TLP/CFCIP Collaboration: Challenges and Opportunities

A young man studies in a library.Chafee Foster Care Independence Programs (CFCIPs) and transitional living programs (TLPs) both help youth move toward self-sufficiency. They work with young people with similar developmental needs. They offer many of the same program components, such as life skills training, counseling, and job readiness training. And they both have limited resources.

Why, then, don’t they work more closely together?

Discrete eligibility requirements may be part of the puzzle. Homeless youth are not eligible for CFCIP services unless they become a part of the foster care system, which is a complicated process and not always in the best interest of the young person involved. Youth in foster care are not eligible for TLP services unless they are discharged from care and find themselves homeless, which, of course, is not the desired path for any young person.

Administrative differences also pose some challenges to the two programs working together. TLPs, typically private, nonprofit organizations that provide shelter care and other services to runaway and homeless youth, have historically considered themselves to be an alternative to the traditional child welfare or juvenile justice systems.

CFCIPs, funded and operated by public departments of child welfare and social services, are subject to the constraints of any local government agency. They sometimes cannot act as quickly because there are many layers in the approval process.

Despite these challenges, there are plenty of opportunities for collaboration. At Volunteers of America in South Dakota, for example, youth in the CFCIP and TLP receive life skills education, employment assistance, and other support services together, in a coordinated effort.

“These young people haven’t necessarily taken the same path, but now they are dealing with somany of the same challenges,” says Stephanie Graeb, independent living program director at Volunteers of America. “It makes a lot of sense to integrate the two programs.”

Here are some ideas: