Independent Living Funds
Independent Living Funds are available through the Office of Children's Services for young people who need services to prepare for the transition from foster care to self-sufficiency. Independent Living Funds are available to youth in state foster care and to young people no longer in custody who reach or have reached the age of 16 1/2 or older while in state foster care and have not yet reached the age of 21 . |
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Independent Living Funds can be used to help young people gain the skills, experience, and materials they will need to become self-sufficient adults.
Are There Any Special Conditions?
For Youth In Foster Care: Any youth in out of home care age
16 1/2 or over is eligible. It does not matter whether they are
in residential care, in a foster home, or in an unlicensed relative
placement.
For Young People No-Longer In Custody: Any young person
who has reached the age of 16 1/2 or older while in state foster
care and has not yet reached the age of 21 is eligible. This
includes young people who have been adopted, entered into guardianship,
or have returned home after turning 16 1/2.
Are there special conditions?
There are two conditions for funding for youth in OCS custody:- The request must be consistent with the child's case plan
- Youth in custody must have completed the Ansell-Casey Life Skills Assessment (ACLSA) and the results must be in the case file
What can the funds be used for?
Daily Living Training
- elementary cooking and cleaning skills
- time management
- training in budgeting and financial management skills
- assistance in developing and managing a budget
- personal hygiene skills
- substance abuse prevention
- preventative health activities (including smoking avoidance, nutritional education, and pregnancy prevention)
Social Development Training
Work and Study Training
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- vocational and trade schools
- apprenticeships
- associate degrees
- college courses
- travel for post secondary education opportunities
- Supplies (household furnishings, cooking, cleaning)
- Textbooks
- Day-planners
Contact the Regional Independent Living Specialist in your area.
Anything else I should know?
Funding for this program is limited. Many independent living services are offered at free or reduced rates for special populations through other government programs and through private and non-profit agencies. You will need to demonstrate that efforts have been made to secure funding from other resources. Be creative!
Ten things you can do to help a youth transition from foster care to independence:
- Help a young person get things that they will need when they leave home, like pots, pans, a bed, an alarm clock, etc
- Provide travel for a foster youth to attend a cultural ceremony in their home village
- Enroll the young person in a Life Skills Correspondence Course. (Contact the Independent Living Program Coordinator for more information)
- Help a foster child enroll in a vocational training program
- Pay for classes to help a foster child quit smoking
- Pay for travel expenses for a foster child to attend job training
- Provide travel to colleges the young person is considering attending
- Enroll the foster child in a money management class
- Pay for a tutor
- Pay for Native Alaskan carving classes
Contact the Independent Living Coordinator: (907) 465-8659


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