Alison Mendiola
Joshua Hinman
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 to 21 years old.
Extended foster care services means residential and other support services DCYF is authorized to provide. Services may include, but are not limited to, placement in a licensed, relative, or otherwise approved care, or supervised independent living settings; assistance in meeting basic needs; independent living services; medical assistance; and counseling or treatment.
To be eligible for EFC, youth must meet the following criteria on their 18th birthday:
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.
DCYF is to develop a program to make incentive payments to youth in extended foster care who participate in qualifying activities. The program design is to include stakeholder engagement from impacted communities. Subject to appropriations, DCYF is to make incentive payments to qualifying youth, in addition to supervised independent living subsidies, by July 1, 2025.
The committee recommended a different version of the bill than what was heard. PRO: Unlike last year's proposal, this bill focuses on the current age for extended foster care, 18 to 20. All young people have expressed a need for continued support. It's our job as a state to help raise and support these young people until they can be successful on their own. EFC reduces homelessness, decreases use of public assistance, and the likelihood of their own child becoming party of system. 20 percent of eligible youth are not participating which is concerning which is why we need to further reduce barriers, allowing everyone to be eligible on their 18th birthday and not requiring the activities by federal law although those are certainly good goals, but may not be achievable for some right away. Providing a housing subsidy is a lifeline for youth striving for a stable future and make good fiscal sense. A WSIPP study shows that for every dollar invested in EFC we get a return of $3.95. Crucial to speed up timeline for payments to youth, a youth shouldn't have to wait 6 months for their initial payment, becoming homeless while they wait.
CON: This bill isn't rooted in the totality of evidenced based research. We know youth need education and employment. This bill sends the wrong message.
OTHER: We released the EFC assessment, DYCF is working on recommendations, payment challenges and policies. The agency asked to increase subsidy and housing subsidy, some were funded, some were not. The internal work will lay the groundwork on improving outcomes. Technical concerns: there is a limitation on DCYF's payment system and it can't process 39 different rates. The timeline is not reasonable for a subsidy to be available within one week.
The committee recommended a different version of the bill than what was heard. PRO: EFC is independently evaluated and proven to significantly lessen likelihood of convictions, homelessness, and use of public assistance. Studies show that participation in EFC produces better outcomes. These youth are more likely to be employed or in post-secondary education, whereas prior to EFC in 2006, youth who terminated at age 18 ended up directly on the streets. Today, Washington's EFC program is a national standard.
EFC is beneficial and a good financial investment. Cost-benefit analysis shows a 4 to 1 return on investment. For example, health care costs are reduced, such as less emergency room visits. Expanding to all aged 18 and removing eligibility barriers makes sense.
A DSHS study showed that 60 percent who exit foster care without EFC were involved in the criminal justice system, which is double the rate for EFC youth. This is a good investment that reduces future system involvement.
Testifier represents hundreds of EFC youth and strongly encourages this bill. Youth are currently ineligible and discharged from foster care when not ready to do so. Their dependency is dismissed, which means they lose access to people supporting them, including judges, caseworkers, and so forth. They are on their own. This is contrary to the Legislature's commitment to support these youth.
EFC helps a youth become a better parent and reduces likelihood that they will become CPS-involved as parents. EFC supports generation well-being.
PRO: Jim Theofelis, NorthStar Advocates; Emiko Tajima, Director, Partners for Our Children University of Washington School of Social Work; Tara Urs, King County Dept. of Public Defense; Crystal Shen, Washington Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics.