(A)Each public
children services agency (PCSA) shall, when requested, provide services and
support to former foster care recipients, who emancipated from agency custody
due to attaining eighteen years of age. A PCSA shall evaluate the strengths and
needs of the young adult to determine the services to be offered. The services
and supports are to complement the young adult's own efforts to achieve self-
sufficiency and to assure that the program participant recognizes and accepts
their personal responsibility for preparing for and then making the transition
from adolescence to adulthood. The services and supports shall be available
until the young adult's twenty-first birthday.
(B)Before a PCSA
provides services to a young adult between the ages of eighteen and twenty-one,
the PCSA shall explore and coordinate services with other community resources.
The PCSA shall coordinate with ODJFS programs and other community resources
including, but not limited to the following:
(1)Bridges.
(2)Comprehensive
case management and employment program (CCMEP).
(3)Other local
community resources.
(C)Based on the
evaluation required by paragraph (A) of this rule, the PCSA and the young adult
shall develop a mutually agreed on written upon plan in SACWIS for
the provision of services. The plan shall clearly outline the responsibilities
of the young adult and the PCSA. The written A copy of the plan shall be signed by the young adult and a
representative of the agency.
(D)The PCSA shall
include or update contact information in the written
plan in SACWIS on any of the youth's connections
with significant others, such as former foster parents, friends, mentors and
extended family members. The contact information shall include names, addresses
and phone numbers, whenever known and shall be documented in the state
automated child welfare information system (SACWIS).
(E) The PCSA shall
make available the following independent living services to young adults aged
eighteen to twenty-one including, but not limited to:
(1)Academic support
including:
(a)Academic
counseling.
(b)Preparation for
a GED.
(c)Assistance in
applying for or studying for a GED exam.
(d)Tutoring.
(e)Help with
homework.
(f)Study skills
training.
(g)Literacy
training.
(h)Help accessing
educational resources.
(2)Post secondary
educational support including:
(a)Classes for
test preparation.
(b)Counseling
about college.
(c)Information
about financial aid and scholarships.
(d)Help completing
college or loan applications.
(e)Tutoring while
in college.
(3)Career
preparation including:
(a)Vocational and
career assessment, career exploration and planning, guidance in setting and
assessing vocational and career interests and skills and help in matching
interests and abilities with vocational goals.
(b)Job seeking and
job placement support, identifying potential employers, writing resumes,
completing job applications, developing interview skills, job shadowing,
receiving job referrals, using career resource libraries, understanding
employee benefits coverage, and securing work permits.
(c)Retention
support and job coaching.
(d)Learning how to
work with employers and other employees.
(e)Understanding
workplace values such as timeliness and appearance.
(f)Understanding
authority and customer relationships.
(4)Employment
programs or vocational training including:
(a)Youths'Youth's
participation in an apprenticeship, internship, or summer employment program.
(b)Youths'Youth's
participation in vocational or trade programs and the receipt of training in
occupational classes for such skills as cosmetology, auto mechanics, building
trades, nursing, computer science, and other current or emerging employment
sectors.
(5)Budget and
financial management including:
(a)Living within a
budget.
(b)Opening and
using a checking/ savings account.
(c)Balancing a
checkbook.
(d)Developing
consumer awareness and smart shopping skills.
(e)Accessing information
about credit, loans and taxes.
(f)Filling out
tax forms.
(6)Housing,
education and home management including:
(a)Assistance or
training in locating and maintaining housing, filling out a rental application
and acquiring a lease, handling security deposits and utilities, understanding
practice for keeping a healthy and safe home, understanding tenants rights and
responsibilities, and handling landlord complaints.
(b)Lessons in food
preparation, laundry, housekeeping, living cooperatively, meal planning,
grocery shopping and basic maintenance and repairs and driving instructions.
(7)Health
education and risk prevention including:
(a)Hygiene,
nutrition, fitness and exercise, and first aid information.
(b)Medical and
dental care benefits, health care resources and insurance, prenatal care and
maintaining personal medical records.
(c)Sex education,
abstinence education, and HIV prevention, education and information about
sexual development and sexuality, pregnancy prevention and family planning and
sexually transmitted diseases and AIDS, substance abuse prevention and
intervention, including education and information about the effects and
consequences of substance use (alcohol, drugs, tobacco) and substance avoidance
and intervention.
(8)Mentoring
including matched with a screened and trained adult for a one-on-one
relationship involving the two meeting on a regular basis. Mentoring can be
short-term, but may also support the development of a long-term relationship:
(9)Supervision
services for a young adult living in a supervised independent living
arrangement including a young adult living independently under a supervised
arrangement that is paid for or provided by the county agency. A young adult in
supervised independent living is not supervised twenty-four hours a day by an
adult and often is provided with increased responsibilities, such as paying
bills, assuming leases, and working with a landlord, while under the
supervision of an adult.
(10)Room and board
financial assistance including room and board financial assistance that is a
payment paid for or provided by the county agency for room and board, rent
deposits, utilities, and other household start-up expenses.
(11)Education
financial assistance including educational financial assistance that is a
payment paid for or provided by the county agency for education or training,
allowances to purchase textbooks, uniforms, computers, and other educational
supplies; tuition assistance; scholarships; payment for educational preparation
and support services, and payment for GED and other educational tests. The
financial assistance also includes vouchers for tuition or vocational education
or tuition waiver programs paid for or provided by the county agency.
(12)Other financial
assistance including financial assistance for any other payments made or
provided by the county agency to help the youth live independently.
(F) The PCSA may
only use up to thirty per cent of its Chafee federal independent living
allocation for room and board pursuant to rule 5101:9-6-35 of the
Administrative Code for eighteen to twenty-one year old youth who emancipated.
Bridges participants receiving Title IV-E maintanence are not eligible for the
Chafee room and board allocation. Room and board may include but is not limited
to:
(1)Assistance with
rent.
(2)Initial rent
deposit.
(3)Utilities.
(4)Utility
deposits.
(G)Under no
circumstances shall the PCSA use any of its independent living allocation for
room and board for youth under the age of eighteen or past the young adult's
twenty-first birthday.
(H) PCSAs shall
report applicable independent living services information for young adults as
required in rule 5101:2-33-70 of the Administrative Code, according to the
statewide automated child welfare information system (SACWIS) reporting
requirements.
(I)The PCSA shall
provide a copy of the agency's grievance policy as required by rule
5101:2-33-20 of the Administrative Code to each young adult requesting
independent living services from the agency.
(J)The PCSA shall
ensure that youth who have reached age nineteen or twenty-one are participating
in state and federal studies in accordance with the Ohio department of job and
family services (ODJFS). The PCSA shall inform the youth:
(1)How to access
the survey.
(2)The benefits of
participating in the survey include:
(a)Increase youth
financial self-sufficiency.
(b)Improve youth
educational, academic or vocational attainment.
(c)Increase youth
connections with adults.
(d)Reduce
homelessness among youth.
(e)Reduce
high-risk behavior among youth.
(f)Improve youth
access to health insurance.
(3)They may be
eligible for an incentive once they complete the survey.
Effective: 4/4/2022
Five Year Review (FYR) Dates: 3/1/2024
Certification: CERTIFIED ELECTRONICALLY
Date: 03/25/2022
Promulgated Under: 119.03
Statutory Authority: 5103.03, 5101.141, 5153.166
Rule Amplifies: 5101.141, 5103.03, 5153.16
Prior Effective Dates: 11/12/2002, 10/09/2006, 10/01/2009,
05/10/2014, 12/11/2017, 03/01/2019