CHAPTER 1. INTRODUCTION
Through the Social Services Block Grant (SSBG) program, the Federal Government disburses funds to States[1] to support social services for adults and children. This report discusses SSBG expenditures and the number of recipients of services during 2006.[2] This chapter provides a brief history of the SSBG and summarizes the SSBG reporting requirements of the States.
Background
On January 4, 1975, title XX of the Social Security Act authorized a capped entitlement to States for providing social services. Prior to title XX, States received matching Federal funds for specified categories of services, with eligibility for the services limited to receipt of public assistance under several titles of the Social Security Act. Title XX gave States flexibility to offer a wide range of services to a broad population of adults and children. The statute also included requirements for planning, public participation, income eligibility, and administration.
In 1981, Congress amended title XX to establish the SSBG program. The SSBG gave States greater flexibility in their use of the entitlement funds. States determine what services will be provided, eligible populations of adults and children, locations in which each service is provided, and whether the services are provided by State or local agency staff or through grants or contracts with private organizations.
The Federal Government allocates funds to the States as block grants to support the delivery of social services. Designated State agencies administer the SSBG program. (See appendix A.) Title XX encourages each State, as far as practicable under the conditions in that State, to furnish services in support of five statutory goals:[3]
- Achieving or maintaining economic self-support to prevent, reduce, or eliminate dependency;
- Achieving or maintaining self-sufficiency, including reduction or prevention of dependency;
- Preventing or remedying neglect, abuse, or exploitation of children and adults unable to protect their own interests, or preserving, rehabilitating, or reuniting families;
- Preventing or reducing inappropriate institutional care by providing for community-based care, home-based care, or other forms of less intensive care; and
- Securing referral or admission for institutional care when other forms of care are not appropriate, or providing services to individuals in institutions.
Funding for the SSBG
The annual appropriation for the SSBG program for 2006 was $1.7 billion. The appropriation for the SSBG program has been at this level since 2002.
On February 8, 2006, President Bush signed the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA) into law.[4] The DRA authorizes States to continue to transfer up to 10 percent of their annual Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) block grant allocation into their SSBG program through Federal fiscal year (FFY) 2010. Any TANF funds transferred into the SSBG may be used only for programs and services to families with children and a family income of less than 200 percent of the official income poverty line (as defined and revised annually by the Office of Management and Budget).[5] Funds transferred into the SSBG from TANF are subject to the statute, regulations, and reporting requirements of the SSBG. During FFY 2006, 43 States transferred funds from TANF into the SSBG program.
Supplemental Hurricane Relief Funds
The 2005 Gulf Coast hurricanes caused historic destruction and loss of life in the Gulf Coast region of the United States. A total of $550 million was made available to the States through a supplemental appropriation to the SSBG.[6] The funds were to provide social services, health care, and mental health services. This one-time supplemental allotment also may have been used for costs associated with the repair, renovation, and construction of facilities used to provide these services to victims of the hurricanes. In contrast, regular SSBG allotments may not be used for construction. Chapter 5 provides greater detail on State expenditures of SSBG Supplemental Hurricane Relief Funds.
SSBG Reporting Requirements
Before a State receives SSBG funds, it must submit a report on the intended use of the block grant, including information on the types of activities to be supported and the categories or characteristics of individuals to be served.[7] This preexpenditure report is submitted annually to the Office of Community Services (OCS), Administration for Children and Families (ACF), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), which administers the SSBG program and provides technical assistance to the States. States are required to submit a revised preexpenditure report if the planned use of SSBG funds changes during the year.
In addition, HHS regulations require each State to submit an annual SSBG postexpenditure report either 6 months after the end of the reporting period, or at the time that the State submits the preexpenditure report for the next reporting period.[8] The States may report data for either the Federal or State fiscal year. States are required to submit information on the services provided, total number of adults and children served, and amounts expended for each service. (See appendices B, C, and D.)
History of SSBG Reporting
Reporting requirements for the SSBG have evolved since 1975. Table 1–1 provides a brief history of the reporting requirements for title XX and the SSBG.
Table 1–1 History of Title XX and SSBG Reporting Requirements | |
---|---|
1975 | Reporting requirements for title XX included the Social Services Reporting Requirements. States submitted quarterly and annual reports that included unduplicated counts of recipients by service, eligibility category, expenditure of funds, method of provision, and title XX goal, as well as special reports on child day care. |
1981 | The SSBG retained the original title XX requirement that each State must report biennially on activities carried out under the SSBG, including the purposes for which funds were spent and the extent to which expenditures were consistent with the State’s preexpenditure report. |
1988 | The Family Support Act of 1988[9] added specific reporting requirements for the SSBG, which required each State to submit an annual report containing the following information:
|
1990 | HHS published a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on April 5, 1990, to implement the new reporting requirements enacted in the Family Support Act of 1988. |
1993 | HHS issued a final rule on November 15, 1993, to implement annual reporting requirements for the SSBG program. It also included uniform definitions of services. |
1999 | HHS issued a final rule that amended the SSBG regulations.
|
2001 | OCS issued an Information Memorandum instructing the States to include the expenditure of funds transferred from TANF into SSBG in the “Expenditures—SSBG” column of their postexpenditure reports. |
2002 | OMB approved a revised postexpenditure reporting form with new instructions (OMB No. 0970–0234, Expiration Date March 2005). States used this form to report data for 2002–2004. |
2005 | OMB approved a revised postexpenditure reporting form with new instructions (OMB No. 0970-0234, Expiration Date May 31, 2008). States used this form to report data for 2006. |
Services Funded by the SSBG
The 1993 regulation, noted above, included uniform definitions for 28 social services. These definitions do not constrain a State’s use of SSBG funds or restrict the services a State may provide; rather, they provide guidelines for reporting purposes. If a service falls outside of the 28 definitions, States report the data under “other services.”[10]
The 29 service categories (28 social service categories plus the “other services” category) are listed below.
- Adoption services
- Case management
- Congregate meals
- Counseling services
- Day care—adults
- Day care—children
- Education and training services
- Employment services
- Family planning services
- Foster care services—adults
- Foster care services—children
- Health-related services
- Home-based services
- Home-delivered meals
- Housing services
- Independent/transitional living
- Information and referral
- Legal services
- Other services
- Pregnancy and parenting
- Prevention and intervention
- Protective services—adults
- Protective services—children
- Recreation services
- Residential treatment
- Special services—disabled
- Special services—youth at risk
- Substance abuse services
- Transportation
States vary in how they use SSBG funds and what services they provide due to the considerable flexibility of the SSBG. States use the SSBG to supplement other funds or to fully support the delivery of a service.
Data Items
The following data items provided the basis for the analyses presented in this report.
SSBG Expenditures
For the purposes of this report, the term SSBG expenditures refers to the sum of two columns of data on the postexpenditure report—expenditures of the SSBG allocation and expenditures of the funds transferred into the SSBG from the TANF block grant.
- SSBG Allocation. States reported dollars from the SSBG appropriation spent for services and administrative costs.[11]
- TANF Transfer. States reported any expended dollars transferred from the TANF block grant into SSBG.[12]
Other Federal, State, and Local Funds
States reported the total amount of other Federal, State, and local funds spent for each service supported with SSBG funds.
Total Expenditures
Total expenditures is the sum of expenditures for SSBG-supported services. It includes SSBG expenditures as well as other Federal, State, and local funds.
Figure 1–1 illustrates the relationships among the data items.
Figure 1-1 Expenditure Terminology | |
---|---|
D |
Number of Recipients
States reported the total number of adult and child recipients for each service category funded in whole, or in part, with SSBG expenditures. In addition, States were asked to report on adult recipients in two categories—age 59 years and younger, and age 60 years and older.
- Children. States reported the actual or estimated number of children who received each service.[13]
- Adults Age 59 Years and Younger. States reported the actual or estimated number of adults age 59 years and younger who received each service.
- Adults Age 60 Years and Older. States reported the actual or estimated number of adults age 60 years and older who received each service.
- Adults of Unknown Age. States reported the actual or estimated number of adults who received each service for whom age data were unavailable. For States in which age categories for adult recipients were only partially available, this item is the total number of adult recipients less the number of adult recipients for whom age is known.
Appendix E contains State data pages, which present the annual expenditures, number of recipients, contact information, and additional notes on reporting methodologies for each State.
Validation
Data from the State postexpenditure reports were entered into a database and validated to identify errors or inconsistencies. All States were contacted to resolve any data issues and verify their definitions of data items. In addition, States were given the opportunity to explain divergences from the reporting requirements. These explanations are included as notes to the State data pages.
Table 1–2 displays all data items used for analyses, specifies whether the States reported the item or it was calculated during data validation, and indicates the specific validation issues addressed.
Table 1–2 SSBG Data Items and Validation Rules | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Expenditures | ||||
Data Item | Reported | Calculated | Data Calculation and Validation | |
SSBG Allocation | ||||
TANF Transfer | ||||
SSBG Expenditures | SSBG expenditures were calculated as the sum of the SSBG allocation and the TANF transfer. If these data were missing, data in all other fields were deleted. | |||
Other Federal, State, and Local Funds | If these data were missing, the State was omitted from analyses comparing SSBG expenditures to expenditures of other sources of funds. | |||
Total Expenditures | ||||
Recipients | ||||
Total Recipients | If data on recipients were missing, expenditure data were accepted and included in the analyses, but the State was asked to provide an explanation for the missing recipient data. Despite variations in methods for determining recipient counts, data from all States were included in the analyses. | |||
Children | ||||
Adults Age 59 Years and Younger | If data for these categories were missing, all adults were counted as adults of unknown age. | |||
Adults Age 60 Years and Older | ||||
Adults of Unknown Age | If these data were missing, adults of unknown age was calculated as the sum of adults age 59 years and younger and adults age 60 years and older subtracted from total adults. |
[1] In this report, “States” include the District of Columbia and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. The territories of Guam, American Samoa, Virgin Islands, and the Northern Mariana Islands also receive funds from the SSBG, but their data are not included in this report.
[2] In this report, the year always refers to the Federal fiscal year (FFY).
[3] 42 U.S.C. §1397.
[4] P.L. 109-171 (2006).
[5] 42 U.S.C. \§604(d)(3)(B).
[6] Department of Defense, Emergency Supplemental Appropriations to Address Hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico, and Pandemic Influenza Act of 2006, P.L. 109-148 (2005).
[7] 42 U.S.C. \§1397c.
[8] 45 C.F.R. \§96.17.
[9] 42 U.S.C. \§1315 et. seq.
[10] 45 C.F.R. \§96.74(b).
[11] The total of this column may differ from the amount of the annual SSBG allocation if the full amount was not expended in the fiscal year during which it was allocated, or if a portion of the SSBG allocation from the previous year was expended during the reporting year.
[12] The total of this column may differ from the total amount transferred, as reported by States in the Fiscal Year 2006 TANF Financial Data Report on http://www.acf.dhhs.gov/programs/ofs/data/2006/tanf_2006.html (accessed 10/12/2007), if the full transfer was not expended during the year it was transferred, or if funds transferred during the previous year were expended during the reporting year.
[13] The age of child recipients is defined by each State, but usually refers to individuals younger than 18 years.