Extended Foster Care. Extended Foster Care (EFC) in the Department of Children, Youth and Families (DCYF) provides an opportunity for young adults who were a dependent of Washington State at age 18, to voluntarily agree to continue receiving foster care services, including placement services, while working on their goals towards independence. The dependency action will continue if the eligible youth elects to participate in the program on their 18th birthday. Eligible youth who do not elect to participate in EFC on their 18th birthday will have until their 21st birthday to voluntarily request to participate in EFC. Eligible youth may enter and exit the program as needed between the ages of 18-21 years old.
Services may include foster care placement or supervised independent living setting placement, medical, dental, case management by DCYF, and referrals to community resources.
To be eligible for the EFC, youth must meet the following criteria on their 18th birthday:
Youth can transition between categories. Currently, there are just under 800 youth enrolled in EFC with an average subsidy of $851 per month.
Subsidy Rates for Foster Care. Licensed care givers receive a monthly subsidy for children in their care. The subsidy rate is based on the child's age and level of care needed, with level I being the basic rate, and level IV being the highest subsidy rate due to a child's physical, developmental, behavioral, or mental health conditions that require increased effort, care, or supervision that are above the needs of a typically developing child. The current monthly subsidy rate for a child age 12 and up ranges from $810 to $1612.30 per month with level II subsidy set at $987.92 per month.
Aging Out of Extended Foster Care. In February 2021, the Governor issued proclamation 21-02 in response to the federal requirement that states could not exit young people from care beginning in March 2020. The federal moratorium removed ages limits on receiving EFC, expired September 30, 2021. The Legislature has appropriated additional funds to provide direct cash payment to youth aging out of EFC through June 2023. The subsidy is $850 per month.
Extended Foster Care. A number of changes are made to the EFC program, including:
The court shall maintain the dependency proceeding for any youth who is dependent at the age of 18 until the youth turns 21 or withdraws their agreement to participate.
Postextended Foster Care. The Postextended Foster Care Program is created within DCYF to support young adults ages 21 through 25 with a financial subsidy. The following young adults are eligible for postextended foster care:
These young adults will automatically be enrolled in postextended foster care, and their dependency will be dismissed at age 21.
Young adults may enter and exit postextended foster care as needed between the ages of 21 through 25.
By January 1, 2024, DCYF is to contract with one or more entities to operate the postextended foster care program. The entity or entities will administer the stipends to young adults until they turn 26, or the young adults voluntarily opt out of the postextended foster care program.
In developing and contracting for the postextended foster care program, DCYF is to consult with a stakeholder group that must include, but is not limited to:
Definitions. Extended foster care services includes a financial subsidy at a rate not lower than the level II foster care reimbursement rate for children 12 and older for those in an independent living setting.
"Postextended foster care" means providing a financial subsidy at a rate not lower than the level II foster care reimbursement rate for children 12 and older provided by DCYF for young adults ages 21 through 25 who were previously enrolled in extended foster care services.
Voluntary placement agreement for the purposes of EFC services, means a written voluntary agreement by a nonminor dependent who agrees to participate in EFC. A youth may sign a voluntary placement agreement to participate in EFC prior to the age of 18, in which case the agreement will take effect on the youth's 18th birthday. The youth may withdraw their consent to participate, at any time, including prior to their 18th birthday. A voluntary placement agreement may be signed by a dependent electronically.
Postextended foster care benefits are limited to a financial subsidy. Technical changes are made.
The committee recommended a different version of the bill than what was heard. PRO: Dependent youth said they want more support and it's our responsibility as a state to provide that support, helping them create a pathway to independence. Those that participate in extended foster care (EFC) likely have higher earnings, experience a lower rate of homelessness, reduces criminal convictions and involvement of their own children in the system. Twenty percent of eligible youth do not participate in EFC, removing barriers such as meeting federal eligibility and increasing flexibility will hopefully increase EFC participation rates. A Washington Institute for Public Policy report found that for every $1 invested in these youth, we get $3.95 in return. The Governor extended EFC during COVID as we saw how much stability that provided young adults.
OTHER: Support an economic step down for EFC, the real challenge is the culture in DCYF's commitment to youth transitioning out of foster care. DCYF may not be the best agency to work with young adults. This bill is premature, a report is expected in June 2023 so we should wait for the findings and recommendations from the current codesign work being done.