HF4206 (Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026))
Extended foster care services grant program established, reports required, and money appropriated.
Related bill: SF4360
AI Generated Summary
Purpose
- Establish an extended foster care services grant program to provide financial support and case management to eligible transition-age youth.
Main Provisions
- Program establishment
- The commissioner of children, youth and families must create an extended foster care services grant program.
- Aimed at youth who are at least 21 years old and under 27.
- Grantee eligibility
- Grants go to community-based providers that:
- Demonstrate expertise serving transition-age youth.
- Maintain nondiscrimination policies consistent with state and federal law.
- Ensure geographic access to services, including areas outside the seven-county metropolitan area.
- Meet performance metrics related to education, employment, housing stability, and youth satisfaction.
- Meet training standards set by the commissioner.
- Youth eligibility
- Eligible youth must:
- Have been in Minnesota foster care at age 14 or older.
- Be currently between 21 and 27 years old.
- Not currently be in a Title IV-E foster placement.
-be engaged in one of the following activities:
- Completing secondary education or a program leading to an equivalent credential.
- Enrolled in postsecondary or vocational education.
- Participating in a program to promote or remove barriers to employment.
- Employed at least 80 hours per month.
- Receiving treatment for mental health or a substance use disorder.
- Facing documented barriers such as a medical condition, disability, pregnancy, parenting, or domestic violence.
- Youth must maintain monthly contact with their case manager.
- Eligibility can apply whether the youth lives with others or lives independently.
- Services provided
- Monthly stipends to cover basic living expenses (including education costs), adjusted for geographic cost of living and inflation.
- Stipend reductions begin when the youth reaches 25, according to a commissioner-developed schedule.
- Case management services, including monthly financial wellness check-ins.
- Access to budgeting and employment readiness training to build financial literacy.
- Assistance in establishing a savings account.
- Housing navigation services to help locate stable housing.
- Transition planning with a comprehensive plan and step-down preparation beginning at age 24, including help coordinating adult services.
- Reporting and accountability
- The commissioner must track and report outcomes disaggregated by protected classes and geography to identify disparities.
- Beginning February 1, 2029, grantees must annually report:
- Number of youth served.
- Amount of money spent on stipends.
- Outcomes disaggregated by protected classes and geography.
- Any other relevant information determined by the grantee.
- Beginning July 1, 2029, the commissioner must report to the legislative chairs and ranking minority members on grant program details, including outcomes, costs, and equity determinations.
Significant Changes from Existing Law
- Creates a new Extended Foster Care Services Grant Program (260C.453) to fund and regulate extended support for transition-age youth up to age 27.
- Establishes mandatory grantee qualifications and service standards for providers delivering extended foster care services outside the traditional foster care system.
- Introduces structured financial supports (monthly stipends with cost-of-living adjustments) and a defined timeline for stipend reductions.
- Adds comprehensive transition planning and life skills services (financial literacy, housing navigation, savings, and adult service coordination) starting before age 25.
- imposes formal, data-driven accountability with disaggregated reporting by protected class and geography, including regular legislative reporting.
Relevant Terms - extended foster care services grant program - transition-age youth - monthly stipends - case management - geographic access - seven-county metropolitan area - Title IV-E foster placement - secondary education - postsecondary education - vocational education - barriers to employment - financial literacy - housing navigation - transition planning - step-down preparation - disaggregated data - equity determinations
Bill text versions
- Introduction PDF PDF file
Actions
| Date | Chamber | Where | Type | Name | Committee Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| March 12, 2026 | House | Action | Introduction and first reading, referred to | Children and Families Finance and Policy | |
| March 18, 2026 | House | Action | Authors added |
Citations
[
{
"analysis": {
"added": [],
"removed": [],
"summary": "Establishes the Extended Foster Care Services Grant Program within Minnesota Statutes section 260C.453 to provide financial support and case management services to eligible youth aged 21 to 27.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "260C.453",
"subdivision": "Subdivision 1"
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [],
"removed": [],
"summary": "Grantee eligibility: requires a community-based provider, demonstrated expertise serving transition-age youth, nondiscrimination policies consistent with state and federal law, geographic access including areas outside the seven-county metro area, and performance metrics and training standards set by the commissioner.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "260C.453",
"subdivision": "Subdivision 2"
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [],
"removed": [],
"summary": "Youth eligibility: youth who were in Minnesota foster care on or after age 14, are at least 21 and under 27, are not currently in Title IV-E foster placement, and meet education or employment criteria, with ongoing eligibility dependent on monthly contact with a case manager and applicability regardless of living arrangement.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "260C.453",
"subdivision": "Subdivision 3"
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [],
"removed": [],
"summary": "Services: grantees must provide monthly stipends adjusted for geographic cost of living and inflation; stipends decrease after age 25; provide case management, training access, savings account establishment, housing navigation, and transition planning beginning at age 24.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "260C.453",
"subdivision": "Subdivision 4"
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [],
"removed": [],
"summary": "Reporting: the commissioner must track and report outcomes disaggregated by protected classes and geography; effective reporting dates begin February 1, 2029 and annually thereafter; grantees must report youth served, stipend expenditures, outcomes by protected classes and geography, and other relevant information; the commissioner must report to legislative chairs and ranking minority members on program outcomes, costs, and equity determinations beginning July 1, 2029.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "260C.453",
"subdivision": "Subdivision 5"
},
{
"analysis": {
"added": [],
"removed": [],
"summary": "References federal law (Title IV-E) in relation to foster care placement eligibility within the bill.",
"modified": []
},
"citation": "Title IV-E of the Social Security Act",
"subdivision": ""
}
]Progress through the legislative process
In Committee