c)(5).
The addition reads as follows:
■
■
§ 303.6 Enforcement of support
obligations.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(5)(i) As elected by the State in
§ 302.76 of this chapter, provide
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 240 / Friday, December 13, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
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employment and training services to
eligible noncustodial parents. In
addition to eligibility criteria that may
be set by the IV–D agency, the
noncustodial parent must: have an open
IV–D case; have a child support order or
be determined by the IV–D agency to be
fully cooperating with the IV–D agency
to establish a child support order; and
be unemployed or underemployed or at
risk of not being able to comply with
their support order. In addition, the IV–
D agency must have adopted policies
and procedures for determining that the
noncustodial parent is not receiving the
same employment and training services
under the following programs: the
Temporary Assistance for Needy
Families program (45 CFR part 261), the
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance
Program Employment and Training
program (7 CFR 273.7 and 273.24), the
Federal Pell Grant program (34 CFR part
690), the Adult, Dislocated Worker, and
Youth programs under title I of the
Workforce Innovation and Opportunity
Act (20 CFR parts 675 through 688), the
Adult Education and Family Literacy
Act program (34 CFR part 463), the
Employment Service program (20 CFR
part 652), or the State Vocational
Rehabilitation program (34 CFR part
361);
(ii) These IV–D agency employment
and training services are limited to:
(A) Job search assistance;
(B) Job readiness training;
(C) Job development and job
placement services;
(D) Skills assessments to facilitate job
placement;
(E) Job retention services;
(F) Work supports, such as
transportation assistance, uniforms, and
tools; and
(G) Occupational training and other
skills training directly related to
employment, which may also include
activities to improve literacy and basic
skills, such as programs to complete
high school or a high school
equivalency certificate or English as a
second language; and
(iii) Federal financial participation
may also be used to provide case
management in connection with the
allowable services under this paragraph
(c)(5); and
*
*
*
*
*
PART 304—FEDERAL FINANCIAL
PARTICIPATION
5. The authority citation for part 304
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 651 through 655, 657,
1302, 1396a(a)(25), 1396b(d)(2), 1396b(o),
1396b(p), and 1396(k).
■
6. Amend § 304.20 by:
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16:42 Dec 12, 2024
Jkt 265001
a. Removing the word ‘‘and’’ at the
end of paragraph (b)(3)(vi);
■ b. Redesignating paragraph (b)(3)(vii)
as paragraph (b)(3)(viii); and
■ c. Adding a new paragraph (b)(3)(vii).
The addition reads as follows:
■
§ 304.20 Availability and rate of Federal
financial participation.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(3) * * *
(vii) Employment and training
services activities in accordance with
§§ 302.76 and 303.6(c)(5) of this chapter;
and
*
*
*
*
*
■ 7. Amend § 304.23 by adding
paragraph (k) to read as follows:
§ 304.23 Expenditures for which Federal
financial participation is not available.
*
*
*
*
*
(k) Any expenditures under
§ 303.6(c)(5) of this chapter for
subsidized employment or payment of
cash, checks, reimbursements, or any
other form of payment that can be
legally converted to currency provided
to the noncustodial parent.
PART 309—TRIBAL CHILD SUPPORT
ENFORCEMENT (IV–D) PROGRAM
8. The authority citation for part 309
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 655(f) and 1302.
9. Amend § 309.65 by:
a. Redesignating paragraph (b) as
paragraph (c); and
■ b. Adding a new paragraph (b).
The addition reads as follows:
■
■
§ 309.65 What must a Tribe or Tribal
Organization include in a Tribal IV–D plan
in order to demonstrate capacity to
operation a Tribal IV–D program?
*
*
*
*
*
(b) The Tribal plan may provide for
employment and training services for
eligible noncustodial parents in
accordance with § 309.121. If the Tribe
or Tribal organization chooses this
option, the Tribal plan must include a
description of the employment and
training services and the eligibility
criteria. In addition, to ensure the Tribal
IV–D agency is providing wellcoordinated and non-duplicative
employment and training services, the
Tribal plan must explain how the Tribal
IV–D agency has consulted with, and
taken into consideration services
provided by, federally-funded
employment and training programs
administered by the Tribe. Tribes or
Tribal organizations electing the option
must comply with future reporting
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Frm 00089
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
100809
requirements prescribed by the Office of
Child Support Services.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 10. Add § 309.121 to read as follows:
§ 309.121
services.
Employment and training
(a) As elected by the Tribe or Tribal
organization in § 309.65(b), provide
employment and training services to
eligible noncustodial parents. In
addition to eligibility criteria that may
be set by the Tribal IV–D agency, the
noncustodial parent must: have an open
IV–D case; have a child support order or
be determined by the Tribal IV–D
agency to be fully cooperating with the
Tribal IV–D agency to establish a child
support order; be unemployed or
underemployed or at risk of not being
able to comply with their support order.
In addition, the Tribal IV–D agency
must have adopted policies and
procedures for determining that the
noncustodial parent is not receiving the
same employment and training services
under federally-funded employment
and training programs administered by
the Tribe.
(b) These IV–D agency employment
and training services are limited to:
(1) Job search assistance;
(2) Job readiness training;
(3) Job development and job
placement services;
(4) Skills assessments to facilitate job
placement;
(5) Job retention services;
(6) Work supports, such as
transportation assistance, uniforms, and
tools; and
(7) Occupational training and other
skills training directly related to
employment, which may also include
activities to improve literacy and basic
skills, such as programs to complete
high school or a high school
equivalency certificate, or English as a
second language.
(c) Federal financial participation may
also be used to provide case
management in connection with the
allowable services under this section.
■ 11. Amend § 309.145 by:
■ a. Removing the word ‘‘and’’ at the
end of paragraph (c)(3);
■ b. Removing the period at the end of
paragraph (c)(4) and adding; ‘‘and’’ in
its place; and
■ c. Adding paragraph (c)(5).
The addition reads as follows:
§ 309.145 What costs are allowable for
Tribal IV–D programs carried out under
§ 309.65(a) of this part?
*
*
*
(c) * * *
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*
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 240 / Friday, December 13, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
(5) Employment and training services
activities in accordance with
§§ 309.65(b) and 309.121.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 12. Amend § 309.155 by:
■ a. Removing the word ‘‘and’’ at the
end of paragraph (e);
■ b. Redesignating paragraph (f) as
paragraph (g); and
■ c. Adding a new paragraph (f).
The addition reads as follows:
§ 309.155 What uses of Tribal IV–D
program funds are not allowable?
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Any expenditures under § 309.121
for subsidized employment or payment
of cash, checks, reimbursements, or any
other form of payment that can be
legally converted to currency provided
to the noncustodial parent; and
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2024–29081 Filed 12–11–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4184–41–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
46 CFR Part 401
[Docket No. USCG–2024–0406]
RIN 1625–AC94
Great Lakes Pilotage Rates—2025
Annual Review
Coast Guard, DHS.
Final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
In accordance with the
statutory provisions enacted by the
Great Lakes Pilotage Act of 1960, the
Coast Guard is issuing new pilotage
rates for 2025. This rule adjusts the
pilotage rates to account for changes in
district operating expenses, an increase
in the number of pilots, and anticipated
inflation. These changes, when
combined, result in a 7-percent net
increase in pilotage costs compared to
the 2024 season.
DATES: This final rule is effective
January 13, 2025.
ADDRESSES: To view documents
mentioned in this preamble as being
available in the docket, go to
www.regulations.gov, type USCG–2024–
0406 in the search box and click
‘‘Search.’’ Next, in the Document Type
column, select ‘‘Supporting & Related
Material.’’
khammond on DSK9W7S144PROD with RULES
SUMMARY:
For
information about this document, call or
email Mr. Brian Rogers, Commandant,
Office of Waterways and Ocean Policy—
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:42 Dec 12, 2024
Jkt 265001
Great Lakes Pilotage Division (CG–
WWM–2), Coast Guard; telephone 410–
360–9260, email Brian.Rogers@uscg.mil.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents for Preamble
I. Abbreviations
II. Basis and Purpose, and Regulatory History
III. Background
IV. Final Pilotage Rates for 2025
V. Discussion of Comments and Changes
VI. Summary of the Ratemaking Methodology
VII. Discussion of the Rate Adjustments
District One
A. Step 1: Recognize Previous Operating
Expenses
B. Step 2: Project Operating Expenses,
Adjusting for Inflation or Deflation
C. Step 3: Estimate Number of Registered
Pilots and Apprentice Pilots
D. Step 4: Determine Target Pilot
Compensation Benchmark and
Apprentice Pilot Wage Benchmark
E. Step 5: Project Working Capital Fund
F. Step 6: Project Needed Revenue
G. Step 7: Calculate Initial Base Rates
H. Step 8: Calculate Average Weighting
Factors by Area
I. Step 9: Calculate Revised Base Rates
J. Step 10: Review and Finalize Rates
District Two
A. Step 1: Recognize Previous Operating
Expenses
B. Step 2: Project Operating Expenses,
Adjusting for Inflation or Deflation
C. Step 3: Estimate Number of Registered
Pilots and Apprentice Pilots
D. Step 4: Determine Target Pilot
Compensation Benchmark and
Apprentice Pilot Wage Benchmark
E. Step 5: Project Working Capital Fund
F. Step 6: Project Needed Revenue
G. Step 7: Calculate Initial Base Rates
H. Step 8: Calculate Average Weighting
Factors by Area
I. Step 9: Calculate Revised Base Rates
J. Step 10: Review and Finalize Rates
District Three
A. Step 1: Recognize Previous Operating
Expenses
B. Step 2: Project Operating Expenses,
Adjusting for Inflation or Deflation
C. Step 3: Estimate Number of Registered
Pilots and Apprentice Pilots
D. Step 4: Determine Target Pilot
Compensation Benchmark and
Apprentice Pilot Wage Benchmark
E. Step 5: Project Working Capital Fund
F. Step 6: Project Needed Revenue
G. Step 7: Calculate Initial Base Rates
H. Step 8: Calculate Average Weighting
Factors by Area
I. Step 9: Calculate Revised Base Rates
J. Step 10: Review and Finalize Rates
VIII. Regulatory Analyses
A. Regulatory Planning and Review
B. Small Entities
C. Assistance for Small Entities
D. Collection of Information
E. Federalism
F. Unfunded Mandates
G. Taking of Private Property
H. Civil Justice Reform
I. Protection of Children
J. Indian Tribal Governments
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Frm 00090
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
K. Energy Effects
L. Technical Standards
M. Environment
I. Abbreviations
2023 final rule Great Lakes Pilotage Rates—
2023 Annual Ratemaking and Review of
Methodology
2024 final rule Great Lakes Pilotage Rates—
2024 Annual Review
2025 Ratemaking NPRM Great Lakes
Pilotage Rates—2025 Annual Review
notice of proposed rulemaking
APA American Pilots’ Association
BLS Bureau of Labor Statistics
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CPI Consumer Price Index
DHS Department of Homeland Security
Director U.S. Coast Guard’s Director of the
Great Lakes Pilotage
ECI Employment Cost Index
FOMC Federal Open Market Committee
FR Federal Register
GLPAC Great Lakes Pilotage Advisory
Committee
LPA Lakes Pilots Association
MOU Memorandum of Understanding
NAICS North American Industry
Classification System
NPRM Notice of proposed rulemaking
OMB Office of Management and Budget
PCE Personal Consumption Expenditures
§ Section
SBA Small Business Administration
SLSPA Saint Lawrence Seaway Pilots
Association
U.S.C. United States Code
WGLPA Western Great Lakes Pilots
Association
II. Basis and Purpose, and Regulatory
History
The legal basis of this rulemaking is
46 U.S.C. Chapter 93,1 which requires
foreign merchant vessels and United
States vessels operating ‘‘on register’’—
meaning United States vessels engaged
in foreign trade—to use United States or
Canadian pilots while transiting the
United States waters of the St. Lawrence
Seaway and the Great Lakes system.2
For U.S. Great Lakes Pilots, the statute
requires the Secretary to ‘‘prescribe by
regulation rates and charges for pilotage
services, giving consideration to the
public interest and the costs of
providing the services.’’ Title 46 of the
U.S.C. 9303(f) also requires that rates be
established or reviewed and adjusted
each year, no later than March 1. The
Secretary’s duties and authority under
46 U.S.C. Chapter 93 have generally
been delegated to the Coast Guard.3
The purpose of this final rule is to
issue new pilotage rates for 2025 by
revising a base rate established in 2023.
1 46
U.S.C. 9301–9308.
U.S.C. 9302(a)(1).
3 Department of Homeland Security Delegation
No. 00170.1 (II)(92)(f), Revision No. 01.4. The
Secretary retains the authority under Section 9307
to establish, and appoint members to, a Great Lakes
Pilotage Advisory Committee.
2 46
E:\FR\FM\13DER1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 240 (Friday, December 13, 2024)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 100789-100810]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-29081]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Administration for Children and Families
45 CFR Parts 302, 303, 304, and 309
RIN 0970-AD00
Employment and Training Services for Noncustodial Parents in the
Child Support Program
AGENCY: Office of Child Support Services (OCSS), Administration for
Children and Families (ACF), Department of Health and Human Services
(HHS or the Department).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In an effort to make the child support program more effective,
OCSS (or the Office) issues this final rule to allow State and Tribal
child support agencies the option to use Federal financial
participation (FFP) available under title IV-D of the Social Security
Act to provide the following employment and training services to
eligible noncustodial parents: job search assistance; job readiness
training; job development and job placement services; skills
assessments; job retention services; work supports; and occupational
training and other skills training directly related to employment.
DATES: This rule is effective on January 13, 2025.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Chad Edinger, Program Specialist, OCSS
Division of Regional Operations, at mail to: [email protected] or
(303) 844-1213. Telecommunications Relay users may dial 711 first.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Statutory Authority
This rule is published under the authority granted to the Secretary
of Health and Human Services by section 1102 of the Social Security Act
(the Act) (42 U.S.C. 1302). Section 1102 of the Act authorizes the
Secretary to publish regulations, not inconsistent with the Act, as may
be necessary to the efficient administration of the functions with
which the Secretary is responsible under the Act.
This rule is also authorized by sections 452(a)(1) and 454(13) of
the Act (42 U.S.C. 652(a)(1) and 654(13)). Section 452(a)(1) of the Act
expressly delegates authority to the Secretary's designee requiring the
designee to ``establish such standards for State programs for locating
noncustodial parents, establishing paternity, and obtaining child
support . . . as he
[[Page 100790]]
determines to be necessary to assure that such programs will be
effective.'' Section 454 of the Act establishes requirements that
States must include in their title IV-D \1\ State plans, the costs of
which are eligible for FFP under section 455 of the Act (42 U.S.C.
655). Specifically, section 454(13) of the Act provides the Secretary
with delegated authority to require the State's title IV-D plan to
``provide that the State will comply with such other requirements and
standards as the Secretary determines to be necessary to the
establishment of an effective program for locating noncustodial
parents, establishing paternity, obtaining support orders, and
collecting support payments . . . .'' State plans may be updated at any
time and a State would submit updates to their State plan at the time
of electing to provide employment and training services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Sections 451-469B of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. 651-
669b.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This rule is further published in accordance with section 455(f) of
the Act (42 U.S.C. 655(f)) which authorizes the Secretary to make child
support funding available to Tribes and Tribal organizations operating
child support programs and to issue regulations establishing
requirements for Tribal child support programs.
The rulemaking is also consistent with section 451 of the Act,
which authorizes Federal funding to States for enforcing support
obligations, obtaining child support payments, and assuring that
assistance in obtaining support is available to all children.
Background
The purpose of this rule is to allow State and Tribal child support
agencies the option to use FFP under title IV-D of the Act to provide
certain optional and nonduplicative employment and training services
for eligible noncustodial parents in the child support program.
In 1975, Congress established the child support program under title
IV-D of the Social Security Act (Pub. L. 93-647) to provide funding to
States for effective enforcement of child support obligations. The
child support program is administered at the Federal level by the OCSS
and functions in all States and over 60 Tribes.\2\ The program has
evolved over the past 50 years and has been guided by the changing
needs of families, by Federal legislation, and by research and data
that contribute to OCSS's understanding of the standards and
requirements necessary to establish an effective child support program.
Today the program is focused on delivering child support services that
improve the financial support of children, by collecting and
facilitating consistent child support payments based on the
noncustodial parents' ability to pay.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Throughout this final rule, States include the 50 States,
the District of Columbia, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Families and labor market opportunities have fundamentally changed
since 1975. The percentage of children who need child support services
has increased and the ability of noncustodial parents to pay child
support has declined.\3\ In calendar year 2021, 40 percent of births
were to unmarried women, up from 14 percent in 1975.\4\ In calendar
year 2023, 25 percent of children lived with a single parent, up from
17 percent in 1975.\5\ In fiscal year 2023, the child support program
served one in five children in the United States, or 12.7 million
children.\6\ The labor market has been particularly difficult for less-
educated men during this period, leaving them with significantly fewer
job opportunities and less income than before. In 2015, the real hourly
earnings for men 25-54 years old with only a high school degree was 18
percent lower than it was in 1973.\7\ As of 2018, over 70 percent of
noncustodial parents had not attended college.\8\ In 2017, more than
one-third of noncustodial parents (3.4 million) lived in families with
incomes below 200 percent of the official poverty thresholds, and 43
percent did not work full-time, year-round.\9\ Stable employment is
particularly important for a parent to be able to make reliable
consistent child support payments for their children.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National
Center for Health Statistics, ``Nonmarital Childbearing in the
United States, 1940-99,'' National Vital Statistics Reports, 48: 16
(October 18, 2000), available at https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr48/nvs48_16.pdf. Osterman, Michelle J.K., Brady E. Hamilton,
Joyce A. Martin, Anne K. Driscoll, and Claudia P. Valenzuela,
``Births: Final Data for 2021,'' National Vital Statistics Reports,
72: 1 (January 31, 2023), available at https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr72/nvsr72-01.pdf. U.S. Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention. ``OJJDP Statistical Briefing Book,'' (March
2024) available at https://www.ojjdp.gov/ojstatbb/population/qa01201.asp?qaDate=2023. Binder, Ariel J. and John Bound, ``The
Declining Labor Market Prospects of Less-Educated Men,'' Journal of
Economic Perspectives, 33: 2 (2019), available at https://pubs.aeaweb.org/doi/pdfplus/10.1257/jep.33.2.163. Sanders, Patrick,
``Demographic and Socioeconomic Characteristics of Nonresident
Parents,'' Washington, DC: Congressional Research Service, R46942
(October 2021) available at https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/R/R46942.
\4\ U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (October 18,
2000). Osterman, Michelle J.K., et al. (January 31, 2023).
\5\ U.S. Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention
(March 2024).
\6\ U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration
for Children and Families, Office of Child Support Services, ``2023
Child Support: More Money for Families,'' undated, available at
https://www.acf.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/documents/ocse/2023_infographic_national.pdf.
\7\ Binder, Ariel J. and John Bound (2019). See page 163 of the
article where the authors note that they use the Personal
Consumption Expenditure deflator when reporting real hourly
earnings.
\8\ Sanders, Patrick (October 2021). This report uses the term
``nonresident parent'' rather than noncustodial parent. It defines a
nonresident parent as a person 15 years or older who does not reside
for a majority of nights in the same household as one or more of his
or her biological, adopted, or stepchildren under age 21. This
definition is very similar to the definition of a noncustodial
parent used by the child support program. For purposes of the child
support program, a noncustodial parent is a parent who does not have
primary care, custody, or control of the child, and who may have an
obligation to pay child support (see Office of Child Support
Services, Glossary of Common Terms available at https://www.acf.hhs.gov/css/glossary#N).
\9\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other societal changes have also affected the child support
program, including greatly elevated incarceration rates. Incarceration
rates increased dramatically between 1980 and 2008 and have since
declined, but the percent of the U.S. population incarcerated in 2020
was more than double the figure in 1980.\10\ It is estimated that six
percent of all children in the United States have a parent who is or
has been incarcerated.\11\ Research shows that the subgroup of
noncustodial parents who participate in employment and training
programs have high rates of prior arrests, convictions, and
incarceration.\12\ For example, 65 percent of noncustodial
[[Page 100791]]
parents who enrolled in a recently completed national demonstration of
child support-led employment and training programs reported that they
had been previously incarcerated.\13\ Having an incarceration record is
a barrier to employment that diminishes earnings potential, reducing a
parent's ability to work and pay child support.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ Kluckow, Rich and Zhen Zeng ``Correctional Populations in
the United States, 2020--Statistical Tables'' (March 2022), Lauren
E. Glaze, ``Correctional Populations in the United States, 2010''
(December 2011), and Louis W. Jankowski, Louis W., ``Correctional
Populations in the United States, 1990'' (July 1992), U.S.
Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Bureau of Justice
Statistics, all available at https://bjs.ojp.gov/library/publications/list?series_filter=Correctional%20Populations%20in%20the%20United%20States. Historical U.S. population data available at https://www.census.gov/data/tables/time-series/dec/popchange-data-text.html.
\11\ The Annie E. Casey Foundation, ``Children Who Had a Parent
Who Was Ever Incarcerated by Race and Ethnicity in United States''
(May 2023) available at https://datacenter.aecf.org/data/tables/9734-children-who-had-a-parent-who-was-ever-incarcerated-by-race-and-ethnicity#detailed/1/any/false/2043,1769,1696,1648,1603/10,11,9,12,1,13/18995,18996.
\12\ Miller, Cynthia, and Virginia Knox, ``The Challenge of
Helping Low-Income Fathers Support Their Children: Final Lessons
From Parents' Fair Share,'' New York: Manpower Demonstration
Research Corporation (MDRC) (2001), available at https://www.mdrc.org/sites/default/files/full_529.pdf. Barden, Bret, Randall
Juras, Cindy Redcross, Mary Farrell, Dan Bloom, ``New Perspectives
on Creating Jobs: Final Impacts of the Next Generation of Subsidized
Employment Programs,'' New York: MDRC (May 2018), available at
https://www.mdrc.org/sites/default/files/ETJD_STED_Final_Impact_Report_2018_508Compliant_v2.pdf.
\13\ Maria Cancian, Maria, Angela Guarin, Leslie Hodges, and
Daniel R. Meyer, ``Characteristics of Participants in the Child
Support Noncustodial Parent Employment Demonstration (CSPED)
Evaluation,'' Madison, WI: Institute for Research on Poverty
(December 2019), Appendix Table C3, available at https://www.irp.wisc.edu/wp/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/CSPED-Final-Characteristics-of-Participants-Report-2019-Compliant.pdf.
\14\ Travis, Jeremy, Bruce Western, & Steve Redburn, (Eds.) The
Growth of Incarceration in the United States: Exploring Causes and
Consequences. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, (2014),
available at https://nap.nationalacademies.org/catalog/18613/the-growth-of-incarceration-in-the-united-states-exploring-causes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 1996, Congress enacted the Personal Responsibility and Work
Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA, Pub. L. 104-193), which made
significant changes to the child support program.\15\ These changes
included the introduction of a new ``family first'' child support
payment distribution policy, which required that families who
previously received cash assistance must receive certain child support
arrearage payments before the State and Federal governments retain
their share of collections.\16\ PRWORA also amended the Social Security
Act to allow courts and child support agencies to require noncustodial
parents owing past-due child support for a child receiving assistance
under the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program to
participate in work activities. Specifically, section 466(a)(15) of the
Act requires States to have laws and procedures under which the State
has the authority to issue an order requiring an individual to
participate in work activities, as defined by section 407(d) of the
Act.\17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ Legler, Paul, The Coming Revolution in Child Support
Policy: Implications of the 1996 Welfare Act Family Law Quarterly,
Vol. 30, No. 3 (Fall 1996), pp. 519-563, available at https://www.jstor.org/stable/25740093.
\16\ Congressional Research Service, ``The Child Support
Enforcement Program: Summary of Laws Enacted Since 1950,''
Washington, DC: Congressional Research Service, R47630 (July 2023)
available at https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/R/R47630.
\17\ In section 407(d) of the Act, work activities are defined
as: (1) unsubsidized employment; (2) subsidized private sector
employment; (3) subsidized public sector employment; (4) work
experience (including work associated with the refurbishing of
publicly assisted housing) if sufficient private sector employment
is not available; (5) on-the-job training; (6) job search and job
readiness assistance; (7) community service programs; (8) vocational
educational training (not to exceed 12 months with respect to any
individual); (9) job skills training directly related to employment;
(10) education directly related to employment, in the case of a
recipient who has not received a high school diploma or a
certificate of high school equivalency; (11) satisfactory attendance
at secondary school or in a course of study leading to a certificate
of general equivalence, in the case of a recipient who has not
completed secondary school or received such a certificate; and (12)
the provision of child care services to an individual who is
participating in a community service program. Available at https://www.ssa.gov/OP_Home/ssact/title04/0407.htm.
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In 1997, Congress authorized a total of $3 billion for the Welfare-
to-Work (WtW) Grants program as part of the Balanced Budget Act of 1997
(Pub. L. 105-33). Administered by the U.S. Department of Labor, these
grants were intended to help long-term welfare recipients and
noncustodial parents of children whose custodial parents met certain
criteria find and keep good jobs.\18\ Congress appropriated funds for
fiscal years 1998 and 1999, and grantees were allowed five years to
spend their funds, which ended in 2004. OCSS encouraged IV-D and IV-A
agencies (TANF agencies) to work together to increase the participation
of noncustodial parents in WtW programs and encouraged States to make
``special efforts to inform potentially eligible noncustodial parents
about the existence and availability of WtW services.'' \19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ U.S. Department of Labor, ``Training and Employment
Guidance Letter No. 15-01, General Program Questions,'' Reissued
March 22, 2002, available at https://www.dol.gov/sites/dolgov/files/ETA/advisories/TEGL/2002/TEGL15-01_GP.pdf.
\19\ See AT-00-08, available at https://www.acf.hhs.gov/css/policy-guidance/questions-and-responses-regarding-collaborative-efforts-iv-d-agencies-and.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, OCSS issued policy guidance in PIQ-98-03 \20\ and AT-
00-08 \21\ to respond to State inquiries about the availability of FFP
under title IV-D to pay for the costs of work activities for
noncustodial parents under section 466(a)(15) of the Act. OCSS
concluded that because section 466(a)(15) of the Act did not require
that IV-D programs establish, provide, or administer work activity
programs for noncustodial parents, the costs of these activities could
not be attributed to the IV-D program. In guidance, OCSS stated that
under section 466(a)(15) of the Act FFP was available ``for the
identification and referral of unemployed noncustodial parents to job
training, coordination with courts regarding compliance with court
orders, tracking participation, and data collection,'' but was not
available for ``training and services provided by entities other than
the IV-D agency.'' \22\ OCSS viewed the determination of eligibility
for and cost of participation in WtW programs as ``the responsibilities
of the WtW grantees, not the courts or the IV-D agency.'' \23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ PIQ-98-03 is available at: https://www.dshs.wa.gov/sites/default/files/ESA/dcs/documents/OCSE_PIQ_90_99.pdf.
\21\ AT-00-08, supra note 17.
\22\ Id.
\23\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This final rule allows FFP for employment and training services for
noncustodial parents under the separate authority provided to the
Secretary in sections 451(a)(1) and 454(13) of the Act. As mentioned
above, sections 451(a)(1) and 454(13) of the Act provide the Secretary
with delegated authority to establish requirements and standards that
the Secretary determines to be necessary to the establishment of an
effective child support program. Upon reviewing the results of research
studies detailed below, and described in the Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, indicating that providing employment and training services
for noncustodial parents can lead to more reliable and regular child
support payments, the Secretary has determined that allowing funding
under title IV-D for such services improves the effectiveness of the
child support program.
In the decades that followed OCSS's policy guidance of 1998 and
2000, national demonstrations and state-based programs have examined
the effectiveness of providing employment and training services to
unemployed and underemployed noncustodial parents. Collectively, these
demonstrations and programs found positive outcomes in employment
rates, earnings, child support payment rates, the amount of child
support paid, and payment regularity.\24\
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\24\ Miller, Cynthia, and Virginia Knox (November 2001). Perez-
Johnson, Irma, Jacqueline Kauff, Alan Hershey, ``Giving Noncustodial
Parents Options: Employment and Child Support Outcomes of the SHARE
Program,'' Princeton, NJ: Mathematica Policy Research (October
2003), available at https://aspe.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/migrated_legacy_files/39936/report.pdf. Pearson, Jessica, Nancy
Thoennes, Lanae Davis, David Price, Jane Venohr and Tracy Griffith,
``OCSE Responsible Fatherhood Programs: Client Characteristics and
Program Outcomes,'' Denver, CO: Center for Policy Research and
Policy Studies Inc. (September 2003), available at https://www.frpn.org/asset/ocse-responsible-fatherhood-programs-client-characteristics-and-program-outcomes. Martinson, Karin, Demetra
Smith Nightingale, Pamela A. Holcomb, Burt S. Barnow, and John
Trutko, ``Partners for Fragile Families Demonstration Projects:
Employment and Child Support Outcomes and Trends,'' Washington, DC:
The Urban Institute (September 2007), available at https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/46816/411567-Partners-for-Fragile-Families-Demonstration-Projects.PDF. Schroeder, Daniel
and Nicholas Doughty, ``Texas Non-Custodial Parent Choices: Program
Impact Analysis,'' Austin, TX: Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public
Affairs, University of Texas (September 2009), available at https://sites.utexas.edu/raymarshallcenter/files/2005/07/NCP_Choices_Final_Sep_03_2009.pdf. Lippold, Kye, Austin Nichols, and
Elaine Sorensen, ``Strengthening Families Through Stronger Fathers:
Final Impact Report for the Pilot Employment Programs,'' Washington,
DC: Urban Institute (October 2011), available at https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/26676/412442-Strengthening-Families-Through-Stronger-Fathers-Final-Impact-Report-for-the-Pilot-Employment-Programs.PDF. Born, Catherine E., Pamela
Caudill Ovwigho, and Correne Saunders, ``The Noncustodial Parent
Employment Program: Employment and Payment Outcomes,'' Baltimore,
MD: Family Welfare Research and Training Group, University of
Maryland, School of Social Work (April 2011), available at https://www.ssw.umaryland.edu/media/ssw/fwrtg/child-support-research/cs-initiatives/npep.pdf?&. Pearson, Jessica, Lanae Davis and Jane
Venohr, ``Parents to Work! Program Outcomes and Economic Impacts,''
Denver, CO: Center for Policy Research (February 2011), available at
https://centerforpolicyresearch.org/wp-content/uploads/ParentsToWork.pdf. Davis, Lanae, Jessica Pearson, and Nancy
Thoennes. ``Evaluation of the Tennessee Parent Support Program,''
Denver, CO: Center for Policy Research (November 2013), available at
https://centerforpolicyresearch.org/wp-content/uploads/EvaluationTennesseeParentSupportProgram.pdf. Sorensen, Elaine,
``What We Learned from Recent Federal Evaluations of Programs
Serving Disadvantaged Noncustodial Parents.'' Washington, DC: Office
of Planning, Research, and Evaluation, Administration for Children
and Families, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (November
2020), available at https://www.acf.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/documents/opre/OPRE%20NCP%20Employment%20Brief_508.pdf. Wasserman,
Kyla, Lily Freedman, Zaina Rodney, and Caroline Schultz,
``Connecting Parents to Occupational Training: A Partnership Between
Child Support Agencies and Local Service Providers,'' New York: MDRC
(April 2021), available at https://www.mdrc.org/sites/default/files/FamiliesForward_Report_0.pdf.
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[[Page 100792]]
Research shows that reliable child support depends on the economic
stability of noncustodial parents. For example, in Wisconsin,
noncustodial fathers who paid at least 90 percent of their order during
the first year after it was established were 9 times as likely to work
all four quarters that year than those who paid nothing.\25\
Nationally, over 70 percent of child support collections are made
through wage withholding by employers.\26\ Noncustodial parents with
irregular employment are particularly unlikely to pay the full amount
of their child support order.\27\ As a result, substantial arrears
accrue.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ Cancian, Maria, Yoona Kim, and Daniel R. Meyer, ``Who Is
Not Paying Child Support?'' Madison, WI: Institute for Research on
Poverty (September 2021), available at https://www.irp.wisc.edu/wp/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/CSRPA-2020-2022-T2.pdf.
\26\ DCL-23-06, OCSS Preliminary FY 2022 Data Report and Tables,
available at https://www.acf.hhs.gov/css/policy-guidance/fy-2022-preliminary-data-report-and-tables.
\27\ Cancian, Maria, et al. (September 2021).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Data regarding unpaid child support debt shows that 78 percent of
the $114 billion in child support arrears that was owed in fiscal year
(FY) 2022 was owed by parents who had annual reported incomes below
$20,000, which is consistent with earlier published research that
examined child support debt in nine States and found a similar
result.\28\ Studies have also shown that owing large amounts of child
support arrears among low-income noncustodial parents can be
counterproductive to the goals of the child support program as it can
push these parents further away from the formal labor market, reduce
their child support payments, and distance them from their
children.\29\ Parents who owe large amounts of arrears can be
discouraged from working in jobs that withhold income for child
support, especially if they can easily turn to other means of earning
money where child support is not typically withheld, such as self-
employment or working off the books.\30\
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\28\ The data regarding child support debt is based on a random
sample of noncustodial parents who owed arrears in the OCSS Debtor
File as of April 2022, which was matched to data from the National
Directory of New Hires. Reported income is the amount of quarterly
earnings and unemployment insurance reported for the noncustodial
parent in the National Directory of New Hires for FY 2021. The
$113.4 billion figure is from the Office of Child Support Services
FY 2022 Preliminary Data Tables, Table P-98 available at https://www.acf.hhs.gov/css/policy-guidance/fy-2022-preliminary-data-report-and-tables. Sorensen, Elaine, Liliana Sousa, and Simon Schaner,
``Assessing Child Support Arrears in Nine Large States and the
Nation,'' Washington, DC: Urban Institute (2007), available at
https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/29736/1001242-Assessing-Child-Support-Arrears-in-Nine-Large-States-and-the-Nation.PDF.
\29\ Miller, Daniel P. and Ronald B. Mincy. ``Falling Further
Behind? Child Support Arrears and Fathers' Labor Force
Participation,'' Social Service Review 86:4 (2012), available at
https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/668761. Cancian,
Maria, Carolyn Heinrich, and Yiyoon Chung, ``Discouraging
Disadvantaged Fathers' Employment: An Unintended Consequence of
Policies Designed to Support Families,'' Journal of Policy Analysis
and Management 32:4 (2013), available at https://www.researchgate.net/publication/264476066_Discouraging_Disadvantaged_Fathers'_Employment_An_Unintende
d_Consequence_of_Policies_Designed_to_Support_Families. Kimberly
Turner and Maureen Waller, ``Indebted Relationships: Child Support
Arrears and Nonresident Fathers' Involvement with Children.''
Journal of Marriage and Family 79:1 (2017), available at https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/jomf.12361.
\30\ Turetsky, Vicki and Maureen Waller. ``Piling on Debt: The
Intersections Between Child Support Arrears and Legal Financial
Obligations.'' UCLA Criminal Justice Law Review, 4(1) (2020),
available at https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7vd043jw.
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Based on the previously discussed research and evidence and the
discussion below, OCSS has a greater understanding of the effectiveness
of providing employment and training services to noncustodial parents
in improving their ability to obtain employment and make regular child
support payments. In allowing FFP for such employment and training
services, we have not disregarded our previous interpretation of
section 466(a)(15) of the Act. Section 466(a)(15) neither authorizes
nor prohibits the child support program from providing employment and
training services to noncustodial parents under title IV-D, and is not
the legal basis for this final rule. OCSS bases this rule on sections
452(a)(1), 454(13) and 455(f), providing the Secretary with broad
delegated express authority to establish standards and requirements for
State and Tribal child support programs that make the program more
effective in ensuring that children receive financial support from
their parent. This rule allows State and Tribal expenses for providing
these services under their IV-D plan to be eligible for FFP under
section 455 of the Act.
Relevant Studies of Employment and Training Services
Since the 1990s, a significant body of research has examined the
effectiveness of providing employment and training services to
unemployed and underemployed parents who owe child support.\31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ Employment and training programs for noncustodial parents
described here were evaluated using one of three evaluation methods:
evaluating the outcomes of individuals randomly assigned to the
program (i.e. the treatment group) or receive business as usual
(i.e. the control group), typically referred to as a random control
trial (RCT) or an experimental evaluation; evaluating the outcomes
of individuals who enrolled in the program compared to a group of
individuals who did not enroll in the program but are similar to
those who did enroll, referred to here as a quasi-experimental
evaluation; and evaluations that examine the outcomes of individuals
who enrolled in the program, typically before and after they entered
the program, which are often referred to as outcome evaluations. The
first two evaluation methods are considered impact evaluations,
which draw causal inferences, while the third evaluation method is
not designed to attribute causality. Experimental evaluations are
considered to be the most rigorous evaluation method, followed by
quasi-experimental evaluations. Outcome evaluations are considered
the least rigorous evaluation method.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The first large-scale effort was conducted by MDRC and was called
Parents' Fair Share (PFS). PFS was first implemented as a pilot program
in nine sites in 1992-1993, followed by a national random assignment
demonstration implemented in seven sites in 1994-1996. More than 5,500
noncustodial parents were randomly assigned to PFS or a control group
during the national demonstration.\32\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ Miller, Cynthia, and Virginia Knox (November 2001).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The PFS demonstration gave participating courts and child support
agencies the ability to refer noncustodial parents facing contempt for
nonpayment of child support to the PFS program where they received the
following four
[[Page 100793]]
core services: employment and training services, enhanced child support
services, peer support, and mediation. The employment and training
services included job search assistance/job clubs, job development,
classroom-based education and training, on-the-job training, and job
retention services. The enhanced child support services included
assigning smaller caseloads to child support workers who handled PFS
cases, expediting modification of child support orders, and offering
flexible rules that allowed child support orders to be reduced while
noncustodial parents participated in PFS. Peer support consisted of
participating in a facilitated support group built around a responsible
fatherhood curriculum developed by MDRC. The lead agency for these
demonstration projects varied, however, two were led by a local child
support agency.
The PFS demonstration found that PFS significantly increased the
likelihood of paying child support during the two-year follow-up
period. The average quarterly payment rate was 12 percent higher for
parents who enrolled in PFS than those who did not.\33\ While the final
PFS report did not examine the regularity of child support payments,
the interim report did. It found that parents who enrolled in PFS
during the first year of the demonstration were 19 percent more likely
than the control group to pay child support in at least four of the six
quarters during the 18-month follow-up period.\34\
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\33\ Id.
\34\ Doolittle, Fred, Virginia Knox, Cynthia Miller, and Sharon
Rowser, ``Building Opportunities, Enforcing Obligations:
Implementation and Interim Impacts of Parents' Fair Share,'' New
York: MDRC (1998), table 6.3, available at https://www.mdrc.org/sites/default/files/full_38.pdf.
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As noted earlier, in 1997, Congress authorized the WtW Grants
program to help welfare recipients and noncustodial parents find and
keep good jobs. A descriptive study conducted as part of the national
evaluation of WtW grant programs examined the strategies that 11
purposively selected WtW programs used to provide employment services
to noncustodial parents. The study found that a variety of
organizations could successfully operate employment and training
programs for noncustodial parents.\35\ Eight of 11 programs partnered
with the State or Local child support agency. Child support agencies
provided referrals, designated specific staff to work with the program,
and offered flexible payment options and debt reduction options for
participants. The principal employment services that all of the WtW
programs provided were employability assessments, individualized
employment plans, job search assistance, job readiness activities, job
retention services, and assistance with transportation and work
expenses. Some of the WtW programs also provided job development and
placement services, on-the-job training, skills training, General
Educational Development (GED) instruction, basic skills training, and
work experience.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ Martinson, Karin, John Trutko, and Debra Strong, ``Serving
Noncustodial Parents: A Descriptive Study of Welfare-to-Work
Programs,'' Washington, DC: Urban Institute (December 2000),
available at https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/62761/410340-Serving-Noncustodial-Parents-A-Descriptive-Study-of-Welfare-to-Work-Programs.PDF.
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One WtW program that served noncustodial parents was evaluated as
part of the national evaluation of the WtW grants program.\36\ This
program, called Support Has A Rewarding Effect (SHARE), operated in
Yakima, Kittitas, and Klickitat counties in the State of Washington
from July 1998 through September 2001. It was led by the Tri-County
Workforce Development Council (WDC) and involved a strong collaboration
among Tri-County WDC, the State's Division of Child Support, and the
office of the Yakima County prosecuting attorney (YCPA). SHARE provided
the courts and YCPA the ability to offer WtW services to noncustodial
parents during a child support contempt hearing for failure to pay
child support. WtW services consisted of employability assessments,
individualized employment plans, and other WtW services structured to
meet the needs of the noncustodial parent. Job search workshops and
referrals for job openings were the principal service offered, but
noncustodial parents could be offered pre-employment education,
vocational training, or on-the-job training. After the noncustodial
parent had secured a job, WtW case management continued for at least 90
days, during which time job retention services were provided. WtW funds
were also available to help with work supports such as transportation,
uniforms, work supplies, and other short-term emergency needs. The
outcome evaluation examined employment and child support payment trends
for 574 noncustodial parents who were referred to the SHARE program.
The evaluation found that the earnings and child support payments of
noncustodial parents referred to SHARE increased substantially after
being referred to the program.\37\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ Perez-Johnson, Irma, et al. (October 2003).
\37\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 1998, OCSS launched an eight-State demonstration to test the
effectiveness of fatherhood programs.\38\ The purpose of these programs
was to assist unemployed or low-income noncustodial parents in paying
their child support by improving their employment and earnings and
encouraging more involved parenting. States were given wide latitude in
program format, services provided, and client eligibility. Most States
partnered with community-based organizations to lead the project and
most projects offered employment services. The exact package of
employment services varied by project, but employment services across
all projects included job search assistance, job readiness services,
job development and placement, work supports, and vocational skills
training and assessments. This demonstration was evaluated by comparing
participant outcomes before and after enrollment in the program. The
outcome evaluation found that the percent of participants paying child
support increased after enrollment in every participating State, by
amounts ranging from four percent to 31 percent.\39\ The average amount
of child support due that was paid also increased after enrollment in
every participating State, by amounts ranging from one percent to 16
percent.\40\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ Pearson, Jessica, et al. (June 2000).
\39\ Pearson, Jessica, et al. (September 2003).
\40\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 2000, OCSS and the Ford Foundation launched a national
demonstration called Partners for Fragile Families (PFF), which was
conducted in 13 sites and ended in 2003.\41\ The goals of this
demonstration were to promote voluntary paternity establishment;
improve the parenting and relationship skills of young fathers; and
help young fathers secure and retain employment. It targeted fathers
between the ages of 16 and 25 years old who had not yet established
paternity and did not have extensive involvement in the child support
program. The lead agency in all 13 sites was a community-based
organization, but each site partnered with the local child support
agency and typically other organizations, such as workforce development
agencies. The primary service consisted of a series of structured
workshops on topics such as fatherhood, parenting, job readiness and
[[Page 100794]]
job search, and child support. The exact package of employment services
varied across projects, but the following employment services were
offered across all projects: job readiness instruction, job search
assistance, job referral and placement, job development, on-the-job
training, GED classes, and job skills training. PFF enrolled over 1,470
noncustodial parents.\42\ The outcome evaluation of PFF examined child
support outcomes of participants at the time of enrollment and over the
next two years. It found that the percentage of participants with child
support orders increased from 14 percent to 35 percent during the first
two years after program enrollment.\43\ It also found that the average
number of months participants paid child support increased from 4.2
months to 5.2 months, and the average annual amount of child support
paid increased by 43 percent from $1,238 to $1,775 between the first
and second year after enrollment.\44\
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\41\ Martinson, Karin, John Trutko, Demetra Smith Nightingale,
Pamela A. Holcomb, and Burt S. Barnow, ``The Implementation of the
Partners for Fragile Families Demonstration Projects,'' Washington,
DC: The Urban Institute (June 2007), available at https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/46576/411511-The-Implementation-of-the-Partners-for-Fragile-Families-Demonstration-Projects.PDF.
\42\ Id, Exhibit 2.1.
\43\ Martinson, Karin, et al. (September 2007).
\44\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 2005, the Child Support Division of the Office of the Attorney
General of Texas and the Texas Workforce Commission established the
Noncustodial Parent (NCP) Choices program.\45\ The goal of the program
is to help parents make regular child support payments and become
financially stable.\46\ This program remains in operation today and is
currently operating in 21 of the 28 workforce development board areas
in Texas.\47\ To be eligible to receive services, noncustodial parents
must be court-ordered to participate. When a noncustodial parent enters
the program, workforce development staff perform an assessment of needs
and barriers and create an individual employment plan designed to move
that individual into a stable employment situation. Additional
employment and training services offered to noncustodial parents mirror
those provided to TANF recipients under the Texas' Choices Program.\48\
The services emphasize Work First, providing job referrals and job
search assistance, and may include development, support services,
short-term training, subsidized employment/work experience, GED and
English as a Second Language classes, and job retention and career
advancement assistance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ Schroeder, Daniel and Nicholas Doughty (September 2009).
\46\ Texas Workforce Commission, Noncustodial Parent Choices
Program, available at https://www.twc.texas.gov/programs/
noncustodial-parent-choices#:~:text=The%20goal%20of%20NCP%20Choices,
Alamo.
\47\ Id.
\48\ Texas Workforce Commission, Choices Program, available at
https://www.twc.texas.gov/programs/choices.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NCP Choices was evaluated during the initial years of its
operation.\49\ The impact evaluation was based on data from 2005 to
2009 and ten local workforce development areas. It used a quasi-
experimental evaluation design.\50\ A total of 2,296 noncustodial
parents who participated in NCP Choices were included in the
evaluation. The evaluation found monthly child support collection rates
among NCP Choices participants were 47 percent higher than the
comparison group in the first year after program enrollment, and the
amounts collected averaged $57 per month higher.\51\ In addition, those
ordered into NCP Choices paid their child support 50 percent more
consistently over time than the comparison group.\52\ All of these
positive impacts continued well into the second through fourth years
after program enrollment.\53\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ Schroeder, Daniel and Nicholas Doughty (September 2009).
\50\ Quasi-experimental designs aim to assess causal
relationships without using random assignment. When evaluating a
program, they compare the group of individuals who participated in
the program to a group of individuals who did not participate in the
program who are as similar as possible to those who participated in
the program in terms of pre-intervention characteristics. For
further information, see Handley, Margaret A., Courtney Lyles,
Charles McCulloch, and Adithya Cattamanchi, ``Selecting and
Improving Quasi-Experimental Designs in Effectiveness and
Implementation Research'' Annual Review of Public Health 39 (2018),
available at https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8011057/pdf/nihms-1671041.pdf.
\51\ Schroeder, Daniel and Nicholas Doughty (September 2009).
\52\ Id.
\53\ Id.
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In 2006, the New York State Legislature enacted the Strengthening
Families Through Stronger Fathers Initiative, a pilot program to help
low-income noncustodial parents find work and pay their child
support.\54\ The legislation authorized funding for five programs to
provide employment and other supportive services to low-income
noncustodial parents, which operated from 2006 to 2009. Employment
services offered by the five programs consisted of job search and
placement assistance, job readiness training, job development, job
skills training, and employment-related supports.\55\ One program
provided subsidized employment and job retention and career enhancement
services. The pilot programs served 3,668 noncustodial parents.\56\ The
impact evaluation used a quasi-experimental design. It found that
Strengthening Families Through Stronger Fathers increased the percent
of parents paying child support by 22 percent, and the amount of child
support paid by 35 percent in the first year after enrollment compared
to the comparison group.\57\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ Tannehill, Tess G., Carolyn T. O'Brien, and Elaine J.
Sorensen, ``Strengthening Families Through Stronger Fathers
Initiative: Process Evaluation Report,'' Washington, DC: Urban
Institute (July 2009), available at https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/28106/1001412-Strengthening-Families-Through-Stronger-Fathers-Initiative-Process-Evaluation-Report.PDF.
\55\ Id.
\56\ Lippold, Kye, et al. (October 2011).
\57\ Id.
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In 2006, Maryland began the Noncustodial Parent Employment Program
(NPEP), a joint effort of the Child Support Enforcement and Family
Investment Administrations of the Maryland Department of Human
Resources.\58\ The purpose of this program is to provide employment
services to noncustodial parents who are behind in their child support
so that they can be a reliable source of income for their children.
NPEP was a statewide program in its initial years and still operates
today, but not in all counties.\59\ During its initial phase, each NPEP
program provided employment services similar to those offered in WtW
grants programs. An evaluation of NPEP was conducted, which examined
3,900 noncustodial parents referred to NPEP in 2007 and 2008.\60\
Outcomes for these participants were examined one year before and after
enrollment. The outcome evaluation found that the average amount of
child support paid increased from $1,094 in the year prior to
enrollment to $1,246 in the year after enrollment, a 14 percent
increase.\61\ It also found that the average number of months that a
participant paid child support rose from 3.7 months in the year prior
to enrollment to 4.5 months in the year after enrollment, a 22 percent
increase.\62\
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\58\ Born, Catherine E., et al. (April 2011).
\59\ NPEP is currently referred to as the Noncustodial Party
Employment Program. Maryland Department of Human Services, Child
Support Administration. ``Noncustodial Party Employment Programs,''
available at: https://dhs.maryland.gov/child-support-services/noncustodial-parents/noncustodial-parent-employment-programs/.
\60\ Born, Catherine E., et al. (April 2011).
\61\ Id.
\62\ Id.
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In 2008, the Arapahoe County Division of Child Support Enforcement,
the Arapahoe/Douglas Workforce Center, and the 18th Judicial District
Court in Colorado established the Parents to Work program to secure
jobs for unemployed and underemployed
[[Page 100795]]
noncustodial parents and generate child support payments.\63\ The
program is still in operation today.\64\ An evaluation of this program
was conducted, which examined the first two years of operation. During
that time the following employment services were offered: intensive job
search assistance, job readiness training, job placement, job
development, on-the-job training, work experience, occupational and
vocational training, subsidized employment, pre-GED or GED preparation,
and assistance with transportation, work clothes and tools. The quasi-
experimental evaluation examined the outcomes of participants one year
before and after enrollment and compared them to a group of
noncustodial parents who did not participate in Parents to Work.\65\ It
found that the average percentage of child support due that was paid by
the treatment group rose from 36.6 percent in the year prior to
enrollment to 41.3 percent in the year following enrollment, but it did
not improve for the comparison group.\66\ Payment regularity also
improved significantly for the treatment group, rising from an average
of 5.3 payments in the year prior to enrollment to 5.7 payments in the
year following enrollment, but again payment regularity did not improve
for the comparison group.\67\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ Pearson, Jessica, et al. (February 2011).
\64\ Arapahoe/Douglas Works Workforce Center. ``Parents to
Work'', available at: https://www.adworks.org/job-seekers/programs/parents-to-work/.
\65\ Pearson, Jessica, et al. (February 2011). Parents to Work
was intended to be evaluated using random assignment, but the
treatment group was disproportionately selected from case worker and
court referrals, while the comparison group was disproportionately
selected from ad hoc reports. Because of this difference in
procedures, the two groups were statistically significantly
different prior to program entry. In an effort to offset this
limitation, the study examined the outcomes of noncustodial parents
in both groups after controlling for observed differences in pre-
program earnings, child support payments, and other characteristics.
The sample size for the evaluation was 601 parents in the treatment
group and 349 in the comparison group.
\66\ Id.
\67\ Id.
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In 2009, the Tennessee Department of Human Services was awarded a
grant from OCSS to develop, implement, and evaluate a program providing
employment, parenting time, and case management services to
low[hyphen]income, unwed parents in the child support program in three
Tennessee judicial districts. The program, called the Parent Support
Program (PSP), placed child support staff known as Grant Program
Coordinators in each of the three local child support offices to
provide services to families. These staff were the primary providers of
employment, parenting time, and case management services. The Grant
Program Coordinators conducted a needs assessment at enrollment and
developed a service plan for each participant. They also provided job
search and job readiness assistance, job development, and financial
assistance with work-related expenses. For other employment services,
such as job training, participants were referred to other service
providers. Enrollment began in January 2010 and ended in March 2013.
During that time, PSP enrolled 1,016 noncustodial parents. The
evaluation examined participant outcomes in the year before and after
enrollment. The outcome evaluation found that the average percentage of
child support due that participants paid rose from 33 percent in the
year prior to enrollment to 36 percent in the year after
enrollment.\68\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\68\ Davis, Lanae, et al. (November 2013).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Many more States than those discussed above have operated
employment and training programs for noncustodial parents, but they
have not been able to use FFP to pay for these services. This has
limited the potential impact and reach of these services. In February
2014, 30 States and the District of Columbia were operating 77
employment and training programs for noncustodial parents with active
child support agency involvement. Three of these States were operating
statewide programs--Georgia, Maryland, and North Dakota. But only a few
of these programs have been able to secure resource commitments to fund
these services in an ongoing, consistent, or statewide basis. As a
result, many programs that were operating in 2014 are no longer in
operation. Other programs have had to scale back because of reduced
funding. Nonetheless, because of the continued work of child support
agencies, some new programs have emerged but there are fewer States in
2024 that have employment and training programs for noncustodial
parents with active child support agency involvement than in 2014.\69\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\69\ Office of Child Support Services. ``Child Support-led
Employment Programs by State,'' available at: https://www.acf.hhs.gov/css/training-technical-assistance/child-support-led-employment-programs-state.
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Further Studies in Support of This Final Rule
OCSS previously issued a notice of proposed rulemaking on November
17, 2014, that included regulatory changes similar to those included in
this final rule.\70\ Although the 2014 proposed rule received
overwhelming support from States, many Members of Congress, and the
public, FFP for employment and training services was not included in
the final rule issued on December 20, 2016, in order to allow for
further study. The final rule stated, ``While we appreciate the support
the commenters expressed, we think allowing for Federal IV-D
reimbursement for job services needs further study and would be ripe
for implementation at a later time.'' See Flexibility, Efficiency, and
Modernization in Child Support Enforcement Programs, Final Rule, 81 FR
93492, 93496 (December 20, 2016).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\70\ See Flexibility, Efficiency, and Modernization in Child
Support Enforcement Programs, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 79 FR
68548, 68556 (November 17, 2014).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Since 2016, findings from two new national demonstrations that
offered employment and training services to noncustodial parents have
been released. They are the Child Support National Parent Employment
Demonstration and Families Forward Demonstration (FFD). These two
demonstrations added considerably to OCSS's understanding of the
effectiveness of employment programs for noncustodial parents and
further informed the development of this rule.
Child Support National Parent Employment Demonstration (CSPED)
CSPED was a randomized control trial (RCT) demonstration designed
to test the effectiveness of child support-led employment programs for
noncustodial parents. It was funded by OCSS, which awarded
demonstration grants to eight State child support agencies in 2012.
These child support agencies operated employment programs for
noncustodial parents in 18 local jurisdictions from 2013 to 2017. A
total of 10,173 noncustodial parents enrolled in the demonstration.\71\
CSPED was able to reach a large number of noncustodial parents in part
because it recruited noncustodial parents administratively as well as
during contempt hearings. Key services included employment services,
enhanced child support services, and parenting classes. Employment
services consisted of one-on-one job counseling, job search assistance,
job readiness training, and job placement and retention services.
Programs were encouraged to offer short-term job skills training and
[[Page 100796]]
vocational educational training, but not required to do so. Enhanced
child support services were expected to include initiating order
modifications if needed, removing license suspensions, and holding
other enforcement remedies in abeyance while parents participated in
the program, and reducing state-owed arrears if permitted by State
law.\72\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\71\ Cancian, Maria, Daniel R. Meyer, Robert Wood, ``Final
Impact Findings from the Child Support Noncustodial Parent
Employment Demonstration,'' Madison, WI: Institute for Research on
Poverty (March 2019), available at https://www.acf.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/documents/ocse/csped_impact_report.pdf.
\72\ Office of Child Support Enforcement, ``National Child
Support Noncustodial Parent Employment Demonstration Projects,''
Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services,
Administration for Children and Families, HHS-2012-ACF-OCSE-FD-0297
(2012), available at https://www.acf.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/documents/ocse/hhs-2012-acf-ocse-fd-0297_csped.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CSPED increased the effectiveness of the child support program by
increasing noncustodial parents' employment and earnings as measured by
quarterly earnings, which, in turn, increased the likelihood of paying
child support through wage withholding. Specifically, it increased
participants' employment rate by three percent during the first two
years after enrollment, and increased their earnings by four percent
during the first year after enrollment, both of which are measured
using quarterly earnings.\73\ This, in turn, increased the likelihood
of participants paying child support through income withholding by
eight percent during the first year after enrollment.\74\ It also
increased noncustodial parents' satisfaction with the child support
program, increased noncustodial parent-child contact, and improved
noncustodial parents' attitudes about responsibility for children, all
of which contributed to an improved image of the child support program
and helped overcome significant distrust among noncustodial parents,
paving the way for better communication, more cooperation, and a more
effective child support program.\75\ Finally, a benefit-cost analysis
of CSPED found that the benefits of CSPED outweighed its costs within
two years when the costs of employment and parenting services received
by members of the regular-services group were taken into account.\76\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\73\ Sorensen, Elaine (November 2020).
\74\ Id. While CSPED was successful at increasing the likelihood
of paying child support through income withholding, it did not
increase the amount of child support paid. As noted in the text,
CSPED provided both employment and enhanced child support services.
It appears that these services worked at cross-purposes to one
another. As part of enhanced child support services, child support
agencies offered order modification services to participants, which
reduced their average amount of child support orders. Reducing child
support orders will necessarily reduce income withholding orders,
which reduces the amount of child support paid since most child
support is paid via income withholding. In contrast, employment
services are designed to increase the employment and earnings of
noncustodial parents, which, in turn, are expected to increase child
support payments. Thus, it appears that one service reduced the
amount of child support paid while the other increased it, resulting
in no impact on the amount of child support paid.
\75\ Cancian, Maria, et al. (March 2019).
\76\ Cancian, Maria, Daniel R. Meyer, and Robert G. Wood,
``Carrots Work Better than Sticks? Results from the National Child
Support Noncustodial Parent Employment Demonstration,'' Journal of
Policy Analysis and Management. 41:2 (2022), available at https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/pam.22370.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Families Forward Demonstration
FFD was designed to test the effectiveness of offering free
occupational training to increase reliable child support payments. It
operated in five locations from 2018 to 2020 and enrolled 761
noncustodial parents. FFD was funded through a grant from the W. K.
Kellogg Foundation, local funding raised by participating child support
agencies, and matching Federal funds through section 1115 waivers \77\
approved by the Office of Child Support Services.\78\ FFD provided the
following three services to noncustodial parents: free occupational
training, other employment services and wraparound supports, and
responsive child support services. Free occupational training targeted
demand-driven occupations, which varied by location. Other employment
services focused on job search and placement assistance and career
planning. The most common wraparound supports were work-related, such
as assistance with work-related transportation costs or other work-
related expenses. Responsive child support services included child
support navigation, arrears compromise programs, order modification if
needed, and suspension of enforcement action.\79\ The evaluation of
this demonstration consisted of an implementation study and an analysis
of child support outcomes for program participants prior to and after
program enrollment.\80\ It found that the trends in child support
payments for noncustodial parent participants improved relative to
their pre-enrollment trends.\81\ While this study was not designed to
attribute causality, these findings suggest that offering free training
to noncustodial parents may have a positive impact on child support
payments, providing further evidence that offering training services to
noncustodial parents increases the effectiveness of the child support
program.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\77\ See section 1115(a) and (b) of the Social Security Act, 42
U.S.C. 1315(a) and (b).
\78\ The FFD program in New York was additionally supported by
the Robin Hood Foundation.
\79\ Wasserman, Kyla, et al. (April 2021).
\80\ Id.
\81\ Id.
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Informed by the child support program's positive experience with
providing employment and training programs, and the positive outcomes
of three decades of national demonstrations and State evaluations, OCSS
has determined that providing FFP under title IV-D for employment and
training services improves the effectiveness of the child support
program. Thus, this final rule allows States and Tribal child support
programs to access FFP for these services and establishes standards and
requirements for States and Tribes or Tribal organizations when opting
to provide federally funded employment and training services under
their IV-D plans. This final rule provides additional stability and
support for States and Tribal child support programs to increase the
effectiveness of their respective programs for collecting child support
payments.
Summary Description of Regulatory Changes
The following is a summary of the regulatory provisions included in
this final rule and, where applicable, how these provisions differ from
the notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM). The NPRM was published in the
Federal Register on May 31, 2024 (89 FR 47109 through 47120). The
comment period ended July 30, 2024.
This final rule allows States and Tribes the option to use FFP to
provide certain employment and training services designed to supplement
traditional enforcement tools to help noncustodial parents find and
retain employment so they can support their children.
Section 302.76 Employment and Training Services
This rule adds a new optional State plan provision at 45 CFR
302.76, Employment and training services, to allow States to provide
certain employment and training services to eligible noncustodial
parents in accordance with the newly designated Sec. 303.6(c)(5). This
State plan provision is optional as each State will need to determine
the level of resources the State wishes to commit in order to draw down
Federal matching funds under title IV-D.\82\ If a State chooses this
[[Page 100797]]
option, Sec. 302.76 requires that the State include a description of
the employment and training services and eligibility criteria in its
State plan. In addition, to ensure the IV-D agency is providing well-
coordinated and non-duplicative employment and training services, it
also requires that States include in their State plan an explanation of
how the State child support program has consulted with, and taken into
consideration services provided by, the State agencies administering
the following programs: TANF (45 CFR part 261), the Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program Employment and Training program (7 CFR
273.7 and 273.24), the Adult, Dislocated Worker, and Youth programs
under Title I of the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (20 CFR
parts 675 through 688), the Adult Education and Family Literacy Act
program (34 CFR part 463), the Employment Service program (20 CFR part
652), and the Vocational Rehabilitation program (34 CFR part 361). The
final rule revises Sec. 302.76 by removing the reference included in
the NPRM to the ``six core programs of the state's workforce
development system established under the Workforce Innovation and
Opportunity Act (WIOA)'' and instead identifies, by name, the six core
programs. These core programs are the three programs for Adults,
Dislocated Workers, and Youth under title I, the Adult Education and
Family Literacy Act program under title II, the Employment Service
program under title III, and the Vocational Rehabilitation program
under title IV. The final rule also requires that States electing the
option to provide employment and training services using FFP under
title IV-D must comply with future reporting requirements prescribed by
the Office.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\82\ Under section 455 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
655), the Federal government provides reimbursement to each state
program (including the District of Columbia and territorial
programs) of 66% of all allowable child support program
expenditures.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
States are required to consult with, and take into consideration
services provided by, the State agencies administering the listed
programs in order to provide the most appropriate mix of services that
ensures effective service delivery for addressing the multiple barriers
to employment often faced by low-income noncustodial parents in their
caseload, while minimizing costs to the child support program. We
strongly encourage States to partner with high-quality training
programs and other evidence-based training models that have been shown
to lead to sustained earnings gains--to increase noncustodial parents'
ability to meet their financial obligations to their children.
Partnering with other programs at the State and local level can allow
child support programs to broaden the types of services they provide to
noncustodial parents in their caseload. OCSS's policy goals are to make
it possible for State child support agencies to provide employment and
training services to noncustodial parents who need and lack access to
services, while minimizing unnecessary duplication of services that are
already successfully being provided by the listed federally-funded
programs. We encourage child support agencies to partner wherever
possible with local American Job Centers to leverage their specialized
experience and knowledge of job development and to partner with labor
organizations to access employment and training services that they
provide.
OCSS anticipates that many State child support agencies will
purchase employment and training services by entering into contracts
with public, private and community-based employment, fatherhood, and
reentry programs, community action agencies, community colleges, or
other service providers, rather than offer these services in-house, in
accordance with 45 CFR 304.22, Federal financial participation in
purchased support enforcement services. However, this does not preclude
a child support agency from providing employment and training services
to noncustodial parents directly.
Section 303.6 Enforcement of Support Obligations
We redesignate existing Sec. 303.6(c)(5) as new Sec. 303.6(c)(6)
and add new Sec. 303.6(c)(5) to provide program standards related to
the optional State plan provision Sec. 302.76.
Employment and Training Services
The final rule establishes basic eligibility requirements that must
be met for States to provide employment and training services to
noncustodial parents. Eligibility for employment and training services
is limited to noncustodial parents who: have an open IV-D case; have a
child support order or have been determined by the IV-D agency to be
fully cooperating with the IV-D agency to establish a child support
order; and are unemployed or underemployed or at risk of not being able
to comply with their support order. In addition, the IV-D agency must
have adopted policies and procedures for determining that the
noncustodial parent is not receiving the same employment and training
services under the following programs: TANF (45 CFR part 261), the
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) Employment and
Training program (7 CFR 273.7 and 273.24), the Federal Pell Grant
program (34 CFR part 690), the Adult, Dislocated Worker, and Youth
programs under title I of the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act
(20 CFR parts 675 through 688), the Adult Education and Family Literacy
Act program (34 CFR part 463), the Employment Service program (20 CFR
part 652), or the Vocational Rehabilitation program (34 CFR part 361).
States may establish additional criteria not in conflict with those
required by this rule.
The final rule does not allow States to provide a noncustodial
parent the same employment and training services that he or she is
already receiving from a set list of federally-funded employment and
training programs. Child support programs will need to adopt policies
and procedures for determining that the noncustodial parent is not
receiving the same employment and training services from the other
federally-funded programs listed in Sec. 303.6(c)(5). We recognize the
challenges for States to verify non-duplication of services due to the
limited availability of data needed for verification. In the NPRM, OCSS
suggested that attestation may be used to verify non-duplication of
services. However, many commenters expressed concern that requiring
attestation would create a barrier to program participation and
requested that OCSS allow States flexibility to determine the
verification approaches. In response to these comments, the final rule
does not prescribe a verification method for child support agencies to
use, but leaves it to States to establish a process for how best to
confirm that a noncustodial parent is not already receiving the same
services under the programs listed in Sec. 303.6(c)(5). For example,
to meet this requirement, the child support agency may obtain a verbal
or other confirmation from the noncustodial parent that the parent is
not receiving the same employment and training services under the
Federal programs listed in Sec. 303.6(c)(5) and document the
confirmation in the case record. This will allow a noncustodial parent
who may be receiving services from the American Job Center to also
receive nonduplicated employment and training services through the
child support program.
Under new Sec. 303.6(c)(5), allowable employment and training
services are limited to:
Job search assistance;
Job readiness training;
Job development and job placement services;
[[Page 100798]]
Skills assessments to facilitate job placement;
Job retention services;
Work supports, such as transportation assistance,
uniforms, and tools; and
Occupational training and other skills training directly
related to employment, which may also include activities to improve
literacy and basic skills, such as programs to complete high school or
a high school equivalency certificate, or English as a second language.
We recognize that providing these services may require case
management. Thus, consistent with OCSS PIQ-12-02, FFP may also be used
to provide case management for these allowable services.\83\
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\83\ PIQ-12-02, Partnering with other programs, including
outreach, referral, and case management activities, is available at:
https://www.acf.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/documents/ocse/piq_12_02_partnering_with_other_programs_and_activities.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We have included a focused set of employment and training services
because our review of research found that employment and training
programs for noncustodial programs tended to provide this package of
employment and training services in their effort to improve the
effectiveness of child support program. The list of allowable services
includes those services that were most frequently provided in various
demonstrations, research evaluations, and state-based programs detailed
in the rule.
We have included work supports and job retention services as
allowable expenditures because, as described above, many of the
employment and training programs for noncustodial parents that have
been evaluated included these services as part of a package of
employment and training services, which were found effective at
improving child support outcomes. Work supports consist of costs
incurred for bona fide services and assistance provided to noncustodial
parents so that they may find and retain employment or participate in
employment and training services. For example, a common form of work
supports is transportation assistance, such as bus tokens and gas
vouchers. Work supports may also include the cost of providing
emergency child care assistance for children on the child support case
associated with the noncustodial parent receiving employment and
training services if that emergency inhibits participation in
employment and training services or finding or retaining work. Other
eligible work supports may include, but are not limited to costs
incurred for bona fide services and assistance such as: work-related
tools; work-related clothing or uniforms; emergency vehicle repairs if
affordable transportation alternatives are not available; referrals for
child care assistance; referrals to health care, mental health
counseling or drug treatment; license fees; application fees; and other
costs of employment and training tests or certifications. Job retention
services are services that assist a job holder with retaining
employment and can include regular check-ins with job holders as well
as supporting managers who hired job holders with on-the-job issues.
Job retention services can be offered directly to the job holder or to
the employer to serve the job holder.
The proposed rule included language at Sec. 303.6(c)(5)(vii) about
an employment and training services plan. We have revised this section
and no longer use the term ``employment and training services plan''
because commenters found this requirement confusing. OCSS does not
believe an employment and training plan is necessary to meet the
requirements of the rule.
In the NPRM, OCSS proposed not to allow employment and training
services for noncustodial parents with arrears-only cases because, as
stated in the NPRM, the primary goal of offering employment and
training services is to increase the consistency of current support
payments to families with minor children. Many commenters urged OCSS to
allow noncustodial parents with arrears-only cases to be eligible for
these services, noting that many of them are of working age,
unemployed, and could benefit from employment and training services to
help them find work and pay their overdue child support. OCSS agrees
with the commenters that noncustodial parents with arrears-only cases
are still responsible for paying overdue child support and may face
barriers to employment that limit their ability to pay and thus could
benefit from employment and training services, which, if provided,
could lead to employment and increased child support payments to
custodial families. In response to comments, we removed the word
``current'' in proposed Sec. 303.6(c)(5) describing the eligibility
criteria to allow noncustodial parents with child support orders in
arrears-only cases to be eligible for employment and training services
funded under title IV-D.
In the NPRM, a list of costs that would not be eligible for FFP was
included in the proposed language of Sec. 303.6(c)(5). In the final
rule, these prohibited costs are moved to Sec. 304.23, Expenditures
for which Federal financial participation is not available, as
described below.
Section 304.20 Availability and Rate of Federal Financial Participation
We redesignate existing Sec. 304.20(b)(3)(vii) as new Sec.
304.20(b)(3)(viii), and add new Sec. 304.20(b)(3)(vii) allowing FFP
for employment and training services when they are provided in
accordance with Sec. 303.6(c)(5).
Section 304.23 Expenditures for Which Federal Financial Participation
Is Not Available
The final rule adds new Sec. 304.23(k) to move the list of costs
related to employment and training services that the NPRM said would
not be eligible for FFP under proposed Sec. 303.6 (c)(5) to Sec.
304.23, Expenditures for which Federal financial participation is not
available. Specifically, under Sec. 304.23(k) this final rule
prohibits expenditures under title IV-D for payments of cash, checks,
reimbursements, or any other form of payment that can be legally
converted to currency provided to the noncustodial parent. The final
rule also prohibits FFP for costs of subsidized employment for
noncustodial parents. The NPRM proposed that these costs not be
eligible for FFP in Sec. 303.6(c)(5), but also requested comments on
all of the employment and training services in Sec. 303.6(c)(5). A few
commenters argued FFP should be available for these costs, but these
arguments did not overcome the concerns that the Federal government has
with allowing FFP for these costs as discussed in response to Comments
13 and 31 below.
Section 309.65 What must a Tribe or Tribal organization include in a
Tribal IV-D plan in order to demonstrate capacity to operate a Tribal
IV-D program?
In response to comments received in support of FFP for Tribes to
offer employment and training services, we redesignate existing Sec.
309.65(b) as new Sec. 309.65(c) and add new Sec. 309.65(b) to add a
new optional Tribal plan provision to allow Tribes to provide certain
employment and training services to eligible noncustodial parents.
This Tribal plan provision is optional to Tribes and Tribal
organizations. This final rule adds provisions in the Tribal
regulations at part 309, specifically new Sec. Sec. 309.65(b),
309.121, 309.145, and 309.155 to clarify, in response to comments, that
this final rule makes
[[Page 100799]]
Federal funding available to Tribes for employment and training
services. If a Tribe or Tribal organization chooses this option, Sec.
309.65(b) requires that the Tribe or Tribal organization include a
description of the employment and training services and eligibility
criteria in its Tribal IV-D plan. In addition, to ensure the IV-D
agency is providing well-coordinated and non-duplicative employment and
training services, Sec. 309.65(b) also requires that the Tribe or
Tribal organization include in its Tribal IV-D plan an explanation of
how the Tribal child support program has consulted with, and taken into
consideration the services provided by, federally-funded employment and
training programs administered by the Tribe. It also requires that
Tribes electing the option to provide employment and training services
using FFP under title IV-D must comply with future reporting
requirements prescribed by the Office.
Consistent with Executive Order 14112, 88 FR 86021 (December 6,
2023), Reforming Federal Funding and Support for Tribal Nations to
Better Embrace Our Trust Responsibilities and Promote the Next Era of
Tribal Self- Determination, the final rule takes into account the
unique needs, capacity, and barriers faced by Tribal IV-D programs, and
thus does not provide a set list of federally-funded programs that
Tribes must coordinate with to ensure noncustodial parents are not
receiving duplicative employment and training services. Tribes must
consult with, and take into consideration the services provided by,
federally-funded employment and training programs administered by the
Tribe to ensure effective service delivery and to provide the most
appropriate mix of services that address the multiple barriers to
employment faced by low-income noncustodial parents in their caseload,
while minimizing costs to the child support program. To meet this
requirement, Tribal IV-D agencies have flexibility to coordinate with
any of the federally-funded employment and training programs
administered by the Tribe. OCSS's policy goals are to make it possible
for Tribal child support agencies to provide employment and training
services to noncustodial parents who need them but are not available to
them, while minimizing unnecessary duplication of services that are
already successfully being provided by other federally-funded programs
administered by the Tribe.
OCSS anticipates that many Tribal child support agencies will
purchase employment and training services by entering into contracts
with public, private and community-based employment, fatherhood, and
reentry programs, community action agencies, community colleges, or
other service providers, rather than offer these services in-house, in
accordance with 45 CFR 309.60(c), Who is responsible for administration
of the Tribal IV-D program under the Tribal IV-D plan. However, this
does not preclude a Tribal child support agency from providing
employment and training services to noncustodial parents directly.
Section 309.121 Employment and Training Services
This rule adds a new optional Tribal plan provision, Sec. 309.121,
Employment and training services, to allow Tribes to provide certain
employment and training services to eligible noncustodial parents in
accordance with the newly designated Sec. 309.65(b).
The final rule establishes basic eligibility requirements that must
be met for Tribes to provide employment and training services for
noncustodial parents. Eligibility for employment and training services
is limited to noncustodial parents who: have an open IV-D case; have a
child support order or have been determined by the IV-D agency to be
fully cooperating with the IV-D agency to establish a child support
order; and are unemployed or underemployed or at risk of not being able
to comply with their support order. In addition, the IV-D agency must
have adopted policies and procedures for determining that the
noncustodial parent is not receiving the same employment and training
services under other federally-funded employment and training program
administered by the Tribe. Tribes and Tribal organizations may
establish additional criteria not in conflict with those established in
the rule.
Consistent with Executive Order 14112, the final rule takes into
account the unique needs, capacity, and barriers faced by Tribal IV-D
programs, and thus does not include a set list of programs for Tribes
to verify non-duplication of services. Tribal child support programs
will need to adopt policies and procedures for determining that the
noncustodial parent is not receiving the same employment and training
services from other federally-funded program administered by the Tribe.
The final rule does not prescribe a method for child support agencies
to use, but leaves it to Tribes and Tribal organizations to determine
how best to confirm that a noncustodial parent is not already receiving
the same services from another federally-funded program administered by
the Tribe.
The list of allowable services includes those services that were
most frequently provided in various demonstrations, research
evaluations, and state-based programs detailed in the rule. Other
eligible work supports may include, but are not limited to costs
incurred for bona fide services and assistance such as: work-related
tools; work-related clothing or uniforms; emergency vehicle repairs if
affordable transportation alternatives are not available; referrals for
child care assistance; referrals to health care, mental health
counseling or drug treatment; license fees; application fees; and other
costs of employment and training tests or certifications.
Section 309.145 What costs are allowable for Tribal IV-D programs
carried out under Sec. 309.65(a)?
As a result of the comments received concerning the applicability
of this rule for Tribal child support programs, we add new Sec.
309.145(c)(5) allowing FFP for certain employment and training services
when they are provided in accordance with Sec. 309.121.
Section 309.155 What uses of Tribal IV-D program funds are not
allowable?
To address comments received in support of the availability of
funds for Tribal child support programs, we redesignate existing Sec.
309.155(f) as new Sec. 309.155(g), and add new Sec. 309.155(f) to
provide a list of costs related to employment and training services
that the NPRM said would not be eligible for FFP.
Responses to Comments
OCSS received 58 sets of comments from States, 2 previous Federal
Office of Child Support Commissioners, national child support
associations, fatherhood, research and other non-profit organizations,
private companies and other interested individuals. We posted 54 sets
of comments on www.regulations.gov, three of which were duplicates; 4
sets of comments were not posted because they were not related to the
NPRM. All expressed overwhelming support for the NPRM.
Section 302.76 Employment and Training Services
Comment 1: We received multiple comments about statewide
requirements related to the State plan. All of these commenters
requested that the final rule not require States to implement
employment and training services statewide. Commenters noted that the
labor market conditions and outlook can vary substantially within a
State,
[[Page 100800]]
affecting the need for employment and training services. Other
commenters noted that the capacity to provide employment and training
services can vary substantially within a State. Still others noted that
available resources to draw matching FFP to pay the non-Federal share
of costs for employment and training services can vary substantially by
county within a State. For these reasons, the commenters urged OCSS to
allow States to tailor employment and training services to local
conditions. The commenters suggested the final rule should waive the
statewide requirement for optional employment and training services, if
permissible. If not permissible, they suggested the final rule should
clarify that a State may indicate in its State plan that the option to
use FFP for employment and training services is available to all
counties within the State and may be used at county option.
Response 1: OCSS appreciates the concerns about States being
required to offer employment and training services statewide given
these services are optional under the State plan. The regulations at 45
CFR 302.10 implement section 454(1) of the Act and requires in Sec.
302.10(a) the State plan be in operation on a statewide basis in
accordance with equitable standards for administration that are
mandatory throughout the State. The regulations at 45 CFR 302.10(c)
require the IV-D agency will assure that the plan is continuously in
operation in all appropriate offices or agencies through (1) methods
for informing staff of policies, standards, procedures, and
instructions and (2) regular planned examination and evaluation of
operations in local offices. As 45 CFR 302.10 requires IV-D State plans
to be in operation on a statewide basis, States electing to provide
employment and training services using FFP must make at least a minimum
level of services available statewide. These services for some
jurisdictions could be virtual job readiness trainings that individuals
could access online or at their local child support services offices
(e.g., online training on how to interview, prepare a resume,
navigating job announcement websites, or occupational training and
other skills training directly related to employment such as programs
to complete high school or a high school equivalency certificate),
while other jurisdictions may offer more intensive employment and
training services. States, however, will have the flexibility to
determine what additional services are appropriate in their
jurisdictions based on local conditions, resources, and needs. OCSS
encourages States to review and consider successful programs operated
by other States, some of which have included piloting employment and
training services in select areas first and then expanding to other
service areas.
Comment 2: We received various comments regarding the requirement
that States must comply with future reporting requirements prescribed
by OCSS if they elect to provide employment and training services. Some
commenters suggested that OCSS consult with States about any reporting
requirements and give States the opportunity to provide feedback to
OCSS ahead of the adoption of these requirements, especially if system
changes would be required to meet these reporting requirements. One
commenter suggested OCSS address the reporting requirements in the
regulation or in supplemental guidance released before the regulation
is finalized, while another commenter suggested reporting requirements
be provided before States elect the option. Another commenter urged
that the reporting requirements closely match existing IV-D agency
requirements to reduce the likelihood of burdensome or negative impacts
on a State's child support system, while another commenter argued that
consideration should be given to the practical utility of the reporting
measures and the ability of States to easily obtain and maintain the
mandated data. Other commenters recommended that OCSS align reporting
requirements with the performance measures of existing employment and
training programs. Still others recommended specific items be included
in the reporting requirements, and one commenter recommended that
reporting be disaggregated by characteristics such as race, ethnicity,
disability status, and gender. One commenter encouraged OCSS to include
reporting requirements that would allow States to conduct program
analysis and evaluation of their employment and training services.
Other commenters suggested FFP be available for system enhancements to
capture any required data elements.
Response 2: OCSS clarifies there are no Federal reporting
requirements that are specifically related to employment and training
programs at this time. We understand that commenters are concerned
about the potential burden that future reporting requirements may have.
After the rule is published, we will consult with States and Tribes
about Federal reporting requirements under this rule, and in accordance
with the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq., OCSS will
publish the proposed information collection in the Federal Register
providing States, Tribes, and the public the opportunity to comment on
the reporting requirements.
Comment 3: Two commenters expressed support for Tribal child
support programs receiving FFP for employment and training services.
Response 3: OCSS appreciates and agrees with the commenters and has
included amendments in the Tribal child support regulations at 45 CFR
part 309 to specifically allow FFP for Tribal child support programs'
employment and training activities. This final rule amends part 309 to
expressly include FFP for Tribes and Tribal organizations operating IV-
D programs that elect to implement optional employment and training
services. This change aligns with President Biden's Executive Order
14112.
Allowing FFP for Tribal child support programs to provide
employment and training services promotes equity and honors Tribal
sovereignty and the trust relationship between the Federal Government
and Tribal Nations. As set out by the 1977 Senate report of the
American Indian Policy Review Commission, ``The purpose behind the
trust is and always has been to insure the survival and welfare of
Indian Tribes and people. This includes an obligation to provide those
services required to protect and enhance Indian lands, resources, and
self-government and also includes those economic and social programs
which are necessary to raise the standard of living and social well-
being of the Indian people to a level comparable to the non-Indian
society.'' \84\
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\84\ See American Indian Policy Review Commission Final Report
(May 1977), page 130 available at https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED164229.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Child support programs adding employment and training services help
Tribal communities support parental financial responsibility, so
children receive economic support from both parents even when they live
in separate households. Allowing Tribal child support programs to
receive FFP for employment and training service activities will help to
ensure that Tribal Nations can offer culturally appropriate and
affirming services to their communities. Tribes and Tribal
organizations exercising their sovereignty to operate their own child
support programs is, in fact, what Congress intended when it authorized
funding under PRWORA. Allowing FFP for Tribal child support programs to
[[Page 100801]]
deliver employment and training services helps to achieve this and to
ensure the continued focus on promoting parenting responsibility and
support for child well-being.
Allowing Tribal child support programs to receive FFP for
employment and training service activities is also important because
many Federal programs that assist Tribal Nations and promote Tribal
sovereignty are underfunded, according to the 2018 U.S. Commission on
Civil Rights report on Federal funding for Native Americans.\85\ The
changes to expressly include Tribal child support programs honors and
reflects the trust relationship and doctrine, which requires the
Federal Government to support Tribal self-government and economic
prosperity.\86\
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\85\ See U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Broken Promises:
Continuing Federal Funding Shortfall for Native Americans (December
2018) at https://www.usccr.gov/files/pubs/2018/12-20-Broken-Promises.pdf.
\86\ See Administration for Children and Families, American
Indians and Alaska Natives--The Trust Responsibility Fact Sheet at
https://www.acf.hhs.gov/ana/fact-sheet/american-indians-and-alaska-natives-trust-responsibility.
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This final rule allows Tribes and Tribal organizations, at their
option, to provide employment and training services to eligible
noncustodial parents and provides that such services are eligible for
FFP at the applicable matching rate.
Comment 4: We received multiple comments related to the requirement
to coordinate with other federally-funded employment and training
programs to ensure that noncustodial parents are receiving well-
coordinated employment and training services across these programs and
that services are not being duplicated. Some commenters requested
specific guidance on how to comply with coordination requirements,
while others requested additional guidance about how to co-enroll a
parent paying child support into multiple training programs and how to
allocate costs across programs. Some asked for guidance about selecting
which funding stream is utilized when and whether each program could
pay a percentage of costs. One commenter recommended State child
support agencies be included as optional partners of WIOA State plans
and that State child support agencies should leverage State workforce
agencies. Another commenter suggested requiring partnership with State
workforce agencies and encouraged OCSS to work closely with the U.S.
Department of Labor and other Federal agencies in the development and
implementation of the final rule. Another commenter suggested
eliminating the coordination requirement because it would be unduly
burdensome. Other commenters asked if the coordination requirement
results in an additional requirement to have cooperative agreements in
place with the other federally-funded employment programs listed in
Sec. 302.76 and whether the prohibition against duplicative services
prevents a State from offering different but related services from more
than one agency.
Response 4: This final rule provides States and Tribes flexibility
regarding how they will coordinate with State and Tribal agencies that
administer federally-funded programs, as States and Tribes may
structure their employment and training service delivery differently.
States and Tribes have discretion to implement coordination efforts
with other federally-funded employment and training service providers
that best support successful program execution and stable employment
outcomes for eligible noncustodial parents while preventing duplication
of services. States and Tribes also have discretion to establish
enrollment policies and processes for employment and training services
programs they provide for eligible noncustodial parents. We encourage
child support programs to work with partner agencies to educate
noncustodial parents regarding partner agencies' enrollment policies.
OCSS's website includes Knowledge Works and Tribal Employment Pathways
resources for child support agencies who have interest or already
provide employment and training services to noncustodial parents.\87\
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\87\ OCSS's Knowledge Works website is available at: https://www.acf.hhs.gov/css/employment-programs; OCSS's Tribal Employment
Pathways website is available at: https://www.acf.hhs.gov/css/child-support-professionals/tribal-agencies/tribal-employment-pathways.
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This rule allows States and Tribes discretion to determine the
appropriateness of who they should target as partners to provide
employment and training services. This final rule does not require
child support agencies to partner with workforce agencies as the
providers of job services, only that they consult with, and take into
consideration the services provided by, other federally-funded
employment and training programs. We do not want to restrict the
ability of States, Counties, Tribes, and Tribal organizations to
determine the most appropriate partner to offer employment and training
services tailored to local conditions, the employment needs of
noncustodial parents, labor market outlook, and existing capacity
within local employment programs.
We disagree with comments requesting that OCSS remove the
coordination requirement as we believe it is important for a child
support program to explain how they have consulted with, and taken into
consideration the services provided by, other federally-funded
employment and training programs to ensure noncustodial parents are
receiving well-coordinated employment and training services across
these programs, and that services provided to noncustodial parents are
not being unnecessarily duplicated.
The coordination requirement does not require IV-D agencies to have
cooperative agreements in place with other federally-funded employment
and training programs and does not prevent a State or Tribe from
offering different services to a noncustodial parent from more than one
agency.
Comment 5: One commenter suggested OCSS encourage coordination with
fatherhood programs. Another commenter suggested OCSS provide examples
and guidance related to coordinating with criminal justice agencies,
especially during reentry into communities, and provide guidance on how
to align protections for individuals already in place through Civil
Rights offices with the services in the NPRM. Another commenter said
States are interested in opportunities for peer-to-peer learning and
knowledge transfer and mentioned that both the National Association of
State Workforce Agencies (NASWA) and the American Public Human Services
Association (APHSA) have such networks.
Response 5: We recommend that child support programs build robust
partnerships with existing education and workforce programs and
providers of supportive services, such as workforce agencies, TANF and
SNAP agencies, the Native Employment Works program, Public Law 102-477
programs, community colleges, labor organizations, criminal justice
agencies including probation, parole and corrections, fatherhood
programs and other community-based organizations. Partnering with other
programs can allow child support agencies to broaden the types of
services they provide to noncustodial parents in their caseload. States
and Tribes are permitted and encouraged to provide additional services
under different funding streams to complement the limited set of
services funded under title IV-D to help noncustodial parents with
significant barriers to employment obtain and retain stable employment
that prevent
[[Page 100802]]
them from making full and regular child support payments.
OCSS has Knowledge Works and Tribal Employment Pathways resources
on our website for child support agencies who have interest or already
provide employment and training services to noncustodial parents.\88\
Several of these resources assist with peer-to-peer learning and
knowledge transfer and highlight the successful programs operating in
various jurisdictions. These resources share documents compiled by
various jurisdictions and include a peer-to-peer training series that
includes an ability to view all previously recorded webinars. OCSS will
endeavor to develop and expand both websites after the publication of
this rule. Further we encourage child support agencies to consider
participating in the networks of NASWA and APHSA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\88\ Id.
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Section 303.6 Enforcement of Support Obligations
Comment 6: Numerous commenters recommended extending eligibility
criteria for employment and training services in Sec. 303.6(c)(5) to
noncustodial parents with arrears-only cases. Many noted that
noncustodial parents with arrears-only cases are still responsible for
paying child support and may face barriers to employment that limit
their ability to pay. Many of them are of working age, unemployed, and
could benefit from employment and training services to help them find
work and pay their child support. Some commenters noted that they
currently operate employment and training programs for noncustodial
parents and do not exclude arrears-only cases and have found their
programs to be effective at getting noncustodial parents into paying
status. They argued that since these programs are effective, child
support agencies should be able to provide these services regardless of
whether the parent owes current support.
Commenters also noted that excluding noncustodial parents with
arrears-only cases is unfair to custodial parents who could receive
increased arrears payments if the noncustodial parent received
employment and training services. Some noted that these custodial
parents went without child support payments when their children were
young through no fault of their own, so they shouldn't be denied the
opportunity to receive these payments simply because their children had
emancipated. Still others noted that this exclusion was unfair to
noncustodial parents with arrears-only cases who were never given the
opportunity to receive employment and training services when they had a
current support order. If they had been given that opportunity, their
child support debt may not exist today. Thus, it is unfair to deny
these parents employment and training services that they needed then
and still need.
Some commenters agreed with OCSS that noncustodial parents with a
current support order should be given priority for employment and
training services since they are responsible for supporting minor
children, but they noted that both the custodial parent and the
noncustodial parent may have other minor children that could benefit
from the increased financial stability that noncustodial parents with
arrears-only cases could achieve if they received employment and
training services.
Some commenters noted that prohibiting noncustodial parents with
arrears-only cases from employment and training services was an
administrative burden for the child support agency since it would
require child support agencies to keep track of a parent's order
status. It would also require the child support agency to terminate
services if a noncustodial parent's child emancipates while the parent
is receiving services, which is disruptive for the parent and may
undermine the success of the services.
If OCSS continues to prohibit noncustodial parents with arrears-
only cases from receiving employment and training services, some
commenters recommended that OCSS allow certain exceptions to a strict
prohibition. The most common exception suggested was for noncustodial
parents who have custody of the minor children covered by the arrears-
only case.
Response 6: OCSS is persuaded by these comments and has revised the
eligibility criteria in Sec. Sec. 303.6(c)(5) and 309.121 to clarify
that a noncustodial parent with an arrears-only case is eligible to
receive employment and training services. As noted in the NPRM, OCSS
wanted to prioritize noncustodial parents who have a current support
order for employment and training services since the primary goal of
offering these services is to increase the consistency of current
support payments to families with minor children. However, we agree
that noncustodial parents with arrears-only cases are still responsible
for paying child support and may face barriers to employment that limit
their ability to pay and thus could benefit from employment and
training services, which, if provided, could lead to an improved
employment situation and increased child support payments to custodial
families. In response to these comments, we removed the word
``current'' in proposed Sec. 303.6(c)(5) describing the eligibility
criteria to allow States and Tribes the option to provide noncustodial
to allow noncustodial parents with child support orders in arrears-only
cases to be eligible for employment and training services funded under
title IV-D in addition to noncustodial parents with a current support
order.
Comment 7: Some commenters suggested extending eligibility criteria
for employment and training services in Sec. 303.6(c)(5) to custodial
parents.
Response 7: OCSS disagrees with these comments. The purpose of
allowing child support programs to provide employment and training
services to noncustodial parents is to obtain child support payments,
which will benefit custodial families and that is the focus of this
rule. OCSS encourages child support agencies to develop robust referral
networks with other programs that provide employment and training
services to custodial parents.
Comment 8: One commenter suggested extending eligibility for
employment and training services in Sec. 303.6(c)(5) to noncustodial
parents who do not have a support order.
Response 8: This final rule limits eligibility criteria for
employment and training services to noncustodial parents who have a
child support order or have been determined by the IV-D agency to be
fully cooperating with the IV-D agency to establish a child support
order, however the child support agency must have an open IV-D case in
accordance with section 454(4) of the Act and 45 CFR 302.33. OCSS
leaves it to States, Tribes, or Tribal organizations to determine if a
noncustodial parent is fully cooperating with the IV-D agency to
establish a child support order.
Comment 9: We received multiple comments regarding the language in
the preamble of the NPRM that a State may obtain an attestation from
the noncustodial parent that he or she is not receiving the same
employment and training service from the programs listed in Sec.
303.6(c)(5). Some commenters suggested that OCSS should allow States to
determine the process to confirm whether the noncustodial parent is
receiving the same services. Other commenters suggested a verbal
confirmation from the noncustodial parent that they are not receiving
the same services, documented in case record, should be sufficient.
Some commenters suggested that if attestation is required, the
attestation requirement
[[Page 100803]]
should be added to the regulatory language.
Response 9: OCSS disagrees with the need to prescribe the method by
which States and Tribes confirm that duplicative services are not
provided in any particular case, including adding specific attestation
requirements. As indicated in response to comments above, this final
rule provides States and Tribes flexibility to adopt policies and
procedures for determining that the noncustodial parent is not
receiving duplicative services from federally-funded employment and
training programs.
Comment 10: A commenter recommended that OCSS clarify that if a
noncustodial parent confirms they are not receiving the same services
from another program and is later found to have received duplicated
services, the IV-D agency will not be liable for repayment of such
costs.
Response 10: OCSS appreciates the commenters concerns, and in
response to comments regarding the non-duplication of services
requirement for individual cases, we made changes in Sec. 303.6(c)(5)
of the final rule to clarify that to meet this requirement States and
Tribes must adopt policies and procedures for determining that a
noncustodial parent is not already receiving the same services under
federally-funded programs. States and tribes have broad discretion to
determine what policies and procedures to adopt for determining that
services are not being duplicated. An unallowable expenditure would not
occur so long as the IV-D agency adopts and implements such policies
and procedures.
Comment 11: Two commenters recommended adding legal services or
legal assistance to the list of allowable services in Sec.
303.6(c)(5). While one commenter suggested including legal services
focused solely on child support issues such as order modification and
enforcement petitions, the other commenter suggested including legal
assistance that addressed employment barriers more broadly, including
help with expungement, reinstating revoked driver's licenses, and other
common barriers people have to securing and keeping a job.
Response 11: OCSS disagrees that legal services or legal assistance
should be separately added to the list of allowable services in
Sec. Sec. 303.6(c)(5) and 309.121. Child support agencies already have
authority to initiate a review and adjustment of child support orders
and, if necessary, enforcement actions. However, we agree that
noncustodial parents may need legal assistance incidental to removing
employment barriers, such as expungement or reinstating a driver's
license, which may be considered work supports under Sec. Sec.
303.6(c)(5)(vi) and 309.121(b)(6).
Comment 12: One commenter suggested this rule require States to
incorporate domestic violence prevention and awareness into employment
and training services programs to reduce the incidence of domestic
violence in the future and suggested that training staff about domestic
violence and the characteristics of healthy relationships would enhance
the delivery of services to noncustodial parents.
Response 12: OCSS requires all States to have and use a Family
Violence Indicator on appropriate cases, work diligently to ensure they
appropriately screen referrals and applications, flag affected cases in
automated systems, and restrict information sharing with other data
collection systems. OCSS reminds child support programs they are
responsible for providing domestic violence safeguards in operating any
aspect of the child support program. See 45 CFR 303.21, 307.11, and
307.13. Additionally, OCSS offers training to child support programs
regarding domestic violence.
Comment 13: Five commenters recommended including subsidized
employment as an allowable service, emphasizing the need for this
service and the multiple benefits generated by this service.
Response 13: We are not including subsidized employment as an
allowable service. OCSS appreciates and understands the potential need
for subsidized employment especially for some noncustodial parents
facing a specific set of barriers. However, including subsidized
employment can significantly increase the cost of providing employment
and training services. Although subsidized employment is not included
as an allowable service under this final rule, as referenced in PIQ-12-
02,\89\ child support agencies may partner with other agencies that can
fund subsidized employment and other employment and training activities
beyond those allowed under this rule. Additionally, a State can
consider submitting an exemption request to the Secretary to reinvest
IV-D incentive payments and States, Tribes, or Tribal organizations can
apply for a section 1115 waiver to provide subsidized employment.
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\89\ PIQ-12-02 is available at: https://www.acf.hhs.gov/css/policy-guidance/partnering-other-programs-including-outreach-referral-and-case-management.
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Comment 14: Various commenters asked about the definitions used to
describe the allowable employment and training services found in Sec.
303.6(c)(5). One commenter recommended that OCSS seek to better align
its definitions of employment and training services with existing
programs, asking, for example, whether ``vocational education
training,'' a core activity within the TANF program, would be
considered within ``occupational training and other skills training
directly related to employment.'' Another commenter asked why OCSS
combined occupational training with activities to improve literacy and
basic skills. A third commenter offered definitions for some of the
employment and training services that are allowable under this rule,
including job search assistance, job readiness training, occupational
training, job retention services, and work supports.
Response 14: OCSS selected the list of allowable employment and
training services found in Sec. Sec. 303.6(c)(5) and 309.121 based on
research that examined the effectiveness of employment and training
programs for noncustodial parents described in this rule. Through
further research, OCSS decided on the term ``occupational training''
since it is more encompassing than ``vocational education training.''
Thus, OCSS would consider ``vocational education training'' within
``occupational training and other skills training directly related to
employment.'' OCSS combined occupational training with activities to
improve literacy and basic skills because both of these activities
increase a person's employment skills. OCSS has included descriptions
for job retention services and work supports in the Summary Description
of the Regulatory Changes in the preamble to the rule. OCSS has not
provided definitions of job search assistance, job readiness training,
and occupational training. We defer to reasonable State and Tribal
definitions for these terms.
Comment 15: One commenter recommended including attainment of a
``general educational diploma (GED)'' as an allowable training service
in Sec. 303.6(c)(5). Another commenter recommended including
comprehensive training programs that are aligned with market demands
and offer certifications that enhance employability in Sec.
303.6(c)(5).
Response 15: OCSS has included programs to complete a high school
or a high school equivalency certificate as an allowable training
service, which
[[Page 100804]]
includes attainment of a ``general education diploma (GED).'' OCSS uses
the phrase ``high school equivalency'' instead of ``General Education
Development (GED)'' since it is a more encompassing term that includes
GED programs as well as other programs similar to GED. OCSS has also
included occupational training and other skills training directly
related to employment, which includes comprehensive training programs
that are aligned with market demands and offer certifications that
enhance employability.
Comment 16: One commenter asked for clarification regarding the
term ``employment and training services plan,'' which is used in Sec.
303.6(c)(5)(vii).
Response 16: We have revised this section and no longer use the
term ``employment and training services plan'' because commenters found
this requirement confusing. OCSS does not believe an employment and
training services plan is necessary to meet the requirements of the
rule.
Comment 17: One commenter recommended that the definition of job
retention services, one of the allowable services in Sec. 303.6(c)(5),
be expanded to include support for re-employment should a job be lost
and advancement services to support the job holder's career growth.
Response 17: OCSS disagrees with this recommendation. We believe
that the list of allowable employment and training services that are
included in Sec. Sec. 303.6(c)(5) and 309.121 are sufficient for child
support programs to support maintaining employment or re-employment
should the noncustodial parent experience job loss. We did not include
job advancement services since they are not needed to find and maintain
employment to pay child support consistently. However, we do value
investments in career development and education as an effective route
out of poverty for parents and their children. We encourage child
support programs to partner with other programs and agencies with a
long-term career development mission. States, Tribes, and Tribal
organizations are permitted and encouraged to provide additional
services under different funding streams to complement the limited set
of services provided in Sec. Sec. 303.6(c)(5) and 309.121 to help
noncustodial parents succeed in the workforce.
Comment 18: Several commenters requested further clarification
regarding work supports, one of the allowable services in Sec.
303.6(c)(5). One commenter requested that OCSS provide States with
adequate flexibility to use funding for work supports to meet
individual and population-specific needs. One commenter asked whether
work supports could include cell phones. Another asked if it included
educational materials (e.g. books, supplies, reading glasses, etc.) and
fees (e.g. motor vehicle records fees, application and enrollment fees,
physicals, and drug screenings, etc.). One commenter asked that OCSS
prescribe how States would determine if an ancillary expenditure is an
approved work support.
Response 18: OCSS describes work supports in the preamble of the
rule as costs incurred for bona fide services and assistance provided
to noncustodial parents so that they may find and retain employment or
participate in employment and training services. We believe this
description provides States, Tribes, and Tribal organizations with
adequate flexibility to meet individual and population-specific needs.
OCSS considers expenditures for cell phones, educational materials, and
the fees mentioned by the commenter as allowable work supports if they
are needed to find or retain employment or participate in employment
and training services.
Comment 19: One commenter asked that OCSS define ``emergency child
care,'' which, under certain circumstances, is an allowable work
support in Sec. 303.6(c)(5).
Response 19: OCSS considers emergency child care to be the
provision of child care services for a limited period of time due to a
sudden and unplanned interruption in the regular child care routine.
Comment 20: One commenter recommended adding financial literacy to
the list of allowable services in Sec. 303.6(c)(5), noting that
financial literacy can help individuals prevent devasting financial
mistakes, prepare for financial emergencies, reach their goals, and
gain fiscal confidence.
Response 20: OCSS disagrees that financial literacy should be
separately added to the list of allowable services in Sec. Sec.
303.6(c)(5) and 309.121 as a stand-alone service. However, when
financial literacy is integrated into job readiness training, the
financial literacy component of the training is eligible for FFP under
Sec. Sec. 303.6(c)(5)(ii) and 309.121(b)(2).
Comment 21: Various commenters asked for further clarification
regarding the eligibility criteria for receiving employment and
training services. Two commenters asked whether noncustodial parents
with support orders set at zero dollars were eligible for employment
and training services. Other commenters asked for clarification
regarding the eligibility criteria that says noncustodial parents are
eligible if they are ``unemployed or underemployed or at risk of not
being able to comply with their child support order''.
Response 21: OCSS clarifies that noncustodial parents who have
zero-dollar child support orders meet the eligibility criteria in
Sec. Sec. 303.6(c)(5) and 309.121. OCSS hasn't defined unemployed,
underemployed, or at risk of not being able to comply with their child
support order. This final rule provides child support programs
discretion and flexibility to define these terms based on the
employment conditions in their jurisdictions.
Comment 22: One commenter asked OCSS about the confidentiality and
security requirements for the partner agencies that provide the
employment and training services. Specifically, the commenter asked
whether these agencies can use their own policies and procedures for
confidentiality and security of program participants' data. If not,
commenters asked if the partner agencies are required to follow IV-D
requirements for storing, transmitting, sharing, and maintaining
electronic and hard-copy IV-D data.
Response 22: States need to meet the requirements of Sec. 303.21,
Safeguarding and disclosure of confidential information, and adhere to
all appropriate Federal, State, and local reporting and safeguarding
requirements regarding data and information related to the provision of
employment and training services. Tribes and Tribal organizations need
to meet the requirements of Sec. 309.80, What safeguarding procedures
must a Tribe or Tribal organization include in a Tribal IV-D plan, and
adhere to all appropriate Federal and Tribal reporting and safeguarding
requirements regarding data and information related to the provision of
employment and training services.
Comment 23: One commenter recommended adding an eligibility
criterion to the rule that would permit States to exclude noncustodial
parents who receive Social Security Administration (SSA) benefits from
receiving employment and training services listed in Sec. 303.6(c)(5).
Alternatively, the commenter recommended including the Ticket to Work
Program among the federally-funded programs detailed in Sec. Sec.
303.6(c)(5) and 302.76 to ensure child support agencies are
establishing a coordinated, nonduplicative set of employment and
training services with other federally-funded programs. The commenter
noted that individuals who
[[Page 100805]]
receive Social Security Disability and/or Supplemental Security Income
benefits are eligible to participate in the Social Security's Ticket to
Work Program, which provides services similar to those in this rule.
Response 23: While OCSS appreciates this commenter's interest in
ensuring that employment and training services provided under
Sec. Sec. 303.6(c)(5) and 309.121 are well targeted and
nonduplicative, we do not think noncustodial parents who are receiving
Social Security benefits should be excluded from receiving employment
and training services in Sec. Sec. 303.6(c)(5) and 309.121 if they
meet the other eligibility criteria for employment and training
services. We do not see any benefit to the child support program to
exclude parents from these services simply because they receive
government benefits in general, or Social Security benefits in
particular. We also think that the final rule already includes the
major federally-funded programs that provide employment and training
services that child support agencies need to coordinate with to ensure
noncustodial parents are not receiving duplicative employment and
training services. However, we note that the rule allows child support
agencies to add eligibility criteria when offering employment and
training services provided under Sec. Sec. 303.6(c)(5) and 309.121,
and agencies are welcome to coordinate with other federally-funded
programs that provide employment and training services not listed in
Sec. Sec. 302.76 and 309.65(b).
Comment 24: Various commenters noted the importance of implementing
employment and training programs for noncustodial parents that are
supportive and transparent to help overcome the apprehension and
distrust that noncustodial parents can have toward the child support
program. One commenter suggested lowering the monthly obligation during
participation and establishing clear and consistent communication
channels to inform noncustodial parents about their rights,
obligations, and available support services. Another commenter
suggested forgoing certain enforcement remedies for parents who are
cooperating with the employment and training program and relaxing
certain Federal requirements for cooperating parents, such as forgoing
credit reporting or arrearage payments on income withholding notices.
It was also suggested that OCSS encourages States to perform a review
of participating noncustodial parents' child support orders.
Response 24: OCSS agrees that it is important to implement
employment and training programs for noncustodial parents that are
supportive and transparent to help overcome the apprehension and
distrust that noncustodial parents can have toward the child support
program. States, Tribes and Tribal organizations currently have
discretion to initiate the review and adjustment of child support
orders where appropriate and suspend or suppress certain enforcement
remedies during program participation. These practices were
successfully utilized during the Child Support Noncustodial Parent
Employment Demonstration (CSPED). OCSS encourages child support
agencies to incorporate these practices into their employment and
training programs. OCSS also encourages child support agencies to
establish clear and consistent communication channels to inform
noncustodial parents about their rights, obligations, and available
support services. With regard to Federal requirements, a State, Tribe,
or Tribal organization may request a waiver under section 1115 of the
Social Security Act to waive Federal requirements for noncustodial
parents who are cooperating with the employment and training program.
Comment 25: One commenter recommended that OCSS should provide
clear and detailed guidance on how to implement employment and training
programs for noncustodial parents after the rule goes into effect so
that States can establish effective programs and avoid costly
challenges. Guidance was encouraged around service delivery,
monitoring, coordination between child support agencies and other
service providers, performance measurement, evaluation, and continuous
improvement.
Response 25: OCSS currently provides technical assistance to
States, Tribes, and Tribal organizations that are implementing
employment and training programs for noncustodial parents through its
Knowledge Works! and Tribal Employment Pathways web pages. OCSS may
issue additional guidance as needed to assist child support programs
implement the rule.
Comment 26: One commenter expressed interest in OCSS--in
partnership with the U.S. Department of Labor--supporting opportunities
for state workforce and human services agencies to research and
evaluate various approaches for using FFP to deliver employment and
training services.
Response 26: OCSS appreciates this commenter's interest in
continuing to develop the evidence base for delivering employment and
training services to noncustodial parents. OCSS encourages States,
Tribes, and Tribal organizations to use IV-D funds to evaluate the
success of the employment and training services and make adjustments
accordingly to maximize the efficiency and effectiveness of such
services in increasing child support payments to families. These
activities are allowable under 45 CFR 304.20(b)(1)(ii) and
309.145(a)(2).
Comment 27: One commenter recommended offering enhanced FFP for
costs associated with programming data exchanges that child support
agencies might undertake with workforce agencies to avoid duplication
of services. This commenter thought that the States' ability to meet
the nonduplication requirement would depend upon a robust and timely
data exchange between child support and other programs.
Response 27: We appreciate the comment. However, OCSS has no
authority to increase the FFP rate through the regulatory process. This
would require a statutory change by Congress. The final rule does not
require automated data exchanges between these agencies. As discussed
in comment and response 9, child support programs will make case-by-
case determinations about whether a noncustodial parent is receiving
the same employment and training services from federally-funded
programs, but the final rule allows States, Tribes, and Tribal
organizations to determine the method it will use to avoid duplication
of these services with these programs.
Comment 28: Two commenters requested clarification regarding the
use of incentive funds for employment and training services. One
comment requested clarification that States can use incentive payments
for allowable employment and training services without the need to
request an exemption to reinvest incentive payments.
Response 28: OCSS clarifies that since employment and training
services will be eligible for title IV-D funds as an allowable activity
under title IV-D, an exemption is not necessary for States to use
incentive dollars to provide the allowable services included in Sec.
303.6(c)(5) to eligible noncustodial parents. Those services would be
an allowable activity for FFP. However, an exemption is necessary if a
State wants to provide employment and training services other than
those listed in Sec. 303.6(c)(5) or wants to serve parents who are not
eligible for employment and training services under this rule.
Comment 29: One commenter recommended that OCSS clarify if FFP is
available for administrative costs
[[Page 100806]]
associated with implementing employment and training services in Sec.
303.6(c)(5), such as costs associated with start-up, staffing,
technology, training, outreach, and rent.
Response 29: This rule allows child support agencies to use FFP to
provide employment and training services in accordance with Sec. Sec.
303.6(c)(5) and 309.121, which includes costs of associated
administrative activities, such as grant administration costs
associated with start-up, staffing, technology, training, outreach, and
rent, provided those costs are necessary, reasonable and appropriately
allocable to the employment and training services and comply with 45
CFR parts 304, 307, and 310 and HHS' uniform grant administration
requirements.
Comment 30: A commenter asked if FFP would be available for partner
agencies to make systems enhancements.
Response 30: FFP is not available for partner agencies to make
enhancements to existing workforce systems.
Comment 31: A few commenters opposed the prohibitions against using
FFP for the cost of cash payments, checks, reimbursements, or any other
form of payment that can be legally converted to currency and
recommended eliminating the prohibition. Another commenter suggested
allowing reimbursement for time critical, de minimus expenses up to a
set dollar threshold, and pointed out that this prohibition is not
consistent with other federally-funded employment and training programs
such as those funded under WIOA.
Response 31: We thank the commenters but have determined to
maintain the NPRM restriction providing that FFP may not be used to
provide cash payments, checks, reimbursements, or any other form of
payment that can be legally converted to currency. Nothing prohibits
State and Tribal child support agencies from forming collaborations
with organizations (e.g., community-based groups; workforce system
entities, such as those funded through WIOA systems; and others) that
do provide resources such as emergency assistance and reimbursement of
expenses.
Comment 32: One commenter asked for clarification that FFP is
available for employment and training services when the noncustodial
parent is ordered to participate and the noncustodial parent
voluntarily agrees to participate.
Response 32: This final rule allows child support agencies to
determine their enrollment process for providing employment and
training services. In the past, some State child support agencies have
limited enrollment to noncustodial parents who appear at a show cause
or civil contempt hearing for failure to pay child support and are
encouraged or ordered to participate in the employment and training
program as an alternative sentencing option. Research shows that this
approach to enrollment yields positive outcomes in terms of
noncustodial parent employment and child support payments.\90\ Other
State child support agencies have enrolled noncustodial parents on a
voluntarily basis as part of early intervention efforts. This approach
has also been found to be associated with positive improvements in
noncustodial parent employment and child support outcomes.\91\ Still
other State child support agencies have used a no wrong door approach
to enrollment and research shows this approach can also be
effective.\92\ Because the research shows that various approaches to
enrollment can generate positive results, we have decided to allow
child support agencies to determine their enrollment process. However,
OCSS encourages States, Tribes, and Tribal organizations to consider
using a no wrong door approach to enrollment because it increases the
number of noncustodial parents who can potentially benefit from
employment and training services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\90\ Schroeder, Daniel and Nicholas Doughty (September 2009).
\91\ Davis, Lanae, et al. (November 2013).
\92\ Lippold, Kye, et al. (October 2011).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) (Pub. L. 104-13), all
Departments are required to submit to the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) for review and approval any reporting or recordkeeping
requirements inherent in a proposed or final rule. There is one new
State plan and one new Tribal plan reporting requirement because of
this final rule for States, Tribes, or Tribal organizations that choose
to implement the optional and nonduplicative employment and training
services. The description and total estimated burden on the ``State
Plan for Child Support Collection and Establishment of Paternity Under
Title IV-D of the Social Security Act,'' and the State Plan Transmittal
Form [OMB 0970-0017] are described in the chart below.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Average burden hour National Federal National State
Section and purpose Instrument respondents per response Total cost share share
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Added optional requirement Sec. State plan amendment. One time for 33 3 hours x $66.82 x $6,615.18 $4,366.02 $2,249.16
302.76 Employment and training States. 33 States.
services.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A State, Tribe, or Tribal organization may submit a plan amendment
for the optional and nonduplicative employment and training services at
any time. But not all States, Tribes, and Tribal organizations will
implement these optional services. Out of the 54 States, we estimate 33
will eventually submit plan amendments for these optional services. Out
of the 63 Tribes and Tribal organizations, we estimate that 35 will
eventually submit plan amendments for these optional services.
Additionally, we estimate that States will take 3 hours to draft the
required information to amend their State plans. The cost to
respondents was calculated using the Bureau of Labor Statistics job
code for State Government Management Analyst [13-1111] and wage data
from May 2021, which is $33.41 per hour. To account for fringe benefits
and overhead, the rate was multiplied by two, which is $66.82. The
total estimated cost is $6,615.18 with a State share of $2,249.16. OCSS
reimburses States for 66 percent of the administrative costs incurred
to administer the State plan.
The description and total estimated burden on the ``Tribal Child
Support Enforcement Direct Funding Requests'' are described in the
chart below.
[[Page 100807]]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average burden hour per National Federal
Section and purpose Instrument Number of respondents response Total cost share
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Added optional requirement Sec. Tribal plan amendment.... One time for 35 Tribes... 6 hours x $76.26 x 35 $16,014.60 $16,014.60
309.65(b) Employment and training Tribes.
services.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
We estimate that Tribes will take 6 hours to draft the required
information to amend their Tribal plans. The cost to respondents was
calculated using the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) job code for
Social and Community Service Managers [11-9151] and wage data from May
2022, which is $38.13 per hour (mean). To account for fringe benefits
and overhead, the rate was multiplied by two, which is $76.26. The
total estimated cost is $16,014.60. Tribal child support programs
receive 100% FFP so there is no Tribal share incurred to administer the
Tribal plan.
This final rule would revise two approved information collections
(State Plan for Child Support Collection and Establishment of Paternity
Under Title IV-D of the Social Security Act; OMB #: 0970-0017 and
Tribal Child Support Enforcement Direct Funding Requests; OMB #0970-
0218), as States, Tribes, and Tribal organizations that elect to
participate in Employment and Training Services for Noncustodial
Parents in the Child Support Program may submit a State and Tribal plan
amendment to OCSS. To account for States, Tribes, and Tribal
organizations that elect to provide employment and training services in
accordance with this rule submitting revisions to their State or Tribal
Plans and as required by PRA, we will submit the proposed revised data
collections to OMB for review and approval. This will include an
updated description in the Supporting Statement A justification and an
updated burden table to show an estimated number of States, Tribes, or
Tribal organizations that might submit amendments annually. The request
to revise the title IV-D plan pages will include a comment period
inviting comments on the new data collection and related burden. The
public comment period will be announced through separate notices
published in the Federal Register.
Regulatory Impact Analysis
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess all
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). Executive
Order 13563 emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and
benefits, of reducing costs, of harmonizing rules, and of promoting
flexibility. This rule meets the standards of Executive Order 13563
because providing employment training and services benefits the public,
particularly children and families whose economic security would be
improved by increasing family income and improving financial stability.
These services help to reduce the need for and cost of providing public
assistance. This rule was designated by OMB as a significant regulatory
action under Executive Order 12866, as amended by Executive Order
14094. This rule will not result in economic impacts that exceed the
monetary threshold in section 3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866 (as
amended by Executive Order 14094).
For the chosen regulatory approach, it is estimated that the fiscal
impact of the final rule against a baseline of no action, accounting
for existing trends, will increase Federal expenditures in FY 2025 by
$17.8 million, the anticipated first fiscal year of implementation. As
more child support programs use this authority, the estimated fiscal
impact will increase. By FY 2034, the estimated fiscal impact is
expected to be $98.5 million per budget year. These estimates do not
reflect the potential benefits to the Federal Government of
implementing this program, such as reducing the cost of providing child
support enforcement services and reducing reliance on means-tested
programs; they only reflect the estimated cost of providing employment
and training services to noncustodial parents in accordance with this
final rule.
ACF also assessed and considered a regulatory alternative of
finalizing the proposed rule as published. As an example of the
differences, in contrast to the final rule, the proposed rule did not
contain a provision explicitly authorizing Tribal child support
programs to receive FFP for employment and training service activities.
It also did not allow child support programs to receive FFP for
employment and training service activities for noncustodial parents
with arrears-only cases. Compared to a baseline scenario of no
regulatory action, adopting this policy alternative would result in an
increase of $15.1 million in Federal expenditures during FY 2025, the
first fiscal year of implementation, increasing to $74.0 million by FY
2034. These estimates are slightly different than those included in the
NPRM because the current estimates use more recent caseload information
than used when estimating the fiscal impact of the NPRM. Compared to
our estimated impacts of the final rule, this regulatory alternative
would result in a lower increase in Federal expenditures by $2.7
million in the first year, and a lower increase in Federal expenditures
by $24.5 million in the final year of the time horizon of our analysis.
We note that, compared to the final rule, this regulatory alternative
would be less likely to ensure that Tribal Nations can offer culturally
appropriate and affirming services to their communities.
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
The Secretary has determined that, under 5 U.S.C. 605(b), as
enacted by the Regulatory Flexibility Act (Pub. L. 96-354), this rule
will not result in a significant impact on a substantial number of
small entities. The primary impact is on State and Tribal governments.
State and Tribal governments are not considered small entities under
the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4) requires
agencies to prepare an assessment of anticipated costs and benefits
before issuing any rule that may result in an annual expenditure by
State, local, and Tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more (adjusted annually for
inflation). That threshold level is currently approximately $177
million. This rule does not impose any mandates on State, local, or
Tribal governments, or the private sector, that will exceed this
threshold in any year.
[[Page 100808]]
Assessment of Federal Regulations and Policies on Families
Section 654 of the Treasury and General Government Appropriations
Act of 1999 requires Federal agencies to determine whether a proposed
policy or regulation may affect family well-being. If the agency's
determination is affirmative, then the agency must prepare an impact
assessment addressing seven criteria specified in the law. We certify
that we have assessed this final rule's impact on the well-being of
families. This rule will have a positive impact on family well-being as
defined in the legislation by proposing evidence-informed policies and
practices that help to ensure that noncustodial parents support their
children more consistently and reliably.
Congressional Review
This final rule is not a major rule as defined in 5 U.S.C. chapter
8.
Executive Order 13132
Executive Order 13132 prohibits an agency from publishing any rule
that has federalism implications if the rule either imposes substantial
direct compliance costs on State and local governments and is not
required by statute, or the rule preempts State law, unless the agency
meets the consultation and funding requirements of section 6 of the
Executive order. This rule does not have federalism impacts as defined
in the Executive Order 13132.
Tribal Consultation Statement
Executive Order 13175, Consultation and Coordination with Indian
Tribal Governments, requires agencies to consult with Indian Tribes
when regulations have ``substantial direct effects on one or more
Indian Tribes, on the relationship between the Federal Government and
Indian Tribes, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities
between the Federal Government and Indian Tribes.'' Similarly, ACF's
Tribal Consultation Policy says that consultation is triggered for a
new rule adoption that significantly affects Tribes, meaning the new
rule adoption has substantial direct effects on one on more Indian
Tribes, on the amount or duration of ACF program funding, on the
delivery of ACF programs or services to one or more Indian Tribes, or
on the distribution of power and responsibilities between the Federal
Government and Indian Tribes. This rule does not meet either standard
for consultation. Executive Order 13175 does not apply to this rule
because it does not impose any burden or cost on Tribal IV-D agencies,
nor does it impact the relationship or distribution of power between
the Federal Government and Indian Tribes. Rather, it provides IV-D
agencies an option for claiming Federal financial participation (FFP)
for the provision of employment and training services to noncustodial
parents. Although not required for this final rule, ACF is committed to
consulting with Indian Tribes and Tribal leadership to the extent
practicable and permitted by law.
In April 2023 OCSS held a consultation where tribal leaders shared
concerns with high unemployment and expressed a need for additional
funding in employment and training for noncustodial parents. During
that same consultation leaders expressed there was no reason for Tribes
to not have the same enforcement measures as States. At the June 2023
ACF Tribal Advisory Committee (TAC) OCSS shared it was exploring ways
to fund employment and training services. Members of the TAC expressed
support for funding employment and training services.
Meg Sullivan, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for the
Administration for Children and Families, performing the delegable
duties of the Assistant Secretary for Children and Families, approved
this document on December 3, 2024
List of Subjects
45 CFR Part 302
Child support, Grant programs--social programs, Penalties,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Unemployment compensation.
45 CFR Part 303
Child support, Grant programs--social programs, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
45 CFR Part 304
Child support, Grant programs--social programs, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
45 CFR Part 309
Child support, Grant programs--social programs, Indians-tribal
government, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: December 6, 2024.
Xavier Becerra,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human Services.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Department of Health
and Human Services amends 45 CFR parts 302, 303, 304, and 309 as set
forth below:
PART 302--STATE PLAN REQUIREMENTS
0
1. The authority citation for part 302 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 651 through 658, 659a, 660, 664, 666, 667,
1302, 1396a(a)(25), 1396b(d)(2), 1396b(o), 1396b(p), and 1396(k).
0
2. Add Sec. 302.76 to read as follows:
Sec. 302.76 Employment and training services.
The State plan may provide for employment and training services for
eligible noncustodial parents in accordance with Sec. 303.6(c)(5) of
this chapter. If the State chooses this option, the State plan must
include a description of the employment and training services and the
eligibility criteria. In addition, to ensure the IV-D agency is
providing well-coordinated and non-duplicative employment and training
services, the State plan must explain how the IV-D agency has consulted
with, and taken into consideration the services provided by, the State
agencies administering the following programs: the Temporary Assistance
for Needy Families program (45 CFR part 261), the Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program Employment and Training program (7 CFR
273.7 and 273.24), the Adult, Dislocated Worker, and Youth programs
under title I of the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (20 CFR
parts 675 through 688), the Adult Education and Family Literacy Act
program (34 CFR part 463), the Employment Service program (20 CFR part
652), and the Vocational Rehabilitation program (34 CFR part 361).
States electing the option must comply with future reporting
requirements prescribed by the Office.
PART 303--STANDARDS FOR PROGRAM OPERATIONS
0
3. The authority citation for part 303 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 651 through 658, 659a, 660, 663, 664, 666,
667, 1302, 1396a(a)(25), 1396b(d)(2), 1396b(o), 1396b(p), 1396(k),
and 25 U.S.C. 1603(12) and 1621e.
0
4. Amend Sec. 303.6 by:
0
a. Removing the word ``and'' at the end of paragraph (c)(4)(iii);
0
b. Redesignating paragraph (c)(5) as paragraph (c)(6); and
0
c. Adding a new paragraph (c)(5).
The addition reads as follows:
Sec. 303.6 Enforcement of support obligations.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(5)(i) As elected by the State in Sec. 302.76 of this chapter,
provide
[[Page 100809]]
employment and training services to eligible noncustodial parents. In
addition to eligibility criteria that may be set by the IV-D agency,
the noncustodial parent must: have an open IV-D case; have a child
support order or be determined by the IV-D agency to be fully
cooperating with the IV-D agency to establish a child support order;
and be unemployed or underemployed or at risk of not being able to
comply with their support order. In addition, the IV-D agency must have
adopted policies and procedures for determining that the noncustodial
parent is not receiving the same employment and training services under
the following programs: the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families
program (45 CFR part 261), the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance
Program Employment and Training program (7 CFR 273.7 and 273.24), the
Federal Pell Grant program (34 CFR part 690), the Adult, Dislocated
Worker, and Youth programs under title I of the Workforce Innovation
and Opportunity Act (20 CFR parts 675 through 688), the Adult Education
and Family Literacy Act program (34 CFR part 463), the Employment
Service program (20 CFR part 652), or the State Vocational
Rehabilitation program (34 CFR part 361);
(ii) These IV-D agency employment and training services are limited
to:
(A) Job search assistance;
(B) Job readiness training;
(C) Job development and job placement services;
(D) Skills assessments to facilitate job placement;
(E) Job retention services;
(F) Work supports, such as transportation assistance, uniforms, and
tools; and
(G) Occupational training and other skills training directly
related to employment, which may also include activities to improve
literacy and basic skills, such as programs to complete high school or
a high school equivalency certificate or English as a second language;
and
(iii) Federal financial participation may also be used to provide
case management in connection with the allowable services under this
paragraph (c)(5); and
* * * * *
PART 304--FEDERAL FINANCIAL PARTICIPATION
0
5. The authority citation for part 304 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 651 through 655, 657, 1302, 1396a(a)(25),
1396b(d)(2), 1396b(o), 1396b(p), and 1396(k).
0
6. Amend Sec. 304.20 by:
0
a. Removing the word ``and'' at the end of paragraph (b)(3)(vi);
0
b. Redesignating paragraph (b)(3)(vii) as paragraph (b)(3)(viii); and
0
c. Adding a new paragraph (b)(3)(vii).
The addition reads as follows:
Sec. 304.20 Availability and rate of Federal financial
participation.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(3) * * *
(vii) Employment and training services activities in accordance
with Sec. Sec. 302.76 and 303.6(c)(5) of this chapter; and
* * * * *
0
7. Amend Sec. 304.23 by adding paragraph (k) to read as follows:
Sec. 304.23 Expenditures for which Federal financial participation is
not available.
* * * * *
(k) Any expenditures under Sec. 303.6(c)(5) of this chapter for
subsidized employment or payment of cash, checks, reimbursements, or
any other form of payment that can be legally converted to currency
provided to the noncustodial parent.
PART 309--TRIBAL CHILD SUPPORT ENFORCEMENT (IV-D) PROGRAM
0
8. The authority citation for part 309 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 655(f) and 1302.
0
9. Amend Sec. 309.65 by:
0
a. Redesignating paragraph (b) as paragraph (c); and
0
b. Adding a new paragraph (b).
The addition reads as follows:
Sec. 309.65 What must a Tribe or Tribal Organization include in a
Tribal IV-D plan in order to demonstrate capacity to operation a Tribal
IV-D program?
* * * * *
(b) The Tribal plan may provide for employment and training
services for eligible noncustodial parents in accordance with Sec.
309.121. If the Tribe or Tribal organization chooses this option, the
Tribal plan must include a description of the employment and training
services and the eligibility criteria. In addition, to ensure the
Tribal IV-D agency is providing well-coordinated and non-duplicative
employment and training services, the Tribal plan must explain how the
Tribal IV-D agency has consulted with, and taken into consideration
services provided by, federally-funded employment and training programs
administered by the Tribe. Tribes or Tribal organizations electing the
option must comply with future reporting requirements prescribed by the
Office of Child Support Services.
* * * * *
0
10. Add Sec. 309.121 to read as follows:
Sec. 309.121 Employment and training services.
(a) As elected by the Tribe or Tribal organization in Sec.
309.65(b), provide employment and training services to eligible
noncustodial parents. In addition to eligibility criteria that may be
set by the Tribal IV-D agency, the noncustodial parent must: have an
open IV-D case; have a child support order or be determined by the
Tribal IV-D agency to be fully cooperating with the Tribal IV-D agency
to establish a child support order; be unemployed or underemployed or
at risk of not being able to comply with their support order. In
addition, the Tribal IV-D agency must have adopted policies and
procedures for determining that the noncustodial parent is not
receiving the same employment and training services under federally-
funded employment and training programs administered by the Tribe.
(b) These IV-D agency employment and training services are limited
to:
(1) Job search assistance;
(2) Job readiness training;
(3) Job development and job placement services;
(4) Skills assessments to facilitate job placement;
(5) Job retention services;
(6) Work supports, such as transportation assistance, uniforms, and
tools; and
(7) Occupational training and other skills training directly
related to employment, which may also include activities to improve
literacy and basic skills, such as programs to complete high school or
a high school equivalency certificate, or English as a second language.
(c) Federal financial participation may also be used to provide
case management in connection with the allowable services under this
section.
0
11. Amend Sec. 309.145 by:
0
a. Removing the word ``and'' at the end of paragraph (c)(3);
0
b. Removing the period at the end of paragraph (c)(4) and adding;
``and'' in its place; and
0
c. Adding paragraph (c)(5).
The addition reads as follows:
Sec. 309.145 What costs are allowable for Tribal IV-D programs
carried out under Sec. 309.65(a) of this part?
* * * * *
(c) * * *
[[Page 100810]]
(5) Employment and training services activities in accordance with
Sec. Sec. 309.65(b) and 309.121.
* * * * *
0
12. Amend Sec. 309.155 by:
0
a. Removing the word ``and'' at the end of paragraph (e);
0
b. Redesignating paragraph (f) as paragraph (g); and
0
c. Adding a new paragraph (f).
The addition reads as follows:
Sec. 309.155 What uses of Tribal IV-D program funds are not
allowable?
* * * * *
(f) Any expenditures under Sec. 309.121 for subsidized employment
or payment of cash, checks, reimbursements, or any other form of
payment that can be legally converted to currency provided to the
noncustodial parent; and
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2024-29081 Filed 12-11-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4184-41-P