| Minn. Stat. § 260.795
Minnesota
Statutes
Public Welfare and Related Activities (Ch. 245-267)
Chapter
260. Juveniles
Minnesota
Indian Preservation Act
260.795. Eligible services
Subdivision
1. Types of services.
(a) Eligible Indian child welfare services provided under primary support
grants include:
(1)
placement prevention and reunification services;
(2)
family-based services;
(3)
individual and family counseling;
(4)
access to professional individual, group, and family counseling;
(5)
crisis intervention and crisis counseling;
(6)
development of foster and adoptive placement resources, including recruitment,
licensing, and support;
(7)
court advocacy;
(8)
training and consultation to county and private social services agencies
regarding the Indian Child Welfare Act [FN1]
and the Minnesota Indian Family Preservation Act; [FN2]
(9)
advocacy in working with the county and private social services agencies,
and
activities to help provide access to agency services, including but not
limited to 24-hour caretaker and homemaker services, day care, emergency
shelter care up to 30 days in 12 months, access to emergency financial
assistance, and arrangements to provide temporary respite care to a family
for up to 72 hours consecutively or 30 days in 12 months;
(10)
transportation services to the child and parents to prevent placement
or reunite the family; and
(11)
other activities and services approved by the commissioner that further
the goals of the Indian Child Welfare Act and the Indian Family Preservation
Act, including but not limited to recruitment of Indian staff for local
social services agencies and licensed child-placing agencies. The commissioner
may specify the priority of an activity and service based on its success
in furthering these goals.
(b)
Eligible services provided under special focus grants include:
(1)
permanency planning activities that meet the special needs of Indian families;
(2)
teenage pregnancy;
(3)
independent living skills;
(4)
family and community involvement strategies to combat child abuse and
chronic neglect of children;
(5)
coordinated child welfare and mental health services to Indian families;
(6)
innovative approaches to assist Indian youth to establish better self-image,
decrease isolation, and decrease the suicide rate;
(7)
expanding or improving services by packaging and disseminating information
on successful approaches or by implementing models in Indian communities
relating to the development or enhancement of social structures that increase
family self-reliance and links with existing community resources;
(8)
family retrieval services to help adopted individuals reestablish legal
affiliation with the Indian tribe; and
(9)
other activities and services approved by the commissioner that further
the goals of the Indian Child Welfare Act and the Indian Family Preservation
Act. The commissioner may specify the priority of an activity and service
based on its success in furthering these goals.
(c)
The commissioner shall give preference to programs that use Indian staff,
contract
with Indian organizations or tribes, or whose application is a joint effort
between the Indian and non-Indian community to achieve the goals of the
Indian Child Welfare Act and the Minnesota Indian Family Preservation
Act. Programs must have input and support from the Indian community.
Subd.
2. Inappropriate expenditures.
Indian child welfare grant money must not be used for:
(1)
child day care necessary solely because of employment or training for
employment of a parent or other relative with whom the child is living;
(2)
foster care maintenance or difficulty of care payments;
(3)
residential facility payments;
(4)
adoption assistance payments;
(5)
public assistance payments for Minnesota family investment program assistance,
supplemental aid, medical assistance, general assistance, general assistance
medical care, or community health services authorized by sections 145A.01
to 145A.14; or
(6)
administrative costs for income maintenance staff.
Subd.
3. Revenue enhancement.
The commissioner shall submit claims for federal reimbursement earned
through the activities and services supported through Indian child welfare
grants. The commissioner may set aside a portion of the federal funds
earned under this subdivision to establish and support a new Indian child
welfare position in the department of human services to provide program
development. The commissioner shall use any federal revenue not set aside
to expand services under section 260.785. The federal revenue earned under
this subdivision is available for these purposes until the funds are expended.
CREDIT(S)
Laws 1999, c. 139, art.
1, § 11.
[FN1]
25 U.S.C.A. §§ 1901 to 1923.
[FN2]
M.S.A. §§ 260.751 to 260.835.
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