18+ Continued Foster Care Eligibility 447-10-52
(Revised 1/1/24 ML #3784)
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18+ Continued Foster Care is available to eligible foster care children up to the age of 21 if the child meets certain criteria. The child must have aged out of foster care while in the custody of a North Dakota public agency including human service zone, Tribal Nations and the Division of Juvenile Services (DJS).
Children under the custody of Division of Juvenile Services
The North Dakota Department of Health and Human Services has a formal agreement with the ND Division of Juvenile Services (DJS) to offer foster care placements for children in need of out of home care. ND law prohibits DJS from case managing a child who is not in their court ordered custody. If a DJS child ages out of foster care and requests to continue in 18+ Continued Care, the DJS case manager is responsible to refer the case and discuss transfer details with the human service zone.
Children under the custody of a Tribal Nation
The North Dakota Department of Health and Human Services has a formal agreement with Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, Three Affiliated Tribes, Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa and Spirit Lake Sioux Tribe. The Title IV-E agreements allow the Tribal Nation to retain jurisdiction of children interested in participating in the 18+ Continued Care program. The Tribal Nation remains responsible to:
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Provide case management to the child.
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Provide all documentation for eligibility determination to the Foster Care and Subadopt (FCSA) Eligibility Unit.
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Provide CFS Field Service Specialists and FCSA Eligibility Unit with required case documentation for entry into the case management system.
A child under the custody of a Tribal Nation at the time they age out of foster care must continue with or return to the same agency to participate in the 18+ Continued Care program. A child cannot be referred or transferred to a human service zone for the purpose of entering the 18+ Continued Care program.
Eligible maintenance payments for the child of an 18+ child will be authorized by the FCSA Eligibility Unit and paid by the state.
- Tribal Title IV-E
A child under the custody of a Tribal Nation who meets the definition of a dependent child, is Title IV-E eligible, and meets the criteria of “aging out”, is eligible to participate in the 18+ Continued Care.
- Tribal Non-Title IV-E
A child under the custody of a Tribal Nation, who was not Title IV-E eligible upon “aging out”, may qualify for 18+ Continued Care. The child must apply and have their eligibility determined. If found to be Title IV-E eligible as “child only”, the child would be eligible to participate in the 18+ Continued Care program. If the child loses Title IV-E eligibility or is no longer reimbursable while participating in the 18+ Continued Care program, the FCSA Eligibility Unit will close the case and the state will no longer be financially responsible.
Placement and Care
The 18+ Continued Foster Care Agreement (SFN 60) allows for a bridge in service and payment. The eligibility determination at the time the child ages out of foster care will determine the effective date of the agreement.
Title IV-E Eligible Child:
- Continued foster care date = day before their 18th birthday.
- Returned to foster care date = day returned to foster care.
Not Title IV-E Eligible Child:
- New foster care date = day after current court order expired.
- Return to foster care date = day returned to foster care.
The agreement authorizes the agency placement and care responsibility until a formal court order can be obtained. The child is not eligible for the 18+ Continued Foster Care program until the court ordered custody expires when the order extends past the child’s 18th birthday.
An 18+ court order authorizing placement and care responsibility to the agency must be obtained within 90 days of the effective date of the 18+ Continued Foster Care Agreement.
Eligibility Month
The month of the effective date on the SFN 60, 18+ Continued Foster Care Agreement, is considered the removal month for a child that requires a new eligibility determination.
AFDC Income and Assets
The income and assets available to an 18+ child that no longer meets the definition of a dependent child must be considered in the eligibility month when determining eligibility for 18+ Continued Care. An 18+ child is considered an AFDC unit of one.
Exclusions:
- The income and assets of an applicant in receipt of SSI. If the applicant is the foster care child, they are counted in the AFDC unit, but their income and assets are excluded.
- The earnings of a dependent child who is a full-time student in high school or in an equivalent level of vocational/technical training.
See Manual Chapter 447-10 AFDC Relatedness for additional exclusions.
If a child's available net income exceeds the daily foster care rate, reimbursement may still exist since the needs of the child include costs other than basic maintenance.
Dependent Child
An 18+ child is considered a “Dependent Child” if they are a full-time student in high school (or in an equivalent level of vocational/technical training) if they are expected to complete high school or vocational training curriculum before attaining age 19.
Student Status
- A child participating in Job Corps is considered to be a student.
- A child is considered in regular attendance for the months in which he/she is not in school because of official vacation, illness, or convalescence if the plan is to continue training when the event that prompted the interruption has run its course.
- A child is considered a dependent child during the entire month of his/her 18th birthday.
- A child is no longer considered a dependent child the month after one of the following occurs:
- They turn 18 and are no longer attending high school or an equivalent course of study.
- They graduate from high school or an equivalent course of study before turning age 19.
- They turn 19 and are still attending high school or an equivalent course of study.
- The terms “full-time” and “part-time” school attendance are defined as follows:
- “Full-time” attendance in a secondary school (high school) requires four or more units of credit. “Part-time” is anything less than four units of credit.
- “Full-time” attendance in college or university requires 12 or more semester or quarter hours and “part-time” is less than 12 semester or quarter hours. Full time summer school normally means one-half of the semester hours earned during a regular quarter or semester.
- “Full-time” in a vocational/technical school, under state operation, means 12 or more semester or quarter hours, and “part-time” is less than 12 semester or quarter hours. There is no uniform defined criteria of what constitutes full or part-time attendance in private vocational/technical schools such as for auto mechanics, auto body repair, hair stylists, etc.
18+ Court order
All children continuing in or returning to the 18+ program must have a court hearing within 90 days of the effective date of the 18+ Continued Foster Care Agreement (SFN 60). A child will not be reimbursable starting on the 91st day if the agency fails to obtain an 18+ court order within 90 days. Reimbursement may resume effective the day the hearing is held granting placement and care responsibility to the agency.
For a Title IV-E eligible child transitioning from regular foster care to the 18+ Continue Care program, the requirement of timely permanency findings does not change. Permanency findings must be obtained 12 months from the date the child is considered to have entered foster care or 12 months from the last permanency hearing.
A child that is not Title IV-E eligible at the time they age out of foster care must be discharged from the foster care program and the case closed. The foster care discharge date must be equal to the date the child ages out of foster care and is no longer under the custody of the agency. Permanency findings are required within 12 months from the effective date of the child’s return to care.
For payment purposes, the 18+ court order must include:
- The child willfully entered the 18+ Continued Foster Care Agreement.
- A judicial determination that it is in the best interest for the child to remain in or return to foster care.
- A judicial determination the agency has made reasonable efforts to meet the youth’s needs before a foster care placement.
- Permanency goal for the child.
- Permanency Hearing: A judicial determination the agency has made reasonable efforts to finalize the permanency plan specific to the youth.
- Placement and care responsibility to the agency.
Eligibility Determination
All 18+ eligibility determinations require the following:
- A current 18+ Continued Foster Care Agreement (SFN 60)
- Continued Eligibility
- Title IV-E: If the child was previously Title IV-E, no redetermination is necessary. However, income and assets must be reviewed to determine if the child is reimbursable.
- Non-Title IV-E: If the child was not previously Title IV-E eligible prior to aging out, a new eligibility determination is required specific to the child only.
Based on the child’s determination, the following documents are required:
Title IV-E children
- Remain in ND 18+ Continued Care:
- Child remains Title IV-E eligible
- A new determination is not required, but income and assets must be monitored for continued reimbursement.
- Additional documentation in the eligibility file must include:
- SFN 60, 18+ Continued Foster Care Agreement
- SFN 45, Notice of Change
- 18+ Court Order
- SFN 642, Title IV-E Title XIX Income/Asset Report
- Return within six months of discharge:
- Child remains Title IV-E eligible.
- Reimbursement must be established.
- Additional documentation in the eligibility file must include:
- SFN 641 Title IV-E Title XIX Application – Foster Care specific to the 18+ Continued Care eligibility month and signed by the child.
- SFN 870, Title IV-E 18+ Continued Care Eligibility
- SFN 873, Title IV-E Income Calculation Worksheet if child has income
- SFN 60, 18+ Continued Foster Care Agreement
- SFN 45, Notice of Change
- 18+ Court Order
Non-Title IV-E children aging out of foster care
All non-IV-E children must be discharged from the foster care program upon aging out of foster care. A child must “return” to foster care if they wish to participate in the 18+ program. The child must apply for 18+ Continued Foster Care and a new eligibility determination is required.
- Return to 18+ Continued Care:
- Additional documentation in the eligibility file must include:
- SFN 641 Title IV-E Title XIX Application – Foster Care specific to the 18+ Continued Care eligibility month and signed by the child.
- SFN 870, Title IV-E 18+ Continued Care Eligibility
- SFN 873, Title IV-E Income Calculation Worksheet if child has income
- SFN 60, 18+ Continued Foster Care Agreement
- SFN 45, Notice of Change
- 18+ Court Order
Reimbursement
To maintain reimbursement the child must have a financial need in AFDC terms. Need has two elements:
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The income available to the child must be less than the costs of maintaining the child.
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Assets cannot exceed $10,000 in non-exempt assets
The cost of maintaining the child is the amount the state is paying for the foster care placement of the child. In any month where the child's income after deductions exceeds this amount, the child is not reimbursable.
Medical Services
The Foster Care Application (SFN 641) must be completed in order to reinstate Medicaid for children who exit and return to foster care after age 18. Title IV-E Title XIX Income/Asset Report (SFN 642) may be used to re-determine Medicaid annually for children who remain in foster care past the child’s 18th birthday. Children who are discharged from foster care at or after age 18 are eligible for Medicaid until the age of 26.
Additional 18+ Policy: 18+ Continued Care program policy can be found in 624-05 and 18+ maintenance payment policy can be found in 623-05.