Honoring Native Kinship: A Brief on ICWA and Relative Caregivers

Record Description

This Grandfamilies & Kinship Support Network guide helps ground your work in the importance of keeping children connected to family, culture, and community, an approach that closely aligns with the goals of Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF). The guide explains how policies like the Indian Child Welfare Act support relative caregiving and why that matters for long-term stability. For Tribal TANF programs or TANF programs working with Tribal families, this guide also provides understanding on how to better support kinship caregivers who may not fit neatly into traditional program models. It offers context you can use to design more responsive services, strengthen family-centered approaches, and ensure that benefits and supports reflect the realities of the families you serve.

Record Type
Combined Date
2026-04-15T00:00:00
Source
OFA Initiatives
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2026-04-15

Implementing Kin-First Child Welfare Strategies

Record Description

A resource from the Grandfamilies & Kinship Support Network highlights how agencies are prioritizing placement with relatives or trusted caregivers when children cannot remain with their parents. These approaches help maintain family connections, reduce disruptions, and support more stable caregiving arrangements.

TANF programs can support this work by reinforcing care in the home or with relatives, including efforts that help stabilize caregiving arrangements, reduce placement changes, and support caregivers in meeting the day-to-day needs of children. This may also include coordinating with partner systems and aligning services to strengthen family-based care and promote continuity.

Record Type
Combined Date
2026-04-01T00:00:00
Source
OFA Initiatives
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2026-04-01
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)

Supporting America’s Children and Families Act: Opportunities for Tribes Delivering Kinship Support Services

Record Description

The Grandfamilies & Kinship Support Network will host a webinar on December 11, 2025 from 2:00 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. ET to help Tribes who operate kinship support service programs, including kinship navigation programs, know about and understand how they can prepare to take advantage of new resources afforded under the Supporting America’s Children and Families Act. This new law reauthorizes and updates Title IV-B of the Social Security Act, a critical child welfare law that provides funding to Tribes, states, and territories, to create and operate coordinated child and family services programs.

Record Type
Combined Date
2025-12-11T14:00:00
Source
OFA Initiatives
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2025-12-11
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)

A Home for Every Child

Record Description

A Home for Every Child (AHEC) is a national initiative of the Administration for Children and Families focused on ensuring that every child has the opportunity to grow up in a safe, stable, and loving home.

The initiative is designed to address both sides of the child welfare equation by reducing entries into foster care through effective prevention and by increasing the availability of foster and kinship homes through stronger recruitment, kin-first approaches, and improved retention of caregivers.

At its core, A Home for Every Child is about right-sizing the ratio of available homes to children in need so that there are homes waiting on kids, not kids waiting on homes.

This webpage showcases resources that support the priorities within the AHEC initiative.

Record Type
Combined Date
2025-11-24T00:00:00
Source
OFA Initiatives
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2025-11-24
Section/Feed Type
PeerTA Resources (OFA Initiatives)

What Are Some Strategies for Finding and Keeping Resource Families?

Record Description

Research shows that separating children from their families causes lasting trauma. Child protection agencies should exhaust all means to ensure children and families receive essential support to safely remain together. In instances when temporary out-of-home placement is necessary, finding the best possible family-based setting helps to mitigate trauma. Placement preferably should be with kin, but when kinship care is not possible, placing children in a safe family setting with a resource caregiver in their community is essential.

To ensure family-based placements meet the differing needs of children in the child welfare system, child protection agencies should actively recruit and retain resource caregivers from varied backgrounds. This Casey Family Programs brief highlights a menu of strategies for recruitment and retention of resource families, as well as a selection of tools and resources to help develop comprehensive, integrated recruitment and retention plans.

Record Type
Combined Date
2025-09-10T00:00:00
Source
OFA Initiatives
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2025-09-10
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)

HHS Should Help States Address Barriers to Using Federal Funds for Programs Serving Youth Transitioning to Adulthood

Record Description

The transition from adolescence to adulthood is a critical period and can be particularly difficult for youth aging out of foster care. Administered by the Administration for Children and Families (ACF), the John H. Chafee Foster Care Program supports youth in or formerly in foster care as they transition to adulthood. Selected state officials told the U.S. Government Accountability Office that they decide on their service array by using data, participant feedback, and information from other states. These officials also reported offering youth services based on individual skills and needs. The most widely used services in selected states are related to education, health, and housing.

This U.S. Government Accountability Office report addresses: (1) how selected states support youth transitioning from foster care to adulthood, (2) ACF resources for states on effective Chafee services, and (3) the extent that state and federal funds are used to support services for older youth.

Record Type
Combined Date
2025-01-22T00:00:00
Source
OFA Initiatives
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2025-01-22
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)

Keeping Families Together: How TANF Programs Can Provide Concrete Supports to Keep More Children at Home

Record Description

Families that receive Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) cash assistance are often in a state of crisis. They face immediate material needs, and these unmet basic needs put families at an increased risk for investigations in the child welfare system. Addressing unmet material needs among TANF participants, through providing concrete supports, can help prevent child maltreatment and ultimately keep children in their homes.

This tipsheet is intended for state, county, and Tribal TANF leaders who make program-level decisions about the types of resources and services that their programs offer to TANF participants.

Record Type
Combined Date
2025-07-30T00:00:00
Source
OFA Initiatives
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2025-07-30
Section/Feed Type
PeerTA Resources (OFA Initiatives)
Upload Files
Attachment Size
KeepFamiliesTogetherTipsht_508_0.pdf 560.88 KB

Working with Native American Fathers: A Spotlight on Three Ongoing Programs

Record Description

This National Responsible Fatherhood Clearinghouse brief discusses some of the key issues facing American Indian/ Alaska Native (AI/AN) and Indigenous families in the United States, particularly fathers. The brief highlights three programs that are working with AI/AN fathers to strengthen their roles in Native families, includes an overview of each program, and provides a discussion of key takeaways to help other programs better serve AI/AN fathers and their families.

Record Type
Combined Date
2024-01-01T00:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2024-01-01
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)

Healthy Relationships Training

Record Description

The Native Wellness Institute (NWI) is hosting a webinar on December 17 and 18, 2024. It is a two-day program designed for adults who seek to enhance their understanding of healthy relationships, as well as staff and workers who provide healthy relationships education and workshops to community members. During the training, participants will learn about and engage in NWI's Healthy Relationships curriculum that covers the essential elements of healthy relationships, as well as additional topics. There is a fee for participation.

Record Type
Combined Date
2024-12-17T12:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2024-12-18
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)

January 2025 Training Institute

The National Indian Child Welfare Association hosted the January 2025 Training Institute in Arizona. The institute had multiple pathways, including Positive Indian Parenting, Understanding the Indian Child Welfare Act, Cross-Cultural Skills in Indian Country, and Tribal Customary Adoption on the land of the Salt River Pima–Maricopa Indian Community.

Record Type
Posting Date
Combined Date
Sponsor
National Indian Child Welfare Association
Event Date
-