Do States Need an Electronic, Interstate System to Place Foster Children in Adoptive Homes? (H.R. 2742)
Do you support or oppose this bill?
What is H.R. 2742?
(Updated February 29, 2020)
This bill would seek to reduce the amount of time it takes to place foster children with adoptive families, relatives, or in long-term placements across state lines by encouraging states to adopt a pilot program used in six states to achieve those goals. It would accomplish that by requiring states to have a centralized electronic case processing system to facilitate the timely and orderly interstate placement of foster children.
Grants would be authorized for states to develop a centralized system to expedite interstate placements of children in foster care, guardianship, or adoptive homes. A total of $5 million would be made available for fiscal year 2018, which would be reserved and remain available through fiscal year 2022.
Argument in favor
The federal government should encourage states to implement an electronic, interstate system for placing foster children that speeds up placement times while cutting administrative costs.
Argument opposed
The existing process for placing foster children with adoptive families in another state is not too time consuming, and states shouldn’t have to adopt an interstate placement system.
Impact
Children in foster care, guardianship, or adoptive homes; adoptive families; and state family services agencies.
Cost of H.R. 2742
A CBO cost estimate is unavailable.
Additional Info
In-Depth: Sponsoring Rep. Jackie Walorski (R-IN) introduced this bill to reduce the amount of time it takes to place foster children with adoptive families out-of-state:
“Foster care and adoption give vulnerable children a chance at a better life, but an outdated system is causing unnecessary delays and hurdles to placing children with loving families. Indiana was one of the first states to use a modern, electronic system to speed up the interstate placement process. Now we can build on that success so children across the country can be more quickly placed in safe and stable homes.”
This legislation is cosponsored by two Republicans and one Democrat in the House.
Of Note: This legislation would encourage states to create a system to place foster children with out-of-state adoptive families by using an existing six-state pilot program as a template. Known as the National Electronic Interstate Compact Enterprise (NEICE), the pilot program has reduced interstate placement times by 30 percent — meaning those children spent about one and a half fewer months waiting to join an adoptive family. It has also been projected that states will save $1.6 million annually from reduced copying and mailing costs, plus additional savings in labor costs given that NEICE is an electronic system.
Media:
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Sponsoring Rep. Jackie Walorski (R-IN) Press Release
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News and Tribune (Previous Version)
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American Public Human Services Association (In Favor - PDF)
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Child Welfare League of America (In Favor)
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State Policy Advocacy and Reform Center (In Favor - PDF)
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