2000
[DOCID: f:h1300ih.txt]
107th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. R. 1300
To amend part D of title IV of the Social Security Act to provide
grants to States to encourage media campaigns to promote responsible
fatherhood skills, and for other purposes.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
March 29, 2001
Ms. Carson of Indiana (for herself, Ms. Norton, Mr. Jefferson, Mr.
Hastings of Florida, Mr. Hilliard, Ms. Eddie Bernice Johnson of Texas,
Mr. Watt of North Carolina, Mrs. Christensen, Mrs. Jones of Ohio, Mr.
Davis of Illinois, Mr. Meeks of New York, Mr. Clyburn, Mr. Towns, Mr.
Clay, Ms. McKinney, Mr. Bishop, Ms. Brown of Florida, Mr. Owens, Mr.
Thompson of Mississippi, Ms. Jackson-Lee of Texas, Mr. Jackson of
Illinois, Mr. Wynn, Mr. Ford, Mr. Rush, Mr. Fattah, and Ms. Millender-
McDonald) introduced the following bill; which was referred to the
Committee on Ways and Means
_______________________________________________________________________
A BILL
To amend part D of title IV of the Social Security Act to provide
grants to States to encourage media campaigns to promote responsible
fatherhood skills, and for other purposes.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the ``Responsible Fatherhood Act of
2001''.
SEC. 2. FINDINGS.
Congress makes the following findings:
(1) Nearly 25,000,000 children in the United States, or 36
percent of all such children, live apart from their biological
father.
(2) Sixty percent of couples who divorce have at least 1
child.
(3) The number of children living with only a mother
increased from just over 5,000,000 in 1960, to 17,000,000 in
1999, and between 1981 and 1991 the percentage of children
living with only 1 parent increased from 19 percent to 25
percent.
(4) Forty percent of children who live in households
without a father have not seen their father in at least 1 year
and 50 percent of such children have never visited their
father's home.
(5) The most important factor in a child's upbringing is
whether the child is brought up in a loving, healthy,
supportive environment.
(6) Children who live without contact with their biological
father are, in comparison to children who have such contact--
(A) 5 times more likely to live in poverty;
(B) more likely to bring weapons and drugs into the
classroom;
(C) twice as likely to commit crime;
(D) twice as likely to drop out of school;
(E) twice as likely to be abused;
(F) more likely to commit suicide;
(G) more than twice as likely to abuse alcohol or
drugs; and
(H) more likely to become pregnant as teenagers.
(7) Violent criminals are overwhelmingly males who grew up
without fathers.
(8) Between 20 and 30 percent of families in poverty are
headed by women who have suffered domestic violence during the
past year and between 40 and 60 percent of women with children
receiving welfare were abused sometime during their life.
(9) Responsible fatherhood includes active participation in
financial support and child care, as well as the formation and
maintenance of a positive, healthy, and nonviolent relationship
between father and child and a cooperative relationship between
parents.
(10) States should be encouraged to implement programs that
provide support for responsible fatherhood, promote marriage,
and increase the incidence of marriage, and should not be
restricted from implementing such programs.
(11) Fatherhood programs should promote and provide support
services for--
(A) loving and healthy relationships between
parents and children; and
(B) cooperative parenting.
(12) There is a social need to reconnect children and
fathers.
(13) The promotion of responsible fatherhood and
encouragement of married 2-parent families should not--
(A) denigrate the standing or parenting efforts of
single mothers or other caregivers;
(B) lessen the protection of children from abusive
parents; or
(C) compromise the safety or health of the
custodial parent;
but should increase the chance that children will have two
caring parents to help them grow up healthy and secure.
(14) The promotion of responsible fatherhood must always
recognize and promote the values of nonviolence.
(15) For the future of the United States and the future of
our children, Congress, States, and local communities should
assist parents to become more actively involved in their children's
lives.
(16) Child support is an important means by which a parent
can take financial responsibility for a child and emotional
support is an important means by which a parent can take social
responsibility for a child.
SEC. 3. BLOCK GRANTS TO STATES TO ENCOURAGE MEDIA CAMPAIGNS.
(a) In General.--Part D of title IV of the Social Security Act (42
U.S.C. 651 et seq.) is amended by adding at the end the following:
``SEC. 469C. BLOCK GRANTS TO STATES FOR MEDIA CAMPAIGNS PROMOTING
RESPONSIBLE FATHERHOOD.
``(a) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) Broadcast advertisement.--The term `broadcast
advertisement' means a communication intended to be aired by a
television or radio broadcast station, including a
communication intended to be transmitted through a cable
channel.
``(2) Child at risk.--The term `child at risk' means each
young child whose family income does not exceed the poverty
line.
``(3) Poverty line.--The term `poverty line' has the
meaning given such term in section 673(2) of the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1981 (including any revision required by
such section) that is applicable to a family of the size
involved.
``(4) Printed or other advertisement.--The term `printed or
other advertisement' includes any communication intended to be
distributed through a newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising
facility, mailing, or any other type of general public
advertising, but does not include any broadcast advertisement.
``(5) State.--The term `State' means each of the 50 States,
the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the
United States Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands.
``(6) Young child.--The term `young child' means an
individual under age 5.
``(b) State Certifications.--Not later than October 1 of each of
fiscal year for which a State desires to receive an allotment under
this section, the chief executive officer of the State shall submit to
the Secretary a certification that the State will--
``(1) use such funds to promote the formation and
maintenance of married 2-parent families, strengthen fragile
families, and promote responsible fatherhood through media
campaigns conducted in accordance with the requirements of
subsection (d);
``(2) return any unused funds to the Secreta
2000
ry in
accordance with the reconciliation process under subsection
(e); and
``(3) comply with the reporting requirements under
subsection (f).
``(c) Payments to States.--For each of fiscal years 2002 through
2006, the Secretary shall pay to each State that submits a
certification under subsection (b), from any funds appropriated under
subsection (h), for the fiscal year an amount equal to the amount of
the allotment determined for the fiscal year under subsection (g).
``(d) Establishment of Media Campaigns.--Each State receiving an
allotment under this section for a fiscal year shall use the allotment
to conduct media campaigns as follows:
``(1) Conduct of media campaigns.--
``(A) Radio and television media campaigns.--
``(i) Production of broadcast
advertisements.--At the option of the State, to
produce broadcast advertisements that promote
the formation and maintenance of married 2-
parent families, strengthen fragile families,
and promote responsible fatherhood.
``(ii) Air-time challenge program.--At the
option of the State, to establish an air-time
challenge program under which the State may
spend amounts allotted under this section to
purchase time from a broadcast station to air a
broadcast advertisement produced under
subparagraph (A), but only if the State obtains
an amount of time of the same class and during
a comparable period to air the advertisement
using non-Federal contributions.
``(B) Other media campaigns.--At the option of the
state, to conduct a media campaign that consists of the
production and distribution of printed or other
advertisements that promote the formation and
maintenance of married 2-parent families, strengthen
fragile families, and promote responsible fatherhood.
``(2) Administration of media campaigns.--A State may
administer media campaigns funded under this section directly
or through grants, contracts, or cooperative agreements with
public agencies, local governments, or private entities,
including charitable and religious organizations.
``(3) Consultation with domestic violence assistance
centers.--In developing broadcast and printed advertisements to
be used in the media campaigns conducted under paragraph (1),
the State or other entity administering the campaign shall
consult with representatives of State and local domestic
violence centers.
``(4) Non-federal contributions.--In this subsection, the
term `non-Federal contributions' includes contributions by the
State and by public and private entities. Such contributions
may be in cash or in kind. Such term does not include any
amounts provided by the Federal Government, or services
assisted or subsidized to any significant extent by the Federal
Government, or any amount expended by a State before October 1,
2002.
``(e) Reconciliation Process.--
``(1) 3-year availability of amounts allotted.--Each State
that receives an allotment under this section shall return to
the Secretary any unused portion of the amount allotted to a State
under this section for a fiscal year not later than the last day of the
second succeeding fiscal year together with any earnings on such unused
portion.
``(2) Procedure for redistribution of unused allotments.--
The Secretary shall establish an appropriate procedure for
redistributing to States that have expended the entire amount
allotted under this section any amount that is--
``(A) returned to the Secretary by States under
paragraph (1); or
``(B) not allotted to a State under this section
because the State did not submit a certification under
subsection (b) by October 1 of a fiscal year.
``(f) Reporting Requirements.--
``(1) Monitoring and evaluation.--Each State receiving an
allotment under this section for a fiscal year shall monitor
and evaluate the media campaigns conducted using funds made
available under this section in such manner as the Secretary,
in consultation with the States, determines appropriate.
``(2) Annual reports.--Not less frequently than annually,
each State receiving an allotment under this section for a
fiscal year shall submit to the Secretary reports on the media
campaigns conducted under this section at such time, in such
manner, and containing such information as the Secretary may
require.
``(g) Amount of Allotments.--
``(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), of
the amount appropriated for the purpose of making allotments
under this section for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall allot
to each State that submits a certification under subsection (b)
for the fiscal year an amount equal to the sum of--
``(A) the amount that bears the same ratio to 50
percent of such funds as the number of young children
in the State (as determined by the Secretary based on
the most recent March supplement to the Current
Population Survey of the Bureau of the Census before
the beginning of the calendar year in which such fiscal
year begins) as bears to the number of such children in
all States; and
``(B) the amount that bears the same ratio to 50
percent of such funds as the number of children at risk
in the State (as determined by the Secretary based on
the most recent March supplement to the Current
Population Survey of the Bureau of the Census before
the beginning of the calendar year in which such fiscal
year begins) bears to the number of such children in
all States.
``(2) Minimum allotments.--No allotment for a fiscal year
under this section shall be less than--
``(A) in the case of a State other than the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin
Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of
the Northern Mariana Islands, 1 percent of the amount
appropriated for the fiscal year under subsection (h);
and
``(B) in the case of the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico, the United States Virgin Islands, Guam, American
Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
Islands, 0.5 percent of such amount.
``(3) Pro rata reductions.--The Secretary shall make such
pro rata reductions to the allotments determined under
paragraph (1) as are necessary to comply with the requirements
of paragraph (2).
``(h) Authorization of Appropriations.--There is authorized to be
appropriated $25,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2002 through 2006 for
purposes of making allotments to States under this section.''.
(b) Evaluation.--
(1) In general.--The Secretary of Health and Human Services
shall conduct an evaluation of the impact of the media
campaigns funded under section 469C of the Social Security Act,
as added by subsection (a).
(2) Report.--Not later than December 31
2000
, 2004, the
Secretary of Health and Human Services shall report to Congress
the results of the evaluation under paragraph (1).
(3) Authorization of appropriations.--There is authorized
to be appropriated $1,000,000 for fiscal year 2002 for purposes
of conducting the evaluation required under this subsection, to
remain available until expended.
SEC. 4. RESPONSIBLE FATHERHOOD BLOCK GRANT.
(a) In General.--Part D of title IV of the Social Security Act (42
U.S.C. 651 et seq.), as amended by section 3, is amended by adding at
the end the following:
``SEC. 469D. RESPONSIBLE FATHERHOOD BLOCK GRANT.
``(a) Definitions.--In this section:
``(1) Child at risk.--The term `child at risk' has the
meaning given such term in section 469C(a)(2).
``(2) Poverty line.--The term `poverty line' has the
meaning given such term in section 469C(a)(3).
``(3) State.--The term `State' has the meaning given such
term in section 469C(a)(5).
``(4) Young child.--The term `young child' has the meaning
given such term in section 469C(a)(6).
``(b) State Certifications.--Not later than October 1 of each of
fiscal year for which a State desires to receive an allotment under
this section, the chief executive officer of the State shall submit to
the Secretary a certification that the State will--
``(1) comply with the matching requirements under
subsection (c)(2);
``(2) use such funds to promote responsible fatherhood in
accordance with the requirements of subsection (d);
``(3) use such funds to promote or sustain marriage in
accordance with subparagraph (A) or (B) of subsection (d)(2);
``(4) return any unused funds to the Secretary in
accordance with the reconciliation process under subsection
(e); and
``(5) comply with the reporting requirements under
subsection (f).
``(c) Payments to States.--
``(1) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), for each of
fiscal years 2002 through 2006, the Secretary shall pay to each
State that submits a certification described in subsection (b),
from any funds appropriated under subsection (h), for the
fiscal year an amount equal to the amount of the allotment
determined under subsection (g).
``(2) Matching requirement.--The Secretary may not make a
payment to a State under paragraph (1) unless the State agrees
that, with respect to the costs to be incurred by the State in
supporting the programs described in subsection (d), the State
will make available non-Federal contributions in an amount
equal to 25 percent of the amount of Federal funds paid to the
State under such clause.
``(3) Non-federal contributions.--In this subsection, the
term `non-Federal contributions' includes contributions by the
State and by public and private entities. Such contributions
may be in cash or in kind. Such term does not include any
amounts provided by the Federal Government, or services
assisted or subsidized to any significant extent by the Federal
Government or any amount expended by a State before October 1,
2002.
``(d) Responsible Fatherhood Programs.--
``(1) Support of programs.--A State shall use the
allotments received under this section to support programs
described in paragraph (2) directly or through a grant,
contract, or cooperative agreement with any public agency,
local government, or private entity (including any charitable
or religious organization) with experience in administering
such a program.
``(2) Programs described.--Responsible Fatherhood programs
include programs that--
``(A) promote marriage through such activities as
counseling, mentoring, disseminating information about
the benefits of marriage and 2-parent involvement for
children, enhancing relationship skills, teaching on
how to control aggressive behavior, and disseminating
information on the causes of domestic violence and
child abuse;
``(B) sustain marriages through marriage
preparation programs, premarital counseling, marital
inventories, skills-based marriage education, financial
planning seminars, and divorce education and reduction
programs, including mediation and counseling;
``(C) promote responsible parenting through such
activities as counseling, mentoring, disseminating
information about good parenting practices, skills-
based parenting education, encouraging child support
payments, and other methods; and
``(D) help fathers and their families avoid or
leave cash welfare and improve their economic status by
providing such activities as work first services, job
search, job training, subsidized employment, job
retention, job enhancement, and encouraging education,
including career-advancing education, dissemination of
employment materials, coordination with existing
employment services such as Welfare to Work and
referrals to local employment training initiatives, and
other methods.
``(3) Targeted low-income participants.--Not less than 50
percent of the participants in each program supported under
paragraph (1) shall be--
``(A) parents of a child who is, or within the past
24 months has been, a recipient of assistance or
services under a State program funded under this part;
or
``(B) parents, including an expectant parent or a
married parent, whose income (after adjustment for
court-ordered child support paid or received) does not
exceed 150 percent of the poverty line.
``(4) Consultation with domestic violence assistance
centers.--Each State or entity administering a program
supported under paragraph (1) shall consult with
representatives of State and local domestic violence centers.
``(5) Supplement not supplant.--Amounts allotted to a State
under this section shall be used to supplement and not supplant
other Federal, State, or local funds provided to the State
under this part or any other provision of law that are used to
support programs and activities similar to the a responsible
fatherhood program described in paragraph (2).
``(6) Restrictions on use.--No amount allotted under this
section may be used for court proceedings on matters of child
visitation or child custody, or for legislative advocacy.
``(e) Reconciliation Process.--
``(1) 3-year availability of amounts allotted.--Each State
that receives an allotment under this section shall return to
the Secretary any unused portion of the amount allotted to a
State under this section for a fiscal year not later than the
last day of the second succeeding fiscal year, together with
any earnings on such unused portion.
``(2) Procedure for redistribution of unused allotments.--
The Secretary shall establish an appropriate procedure for
redistributing to States that have expended the entire amount
allotted under this section any amount that is--
``(A) returned to the Secretary by States under
paragraph (1); or
``(B) not allotted to a State under this secti
2000
on
because the State did not submit a certification under
subsection (b) by October 1 of a fiscal year.
``(f) Reporting Requirements.--
``(1) Monitoring and evaluation.--Each State receiving an
allotment under this section shall monitor and evaluate the
programs supported using funds made available under this
section in such manner as the Secretary, in consultation with
the States, determines appropriate.
``(2) Annual reports.--Not less frequently than annually,
each State receiving an allotment under this section for a
fiscal year shall submit to the Secretary reports on the
programs supported under this section at such time, in such
manner, and containing such information as the Secretary may
reasonably require.
``(g) Amount of Allotments.--
``(1) In general.--Except as provided in paragraph (2), of
the amount appropriated for the purpose of making allotments
under this section for a fiscal year the Secretary shall allot
to each State that submits a certification under subsection (b)
for that fiscal year an amount equal to the sum of--
``(A) the amount that bears the same ratio to 50
percent of such funds as the number of young children
in the State (as determined by the Secretary based on
the most recent March supplement to the Current
Population Survey of the Bureau of the Census before
the beginning of the calendar year in which such fiscal
year begins) as bears to the number of such children in
all States; and
``(B) the amount that bears the same ratio to 50
percent of such funds as the number of children at risk
in the State (as determined by the Secretary based on
the most recent March supplement to the Current
Population Survey of the Bureau of the Census before
the beginning of the calendar year in which such fiscal
year begins) bears to the number of such children in
all States.
``(2) Minimum allotments.--No allotment for a fiscal year
under this section shall be less than--
``(A) in the case of a State other than the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin
Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of
the Northern Mariana Islands, 1 percent of the amount
appropriated for the fiscal year under subsection (h);
and
``(B) in the case of the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico, the United States Virgin Islands, Guam, American
Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
Islands, 0.5 percent of such amount.
``(3) Pro rata reductions.--The Secretary shall make such
pro rata reductions to the allotments determined under
paragraph (1) as are necessary to comply with the requirements
of paragraph (2).
``(h) Authorization of Appropriations.--There is authorized to be
appropriated $50,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2002 through 2006 for
purposes of making allotments to States under this section.''.
(b) Evaluation and Report.--
(1) Evaluation.--
(A) In general.--The Secretary of Health and Human
Services (in this subsection referred to as the
``Secretary''), in consultation with the Secretary of
Labor, shall, directly or through a grant, contract, or
interagency agreement, conduct an evaluation of the
projects funded under section 469D of the Social
Security Act (as added by subsection (a)).
(B) Outcomes assessment.--The evaluation conducted
under subparagraph (A) shall assess, among other
outcomes selected by the Secretary, effects of the
projects on marriage, parenting, employment, earnings,
payment of child support, and incidence of domestic
violence and child abuse.
(C) Project selection.--In selecting projects for
the evaluation, the Secretary should include projects
that are most likely to further the purposes of this
section.
(D) Random assignment.--In conducting the
evaluation, random assignment should be used wherever
possible.
(2) Report.--Not later than December 31, 2004, the
Secretary shall submit to Congress a report on the results of
the evaluation conducted under paragraph (1).
(3) Authorization of appropriations.--There is authorized
to be appropriated $1,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2002
through 2006 to carry out this subsection.
SEC. 5. NATIONAL CLEARINGHOUSE FOR RESPONSIBLE FATHERHOOD PROGRAMS.
(a) In General.--Part D of title IV of the Social Security Act (42
U.S.C. 651), as amended by section 4, is amended by adding at the end
the following:
``SEC. 469E. MEDIA CAMPAIGN NATIONAL CLEARINGHOUSE FOR RESPONSIBLE
FATHERHOOD.
``(a) Media Campaign and National Clearinghouse.--
``(1) In general.--From any funds appropriated under
subsection (c), the Secretary shall contract with a nationally
recognized, nonprofit fatherhood promotion organization
described in subsection (b) to--
``(A) develop, promote, and distribute to
interested States, local governments, public agencies,
and private entities a media campaign that encourages
the appropriate involvement of both parents in the life
of any child of the parents, with a priority for
programs that specifically address the issue of
responsible fatherhood; and
``(B) develop a national clearinghouse to assist
States and communities in efforts to promote and
support marriage and responsible fatherhood by
collecting, evaluating, and making available (through
the Internet and by other means) to other States
information regarding the media campaigns established
under section 469C.
``(2) Coordination with domestic violence programs.--The
Secretary shall ensure that the nationally recognized nonprofit
fatherhood promotion organization with a contract under
paragraph (1) coordinates the media campaign developed under
subparagraph (A) of such paragraph and the national
clearinghouse developed under subparagraph (B) of such
paragraph with a national, State, or local domestic violence
program.
``(b) Nationally Recognized, Nonprofit Fatherhood Promotion
Organization Described.--The nationally recognized, nonprofit
fatherhood promotion organization described in this subsection is such
an organization that has at least 4 years of experience in--
``(1) designing and disseminating a national public
education campaign, including the production and successful
placement of television, radio, and print public service
announcements that promote the importance of responsible
fatherhood; and
``(2) providing consultation and training to community-
based organizations interested in implementing fatherhood
outreach, support, or skill development programs with an
emphasis on promoting married fatherhood as the ideal.
``(c) Authorization of Appropriations.--There is authorized to be
appropriated $2,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2002 through 2006 to
carry out this section.''.
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