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The Child Care and Development Block Grant Act requires an annual report on whether States use CCDF funding in accordance with provisions related to priority for services. The law requires priority for children of families with very low incomes and children with special needs. CCDF regulations add a priority for services for children who are experiencing homelessness.

There are currently 275 EHS-CC Partnership (EHS-CCP) grantees, which will serve approximately 32,000 infants and toddlers. The continued development of EHS-CC Partnerships is occurring as states implement new provisions of the Child Care and Development Block Grant (CCDBG) Act enacted by the law’s 2014 reauthorization. This most recent reauthorization of the CCDBG Act represents an opportunity for states to enact new policies that align Early Head Start and child care, and support the EHS-CCP goals of improving capacity and quality across programs that serve low-income infants and toddlers and their families in order to enhance child well-being and school readiness outcomes.

This brief—based on interviews with eight Tribal MIECHV grantees—will (1) discuss the importance of cultural enrichments of evidence-based home visiting models; (2) highlight three different approaches Tribal MIECHV grantees have pursued to shape programs to best reflect their communities; and (3) offer guidance for programs that are searching for a way to best fit home visiting within the cultural context of their communities. The brief discusses ways that grantees have approached cultural enrichment in the first 5 years of the Tribal MIECHV program.

ACF-800 Reporting Guide

This report contains information from three areas: Extent to which eligible entities receiving grants under this section demonstrated improvements in each of the areas specified in the legislation, Technical assistance (TA) provided to grantees, including the type of assistance provided and Recommendations for such legislative or administrative action as the Secretary determines appropriate

The state-level aggregate report, or ACF-800, is one of two data collections undertaken by the Office of Child Care (OCC) pursuant to the requirements of the Child Care and Development Block Grant of 2014 (Public Law 113-186).  The other data collection is accomplished through the ACF-801 Report, which requires detailed, case-level data on families served through the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF). All CCDF lead agencies in the States, the District of Columbia, and Territories (including Puerto Rico, American Samoa, Guam, Northern Marianna Islands, and the US Virgin Islands) are responsible for completing the ACF-800. For more information, please see the OCC website.

This document provides an introduction to the Tribal Home Visiting Program

In this brief, authors review select Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) state policies, as of October 1, 2012, that have been, or may be, associated with exits from the subsidy program.

This summary provides cumulative information obtained from state ACF-696 financial reports submitted for the Fiscal Year (FY) 2011 CCDF appropriation showing cumulative expenditures through September 30, 2012.

This summary provides cumulative information obtained from state ACF-696 financial reports submitted for the Fiscal Year (FY) 2010 CCDF appropriation showing cumulative expenditures through September 30, 2012.