Order Code RL33785
Runaway and Homeless Youth:
Demographics, Programs, and Emerging Issues
Updated December 10, 2007
Adrienne L. Fernandes
Analyst in Social Policy
Domestic Social Policy Division

Runaway and Homeless Youth:
Demographics, Programs, and Emerging Issues
Summary
There is no single definition of the term “runaway youth” or “homeless youth.”
However, both groups of youth share the risk of not having adequate shelter and
other provisions, and may engage in harmful behaviors while away from a permanent
home. These two groups also include “thrownaway” youth who are asked to leave
their homes, and may include other vulnerable youth populations, such as current and
former foster youth and youth with mental health or other issues.
The precise number of homeless and runaway youth is unknown due to their
residential mobility and overlap among the populations. Determining the number of
these youth is further complicated by the lack of a standardized methodology for
counting the population and inconsistent definitions of what it means to be homeless
or a runaway. Estimates of the homeless youth population range from 52,000 to over
one million. Estimates of runaway youth — including “thrownaway” youth — are
between 1 million and 1.7 million.
From the early 20th century through the 1960s, the needs of a generally
unspecified problem of runaway and homeless youth were handled locally through
the child welfare agency, juvenile justice courts, or both. The 1970s marked a shift
toward federal oversight of programs that help youth who had run afoul of the law,
including those who committed status offenses (i.e., running away). In 1974,
Congress passed the Runaway Youth Act of 1974 as Title III of the Juvenile Justice
and Delinquency Prevention Act (P.L. 93-415) to assist runaways outside of the
juvenile justice and child welfare systems. The scope of the act was expanded in
1977 to include homeless youth through the Runaway and Homeless Youth Act (P.L.
93-415). The Runaway and Homeless Youth Program (RHYP) has since been
reauthorized three times, most recently by the Runaway, Homeless, and Missing
Children Protection Act in 2003 (P.L. 108-96). The law currently authorizes federal
funding for three programs — the Basic Center Program, Transitional Living
Program, and Street Outreach Program.
The Basic Center Program provides temporary shelter, counseling, and after care
services to runaway and homeless youth under age 18 and their families, while the
Transitional Living Program is targeted to older youth ages 16 to 21. Youth who use
the TLP receive longer-term housing with supportive services, including counseling.
The Street Outreach Program provides education, treatment, counseling, and referrals
for runaway, homeless, and street youth who have been subjected to or are at risk of
being subjected to sexual abuse and exploitation. Congress appropriated a total of
$102.9 million for the three programs in FY2006.

Funding authorization for the RHYP is set to expire in the 110th Congress. The
Place to Call Home Act (H.R. 3409), an omnibus child welfare and youth policy bill,
includes language to reauthorize the program. Issues that may arise during any
reauthorization discussions include changing personnel needs at grantee
organizations, evaluation of youth outcomes, and the needs of “disconnected” youth.
This report will be updated as relevant funding and legislative activities occur.

Contents
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Who Are Homeless and Runaway Youth? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Defining the Population . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Demographics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Homeless Youth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Runaway and Thrownaway Youth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Factors Influencing Homelessness and Leaving Home . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Youth in Foster Care . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Risks Associated with Running Away and Homelessness . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Evolution of Federal Policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Early Years: 1930s-1960s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Federal Legislation on Homeless Youth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Federal Legislation on Runaway Youth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
The Runaway Youth Act of 1974 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Expanding the Scope of the Act . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Funding and Description of the Runaway and Homeless Youth Program . . . . . 14
Federal Administration and Funding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Basic Center Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Funding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Youth in the Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Transitional Living Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Funding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Youth in the Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Maternity Group Homes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Street Outreach Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Funding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Youth in the Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Training and Technical Assistance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
National Communication System . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Oversight . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Oversight of Grantees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Congressional Oversight . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
PART Evaluation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Additional Federal Support for Runaway and Homeless Youth . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Educational Assistance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
Shared Youth Vision Initiative . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Discretionary Grants for Family Violence Prevention . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Chafee Foster Care Independence Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Emerging Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
Changing Personnel Needs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30

Runaway and Homeless Youth as “Disconnected Youth” . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Youth Outcomes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Appendix . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
List of Figures
Figure 1. Evolution of Federal Runaway and Homeless Youth Policy,
1912-2003 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Figure 2. Runaway and Homeless Youth Program Funding,
FY1986-FY2006 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Figure 3. Age of Youth Served by the Basic Center Program, FY2007 . . . . . . . 19
Figure 4. Race of Youth Served by the Basic Center Program, FY2007 . . . . . . . 19
List of Tables
Table 1. Runaway and Homeless Youth Program Funding, FY2002-FY2007 . . 3
Table A-1. Basic Center Funding by State and Territory, FY2006-FY2007 . . . 34

Runaway and Homeless Youth:
Demographics, Programs,
and Emerging Issues
Introduction
Running away from home is not a recent phenomenon. Folkloric heroes
Huckleberry Finn and Davey Crockett fled their abusive fathers to find adventure and
employment. While some youth today also leave home due to abuse and neglect,
they often endure far more negative outcomes than their romanticized counterparts
from an earlier era. Without adequate and safe shelter, runaway and homeless youth
are vulnerable to engaging in high-risk behaviors and further victimization. Youth
who live away from home for extended periods may become removed from school
and systems of support that promote positive development. They might also resort
to illicit activities, including selling drugs and prostitution, for survival.
Congress began to hear concerns about the vulnerabilities of the runaway
population in the 1970s due to increased awareness about these youth and the
establishment of runaway shelters to assist them in returning home. Since that time,
Congress has authorized services to provide support for runaway and homeless youth
outside of the juvenile justice, mental health, and child welfare systems. The
Runaway and Homeless Youth Act (RHYA), as currently amended, authorizes
federal funding for three programs to assist runaway and homeless youth — the Basic
Center Program (BCP), Transitional Living Program (TLP), and Street Outreach
Program (SOP) — through FY2008.1 The basic purposes of the programs and
funding for the programs are summarized below.
! Basic Center Program: To provide outreach, crisis intervention,
temporary shelter, counseling, family unification, and after care
services to runaway and homeless youth under age 18 and their
families.
! Transitional Living Program: To support projects that provide
homeless youth ages 16 to 21 with stable, safe longer-term
residential services up to 18 months (or longer if the youth has not
reached age 18), including counseling in basic life skills,
interpersonal skills building, educational advancement, job
attainment skills, and physical and mental health care.
1 The RHYP was most recently reauthorized by Title I of the Runaway, Homeless, and
Missing Children Protection Act of 2003 (P.L. 108-96). For text of current law see 42
U.S.C. §4701 et seq.

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! Street Outreach Program: To provide street-based outreach and
education, including treatment, counseling, provision of information,
and referrals for runaway, homeless, and street youth who have been
subjected to or are at risk of being subjected to sexual abuse and
exploitation.2
Table 1 shows funding levels for the three programs from FY2001 to FY2007,
and the Administration’s request for FY2008. Since FY2001, funding has generally
remained stable for the Basic Center and Street Outreach Programs. Funding for the
Transitional Living Program nearly doubled from FY2001 to FY2002 (as shown
below), but has remained at about $40 million from FY2002 to FY2007. Although
the TLP authorized services for pregnant and parenting teens, the Administration
sought funds specifically to serve this population and Congress provided the
increased funds to enable these youth to access TLP services. In FY2003,
amendments to the Runaway and Homeless Youth Act (P.L. 108-96) specifically
authorized TLP funds to be used for services targeted at pregnant and parenting teens
at TLP centers known as Maternity Group Homes. The FY2004 through FY2008
appropriations reflect funding for the Maternity Group Homes as part of the TLP.
The fourth Continuing Resolution for the FY2007 budget (P.L. 110-5) generally
funds programs at their FY2006 level.3 However, the FY2006 funding levels for the
three components of the RHYP are slightly lower than the FY2007 figures because
of an additional transfer of funds from the RHYP accounts to an HHS sub-agency.4
The Administration’s FY2008 request is identical to the FY2007 funding levels.
This report begins with an overview of the runaway and homeless youth
population. It describes the challenges in defining and counting the runaway and
homeless youth population, as well as the factors that influence homelessness and
leaving home. In particular, youth who experience foster care are vulnerable to
running away or becoming homeless while in care or after having been emancipated
from the system. This report also provides background on the evolution of the
Runaway and Homeless Youth Act from the 1970s until it was last amended in 2003.
The report then goes on to describe the administration and funding of the Basic
Center, Transitional Living, and Street Outreach programs that were created from the
act, as well as the functions of their ancillary components. (Table A-1 in the
Appendix provides BCP funding by state for FY2006 and FY2007.) In anticipation
of the possible reauthorization of the Runaway and Homeless Youth Program in the
110th Congress, the report concludes with a discussion of (1) the Runaway and
Homeless Youth Program’s changing personnel needs; (2) the issue of runaway and
homeless youth as “disconnected” youth; and (3) evaluation of youth outcomes.
2 In 42 U.S.C. §4701 et seq., this program is referred to as the Education and Prevention
Services to Reduce Abuse of Runaway, Homeless, and Street Youth Program.
3 The FY2006 appropriation level includes an across-the-board 1% rescission (for most
programs) pursuant to P.L. 109-14.
4 This transfer was made to offset unexpected costs to the Centers for Medicaid and
Medicare Services’ Medicare Part D benefit program. The transfer was permitted under
Section 208 of the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education and
Related Agencies Appropriations Act of 2006 (P.L. 109-149).

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Table 1. Runaway and Homeless Youth Program Funding,
FY2002-FY2007
($ in thousands)
Program
FY2001
FY2002
FY2003
FY2004
FY2005
FY2006
FY2007
FY2008
Enacted
Enacted
Enacted
Enacted
Enacted
Enacted Estimatedb
Request
BCP
48,338
48,288
48,298
49,171
48,786
48,265
48,298
48,298
TLP
20,740
39,736
40,505
40,260a
39,938a
39,511a
39,539a
39,539a
SOP
14,999
14,999
15,399
15,302
15,178
15,017
15,027
15,027
Total
84,127
103,023
104,202
104,733
103,902
102,793
102,864
102,864
Source: U.S. Department Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families
Justification of Estimates for Appropriations Committees
, FY2003, p. H-48; Administration for
Children and Families Justification of Estimates for Appropriations Committees
, FY2004, p. H-45;
Administration for Children and Families Justification of Estimates for Appropriations Committees,
FY2005, p. H-89; Administration for Children and Families Justification of Estimates for
Appropriations Committees
, FY2006, p. D-41; Administration for Children and Families Justification
of Estimates for Appropriations Committees
, FY2007, p. D-41; Administration for Children and
Families Justification of Estimates for Appropriations Committees
, FY2008, pp. 92, 98.
Note: BCP and TLP funding are distributed under the Consolidated Runaway and Homeless Youth
Program. SOP funds are distributed separately.
a. Includes funding for the Maternity Group Home component.
b. These are estimated amounts, based on the terms of P.L. 110-5 and the FY2008 appropriations
justifications, cited above.
On June 21, 2007, the Senate Committee on Appropriations reported the
FY2008 appropriations bill (S. 1710) for the Departments of Labor, Health and
Human Services, and Education, and related agencies (LHE).5 The committee
recommended $102.9 million for the BCP and TLP, an increase of $15 million over
the current level. It also recommended $20 million for the SOP, an increase of $5
million over the current level. The House Committee on Appropriations reported its
version of the bill (H.R. 3043) on July 13.6 The committee recommended $97.8
million for the BCP and TLP, an increase of $10 million, and no change in funding
for the SOP from its FY2007 level.
The House and Senate Labor-Health and Human Services-Education FY2008
appropriations bill (H.R. 3043), which was vetoed by the President on November 13,
would have funded the BCP and TLP at $100.4 million, an increase over both the
House and Senate appropriation bills.7 The appropriations bill proposed to fund the
5 U.S. Congress, Senate, Committee on Appropriations, Departments of Labor, Health and
Human Services, Education and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill, FY2008
, Report to
accompany S. 1710, 110th Cong., 1st sess., S.Rept. 110-107 (Washington, GPO: 2007).
6 U.S. Congress, House, Committee on Appropriations, Departments of Labor, Health and
Human Services, Education and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill, FY2008
, Report to
accompany H.R. 3043, 110th Cong., 1st sess., H.Rept. 110-231 (Washington, GPO: 2007).
7 U.S. Congress, House, Committee on Appropriations, Departments of Labor, Health and
(continued...)

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SOP at $17.5 million, a decrease from the Senate version and an increase over the
House version. FY2008 appropriations for the Departments of Labor, Health and
Human Services, and Education are operating under a continuing resolution (P.L.
110-116), set to expire on December 14, 2007. P.L. 110-116 maintains the FY2007
funding levels for most programs, including the RHYP.
Who Are Homeless and Runaway Youth?
Defining the Population
There is no single federal definition of the terms “homeless youth” or “runaway
youth.” However, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), the
agency that administers the Runaway and Homeless Youth Program, relies on the
definitions from the program’s authorizing legislation and its accompanying
regulations.8 The Runaway and Homeless Youth Act defines homeless youth as
individuals under age 18 who are unable to live in a safe environment with a relative
and lack safe alternative living arrangements, as well as individuals ages 18 to 21
without shelter.9 The regulations further define homeless youth as being in need of
services and shelter that provide supervision and care.10 Although the Runaway and
Homeless Youth Act does not define “runaway youth,” the regulations describe these
youth as individuals under age 18 who absent themselves from their home or legal
residence at least overnight without the permission of their families.11
Although these current policy definitions are distinct, youth can be homeless
and runaways. The American Medical Association’s Council on Scientific Affairs
argues that the distinctions between the two groups are artificial and may be
counterproductive. Their report on this population concludes that most youth on the
streets are both runaways and homeless because they have no home to which they are
willing or able to return.12
Some definitions of runaway and homeless youth may include a sub-population
known as “thrownaway” youth (or “push outs”) who have been abandoned by their
parents or have been told to leave their households. These youth may be considered
7 (...continued)
Human Services, Education and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill, FY2008, Report to
accompany H.R. 3043, 110th Cong., 1st sess., H.Rept. 110-424 (Washington, GPO: 2007).
8 The U.S. Departments of Education and Housing and Urban Development use definitions
of homelessness that are different than those used by HHS. The U.S. Department of Justice
uses a different definition for runaway youth.
9 42 U.S.C. §5732a, as amended by the Runaway, Homeless, and Missing Children
Protection Act (P.L. 108-96)
10 45 C.F.R. §1351.
11 Ibid.
12 “Health Care Needs of Homeless and Runaway Youths,” Journal of the American
Medical Association
, v. 262, no. 10 (September 1989).

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part of the homeless population if they lack alternative living arrangements.
However, the most recent federal study of runaway youth — the National Incidence
Study of Missing, Abducted, Runaway, and Thrownaway Children-2 (NISMART-2)
conducted by the U.S. Department of Justice — includes thrownaway youth in its
estimates.13 The study de-emphasizes distinctions between runaway and thrownaway
populations because many youth experience both circumstances, and the
categorization of a runaway or thrownaway episode frequently depends on whether
information was gathered from the youth (who tend to emphasize the thrownaway
aspects of the episode) or their care takers (who tend to emphasize the runaway
aspects). Some definitions of runaway and homeless youth, including those used by
HHS, include “street youth” because they lack shelter and live on the street and in
other areas that increase the risk of sexual abuse, sexual exploitation, drug abuse, and
prostitution.14
Demographics
The precise number of homeless and runaway youth is unknown due to their
residential mobility. These youth often eschew the shelter system for locations or
areas that are not easily accessible to shelter workers and others who count the
homeless and runaways.15 Youth who come into contact with census takers may also
be reluctant to report that they have left home or are homeless. Determining the
number of homeless and runaway youth is further complicated by the lack of a
standardized methodology for counting the population and inconsistent definitions
of what it means to be homeless or a runaway.16
Differences in methodology for collecting data on homeless populations may
also influence how the characteristics of the runaway and homeless youth population
are reported. Some studies have relied on point prevalence estimates that report
whether youth have experienced homelessness at a given point in time, such as on a
particular day.17 According to researchers that study the characteristics of runaway
and homeless youth, these studies appear to be biased toward describing individuals
who experience longer periods of homelessness.18 The sample location may also
13 U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention,
“Runaway/Thrownaway Children: National Estimates and Characteristics,” by Heather
Hammer, David Finkelhor, and Andrea J. Sedlak, OJJDP NISMART Bulletin, October 2002,
at [http://www.missingkids.com/en_US/documents/nismart2_runaway.pdf]. (Hereafter
referred to as “Runaway/Thrownaway Children.”)
14 §42 U.S.C. 5732a.
15 Christopher L. Ringwalt et al., “The Prevalence of Homelessness Among Adolescents in
the United States,” American Journal of Public Health, vol. 88, no. 9 (September 1998), p.
1325.
16 Ibid.
17 Ibid, pp. 1325-1326.
18 Ibid.

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misrepresent the characteristics of the population generally.19 Surveying youth who
live on the streets may lend to the perception that all runaway and homeless youth are
especially deviant. Youth surveyed in locations with high rates of drug use and sex
work, known as “cruise areas,” tend to be older, to have been away from home
longer, to have recently visited community-based agencies, and to be less likely to
attend school than youth in “non-cruise areas.”20
Homeless Youth. A 1998 study in the American Journal of Public Health
used the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) 1992 National Health
Interview Survey of youth ages 12 to 17 to determine the number of those who were
homeless.21 In the survey, youth were asked whether, in the past 12 months, they had
spent one or more nights in a specific type of shelter not intended to be a dwelling
place (i.e., in an abandoned building, public place, outside, underground, or in a
stranger’s home) or a youth or adult shelter. Based on their responses, researchers
calculated that 5% of the population ages 12 to 17 — more than 1 million youth in
a given year — experienced homelessness. The researchers concluded that the
prevalence of staying at a particular dwelling place while homeless was constant
across racial groups, socioeconomic status, youth who lived with both parents and
those who did not, and youth who lived in cities of varying sizes. However, boys
were more likely to experience homeless episodes, especially as these episodes
related to sleeping in a shelter or outside.22
Measured characteristics of homeless youth vary depending on the source of the
sample and methodology. Some evaluations of homeless youth indicate that gender
representation varies across sample locations. Surveys from family shelters suggest
either even numbers of females and males, or more females (see below for a
discussion of the gender of youth using federally-funded Basic Center shelters).23
Although studies tend to document that homeless youth generally reflect the ethnic
makeup of their local areas, some studies show overrepresentation of racial or ethnic
minorities relative to the community (black youth are overrepresented at the Basic
Center shelters).24 The history of homelessness among youth also varies by the
sample location. Youth in shelters tend to have short periods of homelessness and
have not experienced prior homeless episodes while youth living on the streets are
more likely to demonstrate patterns of episodic (i.e., multiple episodes adding up to
19 Andrea L. Witkin et al., “Finding Homeless Youth: Patterns Based on Geographical Area
and Number of Homeless Episodes,” Youth & Society, vol. 37, no. 1 (September 2005), pp.
62-63. (Hereafter “Finding Homeless Youth.”)
20 Ibid.
21 “The Prevalence of Homelessness,” pp. 1326-1327.
22 Ibid., p 1327.
23 Marjorie J. Robertson and Paul A. Toro, “Homeless Youth: Research, Intervention, and
Policy,” The 1998 National Symposium on Homeless Research, pp. 1-2, available at
[http://aspe.hhs.gov/progsys/homeless/symposium/3-Youth.htm].
24 Ibid., p. 4.

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less than one year) or chronic homelessness (i.e., being homeless for one year or
longer).25
Runaway and Thrownaway Youth. According to HHS’s Substance Abuse
and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), approximately 1.6 million
youth (7 %) ages 12 to 17 had run away from home and slept on the street in a 12-
month period (in 2002). These youth were more likely to be male (55%) than female,
and nearly half (46%) were ages 16 or 17.26 The NISMART-2, a study sponsored by
the U.S. Department of Justice, estimates that 1.7 million youth under age 18 left
home or were asked to leave home in 1999.27 Of these youth, 68% were between the
ages of 15 and 17. Males and females were equally represented in the population.
White youth made up the largest share of runaways (57%), followed by black youth
(17%) and Hispanic youth (15%). Over half of all youth left home for one to six
days, and 30% traveled more than one to 10 miles. An additional 30% traveled more
than 10 to 50 miles. Nearly all (99%) runaway and thrownaway youth were returned
to their homes. Another study estimates a somewhat smaller number of runaway
youth — 1 million to 1.3 million.28
Factors Influencing Homelessness and Leaving Home
Youth most often cite family conflict as the major reason for their homelessness
or episodes of running away. A literature review of homeless youth found that a
youth’s relationship with a step-parent, sexual activity, sexual orientation, pregnancy,
school problems, and alcohol and drug use were strong predictors of family discord.29
Of those callers who used the National Runaway Switchboard (a federally-sponsored
call center for youth and their relatives involved in runaway incidents) one third
attributed family conflict as the reason for their call.30 Runaway and homeless youth
also describe abuse and neglect as common experiences. Over 20% of youth in the
NISMART-2 reported being physically or sexually abused at home in the prior year
or feared abuse upon returning home.31 Gay and lesbian youth appear to be
overrepresented in the homeless population, due often to experiencing negative
25 “Homeless Youth,” p. 4.
26 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration, Office of Applied Statistics, National Survey on Drug Use and
Health, “Substance Abuse Among Youth Who Had Run Away From Home,” 2002, at
[http://www.oas.samhsa.gov/2k4/runAways/runAways.htm]. (Hereafter referenced U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration, “Substance Abuse Among Youth Who Had Run Away From Home.”)
27 “Runaway/Thrownaway Children,” p. 7.
28 Jan Moore, “Unaccompanied and Homeless Youth Review of Literature (1995-2005),”
National Center for Homeless Education, 2005, p. 6, at [http://www.cde.state.co.us/
cdeprevention/download/pdf/Homeless%20Youth%20Review%20of%20Literature.pdf].
29 “Homeless Youth,” p. 5.
30 National Runaway Switchboard, “NRS Call Statistics,” at [http://www.nrscrisisline.org/
news_events/call_stats.html].
31 “Runaway/Thrownaway Children,” p. 8.

CRS-8
reactions from their parents when they came out about their sexuality. In five studies
of unaccompanied youth in mid-size and large cities, between 20% and 40% of
respondents identified as gay or lesbian.32
Youth in Foster Care. Youth who run away often have a history of
involvement in the foster care system. On the last day of FY2005, states reported
close to 11,000 (just over 2%) foster children as “runaways.”33 These data are similar
to what states reported for the last days of FY2003 and FY2004.34 A study of youth
who ran away from foster care between 1993 and 2003 by the Chapin Hall Center for
Children (University of Chicago) found that the average likelihood of an individual
running away from foster care placements increased over this time period.35 Youth
questioned about their runaway experiences cited three primary reasons why they ran
from foster care. First, they wanted to reconnect or stay connected to their biological
families even if they recognized that their families were neither healthy nor safe.
Second, youth wanted to express their autonomy and find normalcy among
sometimes chaotic events. Many youth explained that they already felt independent
because they had taken on adult responsibilities beginning at a young age. Third,
youth wanted to maintain surrogate family relationships with non-family members.
Youth in the study were more likely than their foster care peers to abuse drugs and
to have certain mental health disorders.
Youth who experience foster care are also vulnerable to homelessness after
emancipating from the child welfare system. Each year about 24,000 youth “age out”
of foster care, many of whom lack the proper supports to successfully transition to
adulthood.36 Only about two-fifths of eligible foster youth receive independent living
services.37 Of those youth who do receive services, few have adequate housing
32 Nicholas Ray, “Lesbian, Gay, and Transgender Youth: An Epidemic of Homelessness,”
National Gay and Lesbian Task Force and National Coalition for the Homeless, 2006, pp.
12-14. (Hereafter “An Epidemic of Homelessness.”) [http://www.thetaskforce.org/
downloads/reports/reports/HomelessYouth.pdf].
33 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, AFCARS Report #13 (Preliminary
Estimates for FY2005) (September 2006), p. 1, available at [http://www.acf.hhs.gov/
programs/cb/stats_research/afcars/tar/report13.htm]. (Hereafter referred to as “AFCARS
Report #13.”)
34 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, AFCARS Report #10 (Preliminary
Estimates for FY2003) (June 2006), p. 1; AFCARS Report #11 (Preliminary Estimates for
FY2004) (June 2006), p. 1, available at [http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/cb/stats_
research/index.htm#afcars].
35 Mark E. Courtney et al., “Youth Who Run Away from Out-of-Home Care,” Chapin Hall
Center for Children Issue Brief
, no. 103 (March 2005), p. 2, at [http://www.chapinhall.
org/article_abstract.aspx?ar=1382].
36 AFCARS Report #13, p. 4.
37 Mark E. Courtney and Darcy Hughes Heuring. “The Transition to Adulthood for Youth
“Aging Out” of the Foster Care System” in Wayne G. Osgood et al., eds., On Your Own
Without a Net: The Transition to Adulthood for Vulnerable Populations
(Chicago: The
University of Chicago Press, 2005), pp. 27-32. (Hereafter “Youth “Aging Out” of the Foster
(continued...)

CRS-9
assistance. Research on youth who emancipate from foster care suggests a nexus
between foster care involvement and later episodes of homelessness. In a study of
19-year-olds who had emancipated from foster care in three states, approximately
14% had experienced homelessness since leaving care.38 A national study of former
foster youth found the percentage of the population who experienced homelessness
to be much higher — 25%.39
Risks Associated with Running Away and Homelessness
Runaway and homeless youth are vulnerable to multiple problems while they
are away from a permanent home, including untreated mental health disorders, drug
use, and sexual exploitation. In a 1996 evaluation of street youth (ages 13 to 17) in
a Hollywood cruise area, about one quarter met clinical criteria for major depression
compared to 10% or less of their peers in the general population.40 However, youth
who live on the streets in cruise areas may experience greater challenges than other
homeless and runaway youth who stay in other locations. Another study that
compared rates for many mental disorders between homeless youth and the general
youth population concluded that they were similar, although homeless youth had
significantly higher rates of disruptive behavior disorders.41
Drug use also appears prevalent among the runaway and homeless youth
population. The SAMHSA study found that nearly 30% had used marijuana and
almost one quarter used any illicit drug other than marijuana.42 NISMART-2 reported
that 17% of runaway youth used hard drugs (not defined) and 18% were in the
company of someone known to be abusing drugs when they were away from home.43
Runaway and homeless youth are also vulnerable to sexual abuse and exploitation,
and are at high risk for contracting sexually transmitted diseases. Some youth resort
to illegal activity including stealing, prostitution, and selling drugs for survival.
37 (...continued)
Care System.”)
38 Mark E. Courtney et al., “Midwest Evaluation of the Adult Functioning of Former Foster
Youth,” Chapin Hall Center for Children, University of Chicago (2005), p. 9.
39 Ronna Cook, Esther Fleischman, and Virginia Grimes, “A National Evaluation of Title
IV-E Foster Care Independent Living Programs for Youth, Phase 2 Final Report,” vol. 1
(1991), Westat, pp. 4-11.
40 “Homeless Youth,” p. 7. The clinical criteria are found in the Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders, 3rd Revision, published by the American Psychiatric
Association, a handbook used most often to diagnose mental disorders in the United States.
41 Ibid.
42 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration, “Substance Abuse Among Youth Who Had Run Away From
Home.”
43 “Runaway/Thrownaway Children,” p. 8.

CRS-10
Runaway and homeless youth report other challenges including poor health and the
lack of basic provisions such as food.44
Evolution of Federal Policy
Prior to the passage of the 1974 Runaway Youth Act (Title III, Juvenile Justice
and Delinquency Prevention Act of 1974, P.L. 93-415), federal policy was limited
in the area of runaway and homeless youth. If they received any services, most such
youth were served through the local child welfare agency, juvenile justice court
system, or both. The 1970s marked a shift to a more rehabilitative model for assisting
youth who had run afoul of the law, including those who committed status offenses
(i.e., running away). During this period, Congress focused increasing attention on
runaways and other vulnerable youth due, in part, to emerging sociological models
to explain why youth engaged in deviant behavior. The first runaway shelters were
created in the late 1960s and 1970s to assist them in returning home. The landmark
Runway Youth Act of 1974 decriminalized runaway youth and authorized funding
for programs to provide shelter, counseling, and other services. Since 1974,
Congress has expanded the services available to both runaway youth and homeless
youth. Figure 1 traces the evolution of federal runaway and homeless youth policy.
Early Years: 1930s-1960s
Federal Legislation on Homeless Youth. The federal government first
addressed the problem of youth homelessness during the Great Depression when it
established programs to provide relief services for children and youth, often
accompanied by their families, who left home to find work and became homeless.
The estimated number of homeless individuals in 1933 was two million to five
million, of whom 20% to 30% were boys.45 Mayors at this time reported that the
transient and homeless populations in their cities were sometimes fed, pushed on to
other cities, or placed in jail.
44 Marjorie J. Robertson and Paul A. Toro, “Homeless Youth: Research, Intervention, and
Policy,” The 1998 National Symposium on Homeless Research, pp. 10, at
[http://aspe.hhs.gov/progsys/homeless/symposium/3-Youth.htm].
45 Eric Beecroft and Seymour Janow, “Toward a National Policy for Migration,” Social
Forces
, vol. 16, no. 4 (May 1938), p. 477. (Hereafter “Migration.”)


CRS-11
Figure 1. Evolution of Federal Runaway and Homeless Youth Policy, 1912-2003
Source: Created by the Congressional Research Service.

CRS-12
In response to the influx of homeless adults and youth to the nation’s cities, the
Federal Transient Relief Act of 1933 established a Transient Division within the
Federal Transient Relief Administration to provide relief services through state
grants. Also in 1933, the Civilian Conservation Corps opened camps and shelters for
more than one million low-income older youth. In 1935, President Franklin
Roosevelt created the National Youth Administration by executive order to open
employment bureaus and provide cash assistance to poor college and high school
students. Together, these programs helped to reduce the number of homeless and
transient youth. According to the July 1935 Federal Transient Relief Act’s Monthly
Report, 50,000 young people were homeless and/or transient at that time.46 The
Transient Division was disbanded shortly thereafter.
Federal Legislation on Runaway Youth. Homeless youth were generally
considered a problem that had ended after the Great Depression, but youth running
away from home was emerging as a more serious issue. At about the same time the
federal government withdrew funding for homeless and transient youth services
provided during the Great Depression, it enacted, for the first time, separate and
unrelated legislation to assist vulnerable youth — including runaways — through
state grants. As originally enacted, the Social Security Act of 1935 (P.L. 74-231)
authorized indefinite annual funding of $1.5 million for states to establish, extend,
and strengthen public child welfare services in “predominately rural” or “special
needs” areas. For purposes of this program (now at Title IV-B, Subpart 1 of the
Social Security Act), these were described as services “for the protection and care of
homeless, dependent, and neglected children, and children in danger of becoming
delinquent.”47 In 1950 (P.L. 81-734), Title IV-B was amended to allow state grants
to be used to pay the cost of returning a runaway child under the age of 16 to his or
her home state from another state. In 1958, the program was again amended (P.L.
85-840) to increase the age of runaways who could receive this aid to 18 and to
include 15 days of maintenance (i.e., room and board) for each child in cases where
the costs could not be met by his or her parents or the agency institution legally
responsible for the care of that child.
The passage of the 1961 Juvenile Delinquency and Youth Offenses Control Act
(P.L. 87-274) focused on the environmental and underlying sociological factors of
deviant behavior among youth. Unaccompanied minors on the street fit the image
of troubled, and potentially delinquent youth. This image was further entrenched as
46 Ibid., 477.
47 In 1962 (P.L. 87-543), child welfare services were formally defined under Title IV-B as
“public social services which supplement, or substitute for parental care and supervision for
the purpose of (1) remedying or assisting in the solution of problems which may result in,
the neglect abuse, exploitation, or delinquency of children, (2) protecting and caring for
homeless, dependent, or neglected children, (3) protecting and promoting the welfare of
children, including the strengthening of their own homes where possible or, where needed,
the provision of adequate care of children away from their homes in foster family homes or
day-care or other child-care facilities.” P.L. 109-288 (2006) removes reference to homeless
youth.

CRS-13
some runaway youth joined the Counterculture Movement of the 1960s.48 The first
runaway centers (Huckleberry House in San Francisco, the Runaway House in
Washington, D.C., and branch offices of the Young Women’s Christian Association
and Traveler’s Aid Society) opened during the late 1960s to provide shelter,
counseling, and other services to youth and their families. The centers received little,
if any, federal funds, and relied primarily on the donations of churches and other non-
governmental organizations.
The Runaway Youth Act of 1974
Concerned that an increasing number of runaway youth were entering the
juvenile justice system, the Subcommittee to Investigate Juvenile Delinquency of the
Senate Judiciary Committee conducted hearings on runaway youth in 1972 to explore
the problems facing this population.49 Testimony from government officials, youth
workers, and community leaders focused on the lifestyles of youth, as well as their
interaction with police and increasing reliance on runaway centers. Runaway youth
were concentrated in areas like the Haight District in San Francisco and New York
City’s Greenwich Village, often staying in filthy, overcrowded houses (known as
“pads”) with other youth and adults. Police officers routinely sent unaccompanied
youth to juvenile detention centers. The few runaway centers operating in the early
1970s were underfunded, understaffed, and unable to help youth cope with the
reasons they ran away. A fractured home life and problems with school were most
often cited as motivation for leaving home. Youth who ran away because they were
abused or neglected were not always placed under the protection of the state. These
youth, like most runaways, had to secure permission from their parents to stay
overnight at a runaway center.
The subcommittee also heard testimony regarding the need to establish and
federally fund programs to assist runaway youth. At the time, states could only use
Social Security Title IV-B funds for runaway youth to return them to their state of
origin (not for intrastate transfer). Other federal funding streams that targeted
runaway youth were also limited. The Juvenile Delinquency Prevention and Control
Act of 1968 (P.L. 90-445) authorized funding for approximately four runaway centers
from 1968 to 1972. The primary purpose of the legislation was to provide assistance
to courts, correctional systems, schools, and community agencies for research and
training on juvenile justice issues.
Although the Senate reacted to the hearings by passing legislation to assist
runaway youth, the House did not act. However, two years later, in 1974, Congress
passed the Runaway Youth Act as Title III of the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency
Prevention Act (JJDPA, P.L. 93-415). A total of $10 million for each fiscal year,
FY1975 through FY1977, was authorized to provide temporary shelter, family
48 Karen M. Staller, “Constructing the Runaway and Homeless Youth Problem: Boy
Adventurers to Girl Prostitutes, 1960-1978,” Journal of Communication, vol. 53, no. 2
(2003), p. 331.
49 U.S. Congress, Senate, Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee to Investigate Juvenile
Delinquency, Juvenile Delinquency, 92nd Cong., 1st sess., January 13-14, 1972 (Washington:
GPO, 1972).

CRS-14
counseling, and after-care services to runaway youth and their families through what
is now referred to as the Basic Center Program. To receive funding under Title III,
states had to decriminalize runaway youth and provide services outside of the
juvenile justice system. The legislation also included a provision requiring a
comprehensive statistical survey of runaway youth.
Expanding the Scope of the Act
Through the Juvenile Justice Amendments to the JJDPA in 1977 (P.L. 95-115),
Congress reauthorized the Runaway Youth Act for FY1978 and expanded its scope
to include homeless youth. Such youth became eligible for services provided through
the Basic Center Program. Two other programs were later added that targeted
specific sub-populations of runaway and homeless youth. Congress established the
Transitional Living Program through the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988 (P.L. 100-
690) to meet the needs of older youth ages 16 to 21. The impetus for passing the
legislation was the success of demonstration transitional living projects in the 1980s.
The other major program, the Street Outreach Program, was created in 1994 by the
Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 (P.L. 103-322). The
purpose of the program is to serve homeless youth living on the streets. The
Runaway and Homeless Youth Act was most recently reauthorized in 2003 by the
Runaway, Homeless, and Missing Children Protection Act (P.L. 108-96) which
extended the program’s funding authorization through FY2008.50
Funding and Description of the Runaway and
Homeless Youth Program
Federal Administration and Funding
The Runaway and Homeless Youth Program is administered by the Family and
Youth Services (FYSB) Bureau within HHS’s Administration for Children and
Families (ACF). The funding streams for the Basic Center Program (BCP) and
Transitional Living Program (TLP) were separate until Congress consolidated them
in 1999 when RHYA was reauthorized by the Missing, Exploited, and Runaway
Children Protection Act (P.L. 106-71). Together, these programs — along with other
program activities, except the Street Outreach Program(SOP) — are known as the
Consolidated Runaway and Homeless Youth Program. Although the Street Outreach
Program is a separately funded component, SOP services are coordinated with those
provided under the BCP and TLP. Figure 2 provides the program funding levels
from FY1986 through FY2006 for the Basic Center Program, and from 1988 and
1994, for the BCP and TLP, respectively, through FY2006.
50 The Missing and Exploited Children’s Program, administered by the Office of Juvenile
Justice and Delinquency Prevention in the U.S. Department of Justice, is generally
reauthorized with the Runaway and Homeless Youth Program. For a discussion of the
program, see CRS Report RL34050, Missing and Exploited Children: Background, Policies
and Issues
, by Adrienne L. Fernandes.

CRS-15
The 2003 reauthorization (P.L. 108-96) of the Runaway and Homeless Youth
Act authorized $105 million for FY2004 and such sums as may be necessary for the
Consolidated Runaway and Homeless Youth Program for FY2005 through FY2008.
Under current law, 90% of the federal funds appropriated under the authorization
must be used for the BCP and TLP. Of this amount, 45% is reserved for the BCP and
no more than 55% is reserved for the Transitional Living Program. The remaining
share of federal funding is allocated for (1) a national communication system to
facilitate communication between service providers, runaway youth, and their
families; (2) training and technical support for grantees; (3) evaluations of the
programs; and (4) HHS efforts to coordinate with other federal agencies on matters
relating to the health, education, employment, and housing of these youth.
The Street Outreach Program is authorized to receive such sums as may be
necessary.
Figure 2. Runaway and Homeless Youth Program Funding,
FY1986-FY2006
Funding Level
($ in millions)
$120
$100
$80
$60
$40
$20
$0
19
1
1
1
8
98
99
99
1
1
1
6
2
8
99
0
9
2
2
99
2
4
9
0
2
6
00
8
0
0
0
00
2
04
6
Fiscal Year
SOP
TLP
BCP
Total Funding
Source: Congressional Research Service.

CRS-16
Basic Center Program
Overview. The Basic Center Program is intended to provide short-term shelter
and services for youth under age 18 and their families through public and private
community-based centers. Youth eligible to receive BCP services include those
youth who are at risk of running away or becoming homeless (and may live at home
with their parents), or have already left home, either voluntarily or involuntarily. BCP
centers were designed to provide these services outside of the law enforcement,
juvenile justice, child welfare, and mental health systems. In FY2006, 328 BCP
shelters operated in all 50 states, Puerto Rico, America Samoa, and Guam.51
According to the FY2008 budget justifications, the proposed FY2008 funding level
can support 336 BCP shelters, the same number funded in FY2007. These centers,
which generally shelter as many as 20 youth for approximately two weeks, are
located in areas that are frequented or easily reached by runaway and homeless youth.
The shelters seeks to reunite youth with their families, whenever possible, or to locate
appropriate alternative placements. They also provide food, clothing, individual or
group and family counseling, and health care referrals. Some centers may serve
homeless youth ages 18 to 21 through street-based services, home-based services,
and drug abuse education and prevention services.
BCP grantees — community-based public and private organizations — must
make efforts to contact the parents and relatives of runaway and homeless youth.
Grantees are also required to establish relationship with law enforcement, health and
mental health care, social service, welfare, and school district systems to coordinate
services. Centers maintain confidential statistical records of youth (including youth
who are not referred to out-of-home shelter services) and the family members. The
centers are required to submit an annual report to HHS detailing the program
activities and the number of youth participating in such activities.
HHS evaluates BCP organizations using the Basic Center Program Performance
Standards, which relate to how well the needs of runaway and homeless youth and
their families are being met. Nine of these standards address service components
(i.e., outreach, individual intake process, and recreational programs) and six focus on
administrative functions or activities (i.e., staffing and staff development, reporting,
and individual client files).
Funding. BCP grants are allocated by formula to each state, the District of
Columbia, and Puerto Rico and are then distributed (by HHS) on a competitive basis
to community-based organizations. The amount of BCP funding available is based
on the jurisdiction’s proportion of the nation’s youth under age 18, and under the law,
these jurisdictions receive a minimum of $100,000. Separately, each of the territories
(U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, America Samoa, and the Northern Mariana Islands)
51 U.S. Department Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families
Justification of Estimates for Appropriations Committees
, FY2007, p. D-43. According to
the ACF budget justification, the Northern Mariana Islands do not have Basic Center
Program grantees, although FY2006 funds are available for new awards to the territory, if
desired.

CRS-17
receives a minimum of $45,000 of the total appropriations. Congress appropriated
$48.3 million for the BCP in FY2006. See Appendix Table A-1 for the amount of
funding allocated for each state in FY2006 and FY2007.
The costs of the Basic Center Program are shared by the federal government
(90%) and grantees (10%). Community-based organizations apply directly to the
federal government for the BCP grants. Grants may be awarded for up to three years.
Funding priority is given to organizations that have demonstrated experience in
providing services to runaway and homeless youth, and to those who apply for less
than $200,000 in funding per fiscal year. Funding for the second and third year,
however, depends on the availability of funds and the grantee’s satisfactory
performance.
Youth in the Program. BCP grantees serve only a fraction of the more than
one million youth who run away or are homeless. According to the FY2007 NEO-
RHYMIS report of all grantees, 43,857 youth used BCP services (about 48,400 youth
used BCP services in FY2006).52 Of these youth, 23,618 (53.9%) were female and
20,239 (46.1%) were male (nearly the same percentages as in FY2005 and FY2006).
As Figure 3 shows, the greatest percentage of youth served were ages 15 and 16.
The centers also served youth younger than 12 and older than 18. The proportions
of youth in each age category were nearly the same as they were in FY2005 and
FY2006.
Youth who visited the centers represented a variety of ethnic and racial
backgrounds (see Figure 4). Although white youth made up the majority of the
youth served, black and American Indian youth were overrepresented compared to
their share of the general population.53 Black youth comprised more than one-third
of the BCP population in FY2007, but made up 15% of the 10-to-19-year-old
population. Similarly, Native American youth comprised about 4% of the BCP
population, but are about 1% of the American population ages 10 to 19. Notably,
however, not all minorities are overrepresented. The share of Asian youth who used
RHY services (1%) in FY2007 is well below their share in the population (3.5%).
Hispanic youth are also underrepresented in the population. Hispanic youth of any
race comprised just over 16% of the BCP population (not shown in the figure), but
are approximately 18% of the general population. The percentages of youth in each
racial and ethnic group are almost identical to those reported in the previous two
fiscal years.
52 Data on youth served by the BCP, TLP, and SOP are provided in HHS’s NEO-RHYMIS
reporting system. See [https://extranet.acf.hhs.gov/rhymis/custom_reports.html]. The NEO-
RHYMIS (that is, National Extranet Optimized Runaway and Homeless Youth Management
Information System) is explained in the section below on Congressional Oversight.
According to the NEO-RHMIS administrator, all BCP, TLP, and SOP grantees reported data
for FY2007 (based on December 5, 2007, correspondence).
53 Based on Congressional Research Service analysis of U.S. Census Bureau, Census 2000
Summary File 1, Table 1: Total Population by Age, Race and Hispanic or Latino Origin
for the United States: 2000
, available at [http://www.census.gov/population/cen2000/
phc-t9/tab01.xls].

CRS-18
According to NEO-RHYMIS, at the time of their entrance to the BCP shelters
in FY2007, about 70% of youth had lived with their parents. About 60% attended
school regularly; however, nearly 20% attended irregularly. Approximately 7.7% had
dropped out and the balance of youth had graduated, obtained a GED, were
suspended or expelled, or did not know their school status. The greatest share of
youth were referred to the shelters by their parents, followed by referrals from law
enforcement agencies, self-referrals, referrals by schools, and referrals by child
protective services. Nearly all (85.4%) youth received counseling. Youth also
received basic support (not defined), life skills training, education, and substance
abuse prevention treatment, among other services at the shelters. Upon exiting, most
youth (65.2%) planned to live with their parents. However, youth were also exiting
to a relative or friend’s home (7.8%), the street (5.9%), and foster care (3.6%).
Approximately 4% of youth did not know where they would live upon exiting. These
proportions are about the same as they were for FY2005 and FY2006. The remaining
youth exited to a shelter, another private residence, or a residential program, among
other arrangements.
As in FY2005 and FY2006, the issues of concern most cited by youth at the
time of exiting, in order of frequency, were family dynamics, education, housing,
mental health, and alcohol and drug abuse. Almost nine out of 10 youth cited family
dynamics as the major issue. Finally, in FY2007, BCP shelters reported turning away
4,039 youth by phone and 331 youth in person due to a lack of bed space.

CRS-19
Figure 3. Age of Youth
Served by the Basic Center Program, FY2007
Over 18
1%
17 to 18
Under 12
21%
6%
12 to 14
32%
15 to 16
40%
Source: Congressional Research Service analysis of NEO-RHYMIS data.
.Note: Based on data from 43,857 youth.
Figure 4. Race of Youth
Served by the Basic Center Program, FY2007
American
Multiracial
Indian/Alaska
3%
Native
4%
Asian
1%
Black or
African
White
American
57%
34%
Native
American/
Pacific
Islander
1%
Source: Congressional Research Service analysis of NEO-RHYMIS data.
Note: Based on data from 40,210 youth. Over 3,600 youth did not provide information about their
race. Consistent with the Census Bureau classification of ethnicity and race, Hispanic youth can be
of any race.

CRS-20
Transitional Living Program
Overview. Recognizing the difficulty that youth face in becoming self-
sufficient adults, the Transitional Living Program provides longer-term shelter and
assistance for youth ages 16 to 21 (including pregnant and/or parenting youth) who
may leave their biological homes due to family conflict, or have left and are not
expected to return home. In FY2006, 207 organizations received TLP grants.54
According to the Administration’s FY2008 budget justifications, the proposed
FY2008 funding level can support 207 TLP grants, the same number as in FY2007.
All but five states (Idaho, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Dakota, and Wyoming),
Guam, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands appear to have at least one TLP
grantee.55
Each TLP grantee may shelter up to 20 youth at host family homes, supervised
apartments owned by a social service agency, or scattered-site apartments, and single-
occupancy apartments rented directly with the assistance of the agency. Shelter is
provided for up to 18 months, and youth under 18 may remain in the program an
additional 180 days or until the youth turns 18, whichever comes first. Youth receive
several types of services:
! basic life-skills training, including consumer education and
instruction in budgeting and housekeeping;
! interpersonal skill building;
! educational preparation, such as GED courses and post-secondary
training;
! assistance in job preparation and attainment;
! education and counseling on substance abuse; and
! mental and physical health care services.
TLP centers develop a written plan designed to help transition youth to
independent living or another appropriate living arrangement, and they refer youth
to other systems that can coordinate to meet their educational, health care, and social
service needs. The grantees must also submit an annual report to HHS that includes
information regarding the activities carried out with funds and the number and
characteristics of the homeless youth.
Funding. TLP grants are distributed competitively by HHS to community-
based public and private organizations for five-year periods. Congress appropriated
$39.5 million in FY2007 for the program. Grantees must provide at least 10% of the
total cost of the program.
Youth in the Program. For FY2007, NEO-RHYMIS reported that the
Transitional Living Program served 3,662 youth (compared to 3,637 youth in
54 U.S. Department Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families
Justification of Estimates for Appropriations Committees
, FY2007, pp. D-44.
55 See “Locate a TLP Program” on the Family and Youth Services website at [http://www.
acf.hhs.gov/programs/fysb/content/youthdivision/programs/locate.htm].

CRS-21
FY2006). Of these youth, about 60% were female and 40% were male.
Approximately 59% were ages 18 or younger and 41% were ages 19 to 21. About
half of the youth were white, 40% were black, and the remaining youth identified as
American Indian (4.0%), Asian (9.0%), Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander (0.7%),
or multi-racial (3.8%). Black, American Indian, and Native Hawaiian or Pacific
Islander youth were overrepresented, compared to their share of the general
population ages 15 to 24.56 These demographics are consistent with data from
FY2005 and FY2006.
Also in FY2007, about one-third of youth in the TLP attended school regularly;
almost 23% had dropped out; 22% had graduated from high school; and nearly 8%
obtained a GED. The remaining youth either were suspended or expelled, or did not
know their school status. According to the FY2007 NEO-RHYMIS report, prior to
living at the TLP shelter, youth lived in a variety of locations: the homes of their
friends and relatives (25.0%) or parents (19.0%), on the street as a runaway or
homeless youth (7.5%), and a BCP shelter (6.6%), among other locations. Youth
most often self-referred or were referred to the TLP by a relative or friend. While at
the TLP shelter, over three-quarters of youth received counseling, basic support (not
defined), life skills training, and employment services, including other services.57 As
in FY2005 and FY2006, youth identified housing, family dynamics, unemployment,
education, mental health, and alcohol or drug abuse most frequently as issues of
concern upon exiting. Youth reported that at exit, they would live with friends or
relatives (26.9%), independently (25.5%), and with their parents (16.1%), among
other situations. About 9% did not know where they would live.
In FY2007, about 1,900 youth were turned away from the TLP by telephone and
55 were turned away in person due to a lack of bed space.
Maternity Group Homes. For FY2002, the Administration proposed a $33
million initiative to fund Maternity Group Homes — or centers that provide shelter
to pregnant and parenting teens who are vulnerable to abuse and neglect — as a
component of the TLP. Congress did not fund the initiative as part of its FY2002
appropriation. However, that year Congress provided additional funding to the TLP
to ensure that pregnant and parenting teens could access services (H.Rept. 107-372).
A total of $39.7 million was appropriated for the TLP, which included an additional
$19.2 million over the FY2001 TLP appropriation to ensure that funds would be
available to assist pregnant and parenting teens.
The 2003 amendments to the Runaway and Homeless Youth Act (P.L. 108-96)
provided statutory authority to use TLP funds for Maternity Group Homes. For
FY2003 through FY2006, the President requested annual funding of $10 million for
such homes, separate from the funding for the TLP grants. Congress again did not
appropriate separate funds for the program, though funding remained stable at
56 Based on Congressional Research Service analysis of U.S. Census Bureau, Census 2000
Summary File 1, Table 1: Total Population by Age, Race and Hispanic or Latino Origin
f o r t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s : 2 0 0 0
, a v a i l a b l e a t
[http://www.census.gov/population/cen2000/phc-t9/tab01.xls].
57 The average length of youth’s stay in the TLP is not available.

CRS-22
approximately $40 million for the TLP. The Administration’s FY2007 budget
request sought to implement a $4 million voucher program for 100 pregnant and
parenting youth, but no legislation to implement this was proposed or considered
during the 109th Congress, and the Administration’s FY2008 budget does not request
funding for such a proposal.58
Since FY2002, funding for adult-supervised transitional living arrangements
that serve pregnant or parenting women ages 16 to 21 and their children has been
awarded to organizations that receive TLP grants. Currently, an estimated one-third
of TLP grants fund Maternity Group Homes.59 These organizations provide youth
with parenting skills, including child development education; family budgeting;
health and nutrition, and other skills to promote their well-being and the well-being
of their children.
Street Outreach Program
Overview. Runaway and homeless youth living on the streets or in areas that
increase their risk of using drugs or being subjected to sexual abuse, prostitution, or
sexual exploitation are eligible to receive services through the Street Outreach
Program. The program’s goal is to assist youth in transitioning to safe and
appropriate living arrangements. SOP services include the following:
! treatment and counseling;
! crisis intervention;
! drug abuse and exploitation prevention and education activities;
! survival aid;
! street-based education and outreach;
! information and referrals; and
! follow-up support.
Funding. The Street Outreach Program is funded separately from the BCP and
TLP and is authorized to receive such sums as may be necessary. Since FY1996,
when funding for the Street Outreach Program was first provided, community-based
public and private organizations have been eligible to apply for SOP grants. Grants
are generally awarded for a three-year period, and grantees must provide 10% of the
funds to cover the cost of the program. Applicants may apply for a $100,000 grant
each year for a maximum of $200,000 over that period. Approximately $15 million
was appropriated to fund 140 projects in FY2006 and 137 in FY2007, many of which
operate in coordination with BCPs and TLPs. HHS anticipates that the same number
will be funded as in FY2007.
Youth in the Program. According to FY2007 NEO-RHYMIS data, street
workers with the grantee organizations made 661,286 contacts with street youth
(down from 696,146 contacts in FY2006). Of those youth, most received written
58 ACF staff confirmed in correspondence on March 9, 2007 that HHS does not plan to
create a voucher program for pregnant and parenting youth.
59 U.S. Congress, House of Representatives, Runaway, Homeless, and Missing Children
Protection Act
, H.Rept. 108-118, p. 9.

CRS-23
materials about referral services, health and hygiene products, and food and drink
items.
Training and Technical Assistance
In FY2007, HHS allocated approximately $3.3 million of BCP funds and
approximately $1.6 million of TLP funds for training and technical assistance, which
included funding for a national communications system and the administration of the
management information system (known as RHYMIS, discussed in the
Congressional Oversight section below).
HHS provides training and technical assistance to RHY grantees through its
Runaway and Homeless Youth Training and Technical Assistance Program. Until
FY2007, HHS awarded funds to multiple non-profit organizations to provide this
assistance in each of the Administration for Children and Families’ 10 regions.60 As
of FY2008, training and technical assistance is being provided by one entity. On
September 30, 2007, HHS competitively awarded two cooperative agreements to the
University of Oklahoma’s National Child Welfare Resource Center for Youth
Services (NRCYS) to provide training and technical assistance. NRCYS has
operated for over 30 years serving public, private, tribal child welfare, and youth
services professionals through training and conference events annually.61
The two cooperative agreements have distinct assignments. The NRCYS
Technical Assistance Center (with an award of $1 million) will provide either
one-on-one or in small group settings, specialized attention to specific areas of
concern raised by federal staff or RHY grantees to improve grantee performance
and/or comply with federal legislation or regulations for the Runaway and Homeless
Youth program. The Training Center (with an award of $1.1 million) is designed to
provide training and conference services to RHY grantees that will enhance and
promote continuous quality improvement of services provided by RHY grantees.
National Communication System. A portion of the Consolidated
Runaway and Homeless Youth Program funds are allocated for a national
communications system (that is, the National Runaway Switchboard) to help
homeless and runaway youth (or youth who are contemplating running away) through
counseling and referrals and communicating with their families. Beginning with
FY1974 and every year after, the National Runaway Switchboard has been funded
through the Basic Center Program grant or the Consolidated Runaway and Homeless
Youth Program grant. The Switchboard is located in Chicago and operates each day
to provide services to youth and their families in the 50 states, the District of
60 Technical support providers offered assistance through the Regional Training and
Technical Assistance Provider System. The providers worked closely with ACF regional
office staff to identify grantee needs and review the results of evaluations conducted by
HHS staff. Based on these analyses, the provider needs assessments, and grantee requests,
the providers offered several types of services, including regional and state-level
conferences that address topics of interest to grantees, on-site and telephone consultations,
workshops and training on issues of concern, and resource materials.
61 For additional information, see NCRYS website, [http://www.nrcys.ou.edu/yd/].

CRS-24
Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Services include 1) a
channel through which runaway and homeless youth or their parents may leave
messages; 2) 24-hour referrals to community resources, including shelter, community
food banks, legal assistance, and social services agencies; and 3) crisis intervention
counseling to youth. In calendar year 2005, the Switchboard handled more than
102,000 calls, 41% of which were from youth and 36% of which were from parents.62
Other services are also provided through the Switchboard. Since 1995, the
“HomeFree” family reunification program has provided bus tickets for youth ages 12
to 21 to return home. In FY2002, the Switchboard offered family reunification
services to 4,872 youth, of whom 1,170 received free bus tickets to return home or
to an alternative placement near their home (such as an independent living program)
through HomeFree.63
Oversight
Oversight of Grantees. ACF evaluates each Runaway and Homeless Youth
Program grant recipient through the Runaway and Homeless Youth Monitoring
System. Staff from regional ACF offices and other grant recipients (known as peer
reviewers) inspect the program site, conduct interviews, review case files and other
agency documents, and conduct entry and exit conferences. The monitoring team
then prepares a written report that identifies the strengths of the program and areas
that require corrective action.
Congressional Oversight. The Senate Committee on Health, Education,
Labor, and Pensions and the House Committee on Education and Workforce have
exercised jurisdiction over the Runaway and Homeless Youth Program. HHS must
submit reports biennially to the committees on the status, activities, and
accomplishments of program grant recipients and evaluations of the programs
performed by HHS.64 These reports generally include data on the youth served by the
programs which are generated by RHYMIS. The information system is designed to
collect information twice during the fiscal year from program grantees on the basic
demographics of the youth, the services they received, and the status of the youth
(i.e., expected living situation, physical and mental health, and family dynamics)
upon exiting the programs. RHYMIS was updated in 2004 to reduce the burden of
reporting the data. Known as NEO-RHYMIS, the new system has received routine
data submissions from nearly all (99%) Runaway and Homeless Youth Program
62 The Switchboard also has a special phone line for hearing-impaired callers and access to
AT&T’s language translation service. Its website provides information to those seeking
non-crisis related information. National statistics on use of the National Runaway
Switchboard are available at [http://www.nrscrisisline.org/news_events/call_stats.htmlp].
63 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Report to Congress on the Youth
Programs of the Family and Youth Services Bureau for Fiscal Years 2002 and 2003,
October
2004, p. 17. (Hereafter Report to Congress.) Report available at [http://www.acf.hhs.
gov/programs/fysb/content/docs/0203_report.pdf].
64 NEO-RHYMIS data are available online by state, region, and grantee organization at
[https://extranet.acf.hhs.gov/rhymis/custom_reports.html].

CRS-25
grantees, including those in FY2006.65 In prior years, fewer than half of grantees
reported on the number of youth served.66
The 2003 reauthorization (P.L. 108-96) of the Runaway and Homeless Youth
Act required that HHS, in consultation with the U.S. Interagency Council on
Homelessness, submit a report to Congress on the promising strategies to end youth
homelessness within two years of the reauthorization, in October 2005. The report
was submitted to Congress in June 2007.
PART Evaluation. In calendar years 2003 and 2006, the Runaway and
Homeless Youth Program was reviewed through the U.S. Office of Management and
Budget’s Program Assessment Rating Tool (PART) process.67 The 2003 evaluation
concluded that program results were not demonstrated because the RHYP lacked
long-term performance measures and time frames for these measures, as well as
adequate progress in achieving its annual and long-term performance goals. The
PART review also found that no independent evaluations of the program were
routinely conducted. However, in 2006 the program was rated effective because it
made improvements to its long-term measures for evaluating youth outcomes.
According to the PART evaluation, the re-engineering of NEO-RHYMIS has
enhanced HHS staff’s ability to evaluate these outcomes (see below for more
information about changes to NEO-RHYMIS). The 2006 PART also explains that
the program has ambitious targets and time frames for its long term measures. For
example, the program plans to increase the proportion of youth living in safe and
appropriate settings after exiting TLP services to 85% by FY2008, from its initial
benchmark of 79%. More accurate NEO-RHYMIS data has enabled HHS to more
effectively evaluate the program internally and through contracts. An analysis by the
National Opinion Research Center of FY2002 through FY2004 NEO-RHYMIS data
on youth using BCPs, identified factors associated with unsafe exits and ranked high
and poor RHYP programs by risk levels of youth in their programs.68 HHS
evaluations have affirmed these findings.
Additional Federal Support
for Runaway and Homeless Youth
Since the creation of the Runaway and Homeless Youth Program, other federal
initiatives have also established services for such youth. Four of these initiatives —
Education for Homeless Children and Youth Program, Chafee Foster Care
65 Based on conversation with NEO-RHYMIS technical support staff on March 2, 2007. See
also Report to Congress, p. 2.
66 Report to Congress, p. 2.
67 U.S. Office of Management and Budget, Detailed Assessment on the Runaway and
Homeless Youth Assessment
, 2003 and U.S. Office of Management and Budget, Detailed
Assessment on the Runaway and Homeless Youth Assessment
, 2007, at [http://www.
whitehouse.gov/omb/expectmore/summary/10001064.2006.html]. (Hereafter PART 2003
or PART 2007.)
68 PART 2007, p. 11.

CRS-26
Independence Program, Shared Vision for Youth initiative, and Discretionary Grants
for Family Violence Prevention Program — are discussed below.
Educational Assistance
The McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act of 1987 (P.L. 100-77), as
amended, established the Education for Homeless Children and Youth program in the
U.S. Department of Education.69 This program assists state education agencies
(SEAs) to ensure that all homeless children and youth have equal access to the same,
appropriate education, including public preschool education, that is provided to other
children and youth. Grants made by SEAs to local education agencies (LEAs) under
this program must be used to facilitate the enrollment, attendance, and success in
school of homeless children and youth. Program funds may be appropriated for
activities such as tutoring, supplemental instruction, and referral services for
homeless children and youth, as well as providing them with medical, dental, mental,
and other health services. Liaison staff for homeless children and youth in each LEA
are responsible for coordinating activities for these youth with other entities and
agencies, including local Basic Center and Transitional Living Program grantees.70
To receive funding, each state must submit a plan to the U.S. Department of
Education that indicates how the state will identify and assess the needs of eligible
children and youth; ensure that they have access to the federal, state, and local food
programs and the same educational programs available to other youth; and resolve
problems concerning delays in and barriers to enrollment and transportation.
Education for Homeless Children and Youth grants are allotted to SEAs in
proportion to grants made under Title I, Part A of the Elementary and Secondary
Education Act of 1965, which allocates funds to all states, the District of Columbia,
and Puerto Rico based on the percentage of low-income children enrolled in a school
or living in the nearby residential area. However, no state can receive less than the
greater of $150,000, 0.25% of the total annual appropriation, or the amount it
received in FY2001 under this program. The Department of Education must reserve
0.1% of the total appropriation for grants to the Virgin Islands, Guam, America
Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands. The agency must
also transfer 1.0% of the total appropriation to the Department of the Interior for
services to homeless children and youth provided by the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
Amendments to the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act of 1987 authorized
funding for the program through FY2007. In FY2007, program appropriations
totaled about $62 million.
69 Other programs assist homeless youth and their families through the McKinney-Vento
Homeless Assistance Act, although none are targeted exclusively to runaway and homeless
youth. For additional information about these programs, see CRS Report RL30442,
Homelessness: Targeted Federal Programs and Recent Legislation, coordinated by Libby
Perl.
70 HHS has provided guidance to grantees on meeting the requirements of the McKinney-
Vento Act, available at [http://www.acf.dhhs.gov/programs/fysb/content/aboutfysb/
McKinney-Vento_IM.pdf].

CRS-27
The No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (P.L. 107-110) reauthorized and
amended the program explicitly to prohibit states that receive McKinney-Vento funds
from segregating homeless students from non-homeless students, except for short
periods of time for health and safety emergencies or to provide temporary, special,
supplemental services. Prior to the reauthorization, homeless children in some
districts attended class in separate buildings or schools. Advocates raised concerns
that these children, including those enrolled in classes that were equal in quality to
the classes attended by their non-homeless peers, were receiving an inferior education
because they were physically separated. The act exempted four counties (San
Joaquin, Orange, and San Diego counties in California and Maricopa County in
Arizona) from these requirements because they operated separate school districts for
homeless students in FY2000, as long as: (1) those separate schools offer services
that are comparable to local schools; and (2) homeless children are not required to
attend them. The Department of Education must certify annually that the school
districts meet these requirements.71
Pending legislation in the 110th Congress would provide additional educational
assistance to runaway and homeless youth. If passed, the FAFSA Fix for Homeless
Kids (H.R. 601) would amend the Higher Education Act to deem a student
independent for financial aid purposes if the student is verified both as homeless and
unaccompanied by an LEA liaison for homeless children, a director of a homeless
shelter, transitional shelter, or independent living facility, or a financial aid
administrator.
Shared Youth Vision Initiative
In 2003, the White House Task Force on Disadvantaged Youth, comprised of
the heads of executive branch agencies and their designees, issued a report calling for
increased federal coordination to improve service delivery to and outcomes for
vulnerable youth. In response to the report, the U.S. Departments of Education,
Health and Human Services, Justice, and Labor, and the Social Security
Administration, partnered to improve communication, coordination, and
collaboration across programs that target at-risk youth groups under a initiative called
the “Shared Youth Vision.” One of these groups includes runaway and homeless
youth.
Together, the agencies have convened an Interagency Work Group and regional
forums to develop and coordinate policies and research on the vulnerable youth
population. The U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) has led efforts to promote
collaboration between the Runaway and Homeless Youth Program and the agency’s
Workforce Investment Act (WIA) programs. The DOL has encouraged local and
state workforce investment boards to implement the strategies of the Shared Youth
71 The Individual with Disabilities Education Act, last amended in 2004 (P.L. 108-446),
includes provisions aimed at ensuring special education and related services for children
with disabilities who are homeless or otherwise members of highly mobile populations. For
additional information, see CRS Report RL32716, Individuals with Disabilities Education
Act (IDEA): Analysis of Changes Made by P.L. 108-446
, by Richard N. Apling and Nancy
Lee Jones.

CRS-28
Vision initiative based, in part, on models already implemented through three WIA
programs in California, Oregon, and Washington that provide employment and
educational resources targeted for runaway and homeless youth.72
Discretionary Grants for Family Violence Prevention
The Family Violence Prevention and Services Discretionary Grants Program
funds projects that prevent family violence, improve service delivery to address
family violence, and increase knowledge and understanding of family violence. The
program also provides discretionary grants to a range of initiatives that promote these
goals. One such initiative — the Domestic Violence/Runaway and Homeless Youth
Collaboration on the Prevention of Adolescent Dating Violence — targets runaway
and homeless youth who receive services through the BCP, TLP, and SOP. The
initiative was created because many runaway and homeless youth come from homes
where domestic violence occurs and may be at risk of abusing their partners or
becoming victims of abuse.
Collaboration projects are being carried out in nine locations (two in California
and one each in Florida, Kansas, Maryland, New York, New Mexico, Oregon, and
Pennsylvania) by faith-based and charitable organizations who are recipients, or have
been recipients of Runaway and Homeless Youth Program or Family Violence
Prevention and Service grants. The grants fund training for staff at these
organizations to enable them to assist youth in preventing dating violence. Each
organization received $75,000 for FY2005 through FY2007. Grantees must fund at
least 25% of the total approved cost of the project.
Chafee Foster Care Independence Program
Recently emancipated foster youth are vulnerable to becoming homeless. In
FY2005, approximately 24,400 youth “aged out” of the foster care system.73 The
Chafee Foster Care Independence Program (CFCIP), created under the Chafee Foster
Care Independence Act of 1999 (P.L. 106-169), provides states with funding to
support youth who are expected to emancipate from foster care and former foster
youth ages 18 to 21.74 States are authorized to receive funds based on their share of
the total number of children in foster care nationwide. However, the law’s “hold
harmless” clause precludes any state from receiving less than the amount of funds it
received in FY1998 or $500,000, whichever is greater.75 The program authorizes
72 See notice from Department of Labor to state workforce agencies, available on the DOL
website, available at [http://wdr.doleta.gov/directives/corr_doc.cfm?DOCN=2176].
73 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, “AFCARS Report #13 (Preliminary
Estimates for FY2005) (September 2006), available at [http://www.acf.hhs.gov/
programs/cb/stats_research/afcars/tar/report13.htm]
74 For additional information on the Chafee Foster Care Independence Act, see CRS Report
RS22501, Child Welfare: The Chafee Foster Care Independence Act, by Adrienne
Fernandes.
75 Prior to the passage of P.L. 106-169, states were awarded a share of independent living
(continued...)

CRS-29
funding for transitional living services, and as much as 30% of the funds may be
dedicated to room and board. In FY2007 Congress appropriated $140 million for the
program. Child welfare advocates have argued that the housing needs of youth
“aging out” of foster care have not been met despite the additional funds for
independent living that are provided through the CFCIP. If, for example, states made
available all federal funds allowable under the CFCIP for housing, each youth would
receive less than $800 per year.76
Emerging Issues
Funding authorization for the Runaway and Homeless Youth Program is set to
expire in the 110th Congress (FY2008). The Place to Call Home Act (H.R. 3409,
Hinojosa), an omnibus child welfare and youth policy bill, would reauthorize the
program. The act would amend the findings of the Runaway and Homeless Youth
Act by inserting language that promotes a positive youth development approach to
serving runaway and homeless youth. The legislation would also extend the number
of days youth may remain at a Basic Center Program from a maximum of 15 days to
a maximum of 30 if the center is located in a state or locality with a child- or youth-
serving facility licensure law or regulation that allows youth stay in excess of 15
days. In addition, the bill would change the definition of homeless youth (for
purposes of defining youth eligible to stay at a Basic Center) to include youth older
than 18 at centers located in a state or locality with a child- or youth-serving facility
licensure law or regulation that permits a higher age. Further, H.R. 3409 allows the
authorization for Basic Center appropriations to increase from a minimum of
$100,000 to a minimum of $200,000 for each state, and from a minimum of $45,000
to a minimum of $100,000 for each territory (U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, America
Samoa, and the Northern Mariana Islands). The bill provides authority for the HHS
Secretary to re-allot unused Basic Center funds within a fiscal year.
H.R. 3409 would also amend provisions for the Transitional Living program.
Specifically, the bill would extend the number of days youth may remain at a
Transitional Living program from a maximum of 18 months (540 days) to a
maximum of two years (730 days) if the center is located in a state or locality with
a child- or youth-serving facility licensure law or regulation that allows youth stay
in excess of 18 months.77 The legislation expressly prohibits the use of vouchers to
provide TLP services.
75 (...continued)
funds - $70 million - based on the number of children receiving federal foster care payments
in FY1984 under the Independent Living Program.
76 “Youth ‘Aging Out’ of the Foster Care System,” p. 54. Based on the authors’ (Mark
Courtney and Darcy Hughes Heuring) calculation that as many as 60,000 youth ages 18 to
21 are eligible to receive independent living funds annually through the CFCIP, of which
30% (or about $47 million) are allocated for housing assistance.
77 Shelter at the Transitional Living Program is provided for up to 18 months, and
youth under 18 may remain in the program an additional 180 days or until the youth
turns 18, whichever comes first.

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Other changes proposed by H.R. 3409 include provisions that would require the
HHS Secretary to submit to Congress a written report on the incidence and
prevalence of runaway and homeless youth ages 13 to 25 and that includes an
assessment of the characteristics of these youth, such as socioeconomic
characteristics and barriers to obtaining housing and other services. In addition, the
Secretary would be required to submit a report to Congress on the public cost
(including law enforcement, emergency and urgent health services, child welfare
services, juvenile and criminal justice services, and public income benefits costs) for
providing services to runaway and homeless youth ages 13 to 25 and the extent to
which the public cost reductions offset the cost of providing family reunification,
emergency shelter, transitional housing, permanent housing, and supportive services
to these youth. The law would require that if the Secretary contracts with a non-
federal entity to collect the information for the reports, that the entity have
“appropriate expertise in quantitative and qualitative social science research.”
Several issues may be relevant to any upcoming reauthorization discussions.
Changing Personnel Needs
A review of testimony from the 2003 reauthorization of the Runaway and
Homeless Youth Act before congressional committees overseeing the program
indicated that the witnesses were generally satisfied with the services of the program
and the mission of the act. Witnesses said that the program had also been successful
in serving youth of different racial and ethnic backgrounds.78 However, they raised
concerns about the changing personnel needs within grantee organizations. They
indicated that grantees needed financial support to attract and retain professional staff
who are bilingual. They reported that bilingual staff who helped youth and their
families obtain needed services through the program were often hired away to
positions in schools and social service agencies that pay higher salaries.
During CRS site visits conducted at grantee organizations in the Washington,
D.C. metropolitan area in November 2006, grantees said that staff are needed for
more specialized languages, in addition to Spanish. For example, a growing number
of Pakistani youth are using services provided by Northern Virginia’s only Runaway
and Homeless Youth Program grantee. Although many of these youth are fluent in
English, their parents and extended families rely primarily on other languages to
communicate.
Runaway and Homeless Youth as “Disconnected Youth”
The concept of “disconnected youth” has recently gained currency among
policymakers who have raised concerns about the negative outcomes these
individuals face in adulthood. “Disconnected youth” have weak social networks of
family, friends, and communities that provide assistance such as employment
connections, health insurance coverage, housing, tuition and other financial
78 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Health and Education, Subcommittee on Select
Education, Missing, Exploited, and Runaway Youth: Strengthening the System
, 108th Cong.,
1st sess., April 29, 2003.

CRS-31
assistance, and emotional support. Researchers have focused on two measurable
characteristics to indicate that vulnerable youth groups are disconnected: the lack of
high school and/or college attendance coupled with not having a job for at least one
year. Approximately two to three million youth ages 16 to 24 are considered
“disconnected” under this criteria, a disproportionate share of whom are young
minorities in urban communities.79 Concentrated poverty, community insecurity,
and unstable family structures are associated with their poor academic and
employment outcomes.
Runaway and homeless youth are vulnerable to becoming disconnected because
of separation from their families, absence from school, and non-participation in the
economy.80 Family conflict — rooted in abuse and neglect, school problems, and
drug and alcohol abuse — can compel youth to leave home. Family
disconnectendess is also evident among many runaway and homeless youth involved
in the foster care system. These youth are brought to the attention of child welfare
services because of incidents of abuse and neglect. Further, youth “aging out” of the
foster care system experience homelessness at a greater rate than their counterparts
in the general population, due, in part, to family disconnectedness. Some gay and
lesbian youth also experience family disassociation when they come out about their
sexuality.81
Runaway and homeless youth also spend time out of school while they are away
from a permanent home. The FY2006 NEO-RHYMIS survey indicated that 21% of
youth were not attending school regularly before entering the Basic Center Program.
Of youth in the Transitional Living Program, 21% had dropped out of school. Some
homeless youth face barriers to attending school because of transportation problems
and the absence of parents and guardians who can provide records and permission for
youth to participate in school activities. Finally, some runaway and homeless youth
are removed from the formal economy, and resort to illegal activity including stealing
and selling drugs in exchange for cash. Other such youth are too young to work
legally or experience mental health and other challenges that make working difficult.
Youth Outcomes
Little is known about the outcomes of youth after they leave the Runaway and
Homeless Youth Program. Local grantee organizations have limited information
about youth after they leave care, and research on whether youth experience
homelessness as adults is dated. Some grantees may decide to follow up with youth
who received services, but HHS does not require longitudinal data collection. HHS’s
2007 report to Congress, Promising Strategies to End Youth Homelessness, states
that longer-term studies of runaway and homeless youth are challenging because of
79 Peter Edelman, Harry J. Holzer, and Paul Offner, Reconnecting Disadvantaged Young
Men
(Washington, D.C., Urban Institute Press, 2006), p. 2.
80 Center for Law and Social Policy, Bob Reeg, “The Runaway and Homeless Youth Act and
Disconnected Youth,” in Jodie Levin-Epstein and Mark H. Greenburg, eds., Leave No Youth
Behind: Opportunities for Congress to Reach Disconnected Youth
(July 2003), pp. 56-63.
81 An Epidemic of Homelessness, p. 2.

CRS-32
their transient nature.82 Further, knowledge about effective strategies for serving
these youth is limited.83 Studies of intervention programs have not been based on
rigorous design, primarily due to ethical concerns in assigning homeless youth (or
youth at risk of becoming homeless) to a control group. According to the Promising
Strategies
report, creating studies that compared groups of homeless youth is
complicated by the diversity in the population and the tendency for these youth to
experience episodic periods of homelessness. (Conducting such an evaluation may
also be financially prohibitive.)
In response to the need for longer-term evaluations, HHS plans to fund an
evaluation of the Runaway and Homeless Youth program beginning sometime in
2008.84 The evaluation will track youth served at select TLP sites after they exit
care, and at the six-month mark, 12-month mark, and 18-month mark. The
evaluation will not involve random assignment; rather, evaluators will compare the
individual outcomes of each youth to their benchmark data.
HHS has also revised its four annual performance measures for the program to
better capture youth outcomes. NEO-RHYMIS will be used to evaluate the
outcomes. The performance measures are the following:
! Achieve the proportion of youth served in the TLP entering safe and
appropriate settings directly after exiting care at 85% by FY2008 and
maintain this level through FY2010 (long-term outcome measure).
The 80% target was not met in FY2004. In FY2005, the target of
80% was exceeded by two percentage points. The goal for FY2006
of 83% was not met by one percentage point.
! Increase funding efficiency by increasing the percent of youth who
complete the TLP by graduating or who leave ahead of schedule
based on opportunity (long-term efficiency measure). The target
measures of 43.6% in FY2004, 45.6% in FY2005, and 47.6% in
FY2006 were exceeded. The goal for FY2007 is 49.6%.
! Increase the percentage of TLP youth participants who are engaged
in community service and service learning activities while in the
program (outcome measure). The program exceeded the target of
30% in FY2004, but only reached 27% in FY2005. The goal for
FY2006 of 32% was not met by 4 percentage points; the FY2007
goal is 33%.
! Increase by 2% annually, beginning in FY2008, the proportion of
youth who are prevented from running away through BCP in-home
or off-site services as a percentage of all youth receiving such
82 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Report to Congress, Promising
Strategies to End Youth Homelessness
, submitted June, 27, 2007, pp. 9-10.
83 Ibid.
84 Based on conversations with ACF staff on September 21, 2007.

CRS-33
services, including those youth who must be fully admitted to the
shelter despite such preventative efforts (outcome measure). FYSB
plans for the baseline measure to be established in December 2007.

Although these measures capture information about the immediate living
situation of youth after they leave the program, little is known about their longer-term
outcomes.

CRS-34
Appendix
Table A-1. Basic Center Funding by State and Territory,
FY2006-FY2007
($ in thousands)
FY2006
FY2007
State
Actual
Allotted
Alabama
653
640
Alaska
319
319
Arizona
799
799
Arkansas
277
379
California
5,192
5,192
Colorado
647
647
Connecticut
505
505
Delaware
119
119
District of Columbia
113
100
Florida
2,395
2,483
Georgia
1,258
1,256
Hawaii
162
162
Idaho
225
225
Illinois
1,729
1,840
Indiana
1,008
1,008
Iowa
477
411
Kansas
434
378
Kentucky
573
573
Louisiana
789
639
Maine
265
200
Maryland
600
778
Massachusetts
914
924
Michigan
2,123
1,659
Minnesota
1,032
1,032
Mississippi
447
401
Missouri
773
817
Montana
144
144
Nebraska
454
233
Nevada
307
307
New Hampshire
191
190
New Jersey
1,024
1,251
New Mexico
459
269
New York
3,085
2,082
North Carolina
1,205
1,202
North Dakota
102
102
Ohio
1,526
1,660
Oklahoma
456
494
Oregon
551
501
Pennsylvania
1,660
1,788
Rhode Island
136
136
South Carolina
472
588

CRS-35
FY2006
FY2007
State
Actual
Allotted
South Dakota
111
111
Tennessee
764
837
Texas
3,121
3,148
Utah
315
315
Vermont
100
100
Virginia
1,060
1,060
Washington
880
880
West Virginia
244
244
Wisconsin
845
783
Wyoming
118
118
Subtotal
43,156
42,750
America Samoa
45
45
Guam
45
45
N. Mariana Islands
0
45
Puerto Rico
200
538
U.S. Virgin Islands
0
45
Subtotal
290
718
Total
43,446
43,468
Source: U.S. Department Health and Human Services, Administration for
Children and Families Justification of Estimates for Appropriations
Committees
, FY2007, pp. D-45, D-46, and U.S. Department Health and
Human Services, Administration for Children and Families Justification of
Estimates for Appropriations Committees
, FY2008, pp. 96-97.