HB 25-1271
signedFederal Benefits for Youth in Foster Care
Plain-English Summary
AI-generatedHB 25-1271, also known as "Federal Benefits for Youth in Foster Care," aims to help children and young people in foster care who have lost a parent by ensuring they receive federal survivor benefits like those from the Social Security Administration or Veterans Affairs. The bill requires local social services departments to check if these youth are eligible for such benefits within 90 days of taking custody, and if so, to apply on their behalf unless another more suitable representative is found. It also mandates that any funds received must be kept in a separate account for the child’s future needs rather than used by the foster care system. This bill has been signed into law, meaning it will start being implemented as planned.
Official Summary
Beginning on or before July 1, 2027, the act requires a county department of human or social services (county department) to determine whether a child or youth who is in foster care and who has a deceased parent (child or youth) may be eligible to receive survivor benefits administered by the United States railroad retirement board, social security administration, or veterans benefits administration (federal survivor benefits). The county department must make an initial eligibility determination within 90 days after assuming legal custody of or authority over the child or youth. Under current law, certain federal agencies appoint a representative payee or fiduciary (representative payee) to receive and manage federal benefits on behalf of a child or youth in foster care. If a child or youth may be eligible for federal survivor benefits and the county department is the most appropriate representative payee, the act requires the county department to apply for federal survivor benefits on behalf of the child or youth. If the county department determines that the child or youth may be eligible for federal survivor benefits but that the county department is not the most appropriate representative payee, the county department shall provide information to the prospective representative payee that the county department has identified about how to apply for federal survivor benefits on behalf of the child or youth and how to become the child's or youth's representative payee. Under current law, a county department serving as a representative payee may use federal benefits to offset the cost of providing basic care and services to a child or youth in foster care. The act prohibits this offset practice with respect to federal survivor benefits. Instead, the act directs a county department serving as a representative payee to establish an account for the federal survivor benefits (account). A county department serving as a representative payee must save money in the account for the needs of the individual child or youth. Once the child or youth leaves foster care, the county department is required to release funds in the account to the child or youth. The act sets forth various accounting and notice requirements related to federal survivor benefits and requires the department of human services (department), in consultation with interested stakeholders, to adopt rules providing guidance for county departments. The guidance extends to procedures for identifying a representative payee, county department responsibilities when federal survivor benefits are denied or when a child or youth leaves foster care, and policies governing the establishment and maintenance of an account for federal survivor benefit funds. The department must provide technical assistance to a county department about how to conserve federal survivor benefit funds in the best interests of an individual child or youth. (Note: This summary applies to this bill as enacted.)
Details
- Chamber
- House
- First action
- 2025-05-28
- Latest action
- 2025-02-18
- Last action desc.
- Introduced In House - Assigned to Health & Human Services
- OpenStates
- View source ↗
Sponsors
- Lindsay Gilchrist (primary) · Democratic
- Kyle Brown (primary) · Democratic
- Lindsey Daugherty (primary) · Democratic
- Sean Camacho (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Meg Froelich (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Manny Rutinel (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Rebekah Stewart (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Jenny Willford (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Jennifer Bacon (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Brandi Bradley (cosponsor) · Republican
- Chad Clifford (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Monica Duran (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Regina English (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Cecelia Espenoza (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Lorena García (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Eliza Hamrick (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Jamie Jackson (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Junie Joseph (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Rebecca Keltie (cosponsor) · Republican
- Sheila Lieder (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Mandy Lindsay (cosponsor) · Democratic
- William Lindstedt (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Meghan Lukens (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Matt Martinez (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Tisha Mauro (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Julie McCluskie (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Karen McCormick (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Amy Paschal (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Jacque Phillips (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Emily Sirota (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Lesley Smith (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Katie Stewart (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Tammy Story (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Alex Valdez (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Elizabeth Velasco (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Ron Weinberg (cosponsor) · Republican
- Steven Woodrow (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Yara Zokaie (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Judy Amabile (cosponsor) · Democratic
- John Carson (cosponsor) · Republican
- Lisa Cutter (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Tony Exum (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Iman Jodeh (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Cathy Kipp (cosponsor) · Democratic
- Mike Weissman (cosponsor) · Democratic