Homeless Shelters
March
30, 1999
Participation of Emergency Shelters Serving Homeless Children
(CACFP #6-99, SFSP #21-99)
Regional Directors
Child Nutrition Programs
All Regions
Several provisions of the Child Nutrition Reauthorization of 1998
(Public Law 105-336) affect the administration of benefits to homeless
children. This memorandum provides guidance for State agencies to use
regarding the participation of emergency shelters which serve homeless
children and their families in the Child and Adult Care Food Program
(CACFP) and the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP). We intend to publish
regulations to implement these provisions as soon as possible. This
memorandum will remain in effect until superseded by regulation or future
memoranda.
PUBLIC
LAW 105-336 AMENDMENTS AFFECTING BENEFITS TO HOMELESS CHILDREN
Both Congress and this administration have made it a priority to
improve the access homeless people have to mainstream programs, rather
than creating a separate support system of programs and services. Public
Law 105-336 works toward that goal by providing homeless children residing
in emergency shelters with year-round access to nutritious meals and
snacks under CACFP, effective July 1, 1999. Section 107(j) amended the
National School Lunch Act (NSLA) in several significant ways. The law:
- expanded the definition of an eligible CACFP institution in section
17(a) of the NSLA (42 U.S.C. 1766(a)) to include emergency shelters;
- added a new paragraph (t), "Participation of emergency
shelters," to section 17 of the NSLA (42 U.S.C. 1755(t)), which
sets forth requirements on eligibility, meal service, and
reimbursement, for emergency shelters to participate in CACFP;
- removed section 17B from the NSLA (42 U.S.C. 1766(b)), thereby
repealing authorization for the Homeless Children Nutrition Program (HCNP); and
- removed homeless shelters as a separate category of food service
site which is eligible to participate in SFSP in section 13(a)(3)(C)
of the NSLA (42 U.S.C. 1761(a)(3)(C)).
Institutions which support homeless children in temporary residential
settings, including those which currently participate in HCNP or SFSP, may
now apply to participate in CACFP under the provisions of section 17(t) of
the NSLA.
PARTICIPATION OF EMERGENCY SHELTERS IN CACFP
Although the mission and the characteristics of emergency shelters
differ from those of other child care institutions and facilities
participating in CACFP, the structure and goals of their non-profit food
service programs are fundamentally the same. Nevertheless, there are
important administrative questions affecting the participation of eligible
emergency shelters in CACFP which we need to address.
Eligible Institutions and Facilities - Public Law 105-336
designated emergency shelters and sites operated by shelters as
institutions and facilities eligible to participate in CACFP under section
17(t)(1) of the NSLA (42 U.S.C. 1766(t)(1)). The law adopted the
definition of "emergency shelter" that is used in targeted
homeless assistance programs created under section 321 of the Stewart B.
McKinney Homeless Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 112351). Section 321 defines
an emergency shelter as "a facility all or a part of which is used or
designed to be used to provide temporary housing." Participation of
emergency shelters in HCNP was also based on this definition.
We recognize that most emergency shelters are charitable organizations
that define their mission as helping all needy persons. The Bureau of the
Census estimates that there are more than 6,000 emergency shelters
nationwide; at least 70 percent of them serve individual adult clients.
However, the intent of Public Law 105-336 is to support at-risk children
in temporary residential settings. Based on our experience with HCNP and
SFSP, we believe that section 17(t) of the NSLA targets family shelters,
shelters for battered women, and other facilities whose primary purpose is
to provide temporary shelter to homeless families with children, to
participate in CACFP.
Therefore, an emergency shelter providing temporary residence to
children and their parents or guardians, or a temporary residential site
for children and their parents or guardians sponsored by an emergency
shelter, is eligible to participate in CACFP under the provisions of
section 17(t). The shelter may be a public or private nonprofit
institution that provides support to at-risk children and their families.
Residential Child Care Institutions (RCCI) - A temporary shelter
for abused and runaway children is one type of RCCI included in the
definition of "school," in section 210.2 of the National School
Lunch Program, and is therefore eligible for benefits through the school
meals programs. Unlike family shelters, an RCCI may serve homeless
children who reside there without their parents or guardians. An emergency
shelter that serves only children will continue to be eligible as an RCCI
and claim reimbursement for breakfasts and lunches served to children up
to age 21 through the school nutrition programs.
Licensing and Approval Requirements - To participate in CACFP,
an emergency shelter does not have to offer formal child care as
recognized by a licensing authority. Unlike child care centers or family
day care homes, there is no Federal requirement for emergency shelters
operating under this provision to have either Federal, State, or local
licensing or approval as a condition of eligibility (per section 17(t)(3)
of the NSLA (42 U.S.C. 1766(t)(3))). Although shelters do not have to meet
child care licensing standards to participate in CACFP, they must comply
with all applicable State or local health and safety standards (per
section 17(t)(4) of the NSLA (42 U.S.C. 1766(t)(4)). The shelter must have
the appropriate inspections or permits to certify that proper health,
sanitation, fire, and safety codes are met at all times.
Eligible Children - CACFP is primarily targeted to serving
children in nonresidential settings. Unlike other institutions
participating in CACFP, emergency shelters approved under the provisions
of section 17(t) of the NSLA must serve residential children. Section
17(t)(5)(A)(i) of the NSLA (42 U.S.C. 1766(t)(5)(A)(i)) specifies that
reimbursement may be claimed "…only for a meal or supplement served
to children residing in an emergency shelter…."
Although some emergency shelters provide meals to non-homeless children
and their families, it is clearly the intent of Congress to support
at-risk children who temporarily reside in the facility where they receive
their meals. Therefore, meals and snacks served to visiting children who
are not residents of the shelter may not be claimed for reimbursement.
This provision highlights an important difference with HCNP and SFSP where
participants could claim reimbursement for meals and snacks served to
children, regardless of whether every child served was a resident of the
participating shelter. Under section 17(t), shelters will have to
differentiate between residential children and children who are served
meals as "walk-ins."
Reimbursable meals and snacks may be served to residential children 12
years of age and younger. Migrant children age 15 and younger and children
with disabilities, regardless of their age, may also receive CACFP meals
and snacks at the emergency shelters where they reside.
Reimbursement - As in HCNP and SFSP, residential children who
participate in the shelter's food service will be automatically eligible
for free meals and snacks, without further application. Although a shelter
may collect cash, food stamps, or other in-kind payments from some
residents for their meal services, it may not charge or collect payments
for CACFP meals and snacks served to eligible children.
Emergency shelters may be approved to serve up to three reimbursable
meals—breakfast, lunch, and supper—or two meals and one snack, to each
child, each day, on weekdays and weekends.
The maximum payment rates are based on the numbers of meals and snacks
served at the free rate in day care centers. Unlike participation in HCNP,
claims for reimbursement will be processed by the CACFP administering
agency which takes the agreement with the shelter.
Meals which are consumed in private family quarters in an emergency
shelter are not reimbursable. Generally, only meals served in congregate
meal settings are eligible for reimbursement. An exception may be made for
meals served in private family quarters that are part of an emergency
shelter to infants from birth through age 11 months. Those meals may be
claimed for reimbursement if the shelter provides all of the required
components to the infant’s parent or guardian, and maintains records
documenting that sufficient food has been served to meet the meal pattern
requirements.
Applications - An emergency shelter may participate in CACFP as
an independent shelter or as a sponsoring organization of one or more
participating emergency shelters. The shelter must submit an application
to the CACFP administering agency to participate in the program. The
application would include an administrative budget, information about the
numbers of children served, and statements regarding the shelter’s
options for receiving commodities and advance payments. The shelter must
document in its application that its primary purpose is to temporarily
house and provide meals to children and their parents or guardians. The
application must also include a description of how the shelter will ensure
that reimbursement is claimed only for meals served to eligible children
who reside there.
There is no limit on the number of facilities or children that an
eligible emergency shelter may be approved to serve. A shelter that
sponsors one or more facilities must complete a management plan, provide
information describing each of its proposed facilities, and fulfill all of
the other requirements of a sponsoring organization applying to
participate in CACFP.
An emergency shelter may also participate in CACFP as a facility under
an existing CACFP sponsoring organization that is a separate entity from
the shelter. In this case, the sponsoring organization would follow
standard CACFP procedures for adding a new facility to its agreement with
the CACFP administering agency. The shelter would participate under the
provisions of section 17(t)(1) of the NSLA (42 U.S.C. 1766(t)(1)).
Reporting and Recordkeeping - Meals and snacks will be included
in the child care center portion of the FNS-44, Report of the Child and
Adult Care Food Program. The number of participating emergency
shelters and the average daily attendance will be reported quarterly on
the FNS-44. A revised form will be available to permit reporting of those
data. Draft copies of the proposed FNS-44 were sent to regional offices on
February 26, 1999.
The State agency will prescribe meal counting and recordkeeping systems
for meals served to eligible children and infants. As with all CACFP
institutions, shelters must keep records that are adequate to determine
the nonprofit status of the food service and proper utilization of CACFP
funds. At a minimum, the State agency's procedures should include
requirements that the shelter maintain a daily roster of children
receiving meals, total meal counts by type; and menus for infant meals and
meals served to children.
Commodities - An approved shelter may receive CACFP
reimbursement and commodities or cash-in-lieu of commodities for meals
served to eligible children. A shelter may continue to receive and use
commodity foods from The Emergency Food Assistance Program for the meals
it serves to adults and children who are not eligible for CACFP, provided
that its records are sufficient to establish the shelter’s allotments of
commodities under each program.
Miscellaneous - CACFP institutions may not claim a program meal
under more than one Federal program. However, an institution may use other
funding sources to supplement the CACFP reimbursement for the same meal.
Providers of meals to homeless children often serve a diverse clientele
that include homeless and non-homeless adults and children. In those
situations where a shelter’s total food service is not conducted
exclusively for the benefit of eligible residential children, the shelter
must keep separate records of the meals it serves. Meals served to
non-eligible adults and children are not reimbursable.
1999 TRANSITION TO CACFP
Emergency shelters participating in HCNP and sponsors of homeless sites
in SFSP may be reimbursed for meals and snacks served to eligible children
through those programs, through June 30, 1999. Under the provisions of
Public Law 105-336, most of them will apply to participate in CACFP to
continue receiving meal benefits for resident children after that date.
Delaying implementation until July 1999, has posed a number of
administrative challenges for administering agencies. The status of the 85
sponsors currently receiving HCNP benefits and of SFSP sponsors of
homeless sites (23 in the 1998 SFSP) must also be addressed.
Emergency Shelters in HCNP - Current participants in HCNP were
alerted to the changes in the status of the program shortly after the law
was enacted. As follow-up, the Child Nutrition Division, which administers
HCNP, will formally notify those shelters that their final day of
participation in HCNP is June 30, 1999, and that they will be eligible to
participate in CACFP as of July 1, 1999. We will advise HCNP participants
that to be eligible to receive uninterrupted meal service benefits, they
should contact the appropriate CACFP administering agency in the States
where they operate and complete their application requirements as early as
possible.
Sponsors of Homeless Sites in SFSP - During the SFSP application
process, State agencies should notify sponsors of homeless sites that
effective July 1, 1999, emergency shelters are eligible to participate in
CACFP. Sponsors that are interested in beginning CACFP program operations
on July 1, 1999, should be encouraged to complete their applications with
the appropriate State agency as early as possible.
PARTICIPATION OF EMERGENCY SHELTERS IN SFSP
If an emergency shelter wants to participate in SFSP past June 30,
1999, then it must establish its eligibility as an open site, an enrolled
site, or a camp. We recommend that approval to participate in SFSP be
based on one of those three eligibility determinations at the time of
application for summer 1999.
Shelters that are located in areas which meet the area eligibility
requirements for SFSP and which open their food service to non-residents
as well as residents may qualify to participate in SFSP as area eligible
sites. If the shelter applies to participate as an enrolled site,
individual free and reduced price applications from parents or guardians
will not be required. A list of children, certified by the shelter’s
director, is sufficient to document the eligibility of children who are
residents of emergency shelters. The list must include each child's name,
age, and beginning and ending dates (if applicable) of residence in the
shelter, and the signature of the determining official.
An emergency shelter which also elects to participate in the CACFP
would be subject to the provisions of FNS Instruction 782-4, Approval
of Child Care Institutions for the Summer Food Service Program. This
instruction states that a CACFP institution that meets SFSP eligibility
criteria and develops a separate food service program for children who are
not enrolled in CACFP may be approved to participate in SFSP. CACFP
institutions which do not substantially change their program activities or
significantly increase their program enrollment during periods which
school is not in session may not be approved to participate in SFSP.
An institution which is approved to claim reimbursement under both the
CACFP and the SFSP must ensure that the same children are not served meals
in both programs. The institution must also ensure that it keeps separate
records to justify all costs and meals claimed for CACFP and for SFSP.
SUMMARY
Section 107(j) of Public Law 105-336 encourages emergency shelters to
participate in CACFP. This memorandum addresses the questions you have
raised about the participation of emergency shelters in CACFP and SFSP and
ensuring that these benefits reach eligible children. Please share this
information with your State agencies. If you have any questions concerning
any of the issues addressed in this memorandum, please contact Melissa
Rothstein or Susan Ponemon.
STANLEY C. GARNETT
Director
Child Nutrition Division
Back to the Top
|