Pre-Service Training
Prospective foster and adoptive parents (including kin who want to be verified foster parents) are trained using the 19-hour Texas adaptation of the National Training and Development Curriculum for Foster and Adoptive Parents (NTDC) training program. In addition to NTDC, prospective foster and adoptive parents may be required to complete the following topics as a part of their pre-service training: Psychotropic Medication, Certification in First Aid and Infant/Child/Adult CPR, Medical Consent, Preventing and Recognizing Sexual Abuse and Victimization of Youth in Foster Care, and AS+K? online training for suicide intervention and prevention.
A shortened training program was developed for kinship families who are considered adoption-only and are not becoming verified as a foster home. Relatives may also have access to NTDC modules designed specifically for kinship families, but they are not required.
Services Offered Through the State’s Post-Permanency Support Program
Post-adoption services in Texas are provided statewide through contracts with three providers serving particular regions in the state: Centers for Children and Families, CK Family Services, and Arms Wide Adoption Services. Families who took permanent managing conservatorship of children from the state’s foster care system are eligible for services only in the regions served by Arms Wide.
Services include:
For more information, visit https://www.dfps.texas.gov/Child_Protection/Adoption/adoption_support.asp
Geographic Area Covered
The state contracts with three providers to offer services statewide. Services vary slightly by provider.
Eligible Population for the Overall Post-Permanency Program
Variations in Eligibility for the Post-Permanency Program
Post-permanency conservatorship families are eligible for services only in regions 6 and 11 as part of a pilot that began in 2017.
Financial supports are available in regions 6 and 11 only, as a pilot project. Post-permanency conservatorship families are not eligible for financial support for residential treatment.
All types of adoptive and guardianship families can receive information and referral services.
Accessibility
There are English/Spanish bilingual staff serving families in the Houston area and in the South Texas area.
Outreach and Engagement
The Texas Adoptive Placement Agreement provides adoptive families with information about post-adoption services and the providers across the state. It also gives adoptive families an opportunity to consent to the release of their contact information to the post-adoption services provider in their area, for outreach and engagement. Caseworkers also inform the families about service availability prior to finalization by providing a brochure. When the subsidy is being negotiated, the negotiator also informs the family of service availability. When a family is recertified every five years for adoption or permanency care assistance, the recertification letter includes a reminder about services and guides the family to a website.
How the Post-Permanency Program Is Operated
Notes About Who Provides Which Service(s)
Texas contracts with three agencies to provide post-permanency services, with each agency serving different areas:
- CK Family Services — Dallas/Ft. Worth and Arlington areas (region 3)
- Arms Wide Adoption Services — Houston, Corpus Christi, and Edinburg areas (regions 6 and 11)
- Centers for Children and Families — Beaumont, Lufkin, Lubbock, Abilene, Tyler, Austin, San Antonio, Midland/Odessa, and El Paso areas (regions 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9 and 10)
Adoption/Guardianship Assistance/Subsidy Review and Changes
The state is required to review adoptive families’ and subsidized conservators’ continued eligibility for adoption or permanency care assistance at least every five years as long as the child is under the age of 18. Adoptive families and conservators are contacted via mail for up to three attempts—the third through certified letter. When the regional adoption assistance eligibility specialist does not hear from the adoptive parent or conservator after the third attempt, the state may—on a case-by-case basis—suspend the assistance payments and Medicaid and research the case to see if the child is still in the home or if the adoptive parent or conservator is still supporting the child.
An adoptive family can request a subsidy after an adoption has been finalized, provided it is determined that the child has a special need that pre-existed the finalization of the adoption. This option is not available for conservators.
Tracking Adoption/Guardianship Discontinuity
DFPS tracks adoption dissolutions that happen within 12 months of finalization.
Post-Permanency Program Spending (FY 2023)
Funding Sources for the Post-Permanency Program (FY 2023)
- Title IV-E funds (including Prevention Services Grant Program/PSGP or IV-E training dollars)
- State funds