California 2021-2022 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB2517 Compare Versions

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1-Enrolled September 01, 2022 Passed IN Senate August 29, 2022 Passed IN Assembly August 30, 2022 Amended IN Senate August 25, 2022 Amended IN Senate August 11, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 22, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 13, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 19, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2517Introduced by Assembly Member Mia Bonta(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Reyes)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Levine, Quirk, Stone, and Blanca Rubio)(Coauthor: Senator Hurtado)February 17, 2022An act to add Division 11 (commencing with Section 20000) to the Welfare and Institutions Code, relating to poverty.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2517, Mia Bonta. California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program.Existing law requires the Department of Community Services and Development to, among other things, plan and evaluate strategies for overcoming poverty in the state, mobilize resources in support of antipoverty and community services programs, and administer public and private funds designed to support antipoverty programs that are not currently administered by other departments.Existing law establishes the Cradle-to-Career Data System for the purpose of connecting individuals and organizations to trusted information and resources, as a source for actionable data and research on education, economic, and health outcomes for individuals, families, and communities, and to provide for expanded access to tools and services that support the education-to-employment pipeline, as specified.This bill, the It Takes a Village Act of 2022, subject upon an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for these purposes, would establish the California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program to be administered by the State Department of Social Services or another department within the California Health and Human Services Agency. The bill would require the department to grant awards on a competitive basis to eligible entities that are Promise Neighborhoods, other community-based networks, or multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks, as those terms are defined, to either implement a comprehensive, integrated continuum of cradle-to-career solutions at the neighborhood level or support the civic infrastructure and backbone of cradle-to-career networks that support their network partners to accomplish systems change. The bill would define cradle-to-career to mean a system of integrated services that begins before birth and leads to appropriate postsecondary success, including academic, occupational, and independent living, that benefits the individual and community as a whole. The bill would require the department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, to develop an application process and would require the department to establish performance standards to measure progress on indicators and results relevant to the evaluation of the grant program. The bill would require grant recipients to contribute matching funds and prepare and submit an annual report to the department, as specified.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) It takes a village to raise a child. Applying that simple proverb and concept to Californias multifaceted society today means making sure that children and families, especially those in economically disadvantaged communities, have full access to opportunities and services from before birth to career that will enable them to reach their full potential in life.(b) Despite large statewide investments in education, health, social services, and other programs directed at children and their families, California faces persistently high rates of child poverty and educational achievement gaps in many economically disadvantaged communities. Cash payments, food assistance, and crucial services do not reach many children and families who are most in need because of significant access barriers that are often due to inequitable systemic barriers, and when provided, the services are fragmented and offered through organizationally siloed programs without attention to improving those equitable systems.(c) A proven solution to this problem, and the way to apply the it takes a village proverb and concept in todays world, is to invest in local and regional networks that: are equity focused; are data-driven and have the capacity to identify the highest needs within the most economically disadvantaged neighborhoods or regions; have the resources and trusted relationships within the communities to align, coordinate, leverage, and enhance services provided by state and local government, community-based organizations, nonprofits, businesses, and other entities active in the local community toward equitable outcomes; and identify systems needs, work with partners to address systemic needs, and measure systemic improvements.(d) Coordination of services needs to take place at both the neighborhood and regionwide levels to effectively align community services and systems with statewide policy and equity goals and implementation.(e) Promise Neighborhoods (PNs) and other neighborhood-based networks currently fulfill this function in selected economically disadvantaged neighborhoods by coordinating services provided by governments and private sector partners, and by providing direct services to the public. Regional cradle-to-career networks, such as StriveTogether, support multiple populations in selected regions, such as counties, in California by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale.(f) Both neighborhood-based and regional-based networks have achieved positive results and very high returns on investment in areas where they have operated. For PNs, this includes substantial improvements in health care access, kindergarten readiness, English language arts and literacy and mathematics achievement results, high school graduation rates, college and career readiness, reduced child welfare and juvenile justice involvement, and increased family stability in areas served by these programs. For StriveTogether and other regional cross-sector networks, this includes reductions in achievement gaps and improvements in a wide range of measures, such as preterm birth rates, early childcare quality or attendance, early grade reading, middle grade math, high school graduation rates, and postsecondary completion.(g) During the COVID-19 pandemic, community and regional networks were able to leverage their established infrastructure of cradle-to-career connections to confront issues created by the pandemic, meeting the basic needs of families, including food, housing, income relief, eviction defense, technology access, childcare, and vaccine outreach. The integrated and coordinated infrastructure has proven to be a strong model that is poised to confront extreme emergency events and greatly improve the well-being of children and families during difficult periods on a communitywide scale.(h) This collaborative approach ensures that a continuum of services reach children in communities where they are needed the most. This is especially important in communities experiencing high levels of homelessness. Community and regional networks can coordinate efforts among government agencies and other local organizations to ensure that those experiencing homelessness, or are at risk of becoming homeless, have full access to all programs and services to which they are entitled.(i) Community and regional networks can also play a major role in recovery from the pandemic by prioritizing investments in historically underserved communities, working with key organizations to leverage federal, state, and local recovery funds, strengthening civic infrastructure that builds the power and capacity of marginalized communities, and ensuring a strong accountability structure.(j) They also support implementation of the California Community Schools Partnership Program and other initiatives in the State Department of Education to engage pupils and parents, to fund and implement local improvement strategies, and provide supplemental and complementary services to ensure that Californias English learners, foster youth, and pupils in poverty have the learning supports they need.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature that the vital contributions provided by these community-based and regional networks be brought to scale, so that all children and families have the opportunities and continuum of services needed to break the cycle of poverty.SEC. 2. Division 11 (commencing with Section 20000) is added to the Welfare and Institutions Code, to read:DIVISION 11. Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services CHAPTER 1. California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program20000. This chapter shall be known, and may be cited, as the It Takes a Village Act of 2022.20001. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Cradle-to-career means a system of integrated services that begins before birth and leads to appropriate postsecondary success, including academic, occupational, and independent living, that benefits the individual and community as a whole.(b) (1) Eligible entity includes all of the following:(A) A nonprofit organization that is exempt from federal income taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, and that has a strong demonstrated financial record evidencing compliance. A nonprofit organization may be a faith-based organization, to the extent permitted by law.(B) A public or nonprofit institution of higher education.(C) An Indian tribe or tribal organization.(2) An eligible entity shall work in partnership with at least one local educational agency and one social service agency located within the identified geographic boundaries.(3) An eligible entity may also work with one or more of the following entities located within the identified geographic boundaries:(A) A local government agency.(B) Health organizations.(C) Another eligible entity.(c) Grant program means the California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program.(d) Multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks support multiple populations in neighborhoods, cities, counties, and regions by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale. These networks seek systems change and community engagement, develop evidence-based strategies, and where strategies prove successful, promote adoption in the full region.(e) Other community-based networks include nonprofit and faith-based networks, other than PNs, that are involved in supporting, advocating for, and empowering residents to achieve self-reliance and economic stability. Services provided by these networks may include food, housing assistance, access to benefits, mental health, job training, legal services, financial literacy, early childhood development, parenting support, after school enhanced learning, and youth empowerment.(f) Promise Neighborhood (PN) means a targeted geographic area served by the Promise Neighborhoods program administered by the United States Department of Education and authorized by the federal Every Student Succeeds Act in 2015 (Public Law 114-95). The program focuses on revitalizing economically disadvantaged communities through the establishment of a cradle-to-career network of services aimed at improving the health, safety, and education of the occupants in the defined area.(g) Solution includes both of the following:(1) A single activity, or a set of activities, performed or coordinated by PNs and other community-based networks that help ensure that children and their families receive an appropriate continuum of services that they need to thrive. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to services provided by federal, state, and local governments, or other entities, as well as the direct provision of services to the public.(2) A set of activities coordinated and supported by multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks to help ensure that children and their families are engaged with and supported by equitable systems that address their education, health, and well-being. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to effect systems change.20002. (a) (1) The California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program is hereby established to be administered by the State Department of Social Services or another department within the California Health and Human Services Agency, as designated by the Secretary of California Health and Human Services.(2) The purpose of the grant program is to award grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible entities to do either of the following:(A) Implement a comprehensive, integrated continuum of cradle-to-career solutions at the neighborhood level.(B) Support the civic infrastructure and backbone of cradle-to-career networks that support their network partners to accomplish systems change.(3) Solutions shall be in areas that include, but are not limited to, academic, health, social programs, and family and community supports, to meet the needs of high-need populations identified by a needs assessment or indicators, such as poor health for children, disparity gaps in school performance based on income or racial or ethnicity disaggregation, high rates of juvenile delinquency, adjudication, or incarceration, or high rates of foster care placement.(4) (A) Grants shall be awarded to eligible entities that are PNs, other community-based networks, or multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks.(B) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks receiving grants shall share the same common indicators and metrics and the common goal of helping children, youth, and families to thrive and serve to break the cycle of intergenerational poverty.(C) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career network applicants shall demonstrate that they have consulted and coordinated with stakeholders within their regions, including community members, PNs, and other community-based networks addressing needs of low-income neighborhoods.(D) All applicants shall identify solutions that tackle systemic inequities and work toward community transformation.(5) It is the intent of the Legislature that programs in the continuum should improve academic achievement and equitable social outcomes, including improving outcomes of early development, child and youth social and health development, and college and career readiness, as well as build strong family and community supports to help families move out of poverty.(b) (1) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall develop an application process for eligible entities to apply for the grants.(2) The department shall aim to achieve geographic equity by giving priority to applicants serving remote communities, including rural and tribal communities, through the selection process.20003. (a) To be eligible to receive a grant under this chapter, an eligible entity shall submit an application to the department at the time, in the manner, and containing the information, as the department may require.(b) At a minimum, the grant application shall include all of the following:(1) A description of a plan to significantly improve the academic, health, and social outcomes of children living in an identified economically disadvantaged neighborhood and to support the healthy development and well-being of children and youth in the neighborhood by providing a continuum of cradle-to-career solutions. This plan shall address the needs of the whole child, whole family, and whole community, as identified by the needs assessment described in paragraph (4). The continuum of solutions shall be based on the best available evidence, including, if available, strong, or moderately strong evidence. The plan shall also ensure that, over time, pupils not living in the neighborhood who attend the target school or schools have access to services within the continuum of solutions.(2) A description of the geographically defined area or neighborhood to be served and the level of distress in that area based on indicators of need and other relevant indicators. The statement of need in the neighborhood shall be based, in part, on results of a comprehensive needs assessment and segmentation analysis. The application may propose to serve multiple, noncontiguous areas.(3) A description of the applicants measurable short-term, long-term, and annual goals for expected outcomes of the grant, based on program and project indicators, as described in paragraph (2), which includes all of the following:(A) Performance goals for each year of the grant.(B) Projected growth or change over time and a sustainability plan outlining the process for reviewing and working with partners on a strategy to strengthen the infrastructure, ensure that target populations that require services have access to them and continue improving the results they are achieving beyond the grant life.(C) Annual goals for evaluating progress in improving systems, such as changes in policies, environments, or organizations that affect children and youth in the neighborhood.(4) An analysis of the needs and assets of the neighborhood or neighborhoods identified that includes all of the following:(A) A description of the process through which the needs assessment and segmentation analysis was produced, including a description of how family and community members were engaged in the analysis.(B) An explanation of how the applicant used the needs assessment and segmentation analysis in the development of localized, equity-based, cradle-to-career solutions.(C) A description of both the academic indicators and the available family and community support indicators, and social indicators that the applicant used to conduct the needs assessment.(5) For PNs and other community-based networks:(A) A description of solutions that will be used in the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions based on data collected, including a description of solutions specifically targeting subgroups of children, family members, community members, and children not attending schools or programs operated by the applicant and its partners.(B) The process by which each solution will be implemented and an expected timeline for launching each solution.(C) The estimated per child cost and cost projections over time, including administrative costs, to implement each solution.(D) The estimated number of children, by age, in the neighborhood who will be served by each solution, including the percentage of all children of the same age group within the neighborhood proposed to be served with each solution and the annual targets required to increase the proportion of children served to reach scale over time.(E) Financial projections of the cost of solutions over time.(F) The best available evidence supporting each proposed solution.(6) A description of the process used to develop the application, including the involvement of family and community members.(7) If feasible, a description of the process by which to develop, launch, and implement a longitudinal data system that does both of the following:(A) Integrates pupil-level or grade-level data from multiple sources to measure progress on academic, family, and community support indicators for all children in the neighborhood.(B) Tracks appropriate social indicators, as determined by the department, for children and families in the neighborhood.(8) A description of how the applicant has done all of the following:(A) Description of a detailed data plan that includes the data collection process.(B) Made or will make data accessible to parents, families, community residents, program partners, researchers, and evaluators at either the individual or aggregate level as appropriate while abiding by federal, state, and other privacy laws and requirements.(C) Managed and maintained the data system over time.(9) An explanation of how the applicant will continuously evaluate and improve the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions, including both of the following:(A) A description of the required grant indicators and other local performance indicators that will be used to inform each solution of the cradle-to-career continuum.(B) The processes for using data to improve instruction, optimize integrated pupil supports, provide for continuous program improvement, and hold staff and partner organizations accountable.(10) An identification of the fiscal agent, which may be any eligible entity.(11) A list of federal, state, local, and private sources of funding that the applicant will secure to comply with the matching funds requirement specified in Section 20004.(c) Before receiving a grant under this chapter, the applicant shall do all of the following:(1) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the academic and social indicators, and use them as program and project indicators.(2) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the family and community support indicators and use them as program and project indicators.(3) Perform an analysis of community assets within, or accessible to, the neighborhood, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) Early learning programs and networks, including home visiting, high-quality childcare, Early Head Start programs, Head Start programs, and prekindergarten programs.(B) Community centers, after school programs, and other opportunities for activities outside of school hours.(C) Transportation.(D) Parks.(E) The availability of healthy food options and opportunities for physical activity.(F) Existing family and pupil supports.(G) Businesses and employers located in the community.(H) Institutions of higher education.(4) Provide evidence of successful collaboration that has led to changes in child outcomes within the neighborhood.(d) An eligible entity, as part of the application, shall submit a preliminary memorandum of understanding, signed by each partner entity or agency. The preliminary memorandum of understanding shall describe, at a minimum, all of the following:(1) Each partners commitment and contribution toward achieving each result at population level by using a backbone agency to coordinate a collective impact initiative.(2) Each partners financial and programmatic commitment toward the strategies described in the application, including an identification of the fiscal agent.(3) The governance structure proposed for the eligible entity, including a system for how the eligible entity will serve as a backbone agency and hold partners accountable, representation of the geographic area on the eligible entitys governing and advisory boards, and resident engagement from the neighborhood in the organizations decisionmaking.(4) Each partners long-term commitment to providing cradle-to-career continuum services that, at a minimum, accounts for the cost of supporting the continuum, including the period after grant funds are no longer available, and potential changes in local government.(5) Each partners mission and plan that will govern the work that partners do together, including an aligned theory of improvement.(6) Each partners long-term commitment to supporting the cradle-to-career continuum through data-driven decisionmaking, including data collection, monitoring, reporting, and sharing.(7) Each partners commitment to ensuring sound fiscal management and controls, including evidence of a system of supports and personnel.(8) Each partners commitment to mobilizing local government service integration to improve outcomes for families and children in the neighborhood as measured by increased employment, improved education, decreased poverty, reduced crime, and improved health status.(9) A proposed data governance plan with each partners commitment to and plan for data collection and data sharing, including a data privacy plan that maintains privacy for children and families as required by the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-191) and federal Family Education Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (Public Law 93-380) standards.20004. (a) For the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, the department shall competitively award grants as follows:(1) Planning grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state.(2) Implementation grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and to multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state to be expended pursuant to Section 20005.(b) All neighborhood-based and multineighborhood regional networks that received a planning grant in the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, but did not receive an implementation grant during these three years shall be eligible to receive an implementation grant starting in the 202627 fiscal year, contingent on future budget appropriations. All entities that continue to meet the requirements set forth in Sections 20005 and 20007 shall be eligible for an implementation grant extension two years after the original grant was awarded.(c) (1) (A) Each grant recipient shall contribute matching funds or in-kind contributions in an amount equal to, but not less than, 100 percent of the grant award.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), a PN or other community-based network located in a rural community or tribal community shall provide matching funds or in-kind donations equal to at least 50 percent of the grant award.(2) (A) The matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 10 percent coming from private sources.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), for a PN or other community-based network in a rural community or tribal community, the matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 5 percent coming from private sources.(3) (A) An applicant that is unable to meet the matching requirements required by paragraphs (1) and (2) shall include in its application a request to the department to reduce the matching requirement, including the amount of the requested reduction, the total remaining match contribution, and a statement of the basis for the request.(B) The department may grant a request described in subparagraph (A) if it finds the request reasonable and that doing so would further the purposes of this chapter.20005. (a) Each implementation grant recipient under this chapter shall use the grant funds for both of the following purposes:(1) To implement the cradle-to-career services based on results of the needs analysis described in the application and plans to build system and organizational capacity.(2) To continuously evaluate the success of the program and improve the program based on data and outcomes.(b) Each grant recipient may use grant funds to develop the administrative capacity necessary to successfully implement a continuum of solutions, such as managing partnerships, integrating multiple funding sources, supporting the operation of a longitudinal data system, and accessing technical assistance. Each grant recipient and its partners shall not expend more than 20 percent of funds on these administrative and capacity building costs. Development and implementation of new or improved data systems shall not be included within that 20-percent limitation.(c) Grant recipients developing new or expanded longitudinal data systems shall coordinate and align their data collection and reporting with the Cradle-to-Career Data System.20006. (a) The department shall establish performance standards to measure progress on indicators and results relevant to the evaluation of the grant program.(b) (1) The State Department of Education, in consultation with the State Department of Social Services, shall establish a core set of academic results and indicators by which the grant recipients will be measured. These indicators may be based on pupil-level or grade-level data that is available from the following academic results and indicators:(A) Children benefit from a high-quality early learning education program and demonstrate school readiness skills, as measured by both of the following:(i) Children enter kindergarten ready for success, as measured by the number and percentage of children who demonstrate age-appropriate functioning at the beginning of the program or school year, as demonstrated by literacy, math, science, self-regulation, social-emotional development, physical development, English language development, and oral language indicators.(ii) Children are provided with high-quality early learning experiences, as measured by a quality rating instrument.(B) Pupils are proficient in core academic subjects, as measured by both of the following:(i) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in mathematics based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(ii) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in English language arts and literacy based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(C) Pupils are engaged and families support learning, as measured by attendance rates and chronic absenteeism rates, as measured by both of the following:(i) The average daily attendance rates of students in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive.(ii) The percentage of pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, who are absent 10 percent or more of the instructional days those pupils are enrolled.(D) Percentage of pupils who received a high school diploma within four years of entering grade 9 or who complete their graduation requirements at an alternative school.(E) High school graduates obtaining a postsecondary degree, certification, or credential as measured by all of the following:(i) Percentage of high school graduates who are placed in the prepared level on the college or career indicator.(ii) The number and percentage of students who enroll in a two-year or four-year college or university after graduation.(iii) The number and percentage of students who graduate from a two-year or four-year college or university.(2) The department shall establish a core set of family and community support results and indicators by which the grant recipient will be measured. A grant recipient shall choose to measure and report on two or more family and community support results and indicators. A grant recipients project design and implementation of a whole community continuum of solutions are subject to, but not limited to, all of the following family and community support results and indicators:(A) Pupils feel safe at school and connected to their school community, as measured by locally implemented school climate surveys or other instruments.(B) Pupils live in stable communities, as measured by pupil mobility rates in schools within the designated geographic boundary.(C) Where the appropriate infrastructure is available, pupils that have access to 21st century learning tools, as measured by the number and percentage of pupils who have access to a high-speed broadband internet-connected computing device.(c) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall also establish at least two indicators related to health, social and emotional development, mental health, and wellness. A grant recipient may choose to report on additional social or socioemotional indicators, drawn from either of the following:(1) Existing surveys, including the California Healthy Kids Survey or the YouthTruth Student Survey.(2) Other sources, as determined by the eligible entity and their partner agencies.(d) The department may establish other engagement, academic, and social indicators.20007. Each grant recipient shall prepare and submit an annual report to the department that shall include both of the following:(a) Information about the number and percentage of children, family members, and community members in the PN or similar community-based network who are served by the grant recipient, including a description of the number and percentage of children accessing each of the pipeline services and the number of family and community members served by each program.(b) Disaggregated data at population and program levels related to the grant recipients programs success in annual growth along program and project indicators. To the extent feasible, data should be disaggregated by all of the following:(1) Gender.(2) Major racial and ethnic groups.(3) English proficiency status.(4) Migrant status.(5) Disability status.(6) Economic disadvantage status.(7) Information relating to the performance metrics.(8) Other indicators that may be required by the department.20008. The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may establish an appropriate method, process, and structure for grant management, fiscal accountability, payments to grant recipients, and technical assistance and supports for grant recipients that ensures transparency and accountability in the use of state funds. The department may, at its discretion, contract with one or more entities, including, but not limited to, community development financial intermediaries, state financial entities, or other community-based organizations, for these purposes.20009. Notwithstanding the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code), the department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may implement, interpret, or make specific this chapter without taking any regulatory action.20010. (a) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the personal services contracting requirements of Article 4 (commencing with Section 19130) of Chapter 5 of Part 2 of Division 5 of Title 2 of the Government Code.(b) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the Public Contract Code and the State Contracting Manual, and are not subject to the approval of the Department of General Services.20011. Implementation of this chapter shall be subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for the purposes of this chapter.
1+Amended IN Senate August 25, 2022 Amended IN Senate August 11, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 22, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 13, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 19, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2517Introduced by Assembly Member Mia Bonta(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Reyes)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Levine, Quirk, Stone, and Blanca Rubio)(Coauthor: Senator Hurtado)February 17, 2022An act to add Division 11 (commencing with Section 20000) to the Welfare and Institutions Code, relating to poverty.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2517, as amended, Mia Bonta. California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program.Existing law requires the Department of Community Services and Development to, among other things, plan and evaluate strategies for overcoming poverty in the state, mobilize resources in support of antipoverty and community services programs, and administer public and private funds designed to support antipoverty programs that are not currently administered by other departments.Existing law establishes the Cradle-to-Career Data System for the purpose of connecting individuals and organizations to trusted information and resources, as a source for actionable data and research on education, economic, and health outcomes for individuals, families, and communities, and to provide for expanded access to tools and services that support the education-to-employment pipeline, as specified.This bill, the It Takes a Village Act of 2022, subject upon an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for these purposes, would establish the California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program to be administered by the State Department of Social Services or another department within the California Health and Human Services Agency. The bill would require the department to grant awards on a competitive basis to eligible entities that are Promise Neighborhoods, other community-based networks, or multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks, as those terms are defined, to either implement a comprehensive, integrated continuum of cradle-to-career solutions at the neighborhood level or support the civic infrastructure and backbone of cradle-to-career networks that support their network partners to accomplish systems change. The bill would define cradle-to-career to mean a system of integrated services that begins before birth and leads to appropriate postsecondary success, including academic, occupational, and independent living, that benefits the individual and community as a whole. The bill would require the department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, to develop an application process and would require the department to establish performance standards to measure progress on indicators and results relevant to the evaluation of the grant program. The bill would require grant recipients to contribute matching funds and prepare and submit an annual report to the department, as specified.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) It takes a village to raise a child. Applying that simple proverb and concept to Californias multifaceted society today means making sure that children and families, especially those in economically disadvantaged communities, have full access to opportunities and services from before birth to career that will enable them to reach their full potential in life.(b) Despite large statewide investments in education, health, social services, and other programs directed at children and their families, California faces persistently high rates of child poverty and educational achievement gaps in many economically disadvantaged communities. Cash payments, food assistance, and crucial services do not reach many children and families who are most in need because of significant access barriers that are often due to inequitable systemic barriers, and when provided, the services are fragmented and offered through organizationally siloed programs without attention to improving those equitable systems.(c) A proven solution to this problem, and the way to apply the it takes a village proverb and concept in todays world, is to invest in local and regional networks that: are equity focused; are data-driven and have the capacity to identify the highest needs within the most economically disadvantaged neighborhoods or regions; have the resources and trusted relationships within the communities to align, coordinate, leverage, and enhance services provided by state and local government, community-based organizations, nonprofits, businesses, and other entities active in the local community toward equitable outcomes; and identify systems systems needs, work with partners to address systemic needs, and measure systemic improvements.(d) Coordination of services needs to take place at both the neighborhood and regionwide levels to effectively align community services and systems with statewide policy and equity goals and implementation.(e) Promise Neighborhoods (PNs) and other neighborhood-based networks currently fulfill this function in selected economically disadvantaged neighborhoods by coordinating services provided by governments and private sector partners, and by providing direct services to the public. Regional cradle-to-career networks, such as StriveTogether, support multiple populations in selected regions, such as counties, in California by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale.(f) Both neighborhood-based and regional-based networks have achieved positive results and very high returns on investment in areas where they have operated. For PNs, this includes substantial improvements in health care access, kindergarten readiness, English language arts and literacy and mathematics achievement results, high school graduation rates, college and career readiness, reduced child welfare and juvenile justice involvement, and increased family stability in areas served by these programs. For StriveTogether and other regional cross-sector networks, this includes reductions in achievement gaps and improvements in a wide range of measures, such as preterm birth rates, early childcare quality or attendance, early grade reading, middle grade math, high school graduation rates, and postsecondary completion.(g) During the COVID-19 pandemic, community and regional networks were able to leverage their established infrastructure of cradle-to-career connections to confront issues created by the pandemic, meeting the basic needs of families, including food, housing, income relief, eviction defense, technology access, childcare, and vaccine outreach. The integrated and coordinated infrastructure has proven to be a strong model that is poised to confront extreme emergency events and greatly improve the well-being of children and families during difficult periods on a communitywide scale.(h) This collaborative approach ensures that a continuum of services reach children in communities where they are needed the most. This is especially important in communities experiencing high levels of homelessness. Community and regional networks can coordinate efforts among government agencies and other local organizations to ensure that those experiencing homelessness, or are at risk of becoming homeless, have full access to all programs and services to which they are entitled.(i) Community and regional networks can also play a major role in recovery from the pandemic by prioritizing investments in historically underserved communities, working with key organizations to leverage federal, state, and local recovery funds, strengthening civic infrastructure that builds the power and capacity of marginalized communities, and ensuring a strong accountability structure.(j) They also support implementation of the California Community Schools Partnership Program and other initiatives in the State Department of Education to engage pupils and parents, to fund and implement local improvement strategies, and provide supplemental and complementary services to ensure that Californias English learners, foster youth, and pupils in poverty have the learning supports they need.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature that the vital contributions provided by these community-based and regional networks be brought to scale, so that all children and families have the opportunities and continuum of services needed to break the cycle of poverty.SEC. 2. Division 11 (commencing with Section 20000) is added to the Welfare and Institutions Code, to read:DIVISION 11. Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services CHAPTER 1. California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program20000. This chapter shall be known, and may be cited, as the It Takes a Village Act of 2022.20001. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Cradle-to-career means a system of integrated services that begins before birth and leads to appropriate postsecondary success, including academic, occupational, and independent living, that benefits the individual and community as a whole.(b) (1) Eligible entity includes all of the following:(A) A nonprofit organization that is exempt from federal income taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, and that has a strong demonstrated financial record evidencing compliance. A nonprofit organization may be a faith-based organization, to the extent permitted by law.(B) A public or nonprofit institution of higher education.(C) An Indian tribe or tribal organization.(2) An eligible entity shall work in partnership with at least one local educational agency and one social service agency located within the identified geographic boundaries.(3) An eligible entity may also work with one or more of the following entities located within the identified geographic boundaries:(A) A local government agency.(B) Health organizations.(C) Another eligible entity.(c) Grant program means the California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program.(d) Multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks support multiple populations in neighborhoods, cities, counties, and regions by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale. These networks seek systems change, change and community engagement, develop evidence-based strategies, and where strategies prove successful, promote adoption in the full region.(e) Other community-based networks include nonprofit and faith-based networks, other than PNs, that are involved in supporting, advocating for, and empowering residents to achieve self-reliance and economic stability. Services provided by these networks may include food, housing assistance, access to benefits, mental health, job training, legal services, financial literacy, early childhood development, parenting support, after school enhanced learning, and youth empowerment.(f) Promise Neighborhood (PN) means a targeted geographic area served by the Promise Neighborhoods program administered by the United States Department of Education and authorized by the federal Every Student Succeeds Act in 2015 (Public Law 114-95). The program focuses on revitalizing economically disadvantaged communities through the establishment of a cradle-to-career network of services aimed at improving the health, safety, and education of the occupants in the defined area.(g) Solution includes both of the following:(1) A single activity, or a set of activities, performed or coordinated by PNs and other community-based networks that help ensure that children and their families receive an appropriate continuum of services that they need to thrive. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to services provided by federal, state, and local governments, or other entities, as well as the direct provision of services to the public.(2) A set of activities coordinated and supported by multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks to help ensure that children and their families are engaged with and supported by equitable systems that address their education, health, and well-being. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to effect systems change.20002. (a) (1) The California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program is hereby established to be administered by the State Department of Social Services or another department within the California Health and Human Services Agency, as designated by the Secretary of California Health and Human Services.(2) The purpose of the grant program is to award grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible entities to do either of the following:(A) Implement a comprehensive, integrated continuum of cradle-to-career solutions at the neighborhood level.(B) Support the civic infrastructure and backbone of cradle-to-career networks that support their network partners to accomplish systems change.(3) Solutions shall be in areas that include, but are not limited to, academic, health, social programs, and family and community supports, to meet the needs of high-need populations identified by a needs assessment or indicators, such as poor health for children, disparity gaps in school performance based on income or racial or ethnicity disaggregation, high rates of juvenile delinquency, adjudication, or incarceration, or high rates of foster care placement.(4) (A) Grants shall be awarded to eligible entities that are PNs, other community-based networks, or multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks.(B) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks receiving grants shall share the same common indicators and metrics and the common goal of helping children, youth, and families to thrive and serve to break the cycle of intergenerational poverty.(C) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career network applicants shall demonstrate that they have consulted and coordinated with stakeholders within their regions, including community members, PNs, and other community-based networks addressing needs of low-income neighborhoods.(D) All applicants shall identify solutions that tackle systemic inequities and work toward community transformation.(5) It is the intent of the Legislature that programs in the continuum should improve academic achievement and equitable social outcomes, including improving outcomes of early development, child and youth social and health development, and college and career readiness, as well as build strong family and community supports to help families move out of poverty.(b) (1) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall develop an application process for eligible entities to apply for the grants.(2) The department shall aim to achieve geographic equity by giving priority to applicants serving remote communities, including rural and tribal communities, through the selection process.20003. (a) To be eligible to receive a grant under this chapter, an eligible entity shall submit an application to the department at the time, in the manner, and containing the information, as the department may require.(b) At a minimum, the grant application shall include all of the following:(1) A description of a plan to significantly improve the academic, health, and social outcomes of children living in an identified economically disadvantaged neighborhood and to support the healthy development and well-being of children and youth in the neighborhood by providing a continuum of cradle-to-career solutions. This plan shall address the needs of the whole child, whole family, and whole community, as identified by the needs assessment described in paragraph (4). The continuum of solutions shall be based on the best available evidence, including, if available, strong, or moderately strong evidence. The plan shall also ensure that, over time, pupils not living in the neighborhood who attend the target school or schools have access to services within the continuum of solutions.(2) A description of the geographically defined area or neighborhood to be served and the level of distress in that area based on indicators of need and other relevant indicators. The statement of need in the neighborhood shall be based, in part, on results of a comprehensive needs assessment and segmentation analysis. The application may propose to serve multiple, noncontiguous areas.(3) A description of the applicants measurable short-term, long-term, and annual goals for expected outcomes of the grant, based on program and project indicators, as described in paragraph (2), that which includes all of the following:(A) Performance goals for each year of the grant.(B) Projected growth or change over time and a sustainability plan outlining the process for reviewing and working with partners on a strategy to strengthen the infrastructure, ensure that target populations that require services have access to them and continue improving the results they are achieving beyond the grant life.(C) Annual goals for evaluating progress in improving systems, such as changes in policies, environments, or organizations that affect children and youth in the neighborhood.(4) An analysis of the needs and assets of the neighborhood or neighborhoods identified that includes all of the following:(A) A description of the process through which the needs assessment and segmentation analysis was produced, including a description of how family and community members were engaged in the analysis.(B) An explanation of how the applicant used the needs assessment and segmentation analysis in the development of localized, equity-based, cradle-to-career solutions.(C) A description of both the academic indicators and the available family and community support indicators, and social indicators that the applicant used to conduct the needs assessment.(5) For PNs and other community-based networks:(A) A description of solutions that will be used in the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions based on data collected, including a description of solutions specifically targeting subgroups of children, family members, community members, and children not attending schools or programs operated by the applicant and its partners.(B) The process by which each solution will be implemented and an expected timeline for launching each solution.(C) The estimated per child cost and cost projections over time, including administrative costs, to implement each solution.(D) The estimated number of children, by age, in the neighborhood who will be served by each solution, including the percentage of all children of the same age group within the neighborhood proposed to be served with each solution and the annual targets required to increase the proportion of children served to reach scale over time.(E) Financial projections of the cost of solutions over time.(F) The best available evidence supporting each proposed solution.(6) A description of the process used to develop the application, including the involvement of family and community members.(7) If feasible, a description of the process by which to develop, launch, and implement a longitudinal data system that does both of the following:(A) Integrates pupil-level or grade-level data from multiple sources to measure progress on academic, family, and community support indicators for all children in the neighborhood.(B) Tracks appropriate social indicators, as determined by the department, for children and families in the neighborhood.(8) A description of how the applicant has done all of the following:(A) Description of a detailed data plan that includes the data collection process.(B) Made or will make data accessible to parents, families, community residents, program partners, researchers, and evaluators at either the individual or aggregate level as appropriate while abiding by federal, state, and other privacy laws and requirements.(C) Managed and maintained the data system over time.(9) An explanation of how the applicant will continuously evaluate and improve the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions, including both of the following:(A) A description of the required grant indicators and other local performance indicators that will be used to inform each solution of the cradle-to-career continuum.(B) The processes for using data to improve instruction, optimize integrated pupil supports, provide for continuous program improvement, and hold staff and partner organizations accountable.(10) An identification of the fiscal agent, which may be any eligible entity.(11) A list of federal, state, local, and private sources of funding that the applicant will secure to comply with the matching funds requirement specified in Section 20004.(c) Before receiving a grant under this chapter, the applicant shall do all of the following:(1) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the academic and social indicators, and use them as program and project indicators.(2) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the family and community support indicators and use them as program and project indicators.(3) Perform an analysis of community assets within, or accessible to, the neighborhood, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) Early learning programs and networks, including home visiting, high-quality childcare, Early Head Start programs, Head Start programs, and prekindergarten programs.(B) Community centers, after school programs, and other opportunities for activities outside of school hours.(C) Transportation.(D) Parks.(E) The availability of healthy food options and opportunities for physical activity.(F) Existing family and pupil supports.(G) Businesses and employers located in the community.(H) Institutions of higher education.(4) Provide evidence of successful collaboration that has led to changes in child outcomes within the neighborhood.(d) An eligible entity, as part of the application, shall submit a preliminary memorandum of understanding, signed by each partner entity or agency. The preliminary memorandum of understanding shall describe, at a minimum, all of the following:(1) Each partners commitment and contribution toward achieving each result at population level by using a backbone agency to coordinate a collective impact initiative.(2) Each partners financial and programmatic commitment toward the strategies described in the application, including an identification of the fiscal agent.(3) The governance structure proposed for the eligible entity, including a system for how the eligible entity will serve as a backbone agency and hold partners accountable, representation of the geographic area on the eligible entitys governing and advisory boards, and resident engagement from the neighborhood in the organizations decisionmaking.(4) Each partners long-term commitment to providing cradle-to-career continuum services that, at a minimum, accounts for the cost of supporting the continuum, including the period after grant funds are no longer available, and potential changes in local government.(5) Each partners mission and plan that will govern the work that partners do together, including an aligned theory of improvement.(6) Each partners long-term commitment to supporting the cradle-to-career continuum through data-driven decisionmaking, including data collection, monitoring, reporting, and sharing.(7) Each partners commitment to ensuring sound fiscal management and controls, including evidence of a system of supports and personnel.(8) Each partners commitment to mobilizing local government service integration to improve outcomes for families and children in the neighborhood as measured by increased employment, improved education, decreased poverty, reduced crime, and improved health status.(9) A proposed data governance plan with each partners commitment to and plan for data collection and data sharing, including a data privacy plan that maintains privacy for children and families as required by the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-191) and federal Family Education Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (Public Law 93-380) standards.20004. (a) For the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, the department shall competitively award grants as follows:(1) Planning grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state.(2) Implementation grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and to multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state to be expended pursuant to Section 20005.(b) All neighborhood-based and multineighborhood regional networks who that received a planning grant in the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, but did not receive an implementation grant during these three years shall be eligible to receive an implementation grant starting in the 202627 fiscal year, contingent on future budget appropriations. All entities that continue to meet the requirements set forth in Sections 20005 and 20007 shall be eligible for an implementation grant extension two years after the original grant was awarded.(c) (1) (A) Each grant recipient shall contribute matching funds or in-kind contributions in an amount equal to, but not less than, 100 percent of the grant award.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), a PN or other community-based network located in a rural community or tribal community shall provide matching funds or in-kind donations equal to at least 50 percent of the grant award.(2) (A) The matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 10 percent coming from private sources.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), for a PN or other community-based network in a rural community or in tribal community, the matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 5 percent coming from private sources.(3) (A) An applicant that is unable to meet the matching requirements required by paragraphs (1) and (2) shall include in its application a request to the department to reduce the matching requirement, including the amount of the requested reduction, the total remaining match contribution, and a statement of the basis for the request.(B) The department may grant a request described in subparagraph (A) if it finds the request reasonable and that doing so would further the purposes of this chapter.20005. (a) Each implementation grant recipient under this chapter shall use the grant funds for both of the following purposes:(1) To implement the cradle-to-career services based on results of the needs analysis described in the application and plans to build system and organizational capacity.(2) To continuously evaluate the success of the program and improve the program based on data and outcomes.(b) Each grant recipient may use grant funds to develop the administrative capacity necessary to successfully implement a continuum of solutions, such as managing partnerships, integrating multiple funding sources, supporting the operation of a longitudinal data system, and accessing technical assistance. Each grant recipient and its partners shall not expend more than 20 percent of funds on these administrative and capacity building costs. Development and implementation of new or improved data systems shall not be included within that 20-percent limitation.(c) Grant recipients developing new or expanded longitudinal data systems shall coordinate and align their data collection and reporting with the Cradle-to-Career Data System.20006. (a) The department shall establish performance standards to measure progress on indicators and results relevant to the evaluation of the grant program.(b) (1) The State Department of Education Education, in consultation with the State Department of Social Services, shall establish a core set of academic results and indicators by which the grant recipients will be measured. These indicators may be based on pupil-level or grade-level data that is available from the following academic results and indicators:(A) Children benefit from a high-quality early learning education program and demonstrate school readiness skills, as measured by both of the following:(i) Children enter kindergarten ready for success, as measured by the number and percentage of children who demonstrate age-appropriate functioning at the beginning of the program or school year, as demonstrated by literacy, math, science, self-regulation, social-emotional development, physical development, English language development, and oral language indicators.(ii) Children are provided with high-quality early learning experiences, as measured by a quality rating instrument.(B) Pupils are proficient in core academic subjects, as measured by both of the following:(i) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in mathematics based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments, Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(ii) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in English language arts and literacy based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments, Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(C) Pupils are engaged and families support learning, as measured by attendance rates and chronic absenteeism rates, as measured by both of the following:(i) The average daily attendance rates of students in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive.(ii) The percentage of pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, who are absent 10 percent or more of the instructional days those pupils are enrolled.(D) Percentage of pupils who received a high school diploma within four years of entering grade 9 or who complete their graduation requirements at an alternative school.(E) High school graduates obtaining a postsecondary degree, certification, or credential as measured by all of the following:(i) Percentage of high school graduates who are placed in the prepared level on the college or career indicator.(ii) The number and percentage of students who enroll in a two-year or four-year college or university after graduation.(iii) The number and percentage of students who graduate from a two-year or four-year college or university.(2) The department shall establish a core set of family and community support results and indicators by which the grant recipient will be measured. A grant recipient shall choose to measure and report on two or more family and community support results and indicators. A grant recipients project design and implementation of a whole community continuum of solutions are subject to, but not limited to, all of the following family and community support results and indicators:(A) Pupils feel safe at school and connected to their school community, as measured by locally implemented school climate surveys or other instruments.(B) Pupils live in stable communities, as measured by pupil mobility rates in schools within the designated geographic boundary.(C) Where the appropriate infrastructure is available, pupils that have access to 21st century learning tools, as measured by the number and percentage of pupils who have access to a high-speed broadband internet-connected computing device.(c) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall also establish at least two indicators related to health, social and emotional development, mental health, and wellness. A grant recipient may choose to report on additional social or socioemotional indicators, drawn from either of the following:(1) Existing surveys, including the California Healthy Kids Survey or the YouthTruth Student Survey.(2) Other sources, as determined by the eligible entity and their partner agencies.(d) The department may establish other engagement, academic, and social indicators.20007. Each grant recipient shall prepare and submit an annual report to the department that shall include both of the following:(a) Information about the number and percentage of children, family members, and community members in the PN or similar community-based network who are served by the grant recipient, including a description of the number and percentage of children accessing each of the pipeline services and the number of family and community members served by each program.(b) Disaggregated data at population and program levels related to the grant recipients programs success in annual growth along program and project indicators. To the extent feasible, data should be disaggregated by all of the following:(1) Gender.(2) Major racial and ethnic groups.(3) English proficiency status.(4) Migrant status.(5) Disability status.(6) Economic disadvantage status.(7) Information relating to the performance metrics.(8) Other indicators that may be required by the department.20008. The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may establish an appropriate method, process, and structure for grant management, fiscal accountability, payments to grant recipients, and technical assistance and supports for grant recipients that ensures transparency and accountability in the use of state funds. The department may, at its discretion, contract with one or more entities, including, but not limited to, community development financial intermediaries, state financial entities, or other community-based organizations, for these purposes.20009. Notwithstanding the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code), the department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may implement, interpret, or make specific this chapter without taking any regulatory action.20010. (a) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the personal services contracting requirements of Article 4 (commencing with Section 19130) of Chapter 5 of Part 2 of Division 5 of Title 2 of the Government Code.(b) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the Public Contract Code and the State Contracting Manual, and are not subject to the approval of the Department of General Services.20011. Implementation of this chapter shall be subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for the purposes of this chapter.
22
3- Enrolled September 01, 2022 Passed IN Senate August 29, 2022 Passed IN Assembly August 30, 2022 Amended IN Senate August 25, 2022 Amended IN Senate August 11, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 22, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 13, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 19, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2517Introduced by Assembly Member Mia Bonta(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Reyes)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Levine, Quirk, Stone, and Blanca Rubio)(Coauthor: Senator Hurtado)February 17, 2022An act to add Division 11 (commencing with Section 20000) to the Welfare and Institutions Code, relating to poverty.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2517, Mia Bonta. California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program.Existing law requires the Department of Community Services and Development to, among other things, plan and evaluate strategies for overcoming poverty in the state, mobilize resources in support of antipoverty and community services programs, and administer public and private funds designed to support antipoverty programs that are not currently administered by other departments.Existing law establishes the Cradle-to-Career Data System for the purpose of connecting individuals and organizations to trusted information and resources, as a source for actionable data and research on education, economic, and health outcomes for individuals, families, and communities, and to provide for expanded access to tools and services that support the education-to-employment pipeline, as specified.This bill, the It Takes a Village Act of 2022, subject upon an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for these purposes, would establish the California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program to be administered by the State Department of Social Services or another department within the California Health and Human Services Agency. The bill would require the department to grant awards on a competitive basis to eligible entities that are Promise Neighborhoods, other community-based networks, or multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks, as those terms are defined, to either implement a comprehensive, integrated continuum of cradle-to-career solutions at the neighborhood level or support the civic infrastructure and backbone of cradle-to-career networks that support their network partners to accomplish systems change. The bill would define cradle-to-career to mean a system of integrated services that begins before birth and leads to appropriate postsecondary success, including academic, occupational, and independent living, that benefits the individual and community as a whole. The bill would require the department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, to develop an application process and would require the department to establish performance standards to measure progress on indicators and results relevant to the evaluation of the grant program. The bill would require grant recipients to contribute matching funds and prepare and submit an annual report to the department, as specified.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Amended IN Senate August 25, 2022 Amended IN Senate August 11, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 22, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 13, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 19, 2022 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2517Introduced by Assembly Member Mia Bonta(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Reyes)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Levine, Quirk, Stone, and Blanca Rubio)(Coauthor: Senator Hurtado)February 17, 2022An act to add Division 11 (commencing with Section 20000) to the Welfare and Institutions Code, relating to poverty.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2517, as amended, Mia Bonta. California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program.Existing law requires the Department of Community Services and Development to, among other things, plan and evaluate strategies for overcoming poverty in the state, mobilize resources in support of antipoverty and community services programs, and administer public and private funds designed to support antipoverty programs that are not currently administered by other departments.Existing law establishes the Cradle-to-Career Data System for the purpose of connecting individuals and organizations to trusted information and resources, as a source for actionable data and research on education, economic, and health outcomes for individuals, families, and communities, and to provide for expanded access to tools and services that support the education-to-employment pipeline, as specified.This bill, the It Takes a Village Act of 2022, subject upon an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for these purposes, would establish the California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program to be administered by the State Department of Social Services or another department within the California Health and Human Services Agency. The bill would require the department to grant awards on a competitive basis to eligible entities that are Promise Neighborhoods, other community-based networks, or multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks, as those terms are defined, to either implement a comprehensive, integrated continuum of cradle-to-career solutions at the neighborhood level or support the civic infrastructure and backbone of cradle-to-career networks that support their network partners to accomplish systems change. The bill would define cradle-to-career to mean a system of integrated services that begins before birth and leads to appropriate postsecondary success, including academic, occupational, and independent living, that benefits the individual and community as a whole. The bill would require the department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, to develop an application process and would require the department to establish performance standards to measure progress on indicators and results relevant to the evaluation of the grant program. The bill would require grant recipients to contribute matching funds and prepare and submit an annual report to the department, as specified.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
44
5- Enrolled September 01, 2022 Passed IN Senate August 29, 2022 Passed IN Assembly August 30, 2022 Amended IN Senate August 25, 2022 Amended IN Senate August 11, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 22, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 13, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 19, 2022
5+ Amended IN Senate August 25, 2022 Amended IN Senate August 11, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 22, 2022 Amended IN Senate June 13, 2022 Amended IN Assembly April 19, 2022
66
7-Enrolled September 01, 2022
8-Passed IN Senate August 29, 2022
9-Passed IN Assembly August 30, 2022
107 Amended IN Senate August 25, 2022
118 Amended IN Senate August 11, 2022
129 Amended IN Senate June 22, 2022
1310 Amended IN Senate June 13, 2022
1411 Amended IN Assembly April 19, 2022
1512
1613 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION
1714
1815 Assembly Bill
1916
2017 No. 2517
2118
2219 Introduced by Assembly Member Mia Bonta(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Reyes)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Levine, Quirk, Stone, and Blanca Rubio)(Coauthor: Senator Hurtado)February 17, 2022
2320
2421 Introduced by Assembly Member Mia Bonta(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Reyes)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Levine, Quirk, Stone, and Blanca Rubio)(Coauthor: Senator Hurtado)
2522 February 17, 2022
2623
2724 An act to add Division 11 (commencing with Section 20000) to the Welfare and Institutions Code, relating to poverty.
2825
2926 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
3027
3128 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
3229
33-AB 2517, Mia Bonta. California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program.
30+AB 2517, as amended, Mia Bonta. California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program.
3431
3532 Existing law requires the Department of Community Services and Development to, among other things, plan and evaluate strategies for overcoming poverty in the state, mobilize resources in support of antipoverty and community services programs, and administer public and private funds designed to support antipoverty programs that are not currently administered by other departments.Existing law establishes the Cradle-to-Career Data System for the purpose of connecting individuals and organizations to trusted information and resources, as a source for actionable data and research on education, economic, and health outcomes for individuals, families, and communities, and to provide for expanded access to tools and services that support the education-to-employment pipeline, as specified.This bill, the It Takes a Village Act of 2022, subject upon an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for these purposes, would establish the California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program to be administered by the State Department of Social Services or another department within the California Health and Human Services Agency. The bill would require the department to grant awards on a competitive basis to eligible entities that are Promise Neighborhoods, other community-based networks, or multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks, as those terms are defined, to either implement a comprehensive, integrated continuum of cradle-to-career solutions at the neighborhood level or support the civic infrastructure and backbone of cradle-to-career networks that support their network partners to accomplish systems change. The bill would define cradle-to-career to mean a system of integrated services that begins before birth and leads to appropriate postsecondary success, including academic, occupational, and independent living, that benefits the individual and community as a whole. The bill would require the department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, to develop an application process and would require the department to establish performance standards to measure progress on indicators and results relevant to the evaluation of the grant program. The bill would require grant recipients to contribute matching funds and prepare and submit an annual report to the department, as specified.
3633
3734 Existing law requires the Department of Community Services and Development to, among other things, plan and evaluate strategies for overcoming poverty in the state, mobilize resources in support of antipoverty and community services programs, and administer public and private funds designed to support antipoverty programs that are not currently administered by other departments.
3835
3936 Existing law establishes the Cradle-to-Career Data System for the purpose of connecting individuals and organizations to trusted information and resources, as a source for actionable data and research on education, economic, and health outcomes for individuals, families, and communities, and to provide for expanded access to tools and services that support the education-to-employment pipeline, as specified.
4037
4138 This bill, the It Takes a Village Act of 2022, subject upon an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for these purposes, would establish the California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program to be administered by the State Department of Social Services or another department within the California Health and Human Services Agency. The bill would require the department to grant awards on a competitive basis to eligible entities that are Promise Neighborhoods, other community-based networks, or multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks, as those terms are defined, to either implement a comprehensive, integrated continuum of cradle-to-career solutions at the neighborhood level or support the civic infrastructure and backbone of cradle-to-career networks that support their network partners to accomplish systems change. The bill would define cradle-to-career to mean a system of integrated services that begins before birth and leads to appropriate postsecondary success, including academic, occupational, and independent living, that benefits the individual and community as a whole. The bill would require the department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, to develop an application process and would require the department to establish performance standards to measure progress on indicators and results relevant to the evaluation of the grant program. The bill would require grant recipients to contribute matching funds and prepare and submit an annual report to the department, as specified.
4239
4340 ## Digest Key
4441
4542 ## Bill Text
4643
47-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) It takes a village to raise a child. Applying that simple proverb and concept to Californias multifaceted society today means making sure that children and families, especially those in economically disadvantaged communities, have full access to opportunities and services from before birth to career that will enable them to reach their full potential in life.(b) Despite large statewide investments in education, health, social services, and other programs directed at children and their families, California faces persistently high rates of child poverty and educational achievement gaps in many economically disadvantaged communities. Cash payments, food assistance, and crucial services do not reach many children and families who are most in need because of significant access barriers that are often due to inequitable systemic barriers, and when provided, the services are fragmented and offered through organizationally siloed programs without attention to improving those equitable systems.(c) A proven solution to this problem, and the way to apply the it takes a village proverb and concept in todays world, is to invest in local and regional networks that: are equity focused; are data-driven and have the capacity to identify the highest needs within the most economically disadvantaged neighborhoods or regions; have the resources and trusted relationships within the communities to align, coordinate, leverage, and enhance services provided by state and local government, community-based organizations, nonprofits, businesses, and other entities active in the local community toward equitable outcomes; and identify systems needs, work with partners to address systemic needs, and measure systemic improvements.(d) Coordination of services needs to take place at both the neighborhood and regionwide levels to effectively align community services and systems with statewide policy and equity goals and implementation.(e) Promise Neighborhoods (PNs) and other neighborhood-based networks currently fulfill this function in selected economically disadvantaged neighborhoods by coordinating services provided by governments and private sector partners, and by providing direct services to the public. Regional cradle-to-career networks, such as StriveTogether, support multiple populations in selected regions, such as counties, in California by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale.(f) Both neighborhood-based and regional-based networks have achieved positive results and very high returns on investment in areas where they have operated. For PNs, this includes substantial improvements in health care access, kindergarten readiness, English language arts and literacy and mathematics achievement results, high school graduation rates, college and career readiness, reduced child welfare and juvenile justice involvement, and increased family stability in areas served by these programs. For StriveTogether and other regional cross-sector networks, this includes reductions in achievement gaps and improvements in a wide range of measures, such as preterm birth rates, early childcare quality or attendance, early grade reading, middle grade math, high school graduation rates, and postsecondary completion.(g) During the COVID-19 pandemic, community and regional networks were able to leverage their established infrastructure of cradle-to-career connections to confront issues created by the pandemic, meeting the basic needs of families, including food, housing, income relief, eviction defense, technology access, childcare, and vaccine outreach. The integrated and coordinated infrastructure has proven to be a strong model that is poised to confront extreme emergency events and greatly improve the well-being of children and families during difficult periods on a communitywide scale.(h) This collaborative approach ensures that a continuum of services reach children in communities where they are needed the most. This is especially important in communities experiencing high levels of homelessness. Community and regional networks can coordinate efforts among government agencies and other local organizations to ensure that those experiencing homelessness, or are at risk of becoming homeless, have full access to all programs and services to which they are entitled.(i) Community and regional networks can also play a major role in recovery from the pandemic by prioritizing investments in historically underserved communities, working with key organizations to leverage federal, state, and local recovery funds, strengthening civic infrastructure that builds the power and capacity of marginalized communities, and ensuring a strong accountability structure.(j) They also support implementation of the California Community Schools Partnership Program and other initiatives in the State Department of Education to engage pupils and parents, to fund and implement local improvement strategies, and provide supplemental and complementary services to ensure that Californias English learners, foster youth, and pupils in poverty have the learning supports they need.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature that the vital contributions provided by these community-based and regional networks be brought to scale, so that all children and families have the opportunities and continuum of services needed to break the cycle of poverty.SEC. 2. Division 11 (commencing with Section 20000) is added to the Welfare and Institutions Code, to read:DIVISION 11. Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services CHAPTER 1. California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program20000. This chapter shall be known, and may be cited, as the It Takes a Village Act of 2022.20001. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Cradle-to-career means a system of integrated services that begins before birth and leads to appropriate postsecondary success, including academic, occupational, and independent living, that benefits the individual and community as a whole.(b) (1) Eligible entity includes all of the following:(A) A nonprofit organization that is exempt from federal income taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, and that has a strong demonstrated financial record evidencing compliance. A nonprofit organization may be a faith-based organization, to the extent permitted by law.(B) A public or nonprofit institution of higher education.(C) An Indian tribe or tribal organization.(2) An eligible entity shall work in partnership with at least one local educational agency and one social service agency located within the identified geographic boundaries.(3) An eligible entity may also work with one or more of the following entities located within the identified geographic boundaries:(A) A local government agency.(B) Health organizations.(C) Another eligible entity.(c) Grant program means the California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program.(d) Multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks support multiple populations in neighborhoods, cities, counties, and regions by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale. These networks seek systems change and community engagement, develop evidence-based strategies, and where strategies prove successful, promote adoption in the full region.(e) Other community-based networks include nonprofit and faith-based networks, other than PNs, that are involved in supporting, advocating for, and empowering residents to achieve self-reliance and economic stability. Services provided by these networks may include food, housing assistance, access to benefits, mental health, job training, legal services, financial literacy, early childhood development, parenting support, after school enhanced learning, and youth empowerment.(f) Promise Neighborhood (PN) means a targeted geographic area served by the Promise Neighborhoods program administered by the United States Department of Education and authorized by the federal Every Student Succeeds Act in 2015 (Public Law 114-95). The program focuses on revitalizing economically disadvantaged communities through the establishment of a cradle-to-career network of services aimed at improving the health, safety, and education of the occupants in the defined area.(g) Solution includes both of the following:(1) A single activity, or a set of activities, performed or coordinated by PNs and other community-based networks that help ensure that children and their families receive an appropriate continuum of services that they need to thrive. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to services provided by federal, state, and local governments, or other entities, as well as the direct provision of services to the public.(2) A set of activities coordinated and supported by multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks to help ensure that children and their families are engaged with and supported by equitable systems that address their education, health, and well-being. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to effect systems change.20002. (a) (1) The California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program is hereby established to be administered by the State Department of Social Services or another department within the California Health and Human Services Agency, as designated by the Secretary of California Health and Human Services.(2) The purpose of the grant program is to award grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible entities to do either of the following:(A) Implement a comprehensive, integrated continuum of cradle-to-career solutions at the neighborhood level.(B) Support the civic infrastructure and backbone of cradle-to-career networks that support their network partners to accomplish systems change.(3) Solutions shall be in areas that include, but are not limited to, academic, health, social programs, and family and community supports, to meet the needs of high-need populations identified by a needs assessment or indicators, such as poor health for children, disparity gaps in school performance based on income or racial or ethnicity disaggregation, high rates of juvenile delinquency, adjudication, or incarceration, or high rates of foster care placement.(4) (A) Grants shall be awarded to eligible entities that are PNs, other community-based networks, or multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks.(B) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks receiving grants shall share the same common indicators and metrics and the common goal of helping children, youth, and families to thrive and serve to break the cycle of intergenerational poverty.(C) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career network applicants shall demonstrate that they have consulted and coordinated with stakeholders within their regions, including community members, PNs, and other community-based networks addressing needs of low-income neighborhoods.(D) All applicants shall identify solutions that tackle systemic inequities and work toward community transformation.(5) It is the intent of the Legislature that programs in the continuum should improve academic achievement and equitable social outcomes, including improving outcomes of early development, child and youth social and health development, and college and career readiness, as well as build strong family and community supports to help families move out of poverty.(b) (1) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall develop an application process for eligible entities to apply for the grants.(2) The department shall aim to achieve geographic equity by giving priority to applicants serving remote communities, including rural and tribal communities, through the selection process.20003. (a) To be eligible to receive a grant under this chapter, an eligible entity shall submit an application to the department at the time, in the manner, and containing the information, as the department may require.(b) At a minimum, the grant application shall include all of the following:(1) A description of a plan to significantly improve the academic, health, and social outcomes of children living in an identified economically disadvantaged neighborhood and to support the healthy development and well-being of children and youth in the neighborhood by providing a continuum of cradle-to-career solutions. This plan shall address the needs of the whole child, whole family, and whole community, as identified by the needs assessment described in paragraph (4). The continuum of solutions shall be based on the best available evidence, including, if available, strong, or moderately strong evidence. The plan shall also ensure that, over time, pupils not living in the neighborhood who attend the target school or schools have access to services within the continuum of solutions.(2) A description of the geographically defined area or neighborhood to be served and the level of distress in that area based on indicators of need and other relevant indicators. The statement of need in the neighborhood shall be based, in part, on results of a comprehensive needs assessment and segmentation analysis. The application may propose to serve multiple, noncontiguous areas.(3) A description of the applicants measurable short-term, long-term, and annual goals for expected outcomes of the grant, based on program and project indicators, as described in paragraph (2), which includes all of the following:(A) Performance goals for each year of the grant.(B) Projected growth or change over time and a sustainability plan outlining the process for reviewing and working with partners on a strategy to strengthen the infrastructure, ensure that target populations that require services have access to them and continue improving the results they are achieving beyond the grant life.(C) Annual goals for evaluating progress in improving systems, such as changes in policies, environments, or organizations that affect children and youth in the neighborhood.(4) An analysis of the needs and assets of the neighborhood or neighborhoods identified that includes all of the following:(A) A description of the process through which the needs assessment and segmentation analysis was produced, including a description of how family and community members were engaged in the analysis.(B) An explanation of how the applicant used the needs assessment and segmentation analysis in the development of localized, equity-based, cradle-to-career solutions.(C) A description of both the academic indicators and the available family and community support indicators, and social indicators that the applicant used to conduct the needs assessment.(5) For PNs and other community-based networks:(A) A description of solutions that will be used in the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions based on data collected, including a description of solutions specifically targeting subgroups of children, family members, community members, and children not attending schools or programs operated by the applicant and its partners.(B) The process by which each solution will be implemented and an expected timeline for launching each solution.(C) The estimated per child cost and cost projections over time, including administrative costs, to implement each solution.(D) The estimated number of children, by age, in the neighborhood who will be served by each solution, including the percentage of all children of the same age group within the neighborhood proposed to be served with each solution and the annual targets required to increase the proportion of children served to reach scale over time.(E) Financial projections of the cost of solutions over time.(F) The best available evidence supporting each proposed solution.(6) A description of the process used to develop the application, including the involvement of family and community members.(7) If feasible, a description of the process by which to develop, launch, and implement a longitudinal data system that does both of the following:(A) Integrates pupil-level or grade-level data from multiple sources to measure progress on academic, family, and community support indicators for all children in the neighborhood.(B) Tracks appropriate social indicators, as determined by the department, for children and families in the neighborhood.(8) A description of how the applicant has done all of the following:(A) Description of a detailed data plan that includes the data collection process.(B) Made or will make data accessible to parents, families, community residents, program partners, researchers, and evaluators at either the individual or aggregate level as appropriate while abiding by federal, state, and other privacy laws and requirements.(C) Managed and maintained the data system over time.(9) An explanation of how the applicant will continuously evaluate and improve the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions, including both of the following:(A) A description of the required grant indicators and other local performance indicators that will be used to inform each solution of the cradle-to-career continuum.(B) The processes for using data to improve instruction, optimize integrated pupil supports, provide for continuous program improvement, and hold staff and partner organizations accountable.(10) An identification of the fiscal agent, which may be any eligible entity.(11) A list of federal, state, local, and private sources of funding that the applicant will secure to comply with the matching funds requirement specified in Section 20004.(c) Before receiving a grant under this chapter, the applicant shall do all of the following:(1) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the academic and social indicators, and use them as program and project indicators.(2) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the family and community support indicators and use them as program and project indicators.(3) Perform an analysis of community assets within, or accessible to, the neighborhood, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) Early learning programs and networks, including home visiting, high-quality childcare, Early Head Start programs, Head Start programs, and prekindergarten programs.(B) Community centers, after school programs, and other opportunities for activities outside of school hours.(C) Transportation.(D) Parks.(E) The availability of healthy food options and opportunities for physical activity.(F) Existing family and pupil supports.(G) Businesses and employers located in the community.(H) Institutions of higher education.(4) Provide evidence of successful collaboration that has led to changes in child outcomes within the neighborhood.(d) An eligible entity, as part of the application, shall submit a preliminary memorandum of understanding, signed by each partner entity or agency. The preliminary memorandum of understanding shall describe, at a minimum, all of the following:(1) Each partners commitment and contribution toward achieving each result at population level by using a backbone agency to coordinate a collective impact initiative.(2) Each partners financial and programmatic commitment toward the strategies described in the application, including an identification of the fiscal agent.(3) The governance structure proposed for the eligible entity, including a system for how the eligible entity will serve as a backbone agency and hold partners accountable, representation of the geographic area on the eligible entitys governing and advisory boards, and resident engagement from the neighborhood in the organizations decisionmaking.(4) Each partners long-term commitment to providing cradle-to-career continuum services that, at a minimum, accounts for the cost of supporting the continuum, including the period after grant funds are no longer available, and potential changes in local government.(5) Each partners mission and plan that will govern the work that partners do together, including an aligned theory of improvement.(6) Each partners long-term commitment to supporting the cradle-to-career continuum through data-driven decisionmaking, including data collection, monitoring, reporting, and sharing.(7) Each partners commitment to ensuring sound fiscal management and controls, including evidence of a system of supports and personnel.(8) Each partners commitment to mobilizing local government service integration to improve outcomes for families and children in the neighborhood as measured by increased employment, improved education, decreased poverty, reduced crime, and improved health status.(9) A proposed data governance plan with each partners commitment to and plan for data collection and data sharing, including a data privacy plan that maintains privacy for children and families as required by the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-191) and federal Family Education Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (Public Law 93-380) standards.20004. (a) For the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, the department shall competitively award grants as follows:(1) Planning grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state.(2) Implementation grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and to multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state to be expended pursuant to Section 20005.(b) All neighborhood-based and multineighborhood regional networks that received a planning grant in the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, but did not receive an implementation grant during these three years shall be eligible to receive an implementation grant starting in the 202627 fiscal year, contingent on future budget appropriations. All entities that continue to meet the requirements set forth in Sections 20005 and 20007 shall be eligible for an implementation grant extension two years after the original grant was awarded.(c) (1) (A) Each grant recipient shall contribute matching funds or in-kind contributions in an amount equal to, but not less than, 100 percent of the grant award.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), a PN or other community-based network located in a rural community or tribal community shall provide matching funds or in-kind donations equal to at least 50 percent of the grant award.(2) (A) The matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 10 percent coming from private sources.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), for a PN or other community-based network in a rural community or tribal community, the matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 5 percent coming from private sources.(3) (A) An applicant that is unable to meet the matching requirements required by paragraphs (1) and (2) shall include in its application a request to the department to reduce the matching requirement, including the amount of the requested reduction, the total remaining match contribution, and a statement of the basis for the request.(B) The department may grant a request described in subparagraph (A) if it finds the request reasonable and that doing so would further the purposes of this chapter.20005. (a) Each implementation grant recipient under this chapter shall use the grant funds for both of the following purposes:(1) To implement the cradle-to-career services based on results of the needs analysis described in the application and plans to build system and organizational capacity.(2) To continuously evaluate the success of the program and improve the program based on data and outcomes.(b) Each grant recipient may use grant funds to develop the administrative capacity necessary to successfully implement a continuum of solutions, such as managing partnerships, integrating multiple funding sources, supporting the operation of a longitudinal data system, and accessing technical assistance. Each grant recipient and its partners shall not expend more than 20 percent of funds on these administrative and capacity building costs. Development and implementation of new or improved data systems shall not be included within that 20-percent limitation.(c) Grant recipients developing new or expanded longitudinal data systems shall coordinate and align their data collection and reporting with the Cradle-to-Career Data System.20006. (a) The department shall establish performance standards to measure progress on indicators and results relevant to the evaluation of the grant program.(b) (1) The State Department of Education, in consultation with the State Department of Social Services, shall establish a core set of academic results and indicators by which the grant recipients will be measured. These indicators may be based on pupil-level or grade-level data that is available from the following academic results and indicators:(A) Children benefit from a high-quality early learning education program and demonstrate school readiness skills, as measured by both of the following:(i) Children enter kindergarten ready for success, as measured by the number and percentage of children who demonstrate age-appropriate functioning at the beginning of the program or school year, as demonstrated by literacy, math, science, self-regulation, social-emotional development, physical development, English language development, and oral language indicators.(ii) Children are provided with high-quality early learning experiences, as measured by a quality rating instrument.(B) Pupils are proficient in core academic subjects, as measured by both of the following:(i) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in mathematics based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(ii) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in English language arts and literacy based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(C) Pupils are engaged and families support learning, as measured by attendance rates and chronic absenteeism rates, as measured by both of the following:(i) The average daily attendance rates of students in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive.(ii) The percentage of pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, who are absent 10 percent or more of the instructional days those pupils are enrolled.(D) Percentage of pupils who received a high school diploma within four years of entering grade 9 or who complete their graduation requirements at an alternative school.(E) High school graduates obtaining a postsecondary degree, certification, or credential as measured by all of the following:(i) Percentage of high school graduates who are placed in the prepared level on the college or career indicator.(ii) The number and percentage of students who enroll in a two-year or four-year college or university after graduation.(iii) The number and percentage of students who graduate from a two-year or four-year college or university.(2) The department shall establish a core set of family and community support results and indicators by which the grant recipient will be measured. A grant recipient shall choose to measure and report on two or more family and community support results and indicators. A grant recipients project design and implementation of a whole community continuum of solutions are subject to, but not limited to, all of the following family and community support results and indicators:(A) Pupils feel safe at school and connected to their school community, as measured by locally implemented school climate surveys or other instruments.(B) Pupils live in stable communities, as measured by pupil mobility rates in schools within the designated geographic boundary.(C) Where the appropriate infrastructure is available, pupils that have access to 21st century learning tools, as measured by the number and percentage of pupils who have access to a high-speed broadband internet-connected computing device.(c) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall also establish at least two indicators related to health, social and emotional development, mental health, and wellness. A grant recipient may choose to report on additional social or socioemotional indicators, drawn from either of the following:(1) Existing surveys, including the California Healthy Kids Survey or the YouthTruth Student Survey.(2) Other sources, as determined by the eligible entity and their partner agencies.(d) The department may establish other engagement, academic, and social indicators.20007. Each grant recipient shall prepare and submit an annual report to the department that shall include both of the following:(a) Information about the number and percentage of children, family members, and community members in the PN or similar community-based network who are served by the grant recipient, including a description of the number and percentage of children accessing each of the pipeline services and the number of family and community members served by each program.(b) Disaggregated data at population and program levels related to the grant recipients programs success in annual growth along program and project indicators. To the extent feasible, data should be disaggregated by all of the following:(1) Gender.(2) Major racial and ethnic groups.(3) English proficiency status.(4) Migrant status.(5) Disability status.(6) Economic disadvantage status.(7) Information relating to the performance metrics.(8) Other indicators that may be required by the department.20008. The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may establish an appropriate method, process, and structure for grant management, fiscal accountability, payments to grant recipients, and technical assistance and supports for grant recipients that ensures transparency and accountability in the use of state funds. The department may, at its discretion, contract with one or more entities, including, but not limited to, community development financial intermediaries, state financial entities, or other community-based organizations, for these purposes.20009. Notwithstanding the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code), the department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may implement, interpret, or make specific this chapter without taking any regulatory action.20010. (a) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the personal services contracting requirements of Article 4 (commencing with Section 19130) of Chapter 5 of Part 2 of Division 5 of Title 2 of the Government Code.(b) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the Public Contract Code and the State Contracting Manual, and are not subject to the approval of the Department of General Services.20011. Implementation of this chapter shall be subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for the purposes of this chapter.
44+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) It takes a village to raise a child. Applying that simple proverb and concept to Californias multifaceted society today means making sure that children and families, especially those in economically disadvantaged communities, have full access to opportunities and services from before birth to career that will enable them to reach their full potential in life.(b) Despite large statewide investments in education, health, social services, and other programs directed at children and their families, California faces persistently high rates of child poverty and educational achievement gaps in many economically disadvantaged communities. Cash payments, food assistance, and crucial services do not reach many children and families who are most in need because of significant access barriers that are often due to inequitable systemic barriers, and when provided, the services are fragmented and offered through organizationally siloed programs without attention to improving those equitable systems.(c) A proven solution to this problem, and the way to apply the it takes a village proverb and concept in todays world, is to invest in local and regional networks that: are equity focused; are data-driven and have the capacity to identify the highest needs within the most economically disadvantaged neighborhoods or regions; have the resources and trusted relationships within the communities to align, coordinate, leverage, and enhance services provided by state and local government, community-based organizations, nonprofits, businesses, and other entities active in the local community toward equitable outcomes; and identify systems systems needs, work with partners to address systemic needs, and measure systemic improvements.(d) Coordination of services needs to take place at both the neighborhood and regionwide levels to effectively align community services and systems with statewide policy and equity goals and implementation.(e) Promise Neighborhoods (PNs) and other neighborhood-based networks currently fulfill this function in selected economically disadvantaged neighborhoods by coordinating services provided by governments and private sector partners, and by providing direct services to the public. Regional cradle-to-career networks, such as StriveTogether, support multiple populations in selected regions, such as counties, in California by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale.(f) Both neighborhood-based and regional-based networks have achieved positive results and very high returns on investment in areas where they have operated. For PNs, this includes substantial improvements in health care access, kindergarten readiness, English language arts and literacy and mathematics achievement results, high school graduation rates, college and career readiness, reduced child welfare and juvenile justice involvement, and increased family stability in areas served by these programs. For StriveTogether and other regional cross-sector networks, this includes reductions in achievement gaps and improvements in a wide range of measures, such as preterm birth rates, early childcare quality or attendance, early grade reading, middle grade math, high school graduation rates, and postsecondary completion.(g) During the COVID-19 pandemic, community and regional networks were able to leverage their established infrastructure of cradle-to-career connections to confront issues created by the pandemic, meeting the basic needs of families, including food, housing, income relief, eviction defense, technology access, childcare, and vaccine outreach. The integrated and coordinated infrastructure has proven to be a strong model that is poised to confront extreme emergency events and greatly improve the well-being of children and families during difficult periods on a communitywide scale.(h) This collaborative approach ensures that a continuum of services reach children in communities where they are needed the most. This is especially important in communities experiencing high levels of homelessness. Community and regional networks can coordinate efforts among government agencies and other local organizations to ensure that those experiencing homelessness, or are at risk of becoming homeless, have full access to all programs and services to which they are entitled.(i) Community and regional networks can also play a major role in recovery from the pandemic by prioritizing investments in historically underserved communities, working with key organizations to leverage federal, state, and local recovery funds, strengthening civic infrastructure that builds the power and capacity of marginalized communities, and ensuring a strong accountability structure.(j) They also support implementation of the California Community Schools Partnership Program and other initiatives in the State Department of Education to engage pupils and parents, to fund and implement local improvement strategies, and provide supplemental and complementary services to ensure that Californias English learners, foster youth, and pupils in poverty have the learning supports they need.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature that the vital contributions provided by these community-based and regional networks be brought to scale, so that all children and families have the opportunities and continuum of services needed to break the cycle of poverty.SEC. 2. Division 11 (commencing with Section 20000) is added to the Welfare and Institutions Code, to read:DIVISION 11. Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services CHAPTER 1. California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program20000. This chapter shall be known, and may be cited, as the It Takes a Village Act of 2022.20001. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Cradle-to-career means a system of integrated services that begins before birth and leads to appropriate postsecondary success, including academic, occupational, and independent living, that benefits the individual and community as a whole.(b) (1) Eligible entity includes all of the following:(A) A nonprofit organization that is exempt from federal income taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, and that has a strong demonstrated financial record evidencing compliance. A nonprofit organization may be a faith-based organization, to the extent permitted by law.(B) A public or nonprofit institution of higher education.(C) An Indian tribe or tribal organization.(2) An eligible entity shall work in partnership with at least one local educational agency and one social service agency located within the identified geographic boundaries.(3) An eligible entity may also work with one or more of the following entities located within the identified geographic boundaries:(A) A local government agency.(B) Health organizations.(C) Another eligible entity.(c) Grant program means the California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program.(d) Multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks support multiple populations in neighborhoods, cities, counties, and regions by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale. These networks seek systems change, change and community engagement, develop evidence-based strategies, and where strategies prove successful, promote adoption in the full region.(e) Other community-based networks include nonprofit and faith-based networks, other than PNs, that are involved in supporting, advocating for, and empowering residents to achieve self-reliance and economic stability. Services provided by these networks may include food, housing assistance, access to benefits, mental health, job training, legal services, financial literacy, early childhood development, parenting support, after school enhanced learning, and youth empowerment.(f) Promise Neighborhood (PN) means a targeted geographic area served by the Promise Neighborhoods program administered by the United States Department of Education and authorized by the federal Every Student Succeeds Act in 2015 (Public Law 114-95). The program focuses on revitalizing economically disadvantaged communities through the establishment of a cradle-to-career network of services aimed at improving the health, safety, and education of the occupants in the defined area.(g) Solution includes both of the following:(1) A single activity, or a set of activities, performed or coordinated by PNs and other community-based networks that help ensure that children and their families receive an appropriate continuum of services that they need to thrive. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to services provided by federal, state, and local governments, or other entities, as well as the direct provision of services to the public.(2) A set of activities coordinated and supported by multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks to help ensure that children and their families are engaged with and supported by equitable systems that address their education, health, and well-being. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to effect systems change.20002. (a) (1) The California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program is hereby established to be administered by the State Department of Social Services or another department within the California Health and Human Services Agency, as designated by the Secretary of California Health and Human Services.(2) The purpose of the grant program is to award grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible entities to do either of the following:(A) Implement a comprehensive, integrated continuum of cradle-to-career solutions at the neighborhood level.(B) Support the civic infrastructure and backbone of cradle-to-career networks that support their network partners to accomplish systems change.(3) Solutions shall be in areas that include, but are not limited to, academic, health, social programs, and family and community supports, to meet the needs of high-need populations identified by a needs assessment or indicators, such as poor health for children, disparity gaps in school performance based on income or racial or ethnicity disaggregation, high rates of juvenile delinquency, adjudication, or incarceration, or high rates of foster care placement.(4) (A) Grants shall be awarded to eligible entities that are PNs, other community-based networks, or multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks.(B) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks receiving grants shall share the same common indicators and metrics and the common goal of helping children, youth, and families to thrive and serve to break the cycle of intergenerational poverty.(C) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career network applicants shall demonstrate that they have consulted and coordinated with stakeholders within their regions, including community members, PNs, and other community-based networks addressing needs of low-income neighborhoods.(D) All applicants shall identify solutions that tackle systemic inequities and work toward community transformation.(5) It is the intent of the Legislature that programs in the continuum should improve academic achievement and equitable social outcomes, including improving outcomes of early development, child and youth social and health development, and college and career readiness, as well as build strong family and community supports to help families move out of poverty.(b) (1) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall develop an application process for eligible entities to apply for the grants.(2) The department shall aim to achieve geographic equity by giving priority to applicants serving remote communities, including rural and tribal communities, through the selection process.20003. (a) To be eligible to receive a grant under this chapter, an eligible entity shall submit an application to the department at the time, in the manner, and containing the information, as the department may require.(b) At a minimum, the grant application shall include all of the following:(1) A description of a plan to significantly improve the academic, health, and social outcomes of children living in an identified economically disadvantaged neighborhood and to support the healthy development and well-being of children and youth in the neighborhood by providing a continuum of cradle-to-career solutions. This plan shall address the needs of the whole child, whole family, and whole community, as identified by the needs assessment described in paragraph (4). The continuum of solutions shall be based on the best available evidence, including, if available, strong, or moderately strong evidence. The plan shall also ensure that, over time, pupils not living in the neighborhood who attend the target school or schools have access to services within the continuum of solutions.(2) A description of the geographically defined area or neighborhood to be served and the level of distress in that area based on indicators of need and other relevant indicators. The statement of need in the neighborhood shall be based, in part, on results of a comprehensive needs assessment and segmentation analysis. The application may propose to serve multiple, noncontiguous areas.(3) A description of the applicants measurable short-term, long-term, and annual goals for expected outcomes of the grant, based on program and project indicators, as described in paragraph (2), that which includes all of the following:(A) Performance goals for each year of the grant.(B) Projected growth or change over time and a sustainability plan outlining the process for reviewing and working with partners on a strategy to strengthen the infrastructure, ensure that target populations that require services have access to them and continue improving the results they are achieving beyond the grant life.(C) Annual goals for evaluating progress in improving systems, such as changes in policies, environments, or organizations that affect children and youth in the neighborhood.(4) An analysis of the needs and assets of the neighborhood or neighborhoods identified that includes all of the following:(A) A description of the process through which the needs assessment and segmentation analysis was produced, including a description of how family and community members were engaged in the analysis.(B) An explanation of how the applicant used the needs assessment and segmentation analysis in the development of localized, equity-based, cradle-to-career solutions.(C) A description of both the academic indicators and the available family and community support indicators, and social indicators that the applicant used to conduct the needs assessment.(5) For PNs and other community-based networks:(A) A description of solutions that will be used in the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions based on data collected, including a description of solutions specifically targeting subgroups of children, family members, community members, and children not attending schools or programs operated by the applicant and its partners.(B) The process by which each solution will be implemented and an expected timeline for launching each solution.(C) The estimated per child cost and cost projections over time, including administrative costs, to implement each solution.(D) The estimated number of children, by age, in the neighborhood who will be served by each solution, including the percentage of all children of the same age group within the neighborhood proposed to be served with each solution and the annual targets required to increase the proportion of children served to reach scale over time.(E) Financial projections of the cost of solutions over time.(F) The best available evidence supporting each proposed solution.(6) A description of the process used to develop the application, including the involvement of family and community members.(7) If feasible, a description of the process by which to develop, launch, and implement a longitudinal data system that does both of the following:(A) Integrates pupil-level or grade-level data from multiple sources to measure progress on academic, family, and community support indicators for all children in the neighborhood.(B) Tracks appropriate social indicators, as determined by the department, for children and families in the neighborhood.(8) A description of how the applicant has done all of the following:(A) Description of a detailed data plan that includes the data collection process.(B) Made or will make data accessible to parents, families, community residents, program partners, researchers, and evaluators at either the individual or aggregate level as appropriate while abiding by federal, state, and other privacy laws and requirements.(C) Managed and maintained the data system over time.(9) An explanation of how the applicant will continuously evaluate and improve the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions, including both of the following:(A) A description of the required grant indicators and other local performance indicators that will be used to inform each solution of the cradle-to-career continuum.(B) The processes for using data to improve instruction, optimize integrated pupil supports, provide for continuous program improvement, and hold staff and partner organizations accountable.(10) An identification of the fiscal agent, which may be any eligible entity.(11) A list of federal, state, local, and private sources of funding that the applicant will secure to comply with the matching funds requirement specified in Section 20004.(c) Before receiving a grant under this chapter, the applicant shall do all of the following:(1) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the academic and social indicators, and use them as program and project indicators.(2) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the family and community support indicators and use them as program and project indicators.(3) Perform an analysis of community assets within, or accessible to, the neighborhood, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) Early learning programs and networks, including home visiting, high-quality childcare, Early Head Start programs, Head Start programs, and prekindergarten programs.(B) Community centers, after school programs, and other opportunities for activities outside of school hours.(C) Transportation.(D) Parks.(E) The availability of healthy food options and opportunities for physical activity.(F) Existing family and pupil supports.(G) Businesses and employers located in the community.(H) Institutions of higher education.(4) Provide evidence of successful collaboration that has led to changes in child outcomes within the neighborhood.(d) An eligible entity, as part of the application, shall submit a preliminary memorandum of understanding, signed by each partner entity or agency. The preliminary memorandum of understanding shall describe, at a minimum, all of the following:(1) Each partners commitment and contribution toward achieving each result at population level by using a backbone agency to coordinate a collective impact initiative.(2) Each partners financial and programmatic commitment toward the strategies described in the application, including an identification of the fiscal agent.(3) The governance structure proposed for the eligible entity, including a system for how the eligible entity will serve as a backbone agency and hold partners accountable, representation of the geographic area on the eligible entitys governing and advisory boards, and resident engagement from the neighborhood in the organizations decisionmaking.(4) Each partners long-term commitment to providing cradle-to-career continuum services that, at a minimum, accounts for the cost of supporting the continuum, including the period after grant funds are no longer available, and potential changes in local government.(5) Each partners mission and plan that will govern the work that partners do together, including an aligned theory of improvement.(6) Each partners long-term commitment to supporting the cradle-to-career continuum through data-driven decisionmaking, including data collection, monitoring, reporting, and sharing.(7) Each partners commitment to ensuring sound fiscal management and controls, including evidence of a system of supports and personnel.(8) Each partners commitment to mobilizing local government service integration to improve outcomes for families and children in the neighborhood as measured by increased employment, improved education, decreased poverty, reduced crime, and improved health status.(9) A proposed data governance plan with each partners commitment to and plan for data collection and data sharing, including a data privacy plan that maintains privacy for children and families as required by the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-191) and federal Family Education Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (Public Law 93-380) standards.20004. (a) For the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, the department shall competitively award grants as follows:(1) Planning grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state.(2) Implementation grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and to multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state to be expended pursuant to Section 20005.(b) All neighborhood-based and multineighborhood regional networks who that received a planning grant in the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, but did not receive an implementation grant during these three years shall be eligible to receive an implementation grant starting in the 202627 fiscal year, contingent on future budget appropriations. All entities that continue to meet the requirements set forth in Sections 20005 and 20007 shall be eligible for an implementation grant extension two years after the original grant was awarded.(c) (1) (A) Each grant recipient shall contribute matching funds or in-kind contributions in an amount equal to, but not less than, 100 percent of the grant award.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), a PN or other community-based network located in a rural community or tribal community shall provide matching funds or in-kind donations equal to at least 50 percent of the grant award.(2) (A) The matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 10 percent coming from private sources.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), for a PN or other community-based network in a rural community or in tribal community, the matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 5 percent coming from private sources.(3) (A) An applicant that is unable to meet the matching requirements required by paragraphs (1) and (2) shall include in its application a request to the department to reduce the matching requirement, including the amount of the requested reduction, the total remaining match contribution, and a statement of the basis for the request.(B) The department may grant a request described in subparagraph (A) if it finds the request reasonable and that doing so would further the purposes of this chapter.20005. (a) Each implementation grant recipient under this chapter shall use the grant funds for both of the following purposes:(1) To implement the cradle-to-career services based on results of the needs analysis described in the application and plans to build system and organizational capacity.(2) To continuously evaluate the success of the program and improve the program based on data and outcomes.(b) Each grant recipient may use grant funds to develop the administrative capacity necessary to successfully implement a continuum of solutions, such as managing partnerships, integrating multiple funding sources, supporting the operation of a longitudinal data system, and accessing technical assistance. Each grant recipient and its partners shall not expend more than 20 percent of funds on these administrative and capacity building costs. Development and implementation of new or improved data systems shall not be included within that 20-percent limitation.(c) Grant recipients developing new or expanded longitudinal data systems shall coordinate and align their data collection and reporting with the Cradle-to-Career Data System.20006. (a) The department shall establish performance standards to measure progress on indicators and results relevant to the evaluation of the grant program.(b) (1) The State Department of Education Education, in consultation with the State Department of Social Services, shall establish a core set of academic results and indicators by which the grant recipients will be measured. These indicators may be based on pupil-level or grade-level data that is available from the following academic results and indicators:(A) Children benefit from a high-quality early learning education program and demonstrate school readiness skills, as measured by both of the following:(i) Children enter kindergarten ready for success, as measured by the number and percentage of children who demonstrate age-appropriate functioning at the beginning of the program or school year, as demonstrated by literacy, math, science, self-regulation, social-emotional development, physical development, English language development, and oral language indicators.(ii) Children are provided with high-quality early learning experiences, as measured by a quality rating instrument.(B) Pupils are proficient in core academic subjects, as measured by both of the following:(i) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in mathematics based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments, Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(ii) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in English language arts and literacy based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments, Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(C) Pupils are engaged and families support learning, as measured by attendance rates and chronic absenteeism rates, as measured by both of the following:(i) The average daily attendance rates of students in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive.(ii) The percentage of pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, who are absent 10 percent or more of the instructional days those pupils are enrolled.(D) Percentage of pupils who received a high school diploma within four years of entering grade 9 or who complete their graduation requirements at an alternative school.(E) High school graduates obtaining a postsecondary degree, certification, or credential as measured by all of the following:(i) Percentage of high school graduates who are placed in the prepared level on the college or career indicator.(ii) The number and percentage of students who enroll in a two-year or four-year college or university after graduation.(iii) The number and percentage of students who graduate from a two-year or four-year college or university.(2) The department shall establish a core set of family and community support results and indicators by which the grant recipient will be measured. A grant recipient shall choose to measure and report on two or more family and community support results and indicators. A grant recipients project design and implementation of a whole community continuum of solutions are subject to, but not limited to, all of the following family and community support results and indicators:(A) Pupils feel safe at school and connected to their school community, as measured by locally implemented school climate surveys or other instruments.(B) Pupils live in stable communities, as measured by pupil mobility rates in schools within the designated geographic boundary.(C) Where the appropriate infrastructure is available, pupils that have access to 21st century learning tools, as measured by the number and percentage of pupils who have access to a high-speed broadband internet-connected computing device.(c) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall also establish at least two indicators related to health, social and emotional development, mental health, and wellness. A grant recipient may choose to report on additional social or socioemotional indicators, drawn from either of the following:(1) Existing surveys, including the California Healthy Kids Survey or the YouthTruth Student Survey.(2) Other sources, as determined by the eligible entity and their partner agencies.(d) The department may establish other engagement, academic, and social indicators.20007. Each grant recipient shall prepare and submit an annual report to the department that shall include both of the following:(a) Information about the number and percentage of children, family members, and community members in the PN or similar community-based network who are served by the grant recipient, including a description of the number and percentage of children accessing each of the pipeline services and the number of family and community members served by each program.(b) Disaggregated data at population and program levels related to the grant recipients programs success in annual growth along program and project indicators. To the extent feasible, data should be disaggregated by all of the following:(1) Gender.(2) Major racial and ethnic groups.(3) English proficiency status.(4) Migrant status.(5) Disability status.(6) Economic disadvantage status.(7) Information relating to the performance metrics.(8) Other indicators that may be required by the department.20008. The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may establish an appropriate method, process, and structure for grant management, fiscal accountability, payments to grant recipients, and technical assistance and supports for grant recipients that ensures transparency and accountability in the use of state funds. The department may, at its discretion, contract with one or more entities, including, but not limited to, community development financial intermediaries, state financial entities, or other community-based organizations, for these purposes.20009. Notwithstanding the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code), the department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may implement, interpret, or make specific this chapter without taking any regulatory action.20010. (a) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the personal services contracting requirements of Article 4 (commencing with Section 19130) of Chapter 5 of Part 2 of Division 5 of Title 2 of the Government Code.(b) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the Public Contract Code and the State Contracting Manual, and are not subject to the approval of the Department of General Services.20011. Implementation of this chapter shall be subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for the purposes of this chapter.
4845
4946 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5047
5148 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
5249
53-SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) It takes a village to raise a child. Applying that simple proverb and concept to Californias multifaceted society today means making sure that children and families, especially those in economically disadvantaged communities, have full access to opportunities and services from before birth to career that will enable them to reach their full potential in life.(b) Despite large statewide investments in education, health, social services, and other programs directed at children and their families, California faces persistently high rates of child poverty and educational achievement gaps in many economically disadvantaged communities. Cash payments, food assistance, and crucial services do not reach many children and families who are most in need because of significant access barriers that are often due to inequitable systemic barriers, and when provided, the services are fragmented and offered through organizationally siloed programs without attention to improving those equitable systems.(c) A proven solution to this problem, and the way to apply the it takes a village proverb and concept in todays world, is to invest in local and regional networks that: are equity focused; are data-driven and have the capacity to identify the highest needs within the most economically disadvantaged neighborhoods or regions; have the resources and trusted relationships within the communities to align, coordinate, leverage, and enhance services provided by state and local government, community-based organizations, nonprofits, businesses, and other entities active in the local community toward equitable outcomes; and identify systems needs, work with partners to address systemic needs, and measure systemic improvements.(d) Coordination of services needs to take place at both the neighborhood and regionwide levels to effectively align community services and systems with statewide policy and equity goals and implementation.(e) Promise Neighborhoods (PNs) and other neighborhood-based networks currently fulfill this function in selected economically disadvantaged neighborhoods by coordinating services provided by governments and private sector partners, and by providing direct services to the public. Regional cradle-to-career networks, such as StriveTogether, support multiple populations in selected regions, such as counties, in California by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale.(f) Both neighborhood-based and regional-based networks have achieved positive results and very high returns on investment in areas where they have operated. For PNs, this includes substantial improvements in health care access, kindergarten readiness, English language arts and literacy and mathematics achievement results, high school graduation rates, college and career readiness, reduced child welfare and juvenile justice involvement, and increased family stability in areas served by these programs. For StriveTogether and other regional cross-sector networks, this includes reductions in achievement gaps and improvements in a wide range of measures, such as preterm birth rates, early childcare quality or attendance, early grade reading, middle grade math, high school graduation rates, and postsecondary completion.(g) During the COVID-19 pandemic, community and regional networks were able to leverage their established infrastructure of cradle-to-career connections to confront issues created by the pandemic, meeting the basic needs of families, including food, housing, income relief, eviction defense, technology access, childcare, and vaccine outreach. The integrated and coordinated infrastructure has proven to be a strong model that is poised to confront extreme emergency events and greatly improve the well-being of children and families during difficult periods on a communitywide scale.(h) This collaborative approach ensures that a continuum of services reach children in communities where they are needed the most. This is especially important in communities experiencing high levels of homelessness. Community and regional networks can coordinate efforts among government agencies and other local organizations to ensure that those experiencing homelessness, or are at risk of becoming homeless, have full access to all programs and services to which they are entitled.(i) Community and regional networks can also play a major role in recovery from the pandemic by prioritizing investments in historically underserved communities, working with key organizations to leverage federal, state, and local recovery funds, strengthening civic infrastructure that builds the power and capacity of marginalized communities, and ensuring a strong accountability structure.(j) They also support implementation of the California Community Schools Partnership Program and other initiatives in the State Department of Education to engage pupils and parents, to fund and implement local improvement strategies, and provide supplemental and complementary services to ensure that Californias English learners, foster youth, and pupils in poverty have the learning supports they need.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature that the vital contributions provided by these community-based and regional networks be brought to scale, so that all children and families have the opportunities and continuum of services needed to break the cycle of poverty.
50+SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) It takes a village to raise a child. Applying that simple proverb and concept to Californias multifaceted society today means making sure that children and families, especially those in economically disadvantaged communities, have full access to opportunities and services from before birth to career that will enable them to reach their full potential in life.(b) Despite large statewide investments in education, health, social services, and other programs directed at children and their families, California faces persistently high rates of child poverty and educational achievement gaps in many economically disadvantaged communities. Cash payments, food assistance, and crucial services do not reach many children and families who are most in need because of significant access barriers that are often due to inequitable systemic barriers, and when provided, the services are fragmented and offered through organizationally siloed programs without attention to improving those equitable systems.(c) A proven solution to this problem, and the way to apply the it takes a village proverb and concept in todays world, is to invest in local and regional networks that: are equity focused; are data-driven and have the capacity to identify the highest needs within the most economically disadvantaged neighborhoods or regions; have the resources and trusted relationships within the communities to align, coordinate, leverage, and enhance services provided by state and local government, community-based organizations, nonprofits, businesses, and other entities active in the local community toward equitable outcomes; and identify systems systems needs, work with partners to address systemic needs, and measure systemic improvements.(d) Coordination of services needs to take place at both the neighborhood and regionwide levels to effectively align community services and systems with statewide policy and equity goals and implementation.(e) Promise Neighborhoods (PNs) and other neighborhood-based networks currently fulfill this function in selected economically disadvantaged neighborhoods by coordinating services provided by governments and private sector partners, and by providing direct services to the public. Regional cradle-to-career networks, such as StriveTogether, support multiple populations in selected regions, such as counties, in California by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale.(f) Both neighborhood-based and regional-based networks have achieved positive results and very high returns on investment in areas where they have operated. For PNs, this includes substantial improvements in health care access, kindergarten readiness, English language arts and literacy and mathematics achievement results, high school graduation rates, college and career readiness, reduced child welfare and juvenile justice involvement, and increased family stability in areas served by these programs. For StriveTogether and other regional cross-sector networks, this includes reductions in achievement gaps and improvements in a wide range of measures, such as preterm birth rates, early childcare quality or attendance, early grade reading, middle grade math, high school graduation rates, and postsecondary completion.(g) During the COVID-19 pandemic, community and regional networks were able to leverage their established infrastructure of cradle-to-career connections to confront issues created by the pandemic, meeting the basic needs of families, including food, housing, income relief, eviction defense, technology access, childcare, and vaccine outreach. The integrated and coordinated infrastructure has proven to be a strong model that is poised to confront extreme emergency events and greatly improve the well-being of children and families during difficult periods on a communitywide scale.(h) This collaborative approach ensures that a continuum of services reach children in communities where they are needed the most. This is especially important in communities experiencing high levels of homelessness. Community and regional networks can coordinate efforts among government agencies and other local organizations to ensure that those experiencing homelessness, or are at risk of becoming homeless, have full access to all programs and services to which they are entitled.(i) Community and regional networks can also play a major role in recovery from the pandemic by prioritizing investments in historically underserved communities, working with key organizations to leverage federal, state, and local recovery funds, strengthening civic infrastructure that builds the power and capacity of marginalized communities, and ensuring a strong accountability structure.(j) They also support implementation of the California Community Schools Partnership Program and other initiatives in the State Department of Education to engage pupils and parents, to fund and implement local improvement strategies, and provide supplemental and complementary services to ensure that Californias English learners, foster youth, and pupils in poverty have the learning supports they need.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature that the vital contributions provided by these community-based and regional networks be brought to scale, so that all children and families have the opportunities and continuum of services needed to break the cycle of poverty.
5451
55-SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) It takes a village to raise a child. Applying that simple proverb and concept to Californias multifaceted society today means making sure that children and families, especially those in economically disadvantaged communities, have full access to opportunities and services from before birth to career that will enable them to reach their full potential in life.(b) Despite large statewide investments in education, health, social services, and other programs directed at children and their families, California faces persistently high rates of child poverty and educational achievement gaps in many economically disadvantaged communities. Cash payments, food assistance, and crucial services do not reach many children and families who are most in need because of significant access barriers that are often due to inequitable systemic barriers, and when provided, the services are fragmented and offered through organizationally siloed programs without attention to improving those equitable systems.(c) A proven solution to this problem, and the way to apply the it takes a village proverb and concept in todays world, is to invest in local and regional networks that: are equity focused; are data-driven and have the capacity to identify the highest needs within the most economically disadvantaged neighborhoods or regions; have the resources and trusted relationships within the communities to align, coordinate, leverage, and enhance services provided by state and local government, community-based organizations, nonprofits, businesses, and other entities active in the local community toward equitable outcomes; and identify systems needs, work with partners to address systemic needs, and measure systemic improvements.(d) Coordination of services needs to take place at both the neighborhood and regionwide levels to effectively align community services and systems with statewide policy and equity goals and implementation.(e) Promise Neighborhoods (PNs) and other neighborhood-based networks currently fulfill this function in selected economically disadvantaged neighborhoods by coordinating services provided by governments and private sector partners, and by providing direct services to the public. Regional cradle-to-career networks, such as StriveTogether, support multiple populations in selected regions, such as counties, in California by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale.(f) Both neighborhood-based and regional-based networks have achieved positive results and very high returns on investment in areas where they have operated. For PNs, this includes substantial improvements in health care access, kindergarten readiness, English language arts and literacy and mathematics achievement results, high school graduation rates, college and career readiness, reduced child welfare and juvenile justice involvement, and increased family stability in areas served by these programs. For StriveTogether and other regional cross-sector networks, this includes reductions in achievement gaps and improvements in a wide range of measures, such as preterm birth rates, early childcare quality or attendance, early grade reading, middle grade math, high school graduation rates, and postsecondary completion.(g) During the COVID-19 pandemic, community and regional networks were able to leverage their established infrastructure of cradle-to-career connections to confront issues created by the pandemic, meeting the basic needs of families, including food, housing, income relief, eviction defense, technology access, childcare, and vaccine outreach. The integrated and coordinated infrastructure has proven to be a strong model that is poised to confront extreme emergency events and greatly improve the well-being of children and families during difficult periods on a communitywide scale.(h) This collaborative approach ensures that a continuum of services reach children in communities where they are needed the most. This is especially important in communities experiencing high levels of homelessness. Community and regional networks can coordinate efforts among government agencies and other local organizations to ensure that those experiencing homelessness, or are at risk of becoming homeless, have full access to all programs and services to which they are entitled.(i) Community and regional networks can also play a major role in recovery from the pandemic by prioritizing investments in historically underserved communities, working with key organizations to leverage federal, state, and local recovery funds, strengthening civic infrastructure that builds the power and capacity of marginalized communities, and ensuring a strong accountability structure.(j) They also support implementation of the California Community Schools Partnership Program and other initiatives in the State Department of Education to engage pupils and parents, to fund and implement local improvement strategies, and provide supplemental and complementary services to ensure that Californias English learners, foster youth, and pupils in poverty have the learning supports they need.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature that the vital contributions provided by these community-based and regional networks be brought to scale, so that all children and families have the opportunities and continuum of services needed to break the cycle of poverty.
52+SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) It takes a village to raise a child. Applying that simple proverb and concept to Californias multifaceted society today means making sure that children and families, especially those in economically disadvantaged communities, have full access to opportunities and services from before birth to career that will enable them to reach their full potential in life.(b) Despite large statewide investments in education, health, social services, and other programs directed at children and their families, California faces persistently high rates of child poverty and educational achievement gaps in many economically disadvantaged communities. Cash payments, food assistance, and crucial services do not reach many children and families who are most in need because of significant access barriers that are often due to inequitable systemic barriers, and when provided, the services are fragmented and offered through organizationally siloed programs without attention to improving those equitable systems.(c) A proven solution to this problem, and the way to apply the it takes a village proverb and concept in todays world, is to invest in local and regional networks that: are equity focused; are data-driven and have the capacity to identify the highest needs within the most economically disadvantaged neighborhoods or regions; have the resources and trusted relationships within the communities to align, coordinate, leverage, and enhance services provided by state and local government, community-based organizations, nonprofits, businesses, and other entities active in the local community toward equitable outcomes; and identify systems systems needs, work with partners to address systemic needs, and measure systemic improvements.(d) Coordination of services needs to take place at both the neighborhood and regionwide levels to effectively align community services and systems with statewide policy and equity goals and implementation.(e) Promise Neighborhoods (PNs) and other neighborhood-based networks currently fulfill this function in selected economically disadvantaged neighborhoods by coordinating services provided by governments and private sector partners, and by providing direct services to the public. Regional cradle-to-career networks, such as StriveTogether, support multiple populations in selected regions, such as counties, in California by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale.(f) Both neighborhood-based and regional-based networks have achieved positive results and very high returns on investment in areas where they have operated. For PNs, this includes substantial improvements in health care access, kindergarten readiness, English language arts and literacy and mathematics achievement results, high school graduation rates, college and career readiness, reduced child welfare and juvenile justice involvement, and increased family stability in areas served by these programs. For StriveTogether and other regional cross-sector networks, this includes reductions in achievement gaps and improvements in a wide range of measures, such as preterm birth rates, early childcare quality or attendance, early grade reading, middle grade math, high school graduation rates, and postsecondary completion.(g) During the COVID-19 pandemic, community and regional networks were able to leverage their established infrastructure of cradle-to-career connections to confront issues created by the pandemic, meeting the basic needs of families, including food, housing, income relief, eviction defense, technology access, childcare, and vaccine outreach. The integrated and coordinated infrastructure has proven to be a strong model that is poised to confront extreme emergency events and greatly improve the well-being of children and families during difficult periods on a communitywide scale.(h) This collaborative approach ensures that a continuum of services reach children in communities where they are needed the most. This is especially important in communities experiencing high levels of homelessness. Community and regional networks can coordinate efforts among government agencies and other local organizations to ensure that those experiencing homelessness, or are at risk of becoming homeless, have full access to all programs and services to which they are entitled.(i) Community and regional networks can also play a major role in recovery from the pandemic by prioritizing investments in historically underserved communities, working with key organizations to leverage federal, state, and local recovery funds, strengthening civic infrastructure that builds the power and capacity of marginalized communities, and ensuring a strong accountability structure.(j) They also support implementation of the California Community Schools Partnership Program and other initiatives in the State Department of Education to engage pupils and parents, to fund and implement local improvement strategies, and provide supplemental and complementary services to ensure that Californias English learners, foster youth, and pupils in poverty have the learning supports they need.(k) It is the intent of the Legislature that the vital contributions provided by these community-based and regional networks be brought to scale, so that all children and families have the opportunities and continuum of services needed to break the cycle of poverty.
5653
5754 SECTION 1. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
5855
5956 ### SECTION 1.
6057
6158 (a) It takes a village to raise a child. Applying that simple proverb and concept to Californias multifaceted society today means making sure that children and families, especially those in economically disadvantaged communities, have full access to opportunities and services from before birth to career that will enable them to reach their full potential in life.
6259
6360 (b) Despite large statewide investments in education, health, social services, and other programs directed at children and their families, California faces persistently high rates of child poverty and educational achievement gaps in many economically disadvantaged communities. Cash payments, food assistance, and crucial services do not reach many children and families who are most in need because of significant access barriers that are often due to inequitable systemic barriers, and when provided, the services are fragmented and offered through organizationally siloed programs without attention to improving those equitable systems.
6461
65-(c) A proven solution to this problem, and the way to apply the it takes a village proverb and concept in todays world, is to invest in local and regional networks that: are equity focused; are data-driven and have the capacity to identify the highest needs within the most economically disadvantaged neighborhoods or regions; have the resources and trusted relationships within the communities to align, coordinate, leverage, and enhance services provided by state and local government, community-based organizations, nonprofits, businesses, and other entities active in the local community toward equitable outcomes; and identify systems needs, work with partners to address systemic needs, and measure systemic improvements.
62+(c) A proven solution to this problem, and the way to apply the it takes a village proverb and concept in todays world, is to invest in local and regional networks that: are equity focused; are data-driven and have the capacity to identify the highest needs within the most economically disadvantaged neighborhoods or regions; have the resources and trusted relationships within the communities to align, coordinate, leverage, and enhance services provided by state and local government, community-based organizations, nonprofits, businesses, and other entities active in the local community toward equitable outcomes; and identify systems systems needs, work with partners to address systemic needs, and measure systemic improvements.
6663
6764 (d) Coordination of services needs to take place at both the neighborhood and regionwide levels to effectively align community services and systems with statewide policy and equity goals and implementation.
6865
6966 (e) Promise Neighborhoods (PNs) and other neighborhood-based networks currently fulfill this function in selected economically disadvantaged neighborhoods by coordinating services provided by governments and private sector partners, and by providing direct services to the public. Regional cradle-to-career networks, such as StriveTogether, support multiple populations in selected regions, such as counties, in California by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale.
7067
7168 (f) Both neighborhood-based and regional-based networks have achieved positive results and very high returns on investment in areas where they have operated. For PNs, this includes substantial improvements in health care access, kindergarten readiness, English language arts and literacy and mathematics achievement results, high school graduation rates, college and career readiness, reduced child welfare and juvenile justice involvement, and increased family stability in areas served by these programs. For StriveTogether and other regional cross-sector networks, this includes reductions in achievement gaps and improvements in a wide range of measures, such as preterm birth rates, early childcare quality or attendance, early grade reading, middle grade math, high school graduation rates, and postsecondary completion.
7269
7370 (g) During the COVID-19 pandemic, community and regional networks were able to leverage their established infrastructure of cradle-to-career connections to confront issues created by the pandemic, meeting the basic needs of families, including food, housing, income relief, eviction defense, technology access, childcare, and vaccine outreach. The integrated and coordinated infrastructure has proven to be a strong model that is poised to confront extreme emergency events and greatly improve the well-being of children and families during difficult periods on a communitywide scale.
7471
7572 (h) This collaborative approach ensures that a continuum of services reach children in communities where they are needed the most. This is especially important in communities experiencing high levels of homelessness. Community and regional networks can coordinate efforts among government agencies and other local organizations to ensure that those experiencing homelessness, or are at risk of becoming homeless, have full access to all programs and services to which they are entitled.
7673
7774 (i) Community and regional networks can also play a major role in recovery from the pandemic by prioritizing investments in historically underserved communities, working with key organizations to leverage federal, state, and local recovery funds, strengthening civic infrastructure that builds the power and capacity of marginalized communities, and ensuring a strong accountability structure.
7875
7976 (j) They also support implementation of the California Community Schools Partnership Program and other initiatives in the State Department of Education to engage pupils and parents, to fund and implement local improvement strategies, and provide supplemental and complementary services to ensure that Californias English learners, foster youth, and pupils in poverty have the learning supports they need.
8077
8178 (k) It is the intent of the Legislature that the vital contributions provided by these community-based and regional networks be brought to scale, so that all children and families have the opportunities and continuum of services needed to break the cycle of poverty.
8279
83-SEC. 2. Division 11 (commencing with Section 20000) is added to the Welfare and Institutions Code, to read:DIVISION 11. Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services CHAPTER 1. California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program20000. This chapter shall be known, and may be cited, as the It Takes a Village Act of 2022.20001. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Cradle-to-career means a system of integrated services that begins before birth and leads to appropriate postsecondary success, including academic, occupational, and independent living, that benefits the individual and community as a whole.(b) (1) Eligible entity includes all of the following:(A) A nonprofit organization that is exempt from federal income taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, and that has a strong demonstrated financial record evidencing compliance. A nonprofit organization may be a faith-based organization, to the extent permitted by law.(B) A public or nonprofit institution of higher education.(C) An Indian tribe or tribal organization.(2) An eligible entity shall work in partnership with at least one local educational agency and one social service agency located within the identified geographic boundaries.(3) An eligible entity may also work with one or more of the following entities located within the identified geographic boundaries:(A) A local government agency.(B) Health organizations.(C) Another eligible entity.(c) Grant program means the California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program.(d) Multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks support multiple populations in neighborhoods, cities, counties, and regions by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale. These networks seek systems change and community engagement, develop evidence-based strategies, and where strategies prove successful, promote adoption in the full region.(e) Other community-based networks include nonprofit and faith-based networks, other than PNs, that are involved in supporting, advocating for, and empowering residents to achieve self-reliance and economic stability. Services provided by these networks may include food, housing assistance, access to benefits, mental health, job training, legal services, financial literacy, early childhood development, parenting support, after school enhanced learning, and youth empowerment.(f) Promise Neighborhood (PN) means a targeted geographic area served by the Promise Neighborhoods program administered by the United States Department of Education and authorized by the federal Every Student Succeeds Act in 2015 (Public Law 114-95). The program focuses on revitalizing economically disadvantaged communities through the establishment of a cradle-to-career network of services aimed at improving the health, safety, and education of the occupants in the defined area.(g) Solution includes both of the following:(1) A single activity, or a set of activities, performed or coordinated by PNs and other community-based networks that help ensure that children and their families receive an appropriate continuum of services that they need to thrive. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to services provided by federal, state, and local governments, or other entities, as well as the direct provision of services to the public.(2) A set of activities coordinated and supported by multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks to help ensure that children and their families are engaged with and supported by equitable systems that address their education, health, and well-being. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to effect systems change.20002. (a) (1) The California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program is hereby established to be administered by the State Department of Social Services or another department within the California Health and Human Services Agency, as designated by the Secretary of California Health and Human Services.(2) The purpose of the grant program is to award grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible entities to do either of the following:(A) Implement a comprehensive, integrated continuum of cradle-to-career solutions at the neighborhood level.(B) Support the civic infrastructure and backbone of cradle-to-career networks that support their network partners to accomplish systems change.(3) Solutions shall be in areas that include, but are not limited to, academic, health, social programs, and family and community supports, to meet the needs of high-need populations identified by a needs assessment or indicators, such as poor health for children, disparity gaps in school performance based on income or racial or ethnicity disaggregation, high rates of juvenile delinquency, adjudication, or incarceration, or high rates of foster care placement.(4) (A) Grants shall be awarded to eligible entities that are PNs, other community-based networks, or multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks.(B) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks receiving grants shall share the same common indicators and metrics and the common goal of helping children, youth, and families to thrive and serve to break the cycle of intergenerational poverty.(C) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career network applicants shall demonstrate that they have consulted and coordinated with stakeholders within their regions, including community members, PNs, and other community-based networks addressing needs of low-income neighborhoods.(D) All applicants shall identify solutions that tackle systemic inequities and work toward community transformation.(5) It is the intent of the Legislature that programs in the continuum should improve academic achievement and equitable social outcomes, including improving outcomes of early development, child and youth social and health development, and college and career readiness, as well as build strong family and community supports to help families move out of poverty.(b) (1) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall develop an application process for eligible entities to apply for the grants.(2) The department shall aim to achieve geographic equity by giving priority to applicants serving remote communities, including rural and tribal communities, through the selection process.20003. (a) To be eligible to receive a grant under this chapter, an eligible entity shall submit an application to the department at the time, in the manner, and containing the information, as the department may require.(b) At a minimum, the grant application shall include all of the following:(1) A description of a plan to significantly improve the academic, health, and social outcomes of children living in an identified economically disadvantaged neighborhood and to support the healthy development and well-being of children and youth in the neighborhood by providing a continuum of cradle-to-career solutions. This plan shall address the needs of the whole child, whole family, and whole community, as identified by the needs assessment described in paragraph (4). The continuum of solutions shall be based on the best available evidence, including, if available, strong, or moderately strong evidence. The plan shall also ensure that, over time, pupils not living in the neighborhood who attend the target school or schools have access to services within the continuum of solutions.(2) A description of the geographically defined area or neighborhood to be served and the level of distress in that area based on indicators of need and other relevant indicators. The statement of need in the neighborhood shall be based, in part, on results of a comprehensive needs assessment and segmentation analysis. The application may propose to serve multiple, noncontiguous areas.(3) A description of the applicants measurable short-term, long-term, and annual goals for expected outcomes of the grant, based on program and project indicators, as described in paragraph (2), which includes all of the following:(A) Performance goals for each year of the grant.(B) Projected growth or change over time and a sustainability plan outlining the process for reviewing and working with partners on a strategy to strengthen the infrastructure, ensure that target populations that require services have access to them and continue improving the results they are achieving beyond the grant life.(C) Annual goals for evaluating progress in improving systems, such as changes in policies, environments, or organizations that affect children and youth in the neighborhood.(4) An analysis of the needs and assets of the neighborhood or neighborhoods identified that includes all of the following:(A) A description of the process through which the needs assessment and segmentation analysis was produced, including a description of how family and community members were engaged in the analysis.(B) An explanation of how the applicant used the needs assessment and segmentation analysis in the development of localized, equity-based, cradle-to-career solutions.(C) A description of both the academic indicators and the available family and community support indicators, and social indicators that the applicant used to conduct the needs assessment.(5) For PNs and other community-based networks:(A) A description of solutions that will be used in the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions based on data collected, including a description of solutions specifically targeting subgroups of children, family members, community members, and children not attending schools or programs operated by the applicant and its partners.(B) The process by which each solution will be implemented and an expected timeline for launching each solution.(C) The estimated per child cost and cost projections over time, including administrative costs, to implement each solution.(D) The estimated number of children, by age, in the neighborhood who will be served by each solution, including the percentage of all children of the same age group within the neighborhood proposed to be served with each solution and the annual targets required to increase the proportion of children served to reach scale over time.(E) Financial projections of the cost of solutions over time.(F) The best available evidence supporting each proposed solution.(6) A description of the process used to develop the application, including the involvement of family and community members.(7) If feasible, a description of the process by which to develop, launch, and implement a longitudinal data system that does both of the following:(A) Integrates pupil-level or grade-level data from multiple sources to measure progress on academic, family, and community support indicators for all children in the neighborhood.(B) Tracks appropriate social indicators, as determined by the department, for children and families in the neighborhood.(8) A description of how the applicant has done all of the following:(A) Description of a detailed data plan that includes the data collection process.(B) Made or will make data accessible to parents, families, community residents, program partners, researchers, and evaluators at either the individual or aggregate level as appropriate while abiding by federal, state, and other privacy laws and requirements.(C) Managed and maintained the data system over time.(9) An explanation of how the applicant will continuously evaluate and improve the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions, including both of the following:(A) A description of the required grant indicators and other local performance indicators that will be used to inform each solution of the cradle-to-career continuum.(B) The processes for using data to improve instruction, optimize integrated pupil supports, provide for continuous program improvement, and hold staff and partner organizations accountable.(10) An identification of the fiscal agent, which may be any eligible entity.(11) A list of federal, state, local, and private sources of funding that the applicant will secure to comply with the matching funds requirement specified in Section 20004.(c) Before receiving a grant under this chapter, the applicant shall do all of the following:(1) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the academic and social indicators, and use them as program and project indicators.(2) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the family and community support indicators and use them as program and project indicators.(3) Perform an analysis of community assets within, or accessible to, the neighborhood, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) Early learning programs and networks, including home visiting, high-quality childcare, Early Head Start programs, Head Start programs, and prekindergarten programs.(B) Community centers, after school programs, and other opportunities for activities outside of school hours.(C) Transportation.(D) Parks.(E) The availability of healthy food options and opportunities for physical activity.(F) Existing family and pupil supports.(G) Businesses and employers located in the community.(H) Institutions of higher education.(4) Provide evidence of successful collaboration that has led to changes in child outcomes within the neighborhood.(d) An eligible entity, as part of the application, shall submit a preliminary memorandum of understanding, signed by each partner entity or agency. The preliminary memorandum of understanding shall describe, at a minimum, all of the following:(1) Each partners commitment and contribution toward achieving each result at population level by using a backbone agency to coordinate a collective impact initiative.(2) Each partners financial and programmatic commitment toward the strategies described in the application, including an identification of the fiscal agent.(3) The governance structure proposed for the eligible entity, including a system for how the eligible entity will serve as a backbone agency and hold partners accountable, representation of the geographic area on the eligible entitys governing and advisory boards, and resident engagement from the neighborhood in the organizations decisionmaking.(4) Each partners long-term commitment to providing cradle-to-career continuum services that, at a minimum, accounts for the cost of supporting the continuum, including the period after grant funds are no longer available, and potential changes in local government.(5) Each partners mission and plan that will govern the work that partners do together, including an aligned theory of improvement.(6) Each partners long-term commitment to supporting the cradle-to-career continuum through data-driven decisionmaking, including data collection, monitoring, reporting, and sharing.(7) Each partners commitment to ensuring sound fiscal management and controls, including evidence of a system of supports and personnel.(8) Each partners commitment to mobilizing local government service integration to improve outcomes for families and children in the neighborhood as measured by increased employment, improved education, decreased poverty, reduced crime, and improved health status.(9) A proposed data governance plan with each partners commitment to and plan for data collection and data sharing, including a data privacy plan that maintains privacy for children and families as required by the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-191) and federal Family Education Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (Public Law 93-380) standards.20004. (a) For the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, the department shall competitively award grants as follows:(1) Planning grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state.(2) Implementation grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and to multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state to be expended pursuant to Section 20005.(b) All neighborhood-based and multineighborhood regional networks that received a planning grant in the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, but did not receive an implementation grant during these three years shall be eligible to receive an implementation grant starting in the 202627 fiscal year, contingent on future budget appropriations. All entities that continue to meet the requirements set forth in Sections 20005 and 20007 shall be eligible for an implementation grant extension two years after the original grant was awarded.(c) (1) (A) Each grant recipient shall contribute matching funds or in-kind contributions in an amount equal to, but not less than, 100 percent of the grant award.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), a PN or other community-based network located in a rural community or tribal community shall provide matching funds or in-kind donations equal to at least 50 percent of the grant award.(2) (A) The matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 10 percent coming from private sources.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), for a PN or other community-based network in a rural community or tribal community, the matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 5 percent coming from private sources.(3) (A) An applicant that is unable to meet the matching requirements required by paragraphs (1) and (2) shall include in its application a request to the department to reduce the matching requirement, including the amount of the requested reduction, the total remaining match contribution, and a statement of the basis for the request.(B) The department may grant a request described in subparagraph (A) if it finds the request reasonable and that doing so would further the purposes of this chapter.20005. (a) Each implementation grant recipient under this chapter shall use the grant funds for both of the following purposes:(1) To implement the cradle-to-career services based on results of the needs analysis described in the application and plans to build system and organizational capacity.(2) To continuously evaluate the success of the program and improve the program based on data and outcomes.(b) Each grant recipient may use grant funds to develop the administrative capacity necessary to successfully implement a continuum of solutions, such as managing partnerships, integrating multiple funding sources, supporting the operation of a longitudinal data system, and accessing technical assistance. Each grant recipient and its partners shall not expend more than 20 percent of funds on these administrative and capacity building costs. Development and implementation of new or improved data systems shall not be included within that 20-percent limitation.(c) Grant recipients developing new or expanded longitudinal data systems shall coordinate and align their data collection and reporting with the Cradle-to-Career Data System.20006. (a) The department shall establish performance standards to measure progress on indicators and results relevant to the evaluation of the grant program.(b) (1) The State Department of Education, in consultation with the State Department of Social Services, shall establish a core set of academic results and indicators by which the grant recipients will be measured. These indicators may be based on pupil-level or grade-level data that is available from the following academic results and indicators:(A) Children benefit from a high-quality early learning education program and demonstrate school readiness skills, as measured by both of the following:(i) Children enter kindergarten ready for success, as measured by the number and percentage of children who demonstrate age-appropriate functioning at the beginning of the program or school year, as demonstrated by literacy, math, science, self-regulation, social-emotional development, physical development, English language development, and oral language indicators.(ii) Children are provided with high-quality early learning experiences, as measured by a quality rating instrument.(B) Pupils are proficient in core academic subjects, as measured by both of the following:(i) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in mathematics based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(ii) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in English language arts and literacy based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(C) Pupils are engaged and families support learning, as measured by attendance rates and chronic absenteeism rates, as measured by both of the following:(i) The average daily attendance rates of students in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive.(ii) The percentage of pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, who are absent 10 percent or more of the instructional days those pupils are enrolled.(D) Percentage of pupils who received a high school diploma within four years of entering grade 9 or who complete their graduation requirements at an alternative school.(E) High school graduates obtaining a postsecondary degree, certification, or credential as measured by all of the following:(i) Percentage of high school graduates who are placed in the prepared level on the college or career indicator.(ii) The number and percentage of students who enroll in a two-year or four-year college or university after graduation.(iii) The number and percentage of students who graduate from a two-year or four-year college or university.(2) The department shall establish a core set of family and community support results and indicators by which the grant recipient will be measured. A grant recipient shall choose to measure and report on two or more family and community support results and indicators. A grant recipients project design and implementation of a whole community continuum of solutions are subject to, but not limited to, all of the following family and community support results and indicators:(A) Pupils feel safe at school and connected to their school community, as measured by locally implemented school climate surveys or other instruments.(B) Pupils live in stable communities, as measured by pupil mobility rates in schools within the designated geographic boundary.(C) Where the appropriate infrastructure is available, pupils that have access to 21st century learning tools, as measured by the number and percentage of pupils who have access to a high-speed broadband internet-connected computing device.(c) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall also establish at least two indicators related to health, social and emotional development, mental health, and wellness. A grant recipient may choose to report on additional social or socioemotional indicators, drawn from either of the following:(1) Existing surveys, including the California Healthy Kids Survey or the YouthTruth Student Survey.(2) Other sources, as determined by the eligible entity and their partner agencies.(d) The department may establish other engagement, academic, and social indicators.20007. Each grant recipient shall prepare and submit an annual report to the department that shall include both of the following:(a) Information about the number and percentage of children, family members, and community members in the PN or similar community-based network who are served by the grant recipient, including a description of the number and percentage of children accessing each of the pipeline services and the number of family and community members served by each program.(b) Disaggregated data at population and program levels related to the grant recipients programs success in annual growth along program and project indicators. To the extent feasible, data should be disaggregated by all of the following:(1) Gender.(2) Major racial and ethnic groups.(3) English proficiency status.(4) Migrant status.(5) Disability status.(6) Economic disadvantage status.(7) Information relating to the performance metrics.(8) Other indicators that may be required by the department.20008. The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may establish an appropriate method, process, and structure for grant management, fiscal accountability, payments to grant recipients, and technical assistance and supports for grant recipients that ensures transparency and accountability in the use of state funds. The department may, at its discretion, contract with one or more entities, including, but not limited to, community development financial intermediaries, state financial entities, or other community-based organizations, for these purposes.20009. Notwithstanding the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code), the department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may implement, interpret, or make specific this chapter without taking any regulatory action.20010. (a) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the personal services contracting requirements of Article 4 (commencing with Section 19130) of Chapter 5 of Part 2 of Division 5 of Title 2 of the Government Code.(b) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the Public Contract Code and the State Contracting Manual, and are not subject to the approval of the Department of General Services.20011. Implementation of this chapter shall be subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for the purposes of this chapter.
80+SEC. 2. Division 11 (commencing with Section 20000) is added to the Welfare and Institutions Code, to read:DIVISION 11. Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services CHAPTER 1. California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program20000. This chapter shall be known, and may be cited, as the It Takes a Village Act of 2022.20001. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Cradle-to-career means a system of integrated services that begins before birth and leads to appropriate postsecondary success, including academic, occupational, and independent living, that benefits the individual and community as a whole.(b) (1) Eligible entity includes all of the following:(A) A nonprofit organization that is exempt from federal income taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, and that has a strong demonstrated financial record evidencing compliance. A nonprofit organization may be a faith-based organization, to the extent permitted by law.(B) A public or nonprofit institution of higher education.(C) An Indian tribe or tribal organization.(2) An eligible entity shall work in partnership with at least one local educational agency and one social service agency located within the identified geographic boundaries.(3) An eligible entity may also work with one or more of the following entities located within the identified geographic boundaries:(A) A local government agency.(B) Health organizations.(C) Another eligible entity.(c) Grant program means the California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program.(d) Multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks support multiple populations in neighborhoods, cities, counties, and regions by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale. These networks seek systems change, change and community engagement, develop evidence-based strategies, and where strategies prove successful, promote adoption in the full region.(e) Other community-based networks include nonprofit and faith-based networks, other than PNs, that are involved in supporting, advocating for, and empowering residents to achieve self-reliance and economic stability. Services provided by these networks may include food, housing assistance, access to benefits, mental health, job training, legal services, financial literacy, early childhood development, parenting support, after school enhanced learning, and youth empowerment.(f) Promise Neighborhood (PN) means a targeted geographic area served by the Promise Neighborhoods program administered by the United States Department of Education and authorized by the federal Every Student Succeeds Act in 2015 (Public Law 114-95). The program focuses on revitalizing economically disadvantaged communities through the establishment of a cradle-to-career network of services aimed at improving the health, safety, and education of the occupants in the defined area.(g) Solution includes both of the following:(1) A single activity, or a set of activities, performed or coordinated by PNs and other community-based networks that help ensure that children and their families receive an appropriate continuum of services that they need to thrive. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to services provided by federal, state, and local governments, or other entities, as well as the direct provision of services to the public.(2) A set of activities coordinated and supported by multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks to help ensure that children and their families are engaged with and supported by equitable systems that address their education, health, and well-being. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to effect systems change.20002. (a) (1) The California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program is hereby established to be administered by the State Department of Social Services or another department within the California Health and Human Services Agency, as designated by the Secretary of California Health and Human Services.(2) The purpose of the grant program is to award grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible entities to do either of the following:(A) Implement a comprehensive, integrated continuum of cradle-to-career solutions at the neighborhood level.(B) Support the civic infrastructure and backbone of cradle-to-career networks that support their network partners to accomplish systems change.(3) Solutions shall be in areas that include, but are not limited to, academic, health, social programs, and family and community supports, to meet the needs of high-need populations identified by a needs assessment or indicators, such as poor health for children, disparity gaps in school performance based on income or racial or ethnicity disaggregation, high rates of juvenile delinquency, adjudication, or incarceration, or high rates of foster care placement.(4) (A) Grants shall be awarded to eligible entities that are PNs, other community-based networks, or multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks.(B) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks receiving grants shall share the same common indicators and metrics and the common goal of helping children, youth, and families to thrive and serve to break the cycle of intergenerational poverty.(C) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career network applicants shall demonstrate that they have consulted and coordinated with stakeholders within their regions, including community members, PNs, and other community-based networks addressing needs of low-income neighborhoods.(D) All applicants shall identify solutions that tackle systemic inequities and work toward community transformation.(5) It is the intent of the Legislature that programs in the continuum should improve academic achievement and equitable social outcomes, including improving outcomes of early development, child and youth social and health development, and college and career readiness, as well as build strong family and community supports to help families move out of poverty.(b) (1) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall develop an application process for eligible entities to apply for the grants.(2) The department shall aim to achieve geographic equity by giving priority to applicants serving remote communities, including rural and tribal communities, through the selection process.20003. (a) To be eligible to receive a grant under this chapter, an eligible entity shall submit an application to the department at the time, in the manner, and containing the information, as the department may require.(b) At a minimum, the grant application shall include all of the following:(1) A description of a plan to significantly improve the academic, health, and social outcomes of children living in an identified economically disadvantaged neighborhood and to support the healthy development and well-being of children and youth in the neighborhood by providing a continuum of cradle-to-career solutions. This plan shall address the needs of the whole child, whole family, and whole community, as identified by the needs assessment described in paragraph (4). The continuum of solutions shall be based on the best available evidence, including, if available, strong, or moderately strong evidence. The plan shall also ensure that, over time, pupils not living in the neighborhood who attend the target school or schools have access to services within the continuum of solutions.(2) A description of the geographically defined area or neighborhood to be served and the level of distress in that area based on indicators of need and other relevant indicators. The statement of need in the neighborhood shall be based, in part, on results of a comprehensive needs assessment and segmentation analysis. The application may propose to serve multiple, noncontiguous areas.(3) A description of the applicants measurable short-term, long-term, and annual goals for expected outcomes of the grant, based on program and project indicators, as described in paragraph (2), that which includes all of the following:(A) Performance goals for each year of the grant.(B) Projected growth or change over time and a sustainability plan outlining the process for reviewing and working with partners on a strategy to strengthen the infrastructure, ensure that target populations that require services have access to them and continue improving the results they are achieving beyond the grant life.(C) Annual goals for evaluating progress in improving systems, such as changes in policies, environments, or organizations that affect children and youth in the neighborhood.(4) An analysis of the needs and assets of the neighborhood or neighborhoods identified that includes all of the following:(A) A description of the process through which the needs assessment and segmentation analysis was produced, including a description of how family and community members were engaged in the analysis.(B) An explanation of how the applicant used the needs assessment and segmentation analysis in the development of localized, equity-based, cradle-to-career solutions.(C) A description of both the academic indicators and the available family and community support indicators, and social indicators that the applicant used to conduct the needs assessment.(5) For PNs and other community-based networks:(A) A description of solutions that will be used in the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions based on data collected, including a description of solutions specifically targeting subgroups of children, family members, community members, and children not attending schools or programs operated by the applicant and its partners.(B) The process by which each solution will be implemented and an expected timeline for launching each solution.(C) The estimated per child cost and cost projections over time, including administrative costs, to implement each solution.(D) The estimated number of children, by age, in the neighborhood who will be served by each solution, including the percentage of all children of the same age group within the neighborhood proposed to be served with each solution and the annual targets required to increase the proportion of children served to reach scale over time.(E) Financial projections of the cost of solutions over time.(F) The best available evidence supporting each proposed solution.(6) A description of the process used to develop the application, including the involvement of family and community members.(7) If feasible, a description of the process by which to develop, launch, and implement a longitudinal data system that does both of the following:(A) Integrates pupil-level or grade-level data from multiple sources to measure progress on academic, family, and community support indicators for all children in the neighborhood.(B) Tracks appropriate social indicators, as determined by the department, for children and families in the neighborhood.(8) A description of how the applicant has done all of the following:(A) Description of a detailed data plan that includes the data collection process.(B) Made or will make data accessible to parents, families, community residents, program partners, researchers, and evaluators at either the individual or aggregate level as appropriate while abiding by federal, state, and other privacy laws and requirements.(C) Managed and maintained the data system over time.(9) An explanation of how the applicant will continuously evaluate and improve the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions, including both of the following:(A) A description of the required grant indicators and other local performance indicators that will be used to inform each solution of the cradle-to-career continuum.(B) The processes for using data to improve instruction, optimize integrated pupil supports, provide for continuous program improvement, and hold staff and partner organizations accountable.(10) An identification of the fiscal agent, which may be any eligible entity.(11) A list of federal, state, local, and private sources of funding that the applicant will secure to comply with the matching funds requirement specified in Section 20004.(c) Before receiving a grant under this chapter, the applicant shall do all of the following:(1) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the academic and social indicators, and use them as program and project indicators.(2) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the family and community support indicators and use them as program and project indicators.(3) Perform an analysis of community assets within, or accessible to, the neighborhood, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) Early learning programs and networks, including home visiting, high-quality childcare, Early Head Start programs, Head Start programs, and prekindergarten programs.(B) Community centers, after school programs, and other opportunities for activities outside of school hours.(C) Transportation.(D) Parks.(E) The availability of healthy food options and opportunities for physical activity.(F) Existing family and pupil supports.(G) Businesses and employers located in the community.(H) Institutions of higher education.(4) Provide evidence of successful collaboration that has led to changes in child outcomes within the neighborhood.(d) An eligible entity, as part of the application, shall submit a preliminary memorandum of understanding, signed by each partner entity or agency. The preliminary memorandum of understanding shall describe, at a minimum, all of the following:(1) Each partners commitment and contribution toward achieving each result at population level by using a backbone agency to coordinate a collective impact initiative.(2) Each partners financial and programmatic commitment toward the strategies described in the application, including an identification of the fiscal agent.(3) The governance structure proposed for the eligible entity, including a system for how the eligible entity will serve as a backbone agency and hold partners accountable, representation of the geographic area on the eligible entitys governing and advisory boards, and resident engagement from the neighborhood in the organizations decisionmaking.(4) Each partners long-term commitment to providing cradle-to-career continuum services that, at a minimum, accounts for the cost of supporting the continuum, including the period after grant funds are no longer available, and potential changes in local government.(5) Each partners mission and plan that will govern the work that partners do together, including an aligned theory of improvement.(6) Each partners long-term commitment to supporting the cradle-to-career continuum through data-driven decisionmaking, including data collection, monitoring, reporting, and sharing.(7) Each partners commitment to ensuring sound fiscal management and controls, including evidence of a system of supports and personnel.(8) Each partners commitment to mobilizing local government service integration to improve outcomes for families and children in the neighborhood as measured by increased employment, improved education, decreased poverty, reduced crime, and improved health status.(9) A proposed data governance plan with each partners commitment to and plan for data collection and data sharing, including a data privacy plan that maintains privacy for children and families as required by the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-191) and federal Family Education Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (Public Law 93-380) standards.20004. (a) For the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, the department shall competitively award grants as follows:(1) Planning grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state.(2) Implementation grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and to multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state to be expended pursuant to Section 20005.(b) All neighborhood-based and multineighborhood regional networks who that received a planning grant in the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, but did not receive an implementation grant during these three years shall be eligible to receive an implementation grant starting in the 202627 fiscal year, contingent on future budget appropriations. All entities that continue to meet the requirements set forth in Sections 20005 and 20007 shall be eligible for an implementation grant extension two years after the original grant was awarded.(c) (1) (A) Each grant recipient shall contribute matching funds or in-kind contributions in an amount equal to, but not less than, 100 percent of the grant award.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), a PN or other community-based network located in a rural community or tribal community shall provide matching funds or in-kind donations equal to at least 50 percent of the grant award.(2) (A) The matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 10 percent coming from private sources.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), for a PN or other community-based network in a rural community or in tribal community, the matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 5 percent coming from private sources.(3) (A) An applicant that is unable to meet the matching requirements required by paragraphs (1) and (2) shall include in its application a request to the department to reduce the matching requirement, including the amount of the requested reduction, the total remaining match contribution, and a statement of the basis for the request.(B) The department may grant a request described in subparagraph (A) if it finds the request reasonable and that doing so would further the purposes of this chapter.20005. (a) Each implementation grant recipient under this chapter shall use the grant funds for both of the following purposes:(1) To implement the cradle-to-career services based on results of the needs analysis described in the application and plans to build system and organizational capacity.(2) To continuously evaluate the success of the program and improve the program based on data and outcomes.(b) Each grant recipient may use grant funds to develop the administrative capacity necessary to successfully implement a continuum of solutions, such as managing partnerships, integrating multiple funding sources, supporting the operation of a longitudinal data system, and accessing technical assistance. Each grant recipient and its partners shall not expend more than 20 percent of funds on these administrative and capacity building costs. Development and implementation of new or improved data systems shall not be included within that 20-percent limitation.(c) Grant recipients developing new or expanded longitudinal data systems shall coordinate and align their data collection and reporting with the Cradle-to-Career Data System.20006. (a) The department shall establish performance standards to measure progress on indicators and results relevant to the evaluation of the grant program.(b) (1) The State Department of Education Education, in consultation with the State Department of Social Services, shall establish a core set of academic results and indicators by which the grant recipients will be measured. These indicators may be based on pupil-level or grade-level data that is available from the following academic results and indicators:(A) Children benefit from a high-quality early learning education program and demonstrate school readiness skills, as measured by both of the following:(i) Children enter kindergarten ready for success, as measured by the number and percentage of children who demonstrate age-appropriate functioning at the beginning of the program or school year, as demonstrated by literacy, math, science, self-regulation, social-emotional development, physical development, English language development, and oral language indicators.(ii) Children are provided with high-quality early learning experiences, as measured by a quality rating instrument.(B) Pupils are proficient in core academic subjects, as measured by both of the following:(i) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in mathematics based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments, Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(ii) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in English language arts and literacy based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments, Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(C) Pupils are engaged and families support learning, as measured by attendance rates and chronic absenteeism rates, as measured by both of the following:(i) The average daily attendance rates of students in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive.(ii) The percentage of pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, who are absent 10 percent or more of the instructional days those pupils are enrolled.(D) Percentage of pupils who received a high school diploma within four years of entering grade 9 or who complete their graduation requirements at an alternative school.(E) High school graduates obtaining a postsecondary degree, certification, or credential as measured by all of the following:(i) Percentage of high school graduates who are placed in the prepared level on the college or career indicator.(ii) The number and percentage of students who enroll in a two-year or four-year college or university after graduation.(iii) The number and percentage of students who graduate from a two-year or four-year college or university.(2) The department shall establish a core set of family and community support results and indicators by which the grant recipient will be measured. A grant recipient shall choose to measure and report on two or more family and community support results and indicators. A grant recipients project design and implementation of a whole community continuum of solutions are subject to, but not limited to, all of the following family and community support results and indicators:(A) Pupils feel safe at school and connected to their school community, as measured by locally implemented school climate surveys or other instruments.(B) Pupils live in stable communities, as measured by pupil mobility rates in schools within the designated geographic boundary.(C) Where the appropriate infrastructure is available, pupils that have access to 21st century learning tools, as measured by the number and percentage of pupils who have access to a high-speed broadband internet-connected computing device.(c) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall also establish at least two indicators related to health, social and emotional development, mental health, and wellness. A grant recipient may choose to report on additional social or socioemotional indicators, drawn from either of the following:(1) Existing surveys, including the California Healthy Kids Survey or the YouthTruth Student Survey.(2) Other sources, as determined by the eligible entity and their partner agencies.(d) The department may establish other engagement, academic, and social indicators.20007. Each grant recipient shall prepare and submit an annual report to the department that shall include both of the following:(a) Information about the number and percentage of children, family members, and community members in the PN or similar community-based network who are served by the grant recipient, including a description of the number and percentage of children accessing each of the pipeline services and the number of family and community members served by each program.(b) Disaggregated data at population and program levels related to the grant recipients programs success in annual growth along program and project indicators. To the extent feasible, data should be disaggregated by all of the following:(1) Gender.(2) Major racial and ethnic groups.(3) English proficiency status.(4) Migrant status.(5) Disability status.(6) Economic disadvantage status.(7) Information relating to the performance metrics.(8) Other indicators that may be required by the department.20008. The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may establish an appropriate method, process, and structure for grant management, fiscal accountability, payments to grant recipients, and technical assistance and supports for grant recipients that ensures transparency and accountability in the use of state funds. The department may, at its discretion, contract with one or more entities, including, but not limited to, community development financial intermediaries, state financial entities, or other community-based organizations, for these purposes.20009. Notwithstanding the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code), the department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may implement, interpret, or make specific this chapter without taking any regulatory action.20010. (a) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the personal services contracting requirements of Article 4 (commencing with Section 19130) of Chapter 5 of Part 2 of Division 5 of Title 2 of the Government Code.(b) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the Public Contract Code and the State Contracting Manual, and are not subject to the approval of the Department of General Services.20011. Implementation of this chapter shall be subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for the purposes of this chapter.
8481
8582 SEC. 2. Division 11 (commencing with Section 20000) is added to the Welfare and Institutions Code, to read:
8683
8784 ### SEC. 2.
8885
89-DIVISION 11. Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services CHAPTER 1. California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program20000. This chapter shall be known, and may be cited, as the It Takes a Village Act of 2022.20001. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Cradle-to-career means a system of integrated services that begins before birth and leads to appropriate postsecondary success, including academic, occupational, and independent living, that benefits the individual and community as a whole.(b) (1) Eligible entity includes all of the following:(A) A nonprofit organization that is exempt from federal income taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, and that has a strong demonstrated financial record evidencing compliance. A nonprofit organization may be a faith-based organization, to the extent permitted by law.(B) A public or nonprofit institution of higher education.(C) An Indian tribe or tribal organization.(2) An eligible entity shall work in partnership with at least one local educational agency and one social service agency located within the identified geographic boundaries.(3) An eligible entity may also work with one or more of the following entities located within the identified geographic boundaries:(A) A local government agency.(B) Health organizations.(C) Another eligible entity.(c) Grant program means the California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program.(d) Multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks support multiple populations in neighborhoods, cities, counties, and regions by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale. These networks seek systems change and community engagement, develop evidence-based strategies, and where strategies prove successful, promote adoption in the full region.(e) Other community-based networks include nonprofit and faith-based networks, other than PNs, that are involved in supporting, advocating for, and empowering residents to achieve self-reliance and economic stability. Services provided by these networks may include food, housing assistance, access to benefits, mental health, job training, legal services, financial literacy, early childhood development, parenting support, after school enhanced learning, and youth empowerment.(f) Promise Neighborhood (PN) means a targeted geographic area served by the Promise Neighborhoods program administered by the United States Department of Education and authorized by the federal Every Student Succeeds Act in 2015 (Public Law 114-95). The program focuses on revitalizing economically disadvantaged communities through the establishment of a cradle-to-career network of services aimed at improving the health, safety, and education of the occupants in the defined area.(g) Solution includes both of the following:(1) A single activity, or a set of activities, performed or coordinated by PNs and other community-based networks that help ensure that children and their families receive an appropriate continuum of services that they need to thrive. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to services provided by federal, state, and local governments, or other entities, as well as the direct provision of services to the public.(2) A set of activities coordinated and supported by multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks to help ensure that children and their families are engaged with and supported by equitable systems that address their education, health, and well-being. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to effect systems change.20002. (a) (1) The California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program is hereby established to be administered by the State Department of Social Services or another department within the California Health and Human Services Agency, as designated by the Secretary of California Health and Human Services.(2) The purpose of the grant program is to award grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible entities to do either of the following:(A) Implement a comprehensive, integrated continuum of cradle-to-career solutions at the neighborhood level.(B) Support the civic infrastructure and backbone of cradle-to-career networks that support their network partners to accomplish systems change.(3) Solutions shall be in areas that include, but are not limited to, academic, health, social programs, and family and community supports, to meet the needs of high-need populations identified by a needs assessment or indicators, such as poor health for children, disparity gaps in school performance based on income or racial or ethnicity disaggregation, high rates of juvenile delinquency, adjudication, or incarceration, or high rates of foster care placement.(4) (A) Grants shall be awarded to eligible entities that are PNs, other community-based networks, or multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks.(B) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks receiving grants shall share the same common indicators and metrics and the common goal of helping children, youth, and families to thrive and serve to break the cycle of intergenerational poverty.(C) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career network applicants shall demonstrate that they have consulted and coordinated with stakeholders within their regions, including community members, PNs, and other community-based networks addressing needs of low-income neighborhoods.(D) All applicants shall identify solutions that tackle systemic inequities and work toward community transformation.(5) It is the intent of the Legislature that programs in the continuum should improve academic achievement and equitable social outcomes, including improving outcomes of early development, child and youth social and health development, and college and career readiness, as well as build strong family and community supports to help families move out of poverty.(b) (1) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall develop an application process for eligible entities to apply for the grants.(2) The department shall aim to achieve geographic equity by giving priority to applicants serving remote communities, including rural and tribal communities, through the selection process.20003. (a) To be eligible to receive a grant under this chapter, an eligible entity shall submit an application to the department at the time, in the manner, and containing the information, as the department may require.(b) At a minimum, the grant application shall include all of the following:(1) A description of a plan to significantly improve the academic, health, and social outcomes of children living in an identified economically disadvantaged neighborhood and to support the healthy development and well-being of children and youth in the neighborhood by providing a continuum of cradle-to-career solutions. This plan shall address the needs of the whole child, whole family, and whole community, as identified by the needs assessment described in paragraph (4). The continuum of solutions shall be based on the best available evidence, including, if available, strong, or moderately strong evidence. The plan shall also ensure that, over time, pupils not living in the neighborhood who attend the target school or schools have access to services within the continuum of solutions.(2) A description of the geographically defined area or neighborhood to be served and the level of distress in that area based on indicators of need and other relevant indicators. The statement of need in the neighborhood shall be based, in part, on results of a comprehensive needs assessment and segmentation analysis. The application may propose to serve multiple, noncontiguous areas.(3) A description of the applicants measurable short-term, long-term, and annual goals for expected outcomes of the grant, based on program and project indicators, as described in paragraph (2), which includes all of the following:(A) Performance goals for each year of the grant.(B) Projected growth or change over time and a sustainability plan outlining the process for reviewing and working with partners on a strategy to strengthen the infrastructure, ensure that target populations that require services have access to them and continue improving the results they are achieving beyond the grant life.(C) Annual goals for evaluating progress in improving systems, such as changes in policies, environments, or organizations that affect children and youth in the neighborhood.(4) An analysis of the needs and assets of the neighborhood or neighborhoods identified that includes all of the following:(A) A description of the process through which the needs assessment and segmentation analysis was produced, including a description of how family and community members were engaged in the analysis.(B) An explanation of how the applicant used the needs assessment and segmentation analysis in the development of localized, equity-based, cradle-to-career solutions.(C) A description of both the academic indicators and the available family and community support indicators, and social indicators that the applicant used to conduct the needs assessment.(5) For PNs and other community-based networks:(A) A description of solutions that will be used in the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions based on data collected, including a description of solutions specifically targeting subgroups of children, family members, community members, and children not attending schools or programs operated by the applicant and its partners.(B) The process by which each solution will be implemented and an expected timeline for launching each solution.(C) The estimated per child cost and cost projections over time, including administrative costs, to implement each solution.(D) The estimated number of children, by age, in the neighborhood who will be served by each solution, including the percentage of all children of the same age group within the neighborhood proposed to be served with each solution and the annual targets required to increase the proportion of children served to reach scale over time.(E) Financial projections of the cost of solutions over time.(F) The best available evidence supporting each proposed solution.(6) A description of the process used to develop the application, including the involvement of family and community members.(7) If feasible, a description of the process by which to develop, launch, and implement a longitudinal data system that does both of the following:(A) Integrates pupil-level or grade-level data from multiple sources to measure progress on academic, family, and community support indicators for all children in the neighborhood.(B) Tracks appropriate social indicators, as determined by the department, for children and families in the neighborhood.(8) A description of how the applicant has done all of the following:(A) Description of a detailed data plan that includes the data collection process.(B) Made or will make data accessible to parents, families, community residents, program partners, researchers, and evaluators at either the individual or aggregate level as appropriate while abiding by federal, state, and other privacy laws and requirements.(C) Managed and maintained the data system over time.(9) An explanation of how the applicant will continuously evaluate and improve the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions, including both of the following:(A) A description of the required grant indicators and other local performance indicators that will be used to inform each solution of the cradle-to-career continuum.(B) The processes for using data to improve instruction, optimize integrated pupil supports, provide for continuous program improvement, and hold staff and partner organizations accountable.(10) An identification of the fiscal agent, which may be any eligible entity.(11) A list of federal, state, local, and private sources of funding that the applicant will secure to comply with the matching funds requirement specified in Section 20004.(c) Before receiving a grant under this chapter, the applicant shall do all of the following:(1) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the academic and social indicators, and use them as program and project indicators.(2) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the family and community support indicators and use them as program and project indicators.(3) Perform an analysis of community assets within, or accessible to, the neighborhood, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) Early learning programs and networks, including home visiting, high-quality childcare, Early Head Start programs, Head Start programs, and prekindergarten programs.(B) Community centers, after school programs, and other opportunities for activities outside of school hours.(C) Transportation.(D) Parks.(E) The availability of healthy food options and opportunities for physical activity.(F) Existing family and pupil supports.(G) Businesses and employers located in the community.(H) Institutions of higher education.(4) Provide evidence of successful collaboration that has led to changes in child outcomes within the neighborhood.(d) An eligible entity, as part of the application, shall submit a preliminary memorandum of understanding, signed by each partner entity or agency. The preliminary memorandum of understanding shall describe, at a minimum, all of the following:(1) Each partners commitment and contribution toward achieving each result at population level by using a backbone agency to coordinate a collective impact initiative.(2) Each partners financial and programmatic commitment toward the strategies described in the application, including an identification of the fiscal agent.(3) The governance structure proposed for the eligible entity, including a system for how the eligible entity will serve as a backbone agency and hold partners accountable, representation of the geographic area on the eligible entitys governing and advisory boards, and resident engagement from the neighborhood in the organizations decisionmaking.(4) Each partners long-term commitment to providing cradle-to-career continuum services that, at a minimum, accounts for the cost of supporting the continuum, including the period after grant funds are no longer available, and potential changes in local government.(5) Each partners mission and plan that will govern the work that partners do together, including an aligned theory of improvement.(6) Each partners long-term commitment to supporting the cradle-to-career continuum through data-driven decisionmaking, including data collection, monitoring, reporting, and sharing.(7) Each partners commitment to ensuring sound fiscal management and controls, including evidence of a system of supports and personnel.(8) Each partners commitment to mobilizing local government service integration to improve outcomes for families and children in the neighborhood as measured by increased employment, improved education, decreased poverty, reduced crime, and improved health status.(9) A proposed data governance plan with each partners commitment to and plan for data collection and data sharing, including a data privacy plan that maintains privacy for children and families as required by the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-191) and federal Family Education Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (Public Law 93-380) standards.20004. (a) For the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, the department shall competitively award grants as follows:(1) Planning grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state.(2) Implementation grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and to multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state to be expended pursuant to Section 20005.(b) All neighborhood-based and multineighborhood regional networks that received a planning grant in the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, but did not receive an implementation grant during these three years shall be eligible to receive an implementation grant starting in the 202627 fiscal year, contingent on future budget appropriations. All entities that continue to meet the requirements set forth in Sections 20005 and 20007 shall be eligible for an implementation grant extension two years after the original grant was awarded.(c) (1) (A) Each grant recipient shall contribute matching funds or in-kind contributions in an amount equal to, but not less than, 100 percent of the grant award.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), a PN or other community-based network located in a rural community or tribal community shall provide matching funds or in-kind donations equal to at least 50 percent of the grant award.(2) (A) The matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 10 percent coming from private sources.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), for a PN or other community-based network in a rural community or tribal community, the matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 5 percent coming from private sources.(3) (A) An applicant that is unable to meet the matching requirements required by paragraphs (1) and (2) shall include in its application a request to the department to reduce the matching requirement, including the amount of the requested reduction, the total remaining match contribution, and a statement of the basis for the request.(B) The department may grant a request described in subparagraph (A) if it finds the request reasonable and that doing so would further the purposes of this chapter.20005. (a) Each implementation grant recipient under this chapter shall use the grant funds for both of the following purposes:(1) To implement the cradle-to-career services based on results of the needs analysis described in the application and plans to build system and organizational capacity.(2) To continuously evaluate the success of the program and improve the program based on data and outcomes.(b) Each grant recipient may use grant funds to develop the administrative capacity necessary to successfully implement a continuum of solutions, such as managing partnerships, integrating multiple funding sources, supporting the operation of a longitudinal data system, and accessing technical assistance. Each grant recipient and its partners shall not expend more than 20 percent of funds on these administrative and capacity building costs. Development and implementation of new or improved data systems shall not be included within that 20-percent limitation.(c) Grant recipients developing new or expanded longitudinal data systems shall coordinate and align their data collection and reporting with the Cradle-to-Career Data System.20006. (a) The department shall establish performance standards to measure progress on indicators and results relevant to the evaluation of the grant program.(b) (1) The State Department of Education, in consultation with the State Department of Social Services, shall establish a core set of academic results and indicators by which the grant recipients will be measured. These indicators may be based on pupil-level or grade-level data that is available from the following academic results and indicators:(A) Children benefit from a high-quality early learning education program and demonstrate school readiness skills, as measured by both of the following:(i) Children enter kindergarten ready for success, as measured by the number and percentage of children who demonstrate age-appropriate functioning at the beginning of the program or school year, as demonstrated by literacy, math, science, self-regulation, social-emotional development, physical development, English language development, and oral language indicators.(ii) Children are provided with high-quality early learning experiences, as measured by a quality rating instrument.(B) Pupils are proficient in core academic subjects, as measured by both of the following:(i) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in mathematics based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(ii) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in English language arts and literacy based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(C) Pupils are engaged and families support learning, as measured by attendance rates and chronic absenteeism rates, as measured by both of the following:(i) The average daily attendance rates of students in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive.(ii) The percentage of pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, who are absent 10 percent or more of the instructional days those pupils are enrolled.(D) Percentage of pupils who received a high school diploma within four years of entering grade 9 or who complete their graduation requirements at an alternative school.(E) High school graduates obtaining a postsecondary degree, certification, or credential as measured by all of the following:(i) Percentage of high school graduates who are placed in the prepared level on the college or career indicator.(ii) The number and percentage of students who enroll in a two-year or four-year college or university after graduation.(iii) The number and percentage of students who graduate from a two-year or four-year college or university.(2) The department shall establish a core set of family and community support results and indicators by which the grant recipient will be measured. A grant recipient shall choose to measure and report on two or more family and community support results and indicators. A grant recipients project design and implementation of a whole community continuum of solutions are subject to, but not limited to, all of the following family and community support results and indicators:(A) Pupils feel safe at school and connected to their school community, as measured by locally implemented school climate surveys or other instruments.(B) Pupils live in stable communities, as measured by pupil mobility rates in schools within the designated geographic boundary.(C) Where the appropriate infrastructure is available, pupils that have access to 21st century learning tools, as measured by the number and percentage of pupils who have access to a high-speed broadband internet-connected computing device.(c) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall also establish at least two indicators related to health, social and emotional development, mental health, and wellness. A grant recipient may choose to report on additional social or socioemotional indicators, drawn from either of the following:(1) Existing surveys, including the California Healthy Kids Survey or the YouthTruth Student Survey.(2) Other sources, as determined by the eligible entity and their partner agencies.(d) The department may establish other engagement, academic, and social indicators.20007. Each grant recipient shall prepare and submit an annual report to the department that shall include both of the following:(a) Information about the number and percentage of children, family members, and community members in the PN or similar community-based network who are served by the grant recipient, including a description of the number and percentage of children accessing each of the pipeline services and the number of family and community members served by each program.(b) Disaggregated data at population and program levels related to the grant recipients programs success in annual growth along program and project indicators. To the extent feasible, data should be disaggregated by all of the following:(1) Gender.(2) Major racial and ethnic groups.(3) English proficiency status.(4) Migrant status.(5) Disability status.(6) Economic disadvantage status.(7) Information relating to the performance metrics.(8) Other indicators that may be required by the department.20008. The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may establish an appropriate method, process, and structure for grant management, fiscal accountability, payments to grant recipients, and technical assistance and supports for grant recipients that ensures transparency and accountability in the use of state funds. The department may, at its discretion, contract with one or more entities, including, but not limited to, community development financial intermediaries, state financial entities, or other community-based organizations, for these purposes.20009. Notwithstanding the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code), the department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may implement, interpret, or make specific this chapter without taking any regulatory action.20010. (a) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the personal services contracting requirements of Article 4 (commencing with Section 19130) of Chapter 5 of Part 2 of Division 5 of Title 2 of the Government Code.(b) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the Public Contract Code and the State Contracting Manual, and are not subject to the approval of the Department of General Services.20011. Implementation of this chapter shall be subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for the purposes of this chapter.
86+DIVISION 11. Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services CHAPTER 1. California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program20000. This chapter shall be known, and may be cited, as the It Takes a Village Act of 2022.20001. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Cradle-to-career means a system of integrated services that begins before birth and leads to appropriate postsecondary success, including academic, occupational, and independent living, that benefits the individual and community as a whole.(b) (1) Eligible entity includes all of the following:(A) A nonprofit organization that is exempt from federal income taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, and that has a strong demonstrated financial record evidencing compliance. A nonprofit organization may be a faith-based organization, to the extent permitted by law.(B) A public or nonprofit institution of higher education.(C) An Indian tribe or tribal organization.(2) An eligible entity shall work in partnership with at least one local educational agency and one social service agency located within the identified geographic boundaries.(3) An eligible entity may also work with one or more of the following entities located within the identified geographic boundaries:(A) A local government agency.(B) Health organizations.(C) Another eligible entity.(c) Grant program means the California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program.(d) Multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks support multiple populations in neighborhoods, cities, counties, and regions by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale. These networks seek systems change, change and community engagement, develop evidence-based strategies, and where strategies prove successful, promote adoption in the full region.(e) Other community-based networks include nonprofit and faith-based networks, other than PNs, that are involved in supporting, advocating for, and empowering residents to achieve self-reliance and economic stability. Services provided by these networks may include food, housing assistance, access to benefits, mental health, job training, legal services, financial literacy, early childhood development, parenting support, after school enhanced learning, and youth empowerment.(f) Promise Neighborhood (PN) means a targeted geographic area served by the Promise Neighborhoods program administered by the United States Department of Education and authorized by the federal Every Student Succeeds Act in 2015 (Public Law 114-95). The program focuses on revitalizing economically disadvantaged communities through the establishment of a cradle-to-career network of services aimed at improving the health, safety, and education of the occupants in the defined area.(g) Solution includes both of the following:(1) A single activity, or a set of activities, performed or coordinated by PNs and other community-based networks that help ensure that children and their families receive an appropriate continuum of services that they need to thrive. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to services provided by federal, state, and local governments, or other entities, as well as the direct provision of services to the public.(2) A set of activities coordinated and supported by multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks to help ensure that children and their families are engaged with and supported by equitable systems that address their education, health, and well-being. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to effect systems change.20002. (a) (1) The California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program is hereby established to be administered by the State Department of Social Services or another department within the California Health and Human Services Agency, as designated by the Secretary of California Health and Human Services.(2) The purpose of the grant program is to award grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible entities to do either of the following:(A) Implement a comprehensive, integrated continuum of cradle-to-career solutions at the neighborhood level.(B) Support the civic infrastructure and backbone of cradle-to-career networks that support their network partners to accomplish systems change.(3) Solutions shall be in areas that include, but are not limited to, academic, health, social programs, and family and community supports, to meet the needs of high-need populations identified by a needs assessment or indicators, such as poor health for children, disparity gaps in school performance based on income or racial or ethnicity disaggregation, high rates of juvenile delinquency, adjudication, or incarceration, or high rates of foster care placement.(4) (A) Grants shall be awarded to eligible entities that are PNs, other community-based networks, or multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks.(B) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks receiving grants shall share the same common indicators and metrics and the common goal of helping children, youth, and families to thrive and serve to break the cycle of intergenerational poverty.(C) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career network applicants shall demonstrate that they have consulted and coordinated with stakeholders within their regions, including community members, PNs, and other community-based networks addressing needs of low-income neighborhoods.(D) All applicants shall identify solutions that tackle systemic inequities and work toward community transformation.(5) It is the intent of the Legislature that programs in the continuum should improve academic achievement and equitable social outcomes, including improving outcomes of early development, child and youth social and health development, and college and career readiness, as well as build strong family and community supports to help families move out of poverty.(b) (1) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall develop an application process for eligible entities to apply for the grants.(2) The department shall aim to achieve geographic equity by giving priority to applicants serving remote communities, including rural and tribal communities, through the selection process.20003. (a) To be eligible to receive a grant under this chapter, an eligible entity shall submit an application to the department at the time, in the manner, and containing the information, as the department may require.(b) At a minimum, the grant application shall include all of the following:(1) A description of a plan to significantly improve the academic, health, and social outcomes of children living in an identified economically disadvantaged neighborhood and to support the healthy development and well-being of children and youth in the neighborhood by providing a continuum of cradle-to-career solutions. This plan shall address the needs of the whole child, whole family, and whole community, as identified by the needs assessment described in paragraph (4). The continuum of solutions shall be based on the best available evidence, including, if available, strong, or moderately strong evidence. The plan shall also ensure that, over time, pupils not living in the neighborhood who attend the target school or schools have access to services within the continuum of solutions.(2) A description of the geographically defined area or neighborhood to be served and the level of distress in that area based on indicators of need and other relevant indicators. The statement of need in the neighborhood shall be based, in part, on results of a comprehensive needs assessment and segmentation analysis. The application may propose to serve multiple, noncontiguous areas.(3) A description of the applicants measurable short-term, long-term, and annual goals for expected outcomes of the grant, based on program and project indicators, as described in paragraph (2), that which includes all of the following:(A) Performance goals for each year of the grant.(B) Projected growth or change over time and a sustainability plan outlining the process for reviewing and working with partners on a strategy to strengthen the infrastructure, ensure that target populations that require services have access to them and continue improving the results they are achieving beyond the grant life.(C) Annual goals for evaluating progress in improving systems, such as changes in policies, environments, or organizations that affect children and youth in the neighborhood.(4) An analysis of the needs and assets of the neighborhood or neighborhoods identified that includes all of the following:(A) A description of the process through which the needs assessment and segmentation analysis was produced, including a description of how family and community members were engaged in the analysis.(B) An explanation of how the applicant used the needs assessment and segmentation analysis in the development of localized, equity-based, cradle-to-career solutions.(C) A description of both the academic indicators and the available family and community support indicators, and social indicators that the applicant used to conduct the needs assessment.(5) For PNs and other community-based networks:(A) A description of solutions that will be used in the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions based on data collected, including a description of solutions specifically targeting subgroups of children, family members, community members, and children not attending schools or programs operated by the applicant and its partners.(B) The process by which each solution will be implemented and an expected timeline for launching each solution.(C) The estimated per child cost and cost projections over time, including administrative costs, to implement each solution.(D) The estimated number of children, by age, in the neighborhood who will be served by each solution, including the percentage of all children of the same age group within the neighborhood proposed to be served with each solution and the annual targets required to increase the proportion of children served to reach scale over time.(E) Financial projections of the cost of solutions over time.(F) The best available evidence supporting each proposed solution.(6) A description of the process used to develop the application, including the involvement of family and community members.(7) If feasible, a description of the process by which to develop, launch, and implement a longitudinal data system that does both of the following:(A) Integrates pupil-level or grade-level data from multiple sources to measure progress on academic, family, and community support indicators for all children in the neighborhood.(B) Tracks appropriate social indicators, as determined by the department, for children and families in the neighborhood.(8) A description of how the applicant has done all of the following:(A) Description of a detailed data plan that includes the data collection process.(B) Made or will make data accessible to parents, families, community residents, program partners, researchers, and evaluators at either the individual or aggregate level as appropriate while abiding by federal, state, and other privacy laws and requirements.(C) Managed and maintained the data system over time.(9) An explanation of how the applicant will continuously evaluate and improve the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions, including both of the following:(A) A description of the required grant indicators and other local performance indicators that will be used to inform each solution of the cradle-to-career continuum.(B) The processes for using data to improve instruction, optimize integrated pupil supports, provide for continuous program improvement, and hold staff and partner organizations accountable.(10) An identification of the fiscal agent, which may be any eligible entity.(11) A list of federal, state, local, and private sources of funding that the applicant will secure to comply with the matching funds requirement specified in Section 20004.(c) Before receiving a grant under this chapter, the applicant shall do all of the following:(1) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the academic and social indicators, and use them as program and project indicators.(2) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the family and community support indicators and use them as program and project indicators.(3) Perform an analysis of community assets within, or accessible to, the neighborhood, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) Early learning programs and networks, including home visiting, high-quality childcare, Early Head Start programs, Head Start programs, and prekindergarten programs.(B) Community centers, after school programs, and other opportunities for activities outside of school hours.(C) Transportation.(D) Parks.(E) The availability of healthy food options and opportunities for physical activity.(F) Existing family and pupil supports.(G) Businesses and employers located in the community.(H) Institutions of higher education.(4) Provide evidence of successful collaboration that has led to changes in child outcomes within the neighborhood.(d) An eligible entity, as part of the application, shall submit a preliminary memorandum of understanding, signed by each partner entity or agency. The preliminary memorandum of understanding shall describe, at a minimum, all of the following:(1) Each partners commitment and contribution toward achieving each result at population level by using a backbone agency to coordinate a collective impact initiative.(2) Each partners financial and programmatic commitment toward the strategies described in the application, including an identification of the fiscal agent.(3) The governance structure proposed for the eligible entity, including a system for how the eligible entity will serve as a backbone agency and hold partners accountable, representation of the geographic area on the eligible entitys governing and advisory boards, and resident engagement from the neighborhood in the organizations decisionmaking.(4) Each partners long-term commitment to providing cradle-to-career continuum services that, at a minimum, accounts for the cost of supporting the continuum, including the period after grant funds are no longer available, and potential changes in local government.(5) Each partners mission and plan that will govern the work that partners do together, including an aligned theory of improvement.(6) Each partners long-term commitment to supporting the cradle-to-career continuum through data-driven decisionmaking, including data collection, monitoring, reporting, and sharing.(7) Each partners commitment to ensuring sound fiscal management and controls, including evidence of a system of supports and personnel.(8) Each partners commitment to mobilizing local government service integration to improve outcomes for families and children in the neighborhood as measured by increased employment, improved education, decreased poverty, reduced crime, and improved health status.(9) A proposed data governance plan with each partners commitment to and plan for data collection and data sharing, including a data privacy plan that maintains privacy for children and families as required by the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-191) and federal Family Education Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (Public Law 93-380) standards.20004. (a) For the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, the department shall competitively award grants as follows:(1) Planning grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state.(2) Implementation grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and to multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state to be expended pursuant to Section 20005.(b) All neighborhood-based and multineighborhood regional networks who that received a planning grant in the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, but did not receive an implementation grant during these three years shall be eligible to receive an implementation grant starting in the 202627 fiscal year, contingent on future budget appropriations. All entities that continue to meet the requirements set forth in Sections 20005 and 20007 shall be eligible for an implementation grant extension two years after the original grant was awarded.(c) (1) (A) Each grant recipient shall contribute matching funds or in-kind contributions in an amount equal to, but not less than, 100 percent of the grant award.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), a PN or other community-based network located in a rural community or tribal community shall provide matching funds or in-kind donations equal to at least 50 percent of the grant award.(2) (A) The matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 10 percent coming from private sources.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), for a PN or other community-based network in a rural community or in tribal community, the matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 5 percent coming from private sources.(3) (A) An applicant that is unable to meet the matching requirements required by paragraphs (1) and (2) shall include in its application a request to the department to reduce the matching requirement, including the amount of the requested reduction, the total remaining match contribution, and a statement of the basis for the request.(B) The department may grant a request described in subparagraph (A) if it finds the request reasonable and that doing so would further the purposes of this chapter.20005. (a) Each implementation grant recipient under this chapter shall use the grant funds for both of the following purposes:(1) To implement the cradle-to-career services based on results of the needs analysis described in the application and plans to build system and organizational capacity.(2) To continuously evaluate the success of the program and improve the program based on data and outcomes.(b) Each grant recipient may use grant funds to develop the administrative capacity necessary to successfully implement a continuum of solutions, such as managing partnerships, integrating multiple funding sources, supporting the operation of a longitudinal data system, and accessing technical assistance. Each grant recipient and its partners shall not expend more than 20 percent of funds on these administrative and capacity building costs. Development and implementation of new or improved data systems shall not be included within that 20-percent limitation.(c) Grant recipients developing new or expanded longitudinal data systems shall coordinate and align their data collection and reporting with the Cradle-to-Career Data System.20006. (a) The department shall establish performance standards to measure progress on indicators and results relevant to the evaluation of the grant program.(b) (1) The State Department of Education Education, in consultation with the State Department of Social Services, shall establish a core set of academic results and indicators by which the grant recipients will be measured. These indicators may be based on pupil-level or grade-level data that is available from the following academic results and indicators:(A) Children benefit from a high-quality early learning education program and demonstrate school readiness skills, as measured by both of the following:(i) Children enter kindergarten ready for success, as measured by the number and percentage of children who demonstrate age-appropriate functioning at the beginning of the program or school year, as demonstrated by literacy, math, science, self-regulation, social-emotional development, physical development, English language development, and oral language indicators.(ii) Children are provided with high-quality early learning experiences, as measured by a quality rating instrument.(B) Pupils are proficient in core academic subjects, as measured by both of the following:(i) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in mathematics based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments, Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(ii) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in English language arts and literacy based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments, Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(C) Pupils are engaged and families support learning, as measured by attendance rates and chronic absenteeism rates, as measured by both of the following:(i) The average daily attendance rates of students in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive.(ii) The percentage of pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, who are absent 10 percent or more of the instructional days those pupils are enrolled.(D) Percentage of pupils who received a high school diploma within four years of entering grade 9 or who complete their graduation requirements at an alternative school.(E) High school graduates obtaining a postsecondary degree, certification, or credential as measured by all of the following:(i) Percentage of high school graduates who are placed in the prepared level on the college or career indicator.(ii) The number and percentage of students who enroll in a two-year or four-year college or university after graduation.(iii) The number and percentage of students who graduate from a two-year or four-year college or university.(2) The department shall establish a core set of family and community support results and indicators by which the grant recipient will be measured. A grant recipient shall choose to measure and report on two or more family and community support results and indicators. A grant recipients project design and implementation of a whole community continuum of solutions are subject to, but not limited to, all of the following family and community support results and indicators:(A) Pupils feel safe at school and connected to their school community, as measured by locally implemented school climate surveys or other instruments.(B) Pupils live in stable communities, as measured by pupil mobility rates in schools within the designated geographic boundary.(C) Where the appropriate infrastructure is available, pupils that have access to 21st century learning tools, as measured by the number and percentage of pupils who have access to a high-speed broadband internet-connected computing device.(c) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall also establish at least two indicators related to health, social and emotional development, mental health, and wellness. A grant recipient may choose to report on additional social or socioemotional indicators, drawn from either of the following:(1) Existing surveys, including the California Healthy Kids Survey or the YouthTruth Student Survey.(2) Other sources, as determined by the eligible entity and their partner agencies.(d) The department may establish other engagement, academic, and social indicators.20007. Each grant recipient shall prepare and submit an annual report to the department that shall include both of the following:(a) Information about the number and percentage of children, family members, and community members in the PN or similar community-based network who are served by the grant recipient, including a description of the number and percentage of children accessing each of the pipeline services and the number of family and community members served by each program.(b) Disaggregated data at population and program levels related to the grant recipients programs success in annual growth along program and project indicators. To the extent feasible, data should be disaggregated by all of the following:(1) Gender.(2) Major racial and ethnic groups.(3) English proficiency status.(4) Migrant status.(5) Disability status.(6) Economic disadvantage status.(7) Information relating to the performance metrics.(8) Other indicators that may be required by the department.20008. The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may establish an appropriate method, process, and structure for grant management, fiscal accountability, payments to grant recipients, and technical assistance and supports for grant recipients that ensures transparency and accountability in the use of state funds. The department may, at its discretion, contract with one or more entities, including, but not limited to, community development financial intermediaries, state financial entities, or other community-based organizations, for these purposes.20009. Notwithstanding the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code), the department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may implement, interpret, or make specific this chapter without taking any regulatory action.20010. (a) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the personal services contracting requirements of Article 4 (commencing with Section 19130) of Chapter 5 of Part 2 of Division 5 of Title 2 of the Government Code.(b) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the Public Contract Code and the State Contracting Manual, and are not subject to the approval of the Department of General Services.20011. Implementation of this chapter shall be subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for the purposes of this chapter.
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91-DIVISION 11. Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services CHAPTER 1. California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program20000. This chapter shall be known, and may be cited, as the It Takes a Village Act of 2022.20001. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Cradle-to-career means a system of integrated services that begins before birth and leads to appropriate postsecondary success, including academic, occupational, and independent living, that benefits the individual and community as a whole.(b) (1) Eligible entity includes all of the following:(A) A nonprofit organization that is exempt from federal income taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, and that has a strong demonstrated financial record evidencing compliance. A nonprofit organization may be a faith-based organization, to the extent permitted by law.(B) A public or nonprofit institution of higher education.(C) An Indian tribe or tribal organization.(2) An eligible entity shall work in partnership with at least one local educational agency and one social service agency located within the identified geographic boundaries.(3) An eligible entity may also work with one or more of the following entities located within the identified geographic boundaries:(A) A local government agency.(B) Health organizations.(C) Another eligible entity.(c) Grant program means the California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program.(d) Multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks support multiple populations in neighborhoods, cities, counties, and regions by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale. These networks seek systems change and community engagement, develop evidence-based strategies, and where strategies prove successful, promote adoption in the full region.(e) Other community-based networks include nonprofit and faith-based networks, other than PNs, that are involved in supporting, advocating for, and empowering residents to achieve self-reliance and economic stability. Services provided by these networks may include food, housing assistance, access to benefits, mental health, job training, legal services, financial literacy, early childhood development, parenting support, after school enhanced learning, and youth empowerment.(f) Promise Neighborhood (PN) means a targeted geographic area served by the Promise Neighborhoods program administered by the United States Department of Education and authorized by the federal Every Student Succeeds Act in 2015 (Public Law 114-95). The program focuses on revitalizing economically disadvantaged communities through the establishment of a cradle-to-career network of services aimed at improving the health, safety, and education of the occupants in the defined area.(g) Solution includes both of the following:(1) A single activity, or a set of activities, performed or coordinated by PNs and other community-based networks that help ensure that children and their families receive an appropriate continuum of services that they need to thrive. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to services provided by federal, state, and local governments, or other entities, as well as the direct provision of services to the public.(2) A set of activities coordinated and supported by multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks to help ensure that children and their families are engaged with and supported by equitable systems that address their education, health, and well-being. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to effect systems change.20002. (a) (1) The California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program is hereby established to be administered by the State Department of Social Services or another department within the California Health and Human Services Agency, as designated by the Secretary of California Health and Human Services.(2) The purpose of the grant program is to award grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible entities to do either of the following:(A) Implement a comprehensive, integrated continuum of cradle-to-career solutions at the neighborhood level.(B) Support the civic infrastructure and backbone of cradle-to-career networks that support their network partners to accomplish systems change.(3) Solutions shall be in areas that include, but are not limited to, academic, health, social programs, and family and community supports, to meet the needs of high-need populations identified by a needs assessment or indicators, such as poor health for children, disparity gaps in school performance based on income or racial or ethnicity disaggregation, high rates of juvenile delinquency, adjudication, or incarceration, or high rates of foster care placement.(4) (A) Grants shall be awarded to eligible entities that are PNs, other community-based networks, or multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks.(B) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks receiving grants shall share the same common indicators and metrics and the common goal of helping children, youth, and families to thrive and serve to break the cycle of intergenerational poverty.(C) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career network applicants shall demonstrate that they have consulted and coordinated with stakeholders within their regions, including community members, PNs, and other community-based networks addressing needs of low-income neighborhoods.(D) All applicants shall identify solutions that tackle systemic inequities and work toward community transformation.(5) It is the intent of the Legislature that programs in the continuum should improve academic achievement and equitable social outcomes, including improving outcomes of early development, child and youth social and health development, and college and career readiness, as well as build strong family and community supports to help families move out of poverty.(b) (1) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall develop an application process for eligible entities to apply for the grants.(2) The department shall aim to achieve geographic equity by giving priority to applicants serving remote communities, including rural and tribal communities, through the selection process.20003. (a) To be eligible to receive a grant under this chapter, an eligible entity shall submit an application to the department at the time, in the manner, and containing the information, as the department may require.(b) At a minimum, the grant application shall include all of the following:(1) A description of a plan to significantly improve the academic, health, and social outcomes of children living in an identified economically disadvantaged neighborhood and to support the healthy development and well-being of children and youth in the neighborhood by providing a continuum of cradle-to-career solutions. This plan shall address the needs of the whole child, whole family, and whole community, as identified by the needs assessment described in paragraph (4). The continuum of solutions shall be based on the best available evidence, including, if available, strong, or moderately strong evidence. The plan shall also ensure that, over time, pupils not living in the neighborhood who attend the target school or schools have access to services within the continuum of solutions.(2) A description of the geographically defined area or neighborhood to be served and the level of distress in that area based on indicators of need and other relevant indicators. The statement of need in the neighborhood shall be based, in part, on results of a comprehensive needs assessment and segmentation analysis. The application may propose to serve multiple, noncontiguous areas.(3) A description of the applicants measurable short-term, long-term, and annual goals for expected outcomes of the grant, based on program and project indicators, as described in paragraph (2), which includes all of the following:(A) Performance goals for each year of the grant.(B) Projected growth or change over time and a sustainability plan outlining the process for reviewing and working with partners on a strategy to strengthen the infrastructure, ensure that target populations that require services have access to them and continue improving the results they are achieving beyond the grant life.(C) Annual goals for evaluating progress in improving systems, such as changes in policies, environments, or organizations that affect children and youth in the neighborhood.(4) An analysis of the needs and assets of the neighborhood or neighborhoods identified that includes all of the following:(A) A description of the process through which the needs assessment and segmentation analysis was produced, including a description of how family and community members were engaged in the analysis.(B) An explanation of how the applicant used the needs assessment and segmentation analysis in the development of localized, equity-based, cradle-to-career solutions.(C) A description of both the academic indicators and the available family and community support indicators, and social indicators that the applicant used to conduct the needs assessment.(5) For PNs and other community-based networks:(A) A description of solutions that will be used in the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions based on data collected, including a description of solutions specifically targeting subgroups of children, family members, community members, and children not attending schools or programs operated by the applicant and its partners.(B) The process by which each solution will be implemented and an expected timeline for launching each solution.(C) The estimated per child cost and cost projections over time, including administrative costs, to implement each solution.(D) The estimated number of children, by age, in the neighborhood who will be served by each solution, including the percentage of all children of the same age group within the neighborhood proposed to be served with each solution and the annual targets required to increase the proportion of children served to reach scale over time.(E) Financial projections of the cost of solutions over time.(F) The best available evidence supporting each proposed solution.(6) A description of the process used to develop the application, including the involvement of family and community members.(7) If feasible, a description of the process by which to develop, launch, and implement a longitudinal data system that does both of the following:(A) Integrates pupil-level or grade-level data from multiple sources to measure progress on academic, family, and community support indicators for all children in the neighborhood.(B) Tracks appropriate social indicators, as determined by the department, for children and families in the neighborhood.(8) A description of how the applicant has done all of the following:(A) Description of a detailed data plan that includes the data collection process.(B) Made or will make data accessible to parents, families, community residents, program partners, researchers, and evaluators at either the individual or aggregate level as appropriate while abiding by federal, state, and other privacy laws and requirements.(C) Managed and maintained the data system over time.(9) An explanation of how the applicant will continuously evaluate and improve the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions, including both of the following:(A) A description of the required grant indicators and other local performance indicators that will be used to inform each solution of the cradle-to-career continuum.(B) The processes for using data to improve instruction, optimize integrated pupil supports, provide for continuous program improvement, and hold staff and partner organizations accountable.(10) An identification of the fiscal agent, which may be any eligible entity.(11) A list of federal, state, local, and private sources of funding that the applicant will secure to comply with the matching funds requirement specified in Section 20004.(c) Before receiving a grant under this chapter, the applicant shall do all of the following:(1) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the academic and social indicators, and use them as program and project indicators.(2) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the family and community support indicators and use them as program and project indicators.(3) Perform an analysis of community assets within, or accessible to, the neighborhood, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) Early learning programs and networks, including home visiting, high-quality childcare, Early Head Start programs, Head Start programs, and prekindergarten programs.(B) Community centers, after school programs, and other opportunities for activities outside of school hours.(C) Transportation.(D) Parks.(E) The availability of healthy food options and opportunities for physical activity.(F) Existing family and pupil supports.(G) Businesses and employers located in the community.(H) Institutions of higher education.(4) Provide evidence of successful collaboration that has led to changes in child outcomes within the neighborhood.(d) An eligible entity, as part of the application, shall submit a preliminary memorandum of understanding, signed by each partner entity or agency. The preliminary memorandum of understanding shall describe, at a minimum, all of the following:(1) Each partners commitment and contribution toward achieving each result at population level by using a backbone agency to coordinate a collective impact initiative.(2) Each partners financial and programmatic commitment toward the strategies described in the application, including an identification of the fiscal agent.(3) The governance structure proposed for the eligible entity, including a system for how the eligible entity will serve as a backbone agency and hold partners accountable, representation of the geographic area on the eligible entitys governing and advisory boards, and resident engagement from the neighborhood in the organizations decisionmaking.(4) Each partners long-term commitment to providing cradle-to-career continuum services that, at a minimum, accounts for the cost of supporting the continuum, including the period after grant funds are no longer available, and potential changes in local government.(5) Each partners mission and plan that will govern the work that partners do together, including an aligned theory of improvement.(6) Each partners long-term commitment to supporting the cradle-to-career continuum through data-driven decisionmaking, including data collection, monitoring, reporting, and sharing.(7) Each partners commitment to ensuring sound fiscal management and controls, including evidence of a system of supports and personnel.(8) Each partners commitment to mobilizing local government service integration to improve outcomes for families and children in the neighborhood as measured by increased employment, improved education, decreased poverty, reduced crime, and improved health status.(9) A proposed data governance plan with each partners commitment to and plan for data collection and data sharing, including a data privacy plan that maintains privacy for children and families as required by the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-191) and federal Family Education Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (Public Law 93-380) standards.20004. (a) For the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, the department shall competitively award grants as follows:(1) Planning grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state.(2) Implementation grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and to multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state to be expended pursuant to Section 20005.(b) All neighborhood-based and multineighborhood regional networks that received a planning grant in the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, but did not receive an implementation grant during these three years shall be eligible to receive an implementation grant starting in the 202627 fiscal year, contingent on future budget appropriations. All entities that continue to meet the requirements set forth in Sections 20005 and 20007 shall be eligible for an implementation grant extension two years after the original grant was awarded.(c) (1) (A) Each grant recipient shall contribute matching funds or in-kind contributions in an amount equal to, but not less than, 100 percent of the grant award.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), a PN or other community-based network located in a rural community or tribal community shall provide matching funds or in-kind donations equal to at least 50 percent of the grant award.(2) (A) The matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 10 percent coming from private sources.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), for a PN or other community-based network in a rural community or tribal community, the matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 5 percent coming from private sources.(3) (A) An applicant that is unable to meet the matching requirements required by paragraphs (1) and (2) shall include in its application a request to the department to reduce the matching requirement, including the amount of the requested reduction, the total remaining match contribution, and a statement of the basis for the request.(B) The department may grant a request described in subparagraph (A) if it finds the request reasonable and that doing so would further the purposes of this chapter.20005. (a) Each implementation grant recipient under this chapter shall use the grant funds for both of the following purposes:(1) To implement the cradle-to-career services based on results of the needs analysis described in the application and plans to build system and organizational capacity.(2) To continuously evaluate the success of the program and improve the program based on data and outcomes.(b) Each grant recipient may use grant funds to develop the administrative capacity necessary to successfully implement a continuum of solutions, such as managing partnerships, integrating multiple funding sources, supporting the operation of a longitudinal data system, and accessing technical assistance. Each grant recipient and its partners shall not expend more than 20 percent of funds on these administrative and capacity building costs. Development and implementation of new or improved data systems shall not be included within that 20-percent limitation.(c) Grant recipients developing new or expanded longitudinal data systems shall coordinate and align their data collection and reporting with the Cradle-to-Career Data System.20006. (a) The department shall establish performance standards to measure progress on indicators and results relevant to the evaluation of the grant program.(b) (1) The State Department of Education, in consultation with the State Department of Social Services, shall establish a core set of academic results and indicators by which the grant recipients will be measured. These indicators may be based on pupil-level or grade-level data that is available from the following academic results and indicators:(A) Children benefit from a high-quality early learning education program and demonstrate school readiness skills, as measured by both of the following:(i) Children enter kindergarten ready for success, as measured by the number and percentage of children who demonstrate age-appropriate functioning at the beginning of the program or school year, as demonstrated by literacy, math, science, self-regulation, social-emotional development, physical development, English language development, and oral language indicators.(ii) Children are provided with high-quality early learning experiences, as measured by a quality rating instrument.(B) Pupils are proficient in core academic subjects, as measured by both of the following:(i) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in mathematics based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(ii) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in English language arts and literacy based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(C) Pupils are engaged and families support learning, as measured by attendance rates and chronic absenteeism rates, as measured by both of the following:(i) The average daily attendance rates of students in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive.(ii) The percentage of pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, who are absent 10 percent or more of the instructional days those pupils are enrolled.(D) Percentage of pupils who received a high school diploma within four years of entering grade 9 or who complete their graduation requirements at an alternative school.(E) High school graduates obtaining a postsecondary degree, certification, or credential as measured by all of the following:(i) Percentage of high school graduates who are placed in the prepared level on the college or career indicator.(ii) The number and percentage of students who enroll in a two-year or four-year college or university after graduation.(iii) The number and percentage of students who graduate from a two-year or four-year college or university.(2) The department shall establish a core set of family and community support results and indicators by which the grant recipient will be measured. A grant recipient shall choose to measure and report on two or more family and community support results and indicators. A grant recipients project design and implementation of a whole community continuum of solutions are subject to, but not limited to, all of the following family and community support results and indicators:(A) Pupils feel safe at school and connected to their school community, as measured by locally implemented school climate surveys or other instruments.(B) Pupils live in stable communities, as measured by pupil mobility rates in schools within the designated geographic boundary.(C) Where the appropriate infrastructure is available, pupils that have access to 21st century learning tools, as measured by the number and percentage of pupils who have access to a high-speed broadband internet-connected computing device.(c) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall also establish at least two indicators related to health, social and emotional development, mental health, and wellness. A grant recipient may choose to report on additional social or socioemotional indicators, drawn from either of the following:(1) Existing surveys, including the California Healthy Kids Survey or the YouthTruth Student Survey.(2) Other sources, as determined by the eligible entity and their partner agencies.(d) The department may establish other engagement, academic, and social indicators.20007. Each grant recipient shall prepare and submit an annual report to the department that shall include both of the following:(a) Information about the number and percentage of children, family members, and community members in the PN or similar community-based network who are served by the grant recipient, including a description of the number and percentage of children accessing each of the pipeline services and the number of family and community members served by each program.(b) Disaggregated data at population and program levels related to the grant recipients programs success in annual growth along program and project indicators. To the extent feasible, data should be disaggregated by all of the following:(1) Gender.(2) Major racial and ethnic groups.(3) English proficiency status.(4) Migrant status.(5) Disability status.(6) Economic disadvantage status.(7) Information relating to the performance metrics.(8) Other indicators that may be required by the department.20008. The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may establish an appropriate method, process, and structure for grant management, fiscal accountability, payments to grant recipients, and technical assistance and supports for grant recipients that ensures transparency and accountability in the use of state funds. The department may, at its discretion, contract with one or more entities, including, but not limited to, community development financial intermediaries, state financial entities, or other community-based organizations, for these purposes.20009. Notwithstanding the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code), the department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may implement, interpret, or make specific this chapter without taking any regulatory action.20010. (a) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the personal services contracting requirements of Article 4 (commencing with Section 19130) of Chapter 5 of Part 2 of Division 5 of Title 2 of the Government Code.(b) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the Public Contract Code and the State Contracting Manual, and are not subject to the approval of the Department of General Services.20011. Implementation of this chapter shall be subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for the purposes of this chapter.
88+DIVISION 11. Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services CHAPTER 1. California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program20000. This chapter shall be known, and may be cited, as the It Takes a Village Act of 2022.20001. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Cradle-to-career means a system of integrated services that begins before birth and leads to appropriate postsecondary success, including academic, occupational, and independent living, that benefits the individual and community as a whole.(b) (1) Eligible entity includes all of the following:(A) A nonprofit organization that is exempt from federal income taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, and that has a strong demonstrated financial record evidencing compliance. A nonprofit organization may be a faith-based organization, to the extent permitted by law.(B) A public or nonprofit institution of higher education.(C) An Indian tribe or tribal organization.(2) An eligible entity shall work in partnership with at least one local educational agency and one social service agency located within the identified geographic boundaries.(3) An eligible entity may also work with one or more of the following entities located within the identified geographic boundaries:(A) A local government agency.(B) Health organizations.(C) Another eligible entity.(c) Grant program means the California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program.(d) Multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks support multiple populations in neighborhoods, cities, counties, and regions by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale. These networks seek systems change, change and community engagement, develop evidence-based strategies, and where strategies prove successful, promote adoption in the full region.(e) Other community-based networks include nonprofit and faith-based networks, other than PNs, that are involved in supporting, advocating for, and empowering residents to achieve self-reliance and economic stability. Services provided by these networks may include food, housing assistance, access to benefits, mental health, job training, legal services, financial literacy, early childhood development, parenting support, after school enhanced learning, and youth empowerment.(f) Promise Neighborhood (PN) means a targeted geographic area served by the Promise Neighborhoods program administered by the United States Department of Education and authorized by the federal Every Student Succeeds Act in 2015 (Public Law 114-95). The program focuses on revitalizing economically disadvantaged communities through the establishment of a cradle-to-career network of services aimed at improving the health, safety, and education of the occupants in the defined area.(g) Solution includes both of the following:(1) A single activity, or a set of activities, performed or coordinated by PNs and other community-based networks that help ensure that children and their families receive an appropriate continuum of services that they need to thrive. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to services provided by federal, state, and local governments, or other entities, as well as the direct provision of services to the public.(2) A set of activities coordinated and supported by multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks to help ensure that children and their families are engaged with and supported by equitable systems that address their education, health, and well-being. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to effect systems change.20002. (a) (1) The California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program is hereby established to be administered by the State Department of Social Services or another department within the California Health and Human Services Agency, as designated by the Secretary of California Health and Human Services.(2) The purpose of the grant program is to award grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible entities to do either of the following:(A) Implement a comprehensive, integrated continuum of cradle-to-career solutions at the neighborhood level.(B) Support the civic infrastructure and backbone of cradle-to-career networks that support their network partners to accomplish systems change.(3) Solutions shall be in areas that include, but are not limited to, academic, health, social programs, and family and community supports, to meet the needs of high-need populations identified by a needs assessment or indicators, such as poor health for children, disparity gaps in school performance based on income or racial or ethnicity disaggregation, high rates of juvenile delinquency, adjudication, or incarceration, or high rates of foster care placement.(4) (A) Grants shall be awarded to eligible entities that are PNs, other community-based networks, or multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks.(B) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks receiving grants shall share the same common indicators and metrics and the common goal of helping children, youth, and families to thrive and serve to break the cycle of intergenerational poverty.(C) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career network applicants shall demonstrate that they have consulted and coordinated with stakeholders within their regions, including community members, PNs, and other community-based networks addressing needs of low-income neighborhoods.(D) All applicants shall identify solutions that tackle systemic inequities and work toward community transformation.(5) It is the intent of the Legislature that programs in the continuum should improve academic achievement and equitable social outcomes, including improving outcomes of early development, child and youth social and health development, and college and career readiness, as well as build strong family and community supports to help families move out of poverty.(b) (1) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall develop an application process for eligible entities to apply for the grants.(2) The department shall aim to achieve geographic equity by giving priority to applicants serving remote communities, including rural and tribal communities, through the selection process.20003. (a) To be eligible to receive a grant under this chapter, an eligible entity shall submit an application to the department at the time, in the manner, and containing the information, as the department may require.(b) At a minimum, the grant application shall include all of the following:(1) A description of a plan to significantly improve the academic, health, and social outcomes of children living in an identified economically disadvantaged neighborhood and to support the healthy development and well-being of children and youth in the neighborhood by providing a continuum of cradle-to-career solutions. This plan shall address the needs of the whole child, whole family, and whole community, as identified by the needs assessment described in paragraph (4). The continuum of solutions shall be based on the best available evidence, including, if available, strong, or moderately strong evidence. The plan shall also ensure that, over time, pupils not living in the neighborhood who attend the target school or schools have access to services within the continuum of solutions.(2) A description of the geographically defined area or neighborhood to be served and the level of distress in that area based on indicators of need and other relevant indicators. The statement of need in the neighborhood shall be based, in part, on results of a comprehensive needs assessment and segmentation analysis. The application may propose to serve multiple, noncontiguous areas.(3) A description of the applicants measurable short-term, long-term, and annual goals for expected outcomes of the grant, based on program and project indicators, as described in paragraph (2), that which includes all of the following:(A) Performance goals for each year of the grant.(B) Projected growth or change over time and a sustainability plan outlining the process for reviewing and working with partners on a strategy to strengthen the infrastructure, ensure that target populations that require services have access to them and continue improving the results they are achieving beyond the grant life.(C) Annual goals for evaluating progress in improving systems, such as changes in policies, environments, or organizations that affect children and youth in the neighborhood.(4) An analysis of the needs and assets of the neighborhood or neighborhoods identified that includes all of the following:(A) A description of the process through which the needs assessment and segmentation analysis was produced, including a description of how family and community members were engaged in the analysis.(B) An explanation of how the applicant used the needs assessment and segmentation analysis in the development of localized, equity-based, cradle-to-career solutions.(C) A description of both the academic indicators and the available family and community support indicators, and social indicators that the applicant used to conduct the needs assessment.(5) For PNs and other community-based networks:(A) A description of solutions that will be used in the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions based on data collected, including a description of solutions specifically targeting subgroups of children, family members, community members, and children not attending schools or programs operated by the applicant and its partners.(B) The process by which each solution will be implemented and an expected timeline for launching each solution.(C) The estimated per child cost and cost projections over time, including administrative costs, to implement each solution.(D) The estimated number of children, by age, in the neighborhood who will be served by each solution, including the percentage of all children of the same age group within the neighborhood proposed to be served with each solution and the annual targets required to increase the proportion of children served to reach scale over time.(E) Financial projections of the cost of solutions over time.(F) The best available evidence supporting each proposed solution.(6) A description of the process used to develop the application, including the involvement of family and community members.(7) If feasible, a description of the process by which to develop, launch, and implement a longitudinal data system that does both of the following:(A) Integrates pupil-level or grade-level data from multiple sources to measure progress on academic, family, and community support indicators for all children in the neighborhood.(B) Tracks appropriate social indicators, as determined by the department, for children and families in the neighborhood.(8) A description of how the applicant has done all of the following:(A) Description of a detailed data plan that includes the data collection process.(B) Made or will make data accessible to parents, families, community residents, program partners, researchers, and evaluators at either the individual or aggregate level as appropriate while abiding by federal, state, and other privacy laws and requirements.(C) Managed and maintained the data system over time.(9) An explanation of how the applicant will continuously evaluate and improve the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions, including both of the following:(A) A description of the required grant indicators and other local performance indicators that will be used to inform each solution of the cradle-to-career continuum.(B) The processes for using data to improve instruction, optimize integrated pupil supports, provide for continuous program improvement, and hold staff and partner organizations accountable.(10) An identification of the fiscal agent, which may be any eligible entity.(11) A list of federal, state, local, and private sources of funding that the applicant will secure to comply with the matching funds requirement specified in Section 20004.(c) Before receiving a grant under this chapter, the applicant shall do all of the following:(1) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the academic and social indicators, and use them as program and project indicators.(2) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the family and community support indicators and use them as program and project indicators.(3) Perform an analysis of community assets within, or accessible to, the neighborhood, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) Early learning programs and networks, including home visiting, high-quality childcare, Early Head Start programs, Head Start programs, and prekindergarten programs.(B) Community centers, after school programs, and other opportunities for activities outside of school hours.(C) Transportation.(D) Parks.(E) The availability of healthy food options and opportunities for physical activity.(F) Existing family and pupil supports.(G) Businesses and employers located in the community.(H) Institutions of higher education.(4) Provide evidence of successful collaboration that has led to changes in child outcomes within the neighborhood.(d) An eligible entity, as part of the application, shall submit a preliminary memorandum of understanding, signed by each partner entity or agency. The preliminary memorandum of understanding shall describe, at a minimum, all of the following:(1) Each partners commitment and contribution toward achieving each result at population level by using a backbone agency to coordinate a collective impact initiative.(2) Each partners financial and programmatic commitment toward the strategies described in the application, including an identification of the fiscal agent.(3) The governance structure proposed for the eligible entity, including a system for how the eligible entity will serve as a backbone agency and hold partners accountable, representation of the geographic area on the eligible entitys governing and advisory boards, and resident engagement from the neighborhood in the organizations decisionmaking.(4) Each partners long-term commitment to providing cradle-to-career continuum services that, at a minimum, accounts for the cost of supporting the continuum, including the period after grant funds are no longer available, and potential changes in local government.(5) Each partners mission and plan that will govern the work that partners do together, including an aligned theory of improvement.(6) Each partners long-term commitment to supporting the cradle-to-career continuum through data-driven decisionmaking, including data collection, monitoring, reporting, and sharing.(7) Each partners commitment to ensuring sound fiscal management and controls, including evidence of a system of supports and personnel.(8) Each partners commitment to mobilizing local government service integration to improve outcomes for families and children in the neighborhood as measured by increased employment, improved education, decreased poverty, reduced crime, and improved health status.(9) A proposed data governance plan with each partners commitment to and plan for data collection and data sharing, including a data privacy plan that maintains privacy for children and families as required by the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-191) and federal Family Education Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (Public Law 93-380) standards.20004. (a) For the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, the department shall competitively award grants as follows:(1) Planning grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state.(2) Implementation grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and to multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state to be expended pursuant to Section 20005.(b) All neighborhood-based and multineighborhood regional networks who that received a planning grant in the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, but did not receive an implementation grant during these three years shall be eligible to receive an implementation grant starting in the 202627 fiscal year, contingent on future budget appropriations. All entities that continue to meet the requirements set forth in Sections 20005 and 20007 shall be eligible for an implementation grant extension two years after the original grant was awarded.(c) (1) (A) Each grant recipient shall contribute matching funds or in-kind contributions in an amount equal to, but not less than, 100 percent of the grant award.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), a PN or other community-based network located in a rural community or tribal community shall provide matching funds or in-kind donations equal to at least 50 percent of the grant award.(2) (A) The matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 10 percent coming from private sources.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), for a PN or other community-based network in a rural community or in tribal community, the matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 5 percent coming from private sources.(3) (A) An applicant that is unable to meet the matching requirements required by paragraphs (1) and (2) shall include in its application a request to the department to reduce the matching requirement, including the amount of the requested reduction, the total remaining match contribution, and a statement of the basis for the request.(B) The department may grant a request described in subparagraph (A) if it finds the request reasonable and that doing so would further the purposes of this chapter.20005. (a) Each implementation grant recipient under this chapter shall use the grant funds for both of the following purposes:(1) To implement the cradle-to-career services based on results of the needs analysis described in the application and plans to build system and organizational capacity.(2) To continuously evaluate the success of the program and improve the program based on data and outcomes.(b) Each grant recipient may use grant funds to develop the administrative capacity necessary to successfully implement a continuum of solutions, such as managing partnerships, integrating multiple funding sources, supporting the operation of a longitudinal data system, and accessing technical assistance. Each grant recipient and its partners shall not expend more than 20 percent of funds on these administrative and capacity building costs. Development and implementation of new or improved data systems shall not be included within that 20-percent limitation.(c) Grant recipients developing new or expanded longitudinal data systems shall coordinate and align their data collection and reporting with the Cradle-to-Career Data System.20006. (a) The department shall establish performance standards to measure progress on indicators and results relevant to the evaluation of the grant program.(b) (1) The State Department of Education Education, in consultation with the State Department of Social Services, shall establish a core set of academic results and indicators by which the grant recipients will be measured. These indicators may be based on pupil-level or grade-level data that is available from the following academic results and indicators:(A) Children benefit from a high-quality early learning education program and demonstrate school readiness skills, as measured by both of the following:(i) Children enter kindergarten ready for success, as measured by the number and percentage of children who demonstrate age-appropriate functioning at the beginning of the program or school year, as demonstrated by literacy, math, science, self-regulation, social-emotional development, physical development, English language development, and oral language indicators.(ii) Children are provided with high-quality early learning experiences, as measured by a quality rating instrument.(B) Pupils are proficient in core academic subjects, as measured by both of the following:(i) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in mathematics based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments, Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(ii) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in English language arts and literacy based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments, Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(C) Pupils are engaged and families support learning, as measured by attendance rates and chronic absenteeism rates, as measured by both of the following:(i) The average daily attendance rates of students in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive.(ii) The percentage of pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, who are absent 10 percent or more of the instructional days those pupils are enrolled.(D) Percentage of pupils who received a high school diploma within four years of entering grade 9 or who complete their graduation requirements at an alternative school.(E) High school graduates obtaining a postsecondary degree, certification, or credential as measured by all of the following:(i) Percentage of high school graduates who are placed in the prepared level on the college or career indicator.(ii) The number and percentage of students who enroll in a two-year or four-year college or university after graduation.(iii) The number and percentage of students who graduate from a two-year or four-year college or university.(2) The department shall establish a core set of family and community support results and indicators by which the grant recipient will be measured. A grant recipient shall choose to measure and report on two or more family and community support results and indicators. A grant recipients project design and implementation of a whole community continuum of solutions are subject to, but not limited to, all of the following family and community support results and indicators:(A) Pupils feel safe at school and connected to their school community, as measured by locally implemented school climate surveys or other instruments.(B) Pupils live in stable communities, as measured by pupil mobility rates in schools within the designated geographic boundary.(C) Where the appropriate infrastructure is available, pupils that have access to 21st century learning tools, as measured by the number and percentage of pupils who have access to a high-speed broadband internet-connected computing device.(c) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall also establish at least two indicators related to health, social and emotional development, mental health, and wellness. A grant recipient may choose to report on additional social or socioemotional indicators, drawn from either of the following:(1) Existing surveys, including the California Healthy Kids Survey or the YouthTruth Student Survey.(2) Other sources, as determined by the eligible entity and their partner agencies.(d) The department may establish other engagement, academic, and social indicators.20007. Each grant recipient shall prepare and submit an annual report to the department that shall include both of the following:(a) Information about the number and percentage of children, family members, and community members in the PN or similar community-based network who are served by the grant recipient, including a description of the number and percentage of children accessing each of the pipeline services and the number of family and community members served by each program.(b) Disaggregated data at population and program levels related to the grant recipients programs success in annual growth along program and project indicators. To the extent feasible, data should be disaggregated by all of the following:(1) Gender.(2) Major racial and ethnic groups.(3) English proficiency status.(4) Migrant status.(5) Disability status.(6) Economic disadvantage status.(7) Information relating to the performance metrics.(8) Other indicators that may be required by the department.20008. The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may establish an appropriate method, process, and structure for grant management, fiscal accountability, payments to grant recipients, and technical assistance and supports for grant recipients that ensures transparency and accountability in the use of state funds. The department may, at its discretion, contract with one or more entities, including, but not limited to, community development financial intermediaries, state financial entities, or other community-based organizations, for these purposes.20009. Notwithstanding the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code), the department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may implement, interpret, or make specific this chapter without taking any regulatory action.20010. (a) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the personal services contracting requirements of Article 4 (commencing with Section 19130) of Chapter 5 of Part 2 of Division 5 of Title 2 of the Government Code.(b) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the Public Contract Code and the State Contracting Manual, and are not subject to the approval of the Department of General Services.20011. Implementation of this chapter shall be subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for the purposes of this chapter.
9289
9390 DIVISION 11. Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services
9491
9592 DIVISION 11. Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services
9693
97- CHAPTER 1. California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program20000. This chapter shall be known, and may be cited, as the It Takes a Village Act of 2022.20001. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Cradle-to-career means a system of integrated services that begins before birth and leads to appropriate postsecondary success, including academic, occupational, and independent living, that benefits the individual and community as a whole.(b) (1) Eligible entity includes all of the following:(A) A nonprofit organization that is exempt from federal income taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, and that has a strong demonstrated financial record evidencing compliance. A nonprofit organization may be a faith-based organization, to the extent permitted by law.(B) A public or nonprofit institution of higher education.(C) An Indian tribe or tribal organization.(2) An eligible entity shall work in partnership with at least one local educational agency and one social service agency located within the identified geographic boundaries.(3) An eligible entity may also work with one or more of the following entities located within the identified geographic boundaries:(A) A local government agency.(B) Health organizations.(C) Another eligible entity.(c) Grant program means the California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program.(d) Multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks support multiple populations in neighborhoods, cities, counties, and regions by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale. These networks seek systems change and community engagement, develop evidence-based strategies, and where strategies prove successful, promote adoption in the full region.(e) Other community-based networks include nonprofit and faith-based networks, other than PNs, that are involved in supporting, advocating for, and empowering residents to achieve self-reliance and economic stability. Services provided by these networks may include food, housing assistance, access to benefits, mental health, job training, legal services, financial literacy, early childhood development, parenting support, after school enhanced learning, and youth empowerment.(f) Promise Neighborhood (PN) means a targeted geographic area served by the Promise Neighborhoods program administered by the United States Department of Education and authorized by the federal Every Student Succeeds Act in 2015 (Public Law 114-95). The program focuses on revitalizing economically disadvantaged communities through the establishment of a cradle-to-career network of services aimed at improving the health, safety, and education of the occupants in the defined area.(g) Solution includes both of the following:(1) A single activity, or a set of activities, performed or coordinated by PNs and other community-based networks that help ensure that children and their families receive an appropriate continuum of services that they need to thrive. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to services provided by federal, state, and local governments, or other entities, as well as the direct provision of services to the public.(2) A set of activities coordinated and supported by multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks to help ensure that children and their families are engaged with and supported by equitable systems that address their education, health, and well-being. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to effect systems change.20002. (a) (1) The California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program is hereby established to be administered by the State Department of Social Services or another department within the California Health and Human Services Agency, as designated by the Secretary of California Health and Human Services.(2) The purpose of the grant program is to award grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible entities to do either of the following:(A) Implement a comprehensive, integrated continuum of cradle-to-career solutions at the neighborhood level.(B) Support the civic infrastructure and backbone of cradle-to-career networks that support their network partners to accomplish systems change.(3) Solutions shall be in areas that include, but are not limited to, academic, health, social programs, and family and community supports, to meet the needs of high-need populations identified by a needs assessment or indicators, such as poor health for children, disparity gaps in school performance based on income or racial or ethnicity disaggregation, high rates of juvenile delinquency, adjudication, or incarceration, or high rates of foster care placement.(4) (A) Grants shall be awarded to eligible entities that are PNs, other community-based networks, or multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks.(B) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks receiving grants shall share the same common indicators and metrics and the common goal of helping children, youth, and families to thrive and serve to break the cycle of intergenerational poverty.(C) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career network applicants shall demonstrate that they have consulted and coordinated with stakeholders within their regions, including community members, PNs, and other community-based networks addressing needs of low-income neighborhoods.(D) All applicants shall identify solutions that tackle systemic inequities and work toward community transformation.(5) It is the intent of the Legislature that programs in the continuum should improve academic achievement and equitable social outcomes, including improving outcomes of early development, child and youth social and health development, and college and career readiness, as well as build strong family and community supports to help families move out of poverty.(b) (1) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall develop an application process for eligible entities to apply for the grants.(2) The department shall aim to achieve geographic equity by giving priority to applicants serving remote communities, including rural and tribal communities, through the selection process.20003. (a) To be eligible to receive a grant under this chapter, an eligible entity shall submit an application to the department at the time, in the manner, and containing the information, as the department may require.(b) At a minimum, the grant application shall include all of the following:(1) A description of a plan to significantly improve the academic, health, and social outcomes of children living in an identified economically disadvantaged neighborhood and to support the healthy development and well-being of children and youth in the neighborhood by providing a continuum of cradle-to-career solutions. This plan shall address the needs of the whole child, whole family, and whole community, as identified by the needs assessment described in paragraph (4). The continuum of solutions shall be based on the best available evidence, including, if available, strong, or moderately strong evidence. The plan shall also ensure that, over time, pupils not living in the neighborhood who attend the target school or schools have access to services within the continuum of solutions.(2) A description of the geographically defined area or neighborhood to be served and the level of distress in that area based on indicators of need and other relevant indicators. The statement of need in the neighborhood shall be based, in part, on results of a comprehensive needs assessment and segmentation analysis. The application may propose to serve multiple, noncontiguous areas.(3) A description of the applicants measurable short-term, long-term, and annual goals for expected outcomes of the grant, based on program and project indicators, as described in paragraph (2), which includes all of the following:(A) Performance goals for each year of the grant.(B) Projected growth or change over time and a sustainability plan outlining the process for reviewing and working with partners on a strategy to strengthen the infrastructure, ensure that target populations that require services have access to them and continue improving the results they are achieving beyond the grant life.(C) Annual goals for evaluating progress in improving systems, such as changes in policies, environments, or organizations that affect children and youth in the neighborhood.(4) An analysis of the needs and assets of the neighborhood or neighborhoods identified that includes all of the following:(A) A description of the process through which the needs assessment and segmentation analysis was produced, including a description of how family and community members were engaged in the analysis.(B) An explanation of how the applicant used the needs assessment and segmentation analysis in the development of localized, equity-based, cradle-to-career solutions.(C) A description of both the academic indicators and the available family and community support indicators, and social indicators that the applicant used to conduct the needs assessment.(5) For PNs and other community-based networks:(A) A description of solutions that will be used in the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions based on data collected, including a description of solutions specifically targeting subgroups of children, family members, community members, and children not attending schools or programs operated by the applicant and its partners.(B) The process by which each solution will be implemented and an expected timeline for launching each solution.(C) The estimated per child cost and cost projections over time, including administrative costs, to implement each solution.(D) The estimated number of children, by age, in the neighborhood who will be served by each solution, including the percentage of all children of the same age group within the neighborhood proposed to be served with each solution and the annual targets required to increase the proportion of children served to reach scale over time.(E) Financial projections of the cost of solutions over time.(F) The best available evidence supporting each proposed solution.(6) A description of the process used to develop the application, including the involvement of family and community members.(7) If feasible, a description of the process by which to develop, launch, and implement a longitudinal data system that does both of the following:(A) Integrates pupil-level or grade-level data from multiple sources to measure progress on academic, family, and community support indicators for all children in the neighborhood.(B) Tracks appropriate social indicators, as determined by the department, for children and families in the neighborhood.(8) A description of how the applicant has done all of the following:(A) Description of a detailed data plan that includes the data collection process.(B) Made or will make data accessible to parents, families, community residents, program partners, researchers, and evaluators at either the individual or aggregate level as appropriate while abiding by federal, state, and other privacy laws and requirements.(C) Managed and maintained the data system over time.(9) An explanation of how the applicant will continuously evaluate and improve the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions, including both of the following:(A) A description of the required grant indicators and other local performance indicators that will be used to inform each solution of the cradle-to-career continuum.(B) The processes for using data to improve instruction, optimize integrated pupil supports, provide for continuous program improvement, and hold staff and partner organizations accountable.(10) An identification of the fiscal agent, which may be any eligible entity.(11) A list of federal, state, local, and private sources of funding that the applicant will secure to comply with the matching funds requirement specified in Section 20004.(c) Before receiving a grant under this chapter, the applicant shall do all of the following:(1) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the academic and social indicators, and use them as program and project indicators.(2) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the family and community support indicators and use them as program and project indicators.(3) Perform an analysis of community assets within, or accessible to, the neighborhood, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) Early learning programs and networks, including home visiting, high-quality childcare, Early Head Start programs, Head Start programs, and prekindergarten programs.(B) Community centers, after school programs, and other opportunities for activities outside of school hours.(C) Transportation.(D) Parks.(E) The availability of healthy food options and opportunities for physical activity.(F) Existing family and pupil supports.(G) Businesses and employers located in the community.(H) Institutions of higher education.(4) Provide evidence of successful collaboration that has led to changes in child outcomes within the neighborhood.(d) An eligible entity, as part of the application, shall submit a preliminary memorandum of understanding, signed by each partner entity or agency. The preliminary memorandum of understanding shall describe, at a minimum, all of the following:(1) Each partners commitment and contribution toward achieving each result at population level by using a backbone agency to coordinate a collective impact initiative.(2) Each partners financial and programmatic commitment toward the strategies described in the application, including an identification of the fiscal agent.(3) The governance structure proposed for the eligible entity, including a system for how the eligible entity will serve as a backbone agency and hold partners accountable, representation of the geographic area on the eligible entitys governing and advisory boards, and resident engagement from the neighborhood in the organizations decisionmaking.(4) Each partners long-term commitment to providing cradle-to-career continuum services that, at a minimum, accounts for the cost of supporting the continuum, including the period after grant funds are no longer available, and potential changes in local government.(5) Each partners mission and plan that will govern the work that partners do together, including an aligned theory of improvement.(6) Each partners long-term commitment to supporting the cradle-to-career continuum through data-driven decisionmaking, including data collection, monitoring, reporting, and sharing.(7) Each partners commitment to ensuring sound fiscal management and controls, including evidence of a system of supports and personnel.(8) Each partners commitment to mobilizing local government service integration to improve outcomes for families and children in the neighborhood as measured by increased employment, improved education, decreased poverty, reduced crime, and improved health status.(9) A proposed data governance plan with each partners commitment to and plan for data collection and data sharing, including a data privacy plan that maintains privacy for children and families as required by the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-191) and federal Family Education Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (Public Law 93-380) standards.20004. (a) For the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, the department shall competitively award grants as follows:(1) Planning grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state.(2) Implementation grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and to multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state to be expended pursuant to Section 20005.(b) All neighborhood-based and multineighborhood regional networks that received a planning grant in the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, but did not receive an implementation grant during these three years shall be eligible to receive an implementation grant starting in the 202627 fiscal year, contingent on future budget appropriations. All entities that continue to meet the requirements set forth in Sections 20005 and 20007 shall be eligible for an implementation grant extension two years after the original grant was awarded.(c) (1) (A) Each grant recipient shall contribute matching funds or in-kind contributions in an amount equal to, but not less than, 100 percent of the grant award.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), a PN or other community-based network located in a rural community or tribal community shall provide matching funds or in-kind donations equal to at least 50 percent of the grant award.(2) (A) The matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 10 percent coming from private sources.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), for a PN or other community-based network in a rural community or tribal community, the matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 5 percent coming from private sources.(3) (A) An applicant that is unable to meet the matching requirements required by paragraphs (1) and (2) shall include in its application a request to the department to reduce the matching requirement, including the amount of the requested reduction, the total remaining match contribution, and a statement of the basis for the request.(B) The department may grant a request described in subparagraph (A) if it finds the request reasonable and that doing so would further the purposes of this chapter.20005. (a) Each implementation grant recipient under this chapter shall use the grant funds for both of the following purposes:(1) To implement the cradle-to-career services based on results of the needs analysis described in the application and plans to build system and organizational capacity.(2) To continuously evaluate the success of the program and improve the program based on data and outcomes.(b) Each grant recipient may use grant funds to develop the administrative capacity necessary to successfully implement a continuum of solutions, such as managing partnerships, integrating multiple funding sources, supporting the operation of a longitudinal data system, and accessing technical assistance. Each grant recipient and its partners shall not expend more than 20 percent of funds on these administrative and capacity building costs. Development and implementation of new or improved data systems shall not be included within that 20-percent limitation.(c) Grant recipients developing new or expanded longitudinal data systems shall coordinate and align their data collection and reporting with the Cradle-to-Career Data System.20006. (a) The department shall establish performance standards to measure progress on indicators and results relevant to the evaluation of the grant program.(b) (1) The State Department of Education, in consultation with the State Department of Social Services, shall establish a core set of academic results and indicators by which the grant recipients will be measured. These indicators may be based on pupil-level or grade-level data that is available from the following academic results and indicators:(A) Children benefit from a high-quality early learning education program and demonstrate school readiness skills, as measured by both of the following:(i) Children enter kindergarten ready for success, as measured by the number and percentage of children who demonstrate age-appropriate functioning at the beginning of the program or school year, as demonstrated by literacy, math, science, self-regulation, social-emotional development, physical development, English language development, and oral language indicators.(ii) Children are provided with high-quality early learning experiences, as measured by a quality rating instrument.(B) Pupils are proficient in core academic subjects, as measured by both of the following:(i) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in mathematics based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(ii) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in English language arts and literacy based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(C) Pupils are engaged and families support learning, as measured by attendance rates and chronic absenteeism rates, as measured by both of the following:(i) The average daily attendance rates of students in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive.(ii) The percentage of pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, who are absent 10 percent or more of the instructional days those pupils are enrolled.(D) Percentage of pupils who received a high school diploma within four years of entering grade 9 or who complete their graduation requirements at an alternative school.(E) High school graduates obtaining a postsecondary degree, certification, or credential as measured by all of the following:(i) Percentage of high school graduates who are placed in the prepared level on the college or career indicator.(ii) The number and percentage of students who enroll in a two-year or four-year college or university after graduation.(iii) The number and percentage of students who graduate from a two-year or four-year college or university.(2) The department shall establish a core set of family and community support results and indicators by which the grant recipient will be measured. A grant recipient shall choose to measure and report on two or more family and community support results and indicators. A grant recipients project design and implementation of a whole community continuum of solutions are subject to, but not limited to, all of the following family and community support results and indicators:(A) Pupils feel safe at school and connected to their school community, as measured by locally implemented school climate surveys or other instruments.(B) Pupils live in stable communities, as measured by pupil mobility rates in schools within the designated geographic boundary.(C) Where the appropriate infrastructure is available, pupils that have access to 21st century learning tools, as measured by the number and percentage of pupils who have access to a high-speed broadband internet-connected computing device.(c) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall also establish at least two indicators related to health, social and emotional development, mental health, and wellness. A grant recipient may choose to report on additional social or socioemotional indicators, drawn from either of the following:(1) Existing surveys, including the California Healthy Kids Survey or the YouthTruth Student Survey.(2) Other sources, as determined by the eligible entity and their partner agencies.(d) The department may establish other engagement, academic, and social indicators.20007. Each grant recipient shall prepare and submit an annual report to the department that shall include both of the following:(a) Information about the number and percentage of children, family members, and community members in the PN or similar community-based network who are served by the grant recipient, including a description of the number and percentage of children accessing each of the pipeline services and the number of family and community members served by each program.(b) Disaggregated data at population and program levels related to the grant recipients programs success in annual growth along program and project indicators. To the extent feasible, data should be disaggregated by all of the following:(1) Gender.(2) Major racial and ethnic groups.(3) English proficiency status.(4) Migrant status.(5) Disability status.(6) Economic disadvantage status.(7) Information relating to the performance metrics.(8) Other indicators that may be required by the department.20008. The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may establish an appropriate method, process, and structure for grant management, fiscal accountability, payments to grant recipients, and technical assistance and supports for grant recipients that ensures transparency and accountability in the use of state funds. The department may, at its discretion, contract with one or more entities, including, but not limited to, community development financial intermediaries, state financial entities, or other community-based organizations, for these purposes.20009. Notwithstanding the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code), the department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may implement, interpret, or make specific this chapter without taking any regulatory action.20010. (a) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the personal services contracting requirements of Article 4 (commencing with Section 19130) of Chapter 5 of Part 2 of Division 5 of Title 2 of the Government Code.(b) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the Public Contract Code and the State Contracting Manual, and are not subject to the approval of the Department of General Services.20011. Implementation of this chapter shall be subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for the purposes of this chapter.
94+ CHAPTER 1. California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program20000. This chapter shall be known, and may be cited, as the It Takes a Village Act of 2022.20001. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Cradle-to-career means a system of integrated services that begins before birth and leads to appropriate postsecondary success, including academic, occupational, and independent living, that benefits the individual and community as a whole.(b) (1) Eligible entity includes all of the following:(A) A nonprofit organization that is exempt from federal income taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, and that has a strong demonstrated financial record evidencing compliance. A nonprofit organization may be a faith-based organization, to the extent permitted by law.(B) A public or nonprofit institution of higher education.(C) An Indian tribe or tribal organization.(2) An eligible entity shall work in partnership with at least one local educational agency and one social service agency located within the identified geographic boundaries.(3) An eligible entity may also work with one or more of the following entities located within the identified geographic boundaries:(A) A local government agency.(B) Health organizations.(C) Another eligible entity.(c) Grant program means the California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program.(d) Multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks support multiple populations in neighborhoods, cities, counties, and regions by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale. These networks seek systems change, change and community engagement, develop evidence-based strategies, and where strategies prove successful, promote adoption in the full region.(e) Other community-based networks include nonprofit and faith-based networks, other than PNs, that are involved in supporting, advocating for, and empowering residents to achieve self-reliance and economic stability. Services provided by these networks may include food, housing assistance, access to benefits, mental health, job training, legal services, financial literacy, early childhood development, parenting support, after school enhanced learning, and youth empowerment.(f) Promise Neighborhood (PN) means a targeted geographic area served by the Promise Neighborhoods program administered by the United States Department of Education and authorized by the federal Every Student Succeeds Act in 2015 (Public Law 114-95). The program focuses on revitalizing economically disadvantaged communities through the establishment of a cradle-to-career network of services aimed at improving the health, safety, and education of the occupants in the defined area.(g) Solution includes both of the following:(1) A single activity, or a set of activities, performed or coordinated by PNs and other community-based networks that help ensure that children and their families receive an appropriate continuum of services that they need to thrive. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to services provided by federal, state, and local governments, or other entities, as well as the direct provision of services to the public.(2) A set of activities coordinated and supported by multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks to help ensure that children and their families are engaged with and supported by equitable systems that address their education, health, and well-being. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to effect systems change.20002. (a) (1) The California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program is hereby established to be administered by the State Department of Social Services or another department within the California Health and Human Services Agency, as designated by the Secretary of California Health and Human Services.(2) The purpose of the grant program is to award grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible entities to do either of the following:(A) Implement a comprehensive, integrated continuum of cradle-to-career solutions at the neighborhood level.(B) Support the civic infrastructure and backbone of cradle-to-career networks that support their network partners to accomplish systems change.(3) Solutions shall be in areas that include, but are not limited to, academic, health, social programs, and family and community supports, to meet the needs of high-need populations identified by a needs assessment or indicators, such as poor health for children, disparity gaps in school performance based on income or racial or ethnicity disaggregation, high rates of juvenile delinquency, adjudication, or incarceration, or high rates of foster care placement.(4) (A) Grants shall be awarded to eligible entities that are PNs, other community-based networks, or multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks.(B) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks receiving grants shall share the same common indicators and metrics and the common goal of helping children, youth, and families to thrive and serve to break the cycle of intergenerational poverty.(C) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career network applicants shall demonstrate that they have consulted and coordinated with stakeholders within their regions, including community members, PNs, and other community-based networks addressing needs of low-income neighborhoods.(D) All applicants shall identify solutions that tackle systemic inequities and work toward community transformation.(5) It is the intent of the Legislature that programs in the continuum should improve academic achievement and equitable social outcomes, including improving outcomes of early development, child and youth social and health development, and college and career readiness, as well as build strong family and community supports to help families move out of poverty.(b) (1) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall develop an application process for eligible entities to apply for the grants.(2) The department shall aim to achieve geographic equity by giving priority to applicants serving remote communities, including rural and tribal communities, through the selection process.20003. (a) To be eligible to receive a grant under this chapter, an eligible entity shall submit an application to the department at the time, in the manner, and containing the information, as the department may require.(b) At a minimum, the grant application shall include all of the following:(1) A description of a plan to significantly improve the academic, health, and social outcomes of children living in an identified economically disadvantaged neighborhood and to support the healthy development and well-being of children and youth in the neighborhood by providing a continuum of cradle-to-career solutions. This plan shall address the needs of the whole child, whole family, and whole community, as identified by the needs assessment described in paragraph (4). The continuum of solutions shall be based on the best available evidence, including, if available, strong, or moderately strong evidence. The plan shall also ensure that, over time, pupils not living in the neighborhood who attend the target school or schools have access to services within the continuum of solutions.(2) A description of the geographically defined area or neighborhood to be served and the level of distress in that area based on indicators of need and other relevant indicators. The statement of need in the neighborhood shall be based, in part, on results of a comprehensive needs assessment and segmentation analysis. The application may propose to serve multiple, noncontiguous areas.(3) A description of the applicants measurable short-term, long-term, and annual goals for expected outcomes of the grant, based on program and project indicators, as described in paragraph (2), that which includes all of the following:(A) Performance goals for each year of the grant.(B) Projected growth or change over time and a sustainability plan outlining the process for reviewing and working with partners on a strategy to strengthen the infrastructure, ensure that target populations that require services have access to them and continue improving the results they are achieving beyond the grant life.(C) Annual goals for evaluating progress in improving systems, such as changes in policies, environments, or organizations that affect children and youth in the neighborhood.(4) An analysis of the needs and assets of the neighborhood or neighborhoods identified that includes all of the following:(A) A description of the process through which the needs assessment and segmentation analysis was produced, including a description of how family and community members were engaged in the analysis.(B) An explanation of how the applicant used the needs assessment and segmentation analysis in the development of localized, equity-based, cradle-to-career solutions.(C) A description of both the academic indicators and the available family and community support indicators, and social indicators that the applicant used to conduct the needs assessment.(5) For PNs and other community-based networks:(A) A description of solutions that will be used in the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions based on data collected, including a description of solutions specifically targeting subgroups of children, family members, community members, and children not attending schools or programs operated by the applicant and its partners.(B) The process by which each solution will be implemented and an expected timeline for launching each solution.(C) The estimated per child cost and cost projections over time, including administrative costs, to implement each solution.(D) The estimated number of children, by age, in the neighborhood who will be served by each solution, including the percentage of all children of the same age group within the neighborhood proposed to be served with each solution and the annual targets required to increase the proportion of children served to reach scale over time.(E) Financial projections of the cost of solutions over time.(F) The best available evidence supporting each proposed solution.(6) A description of the process used to develop the application, including the involvement of family and community members.(7) If feasible, a description of the process by which to develop, launch, and implement a longitudinal data system that does both of the following:(A) Integrates pupil-level or grade-level data from multiple sources to measure progress on academic, family, and community support indicators for all children in the neighborhood.(B) Tracks appropriate social indicators, as determined by the department, for children and families in the neighborhood.(8) A description of how the applicant has done all of the following:(A) Description of a detailed data plan that includes the data collection process.(B) Made or will make data accessible to parents, families, community residents, program partners, researchers, and evaluators at either the individual or aggregate level as appropriate while abiding by federal, state, and other privacy laws and requirements.(C) Managed and maintained the data system over time.(9) An explanation of how the applicant will continuously evaluate and improve the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions, including both of the following:(A) A description of the required grant indicators and other local performance indicators that will be used to inform each solution of the cradle-to-career continuum.(B) The processes for using data to improve instruction, optimize integrated pupil supports, provide for continuous program improvement, and hold staff and partner organizations accountable.(10) An identification of the fiscal agent, which may be any eligible entity.(11) A list of federal, state, local, and private sources of funding that the applicant will secure to comply with the matching funds requirement specified in Section 20004.(c) Before receiving a grant under this chapter, the applicant shall do all of the following:(1) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the academic and social indicators, and use them as program and project indicators.(2) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the family and community support indicators and use them as program and project indicators.(3) Perform an analysis of community assets within, or accessible to, the neighborhood, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) Early learning programs and networks, including home visiting, high-quality childcare, Early Head Start programs, Head Start programs, and prekindergarten programs.(B) Community centers, after school programs, and other opportunities for activities outside of school hours.(C) Transportation.(D) Parks.(E) The availability of healthy food options and opportunities for physical activity.(F) Existing family and pupil supports.(G) Businesses and employers located in the community.(H) Institutions of higher education.(4) Provide evidence of successful collaboration that has led to changes in child outcomes within the neighborhood.(d) An eligible entity, as part of the application, shall submit a preliminary memorandum of understanding, signed by each partner entity or agency. The preliminary memorandum of understanding shall describe, at a minimum, all of the following:(1) Each partners commitment and contribution toward achieving each result at population level by using a backbone agency to coordinate a collective impact initiative.(2) Each partners financial and programmatic commitment toward the strategies described in the application, including an identification of the fiscal agent.(3) The governance structure proposed for the eligible entity, including a system for how the eligible entity will serve as a backbone agency and hold partners accountable, representation of the geographic area on the eligible entitys governing and advisory boards, and resident engagement from the neighborhood in the organizations decisionmaking.(4) Each partners long-term commitment to providing cradle-to-career continuum services that, at a minimum, accounts for the cost of supporting the continuum, including the period after grant funds are no longer available, and potential changes in local government.(5) Each partners mission and plan that will govern the work that partners do together, including an aligned theory of improvement.(6) Each partners long-term commitment to supporting the cradle-to-career continuum through data-driven decisionmaking, including data collection, monitoring, reporting, and sharing.(7) Each partners commitment to ensuring sound fiscal management and controls, including evidence of a system of supports and personnel.(8) Each partners commitment to mobilizing local government service integration to improve outcomes for families and children in the neighborhood as measured by increased employment, improved education, decreased poverty, reduced crime, and improved health status.(9) A proposed data governance plan with each partners commitment to and plan for data collection and data sharing, including a data privacy plan that maintains privacy for children and families as required by the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-191) and federal Family Education Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (Public Law 93-380) standards.20004. (a) For the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, the department shall competitively award grants as follows:(1) Planning grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state.(2) Implementation grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and to multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state to be expended pursuant to Section 20005.(b) All neighborhood-based and multineighborhood regional networks who that received a planning grant in the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, but did not receive an implementation grant during these three years shall be eligible to receive an implementation grant starting in the 202627 fiscal year, contingent on future budget appropriations. All entities that continue to meet the requirements set forth in Sections 20005 and 20007 shall be eligible for an implementation grant extension two years after the original grant was awarded.(c) (1) (A) Each grant recipient shall contribute matching funds or in-kind contributions in an amount equal to, but not less than, 100 percent of the grant award.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), a PN or other community-based network located in a rural community or tribal community shall provide matching funds or in-kind donations equal to at least 50 percent of the grant award.(2) (A) The matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 10 percent coming from private sources.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), for a PN or other community-based network in a rural community or in tribal community, the matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 5 percent coming from private sources.(3) (A) An applicant that is unable to meet the matching requirements required by paragraphs (1) and (2) shall include in its application a request to the department to reduce the matching requirement, including the amount of the requested reduction, the total remaining match contribution, and a statement of the basis for the request.(B) The department may grant a request described in subparagraph (A) if it finds the request reasonable and that doing so would further the purposes of this chapter.20005. (a) Each implementation grant recipient under this chapter shall use the grant funds for both of the following purposes:(1) To implement the cradle-to-career services based on results of the needs analysis described in the application and plans to build system and organizational capacity.(2) To continuously evaluate the success of the program and improve the program based on data and outcomes.(b) Each grant recipient may use grant funds to develop the administrative capacity necessary to successfully implement a continuum of solutions, such as managing partnerships, integrating multiple funding sources, supporting the operation of a longitudinal data system, and accessing technical assistance. Each grant recipient and its partners shall not expend more than 20 percent of funds on these administrative and capacity building costs. Development and implementation of new or improved data systems shall not be included within that 20-percent limitation.(c) Grant recipients developing new or expanded longitudinal data systems shall coordinate and align their data collection and reporting with the Cradle-to-Career Data System.20006. (a) The department shall establish performance standards to measure progress on indicators and results relevant to the evaluation of the grant program.(b) (1) The State Department of Education Education, in consultation with the State Department of Social Services, shall establish a core set of academic results and indicators by which the grant recipients will be measured. These indicators may be based on pupil-level or grade-level data that is available from the following academic results and indicators:(A) Children benefit from a high-quality early learning education program and demonstrate school readiness skills, as measured by both of the following:(i) Children enter kindergarten ready for success, as measured by the number and percentage of children who demonstrate age-appropriate functioning at the beginning of the program or school year, as demonstrated by literacy, math, science, self-regulation, social-emotional development, physical development, English language development, and oral language indicators.(ii) Children are provided with high-quality early learning experiences, as measured by a quality rating instrument.(B) Pupils are proficient in core academic subjects, as measured by both of the following:(i) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in mathematics based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments, Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(ii) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in English language arts and literacy based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments, Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(C) Pupils are engaged and families support learning, as measured by attendance rates and chronic absenteeism rates, as measured by both of the following:(i) The average daily attendance rates of students in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive.(ii) The percentage of pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, who are absent 10 percent or more of the instructional days those pupils are enrolled.(D) Percentage of pupils who received a high school diploma within four years of entering grade 9 or who complete their graduation requirements at an alternative school.(E) High school graduates obtaining a postsecondary degree, certification, or credential as measured by all of the following:(i) Percentage of high school graduates who are placed in the prepared level on the college or career indicator.(ii) The number and percentage of students who enroll in a two-year or four-year college or university after graduation.(iii) The number and percentage of students who graduate from a two-year or four-year college or university.(2) The department shall establish a core set of family and community support results and indicators by which the grant recipient will be measured. A grant recipient shall choose to measure and report on two or more family and community support results and indicators. A grant recipients project design and implementation of a whole community continuum of solutions are subject to, but not limited to, all of the following family and community support results and indicators:(A) Pupils feel safe at school and connected to their school community, as measured by locally implemented school climate surveys or other instruments.(B) Pupils live in stable communities, as measured by pupil mobility rates in schools within the designated geographic boundary.(C) Where the appropriate infrastructure is available, pupils that have access to 21st century learning tools, as measured by the number and percentage of pupils who have access to a high-speed broadband internet-connected computing device.(c) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall also establish at least two indicators related to health, social and emotional development, mental health, and wellness. A grant recipient may choose to report on additional social or socioemotional indicators, drawn from either of the following:(1) Existing surveys, including the California Healthy Kids Survey or the YouthTruth Student Survey.(2) Other sources, as determined by the eligible entity and their partner agencies.(d) The department may establish other engagement, academic, and social indicators.20007. Each grant recipient shall prepare and submit an annual report to the department that shall include both of the following:(a) Information about the number and percentage of children, family members, and community members in the PN or similar community-based network who are served by the grant recipient, including a description of the number and percentage of children accessing each of the pipeline services and the number of family and community members served by each program.(b) Disaggregated data at population and program levels related to the grant recipients programs success in annual growth along program and project indicators. To the extent feasible, data should be disaggregated by all of the following:(1) Gender.(2) Major racial and ethnic groups.(3) English proficiency status.(4) Migrant status.(5) Disability status.(6) Economic disadvantage status.(7) Information relating to the performance metrics.(8) Other indicators that may be required by the department.20008. The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may establish an appropriate method, process, and structure for grant management, fiscal accountability, payments to grant recipients, and technical assistance and supports for grant recipients that ensures transparency and accountability in the use of state funds. The department may, at its discretion, contract with one or more entities, including, but not limited to, community development financial intermediaries, state financial entities, or other community-based organizations, for these purposes.20009. Notwithstanding the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code), the department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may implement, interpret, or make specific this chapter without taking any regulatory action.20010. (a) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the personal services contracting requirements of Article 4 (commencing with Section 19130) of Chapter 5 of Part 2 of Division 5 of Title 2 of the Government Code.(b) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the Public Contract Code and the State Contracting Manual, and are not subject to the approval of the Department of General Services.20011. Implementation of this chapter shall be subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for the purposes of this chapter.
9895
9996 CHAPTER 1. California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program
10097
10198 CHAPTER 1. California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program
10299
103100 20000. This chapter shall be known, and may be cited, as the It Takes a Village Act of 2022.
104101
105102
106103
107104 20000. This chapter shall be known, and may be cited, as the It Takes a Village Act of 2022.
108105
109-20001. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Cradle-to-career means a system of integrated services that begins before birth and leads to appropriate postsecondary success, including academic, occupational, and independent living, that benefits the individual and community as a whole.(b) (1) Eligible entity includes all of the following:(A) A nonprofit organization that is exempt from federal income taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, and that has a strong demonstrated financial record evidencing compliance. A nonprofit organization may be a faith-based organization, to the extent permitted by law.(B) A public or nonprofit institution of higher education.(C) An Indian tribe or tribal organization.(2) An eligible entity shall work in partnership with at least one local educational agency and one social service agency located within the identified geographic boundaries.(3) An eligible entity may also work with one or more of the following entities located within the identified geographic boundaries:(A) A local government agency.(B) Health organizations.(C) Another eligible entity.(c) Grant program means the California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program.(d) Multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks support multiple populations in neighborhoods, cities, counties, and regions by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale. These networks seek systems change and community engagement, develop evidence-based strategies, and where strategies prove successful, promote adoption in the full region.(e) Other community-based networks include nonprofit and faith-based networks, other than PNs, that are involved in supporting, advocating for, and empowering residents to achieve self-reliance and economic stability. Services provided by these networks may include food, housing assistance, access to benefits, mental health, job training, legal services, financial literacy, early childhood development, parenting support, after school enhanced learning, and youth empowerment.(f) Promise Neighborhood (PN) means a targeted geographic area served by the Promise Neighborhoods program administered by the United States Department of Education and authorized by the federal Every Student Succeeds Act in 2015 (Public Law 114-95). The program focuses on revitalizing economically disadvantaged communities through the establishment of a cradle-to-career network of services aimed at improving the health, safety, and education of the occupants in the defined area.(g) Solution includes both of the following:(1) A single activity, or a set of activities, performed or coordinated by PNs and other community-based networks that help ensure that children and their families receive an appropriate continuum of services that they need to thrive. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to services provided by federal, state, and local governments, or other entities, as well as the direct provision of services to the public.(2) A set of activities coordinated and supported by multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks to help ensure that children and their families are engaged with and supported by equitable systems that address their education, health, and well-being. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to effect systems change.
106+20001. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Cradle-to-career means a system of integrated services that begins before birth and leads to appropriate postsecondary success, including academic, occupational, and independent living, that benefits the individual and community as a whole.(b) (1) Eligible entity includes all of the following:(A) A nonprofit organization that is exempt from federal income taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, and that has a strong demonstrated financial record evidencing compliance. A nonprofit organization may be a faith-based organization, to the extent permitted by law.(B) A public or nonprofit institution of higher education.(C) An Indian tribe or tribal organization.(2) An eligible entity shall work in partnership with at least one local educational agency and one social service agency located within the identified geographic boundaries.(3) An eligible entity may also work with one or more of the following entities located within the identified geographic boundaries:(A) A local government agency.(B) Health organizations.(C) Another eligible entity.(c) Grant program means the California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program.(d) Multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks support multiple populations in neighborhoods, cities, counties, and regions by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale. These networks seek systems change, change and community engagement, develop evidence-based strategies, and where strategies prove successful, promote adoption in the full region.(e) Other community-based networks include nonprofit and faith-based networks, other than PNs, that are involved in supporting, advocating for, and empowering residents to achieve self-reliance and economic stability. Services provided by these networks may include food, housing assistance, access to benefits, mental health, job training, legal services, financial literacy, early childhood development, parenting support, after school enhanced learning, and youth empowerment.(f) Promise Neighborhood (PN) means a targeted geographic area served by the Promise Neighborhoods program administered by the United States Department of Education and authorized by the federal Every Student Succeeds Act in 2015 (Public Law 114-95). The program focuses on revitalizing economically disadvantaged communities through the establishment of a cradle-to-career network of services aimed at improving the health, safety, and education of the occupants in the defined area.(g) Solution includes both of the following:(1) A single activity, or a set of activities, performed or coordinated by PNs and other community-based networks that help ensure that children and their families receive an appropriate continuum of services that they need to thrive. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to services provided by federal, state, and local governments, or other entities, as well as the direct provision of services to the public.(2) A set of activities coordinated and supported by multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks to help ensure that children and their families are engaged with and supported by equitable systems that address their education, health, and well-being. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to effect systems change.
110107
111108
112109
113110 20001. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:
114111
115112 (a) Cradle-to-career means a system of integrated services that begins before birth and leads to appropriate postsecondary success, including academic, occupational, and independent living, that benefits the individual and community as a whole.
116113
117114 (b) (1) Eligible entity includes all of the following:
118115
119116 (A) A nonprofit organization that is exempt from federal income taxation under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, and that has a strong demonstrated financial record evidencing compliance. A nonprofit organization may be a faith-based organization, to the extent permitted by law.
120117
121118 (B) A public or nonprofit institution of higher education.
122119
123120 (C) An Indian tribe or tribal organization.
124121
125122 (2) An eligible entity shall work in partnership with at least one local educational agency and one social service agency located within the identified geographic boundaries.
126123
127124 (3) An eligible entity may also work with one or more of the following entities located within the identified geographic boundaries:
128125
129126 (A) A local government agency.
130127
131128 (B) Health organizations.
132129
133130 (C) Another eligible entity.
134131
135132 (c) Grant program means the California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program.
136133
137-(d) Multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks support multiple populations in neighborhoods, cities, counties, and regions by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale. These networks seek systems change and community engagement, develop evidence-based strategies, and where strategies prove successful, promote adoption in the full region.
134+(d) Multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks support multiple populations in neighborhoods, cities, counties, and regions by addressing root cause factors behind poverty, institutional misalignment, and opportunities for meaningful community engagement necessary to ensure that equitable outcomes are achieved at scale. These networks seek systems change, change and community engagement, develop evidence-based strategies, and where strategies prove successful, promote adoption in the full region.
138135
139136 (e) Other community-based networks include nonprofit and faith-based networks, other than PNs, that are involved in supporting, advocating for, and empowering residents to achieve self-reliance and economic stability. Services provided by these networks may include food, housing assistance, access to benefits, mental health, job training, legal services, financial literacy, early childhood development, parenting support, after school enhanced learning, and youth empowerment.
140137
141138 (f) Promise Neighborhood (PN) means a targeted geographic area served by the Promise Neighborhoods program administered by the United States Department of Education and authorized by the federal Every Student Succeeds Act in 2015 (Public Law 114-95). The program focuses on revitalizing economically disadvantaged communities through the establishment of a cradle-to-career network of services aimed at improving the health, safety, and education of the occupants in the defined area.
142139
143140 (g) Solution includes both of the following:
144141
145142 (1) A single activity, or a set of activities, performed or coordinated by PNs and other community-based networks that help ensure that children and their families receive an appropriate continuum of services that they need to thrive. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to services provided by federal, state, and local governments, or other entities, as well as the direct provision of services to the public.
146143
147144 (2) A set of activities coordinated and supported by multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks to help ensure that children and their families are engaged with and supported by equitable systems that address their education, health, and well-being. These activities include administration, coordination, support, and connection of people to effect systems change.
148145
149146 20002. (a) (1) The California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program is hereby established to be administered by the State Department of Social Services or another department within the California Health and Human Services Agency, as designated by the Secretary of California Health and Human Services.(2) The purpose of the grant program is to award grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible entities to do either of the following:(A) Implement a comprehensive, integrated continuum of cradle-to-career solutions at the neighborhood level.(B) Support the civic infrastructure and backbone of cradle-to-career networks that support their network partners to accomplish systems change.(3) Solutions shall be in areas that include, but are not limited to, academic, health, social programs, and family and community supports, to meet the needs of high-need populations identified by a needs assessment or indicators, such as poor health for children, disparity gaps in school performance based on income or racial or ethnicity disaggregation, high rates of juvenile delinquency, adjudication, or incarceration, or high rates of foster care placement.(4) (A) Grants shall be awarded to eligible entities that are PNs, other community-based networks, or multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks.(B) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks receiving grants shall share the same common indicators and metrics and the common goal of helping children, youth, and families to thrive and serve to break the cycle of intergenerational poverty.(C) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career network applicants shall demonstrate that they have consulted and coordinated with stakeholders within their regions, including community members, PNs, and other community-based networks addressing needs of low-income neighborhoods.(D) All applicants shall identify solutions that tackle systemic inequities and work toward community transformation.(5) It is the intent of the Legislature that programs in the continuum should improve academic achievement and equitable social outcomes, including improving outcomes of early development, child and youth social and health development, and college and career readiness, as well as build strong family and community supports to help families move out of poverty.(b) (1) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall develop an application process for eligible entities to apply for the grants.(2) The department shall aim to achieve geographic equity by giving priority to applicants serving remote communities, including rural and tribal communities, through the selection process.
150147
151148
152149
153150 20002. (a) (1) The California Coordinated Neighborhood and Community Services Grant Program is hereby established to be administered by the State Department of Social Services or another department within the California Health and Human Services Agency, as designated by the Secretary of California Health and Human Services.
154151
155152 (2) The purpose of the grant program is to award grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible entities to do either of the following:
156153
157154 (A) Implement a comprehensive, integrated continuum of cradle-to-career solutions at the neighborhood level.
158155
159156 (B) Support the civic infrastructure and backbone of cradle-to-career networks that support their network partners to accomplish systems change.
160157
161158 (3) Solutions shall be in areas that include, but are not limited to, academic, health, social programs, and family and community supports, to meet the needs of high-need populations identified by a needs assessment or indicators, such as poor health for children, disparity gaps in school performance based on income or racial or ethnicity disaggregation, high rates of juvenile delinquency, adjudication, or incarceration, or high rates of foster care placement.
162159
163160 (4) (A) Grants shall be awarded to eligible entities that are PNs, other community-based networks, or multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks.
164161
165162 (B) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career networks receiving grants shall share the same common indicators and metrics and the common goal of helping children, youth, and families to thrive and serve to break the cycle of intergenerational poverty.
166163
167164 (C) Multineighborhood, regional cradle-to-career network applicants shall demonstrate that they have consulted and coordinated with stakeholders within their regions, including community members, PNs, and other community-based networks addressing needs of low-income neighborhoods.
168165
169166 (D) All applicants shall identify solutions that tackle systemic inequities and work toward community transformation.
170167
171168 (5) It is the intent of the Legislature that programs in the continuum should improve academic achievement and equitable social outcomes, including improving outcomes of early development, child and youth social and health development, and college and career readiness, as well as build strong family and community supports to help families move out of poverty.
172169
173170 (b) (1) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall develop an application process for eligible entities to apply for the grants.
174171
175172 (2) The department shall aim to achieve geographic equity by giving priority to applicants serving remote communities, including rural and tribal communities, through the selection process.
176173
177-20003. (a) To be eligible to receive a grant under this chapter, an eligible entity shall submit an application to the department at the time, in the manner, and containing the information, as the department may require.(b) At a minimum, the grant application shall include all of the following:(1) A description of a plan to significantly improve the academic, health, and social outcomes of children living in an identified economically disadvantaged neighborhood and to support the healthy development and well-being of children and youth in the neighborhood by providing a continuum of cradle-to-career solutions. This plan shall address the needs of the whole child, whole family, and whole community, as identified by the needs assessment described in paragraph (4). The continuum of solutions shall be based on the best available evidence, including, if available, strong, or moderately strong evidence. The plan shall also ensure that, over time, pupils not living in the neighborhood who attend the target school or schools have access to services within the continuum of solutions.(2) A description of the geographically defined area or neighborhood to be served and the level of distress in that area based on indicators of need and other relevant indicators. The statement of need in the neighborhood shall be based, in part, on results of a comprehensive needs assessment and segmentation analysis. The application may propose to serve multiple, noncontiguous areas.(3) A description of the applicants measurable short-term, long-term, and annual goals for expected outcomes of the grant, based on program and project indicators, as described in paragraph (2), which includes all of the following:(A) Performance goals for each year of the grant.(B) Projected growth or change over time and a sustainability plan outlining the process for reviewing and working with partners on a strategy to strengthen the infrastructure, ensure that target populations that require services have access to them and continue improving the results they are achieving beyond the grant life.(C) Annual goals for evaluating progress in improving systems, such as changes in policies, environments, or organizations that affect children and youth in the neighborhood.(4) An analysis of the needs and assets of the neighborhood or neighborhoods identified that includes all of the following:(A) A description of the process through which the needs assessment and segmentation analysis was produced, including a description of how family and community members were engaged in the analysis.(B) An explanation of how the applicant used the needs assessment and segmentation analysis in the development of localized, equity-based, cradle-to-career solutions.(C) A description of both the academic indicators and the available family and community support indicators, and social indicators that the applicant used to conduct the needs assessment.(5) For PNs and other community-based networks:(A) A description of solutions that will be used in the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions based on data collected, including a description of solutions specifically targeting subgroups of children, family members, community members, and children not attending schools or programs operated by the applicant and its partners.(B) The process by which each solution will be implemented and an expected timeline for launching each solution.(C) The estimated per child cost and cost projections over time, including administrative costs, to implement each solution.(D) The estimated number of children, by age, in the neighborhood who will be served by each solution, including the percentage of all children of the same age group within the neighborhood proposed to be served with each solution and the annual targets required to increase the proportion of children served to reach scale over time.(E) Financial projections of the cost of solutions over time.(F) The best available evidence supporting each proposed solution.(6) A description of the process used to develop the application, including the involvement of family and community members.(7) If feasible, a description of the process by which to develop, launch, and implement a longitudinal data system that does both of the following:(A) Integrates pupil-level or grade-level data from multiple sources to measure progress on academic, family, and community support indicators for all children in the neighborhood.(B) Tracks appropriate social indicators, as determined by the department, for children and families in the neighborhood.(8) A description of how the applicant has done all of the following:(A) Description of a detailed data plan that includes the data collection process.(B) Made or will make data accessible to parents, families, community residents, program partners, researchers, and evaluators at either the individual or aggregate level as appropriate while abiding by federal, state, and other privacy laws and requirements.(C) Managed and maintained the data system over time.(9) An explanation of how the applicant will continuously evaluate and improve the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions, including both of the following:(A) A description of the required grant indicators and other local performance indicators that will be used to inform each solution of the cradle-to-career continuum.(B) The processes for using data to improve instruction, optimize integrated pupil supports, provide for continuous program improvement, and hold staff and partner organizations accountable.(10) An identification of the fiscal agent, which may be any eligible entity.(11) A list of federal, state, local, and private sources of funding that the applicant will secure to comply with the matching funds requirement specified in Section 20004.(c) Before receiving a grant under this chapter, the applicant shall do all of the following:(1) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the academic and social indicators, and use them as program and project indicators.(2) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the family and community support indicators and use them as program and project indicators.(3) Perform an analysis of community assets within, or accessible to, the neighborhood, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) Early learning programs and networks, including home visiting, high-quality childcare, Early Head Start programs, Head Start programs, and prekindergarten programs.(B) Community centers, after school programs, and other opportunities for activities outside of school hours.(C) Transportation.(D) Parks.(E) The availability of healthy food options and opportunities for physical activity.(F) Existing family and pupil supports.(G) Businesses and employers located in the community.(H) Institutions of higher education.(4) Provide evidence of successful collaboration that has led to changes in child outcomes within the neighborhood.(d) An eligible entity, as part of the application, shall submit a preliminary memorandum of understanding, signed by each partner entity or agency. The preliminary memorandum of understanding shall describe, at a minimum, all of the following:(1) Each partners commitment and contribution toward achieving each result at population level by using a backbone agency to coordinate a collective impact initiative.(2) Each partners financial and programmatic commitment toward the strategies described in the application, including an identification of the fiscal agent.(3) The governance structure proposed for the eligible entity, including a system for how the eligible entity will serve as a backbone agency and hold partners accountable, representation of the geographic area on the eligible entitys governing and advisory boards, and resident engagement from the neighborhood in the organizations decisionmaking.(4) Each partners long-term commitment to providing cradle-to-career continuum services that, at a minimum, accounts for the cost of supporting the continuum, including the period after grant funds are no longer available, and potential changes in local government.(5) Each partners mission and plan that will govern the work that partners do together, including an aligned theory of improvement.(6) Each partners long-term commitment to supporting the cradle-to-career continuum through data-driven decisionmaking, including data collection, monitoring, reporting, and sharing.(7) Each partners commitment to ensuring sound fiscal management and controls, including evidence of a system of supports and personnel.(8) Each partners commitment to mobilizing local government service integration to improve outcomes for families and children in the neighborhood as measured by increased employment, improved education, decreased poverty, reduced crime, and improved health status.(9) A proposed data governance plan with each partners commitment to and plan for data collection and data sharing, including a data privacy plan that maintains privacy for children and families as required by the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-191) and federal Family Education Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (Public Law 93-380) standards.
174+20003. (a) To be eligible to receive a grant under this chapter, an eligible entity shall submit an application to the department at the time, in the manner, and containing the information, as the department may require.(b) At a minimum, the grant application shall include all of the following:(1) A description of a plan to significantly improve the academic, health, and social outcomes of children living in an identified economically disadvantaged neighborhood and to support the healthy development and well-being of children and youth in the neighborhood by providing a continuum of cradle-to-career solutions. This plan shall address the needs of the whole child, whole family, and whole community, as identified by the needs assessment described in paragraph (4). The continuum of solutions shall be based on the best available evidence, including, if available, strong, or moderately strong evidence. The plan shall also ensure that, over time, pupils not living in the neighborhood who attend the target school or schools have access to services within the continuum of solutions.(2) A description of the geographically defined area or neighborhood to be served and the level of distress in that area based on indicators of need and other relevant indicators. The statement of need in the neighborhood shall be based, in part, on results of a comprehensive needs assessment and segmentation analysis. The application may propose to serve multiple, noncontiguous areas.(3) A description of the applicants measurable short-term, long-term, and annual goals for expected outcomes of the grant, based on program and project indicators, as described in paragraph (2), that which includes all of the following:(A) Performance goals for each year of the grant.(B) Projected growth or change over time and a sustainability plan outlining the process for reviewing and working with partners on a strategy to strengthen the infrastructure, ensure that target populations that require services have access to them and continue improving the results they are achieving beyond the grant life.(C) Annual goals for evaluating progress in improving systems, such as changes in policies, environments, or organizations that affect children and youth in the neighborhood.(4) An analysis of the needs and assets of the neighborhood or neighborhoods identified that includes all of the following:(A) A description of the process through which the needs assessment and segmentation analysis was produced, including a description of how family and community members were engaged in the analysis.(B) An explanation of how the applicant used the needs assessment and segmentation analysis in the development of localized, equity-based, cradle-to-career solutions.(C) A description of both the academic indicators and the available family and community support indicators, and social indicators that the applicant used to conduct the needs assessment.(5) For PNs and other community-based networks:(A) A description of solutions that will be used in the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions based on data collected, including a description of solutions specifically targeting subgroups of children, family members, community members, and children not attending schools or programs operated by the applicant and its partners.(B) The process by which each solution will be implemented and an expected timeline for launching each solution.(C) The estimated per child cost and cost projections over time, including administrative costs, to implement each solution.(D) The estimated number of children, by age, in the neighborhood who will be served by each solution, including the percentage of all children of the same age group within the neighborhood proposed to be served with each solution and the annual targets required to increase the proportion of children served to reach scale over time.(E) Financial projections of the cost of solutions over time.(F) The best available evidence supporting each proposed solution.(6) A description of the process used to develop the application, including the involvement of family and community members.(7) If feasible, a description of the process by which to develop, launch, and implement a longitudinal data system that does both of the following:(A) Integrates pupil-level or grade-level data from multiple sources to measure progress on academic, family, and community support indicators for all children in the neighborhood.(B) Tracks appropriate social indicators, as determined by the department, for children and families in the neighborhood.(8) A description of how the applicant has done all of the following:(A) Description of a detailed data plan that includes the data collection process.(B) Made or will make data accessible to parents, families, community residents, program partners, researchers, and evaluators at either the individual or aggregate level as appropriate while abiding by federal, state, and other privacy laws and requirements.(C) Managed and maintained the data system over time.(9) An explanation of how the applicant will continuously evaluate and improve the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions, including both of the following:(A) A description of the required grant indicators and other local performance indicators that will be used to inform each solution of the cradle-to-career continuum.(B) The processes for using data to improve instruction, optimize integrated pupil supports, provide for continuous program improvement, and hold staff and partner organizations accountable.(10) An identification of the fiscal agent, which may be any eligible entity.(11) A list of federal, state, local, and private sources of funding that the applicant will secure to comply with the matching funds requirement specified in Section 20004.(c) Before receiving a grant under this chapter, the applicant shall do all of the following:(1) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the academic and social indicators, and use them as program and project indicators.(2) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the family and community support indicators and use them as program and project indicators.(3) Perform an analysis of community assets within, or accessible to, the neighborhood, including, at a minimum, all of the following:(A) Early learning programs and networks, including home visiting, high-quality childcare, Early Head Start programs, Head Start programs, and prekindergarten programs.(B) Community centers, after school programs, and other opportunities for activities outside of school hours.(C) Transportation.(D) Parks.(E) The availability of healthy food options and opportunities for physical activity.(F) Existing family and pupil supports.(G) Businesses and employers located in the community.(H) Institutions of higher education.(4) Provide evidence of successful collaboration that has led to changes in child outcomes within the neighborhood.(d) An eligible entity, as part of the application, shall submit a preliminary memorandum of understanding, signed by each partner entity or agency. The preliminary memorandum of understanding shall describe, at a minimum, all of the following:(1) Each partners commitment and contribution toward achieving each result at population level by using a backbone agency to coordinate a collective impact initiative.(2) Each partners financial and programmatic commitment toward the strategies described in the application, including an identification of the fiscal agent.(3) The governance structure proposed for the eligible entity, including a system for how the eligible entity will serve as a backbone agency and hold partners accountable, representation of the geographic area on the eligible entitys governing and advisory boards, and resident engagement from the neighborhood in the organizations decisionmaking.(4) Each partners long-term commitment to providing cradle-to-career continuum services that, at a minimum, accounts for the cost of supporting the continuum, including the period after grant funds are no longer available, and potential changes in local government.(5) Each partners mission and plan that will govern the work that partners do together, including an aligned theory of improvement.(6) Each partners long-term commitment to supporting the cradle-to-career continuum through data-driven decisionmaking, including data collection, monitoring, reporting, and sharing.(7) Each partners commitment to ensuring sound fiscal management and controls, including evidence of a system of supports and personnel.(8) Each partners commitment to mobilizing local government service integration to improve outcomes for families and children in the neighborhood as measured by increased employment, improved education, decreased poverty, reduced crime, and improved health status.(9) A proposed data governance plan with each partners commitment to and plan for data collection and data sharing, including a data privacy plan that maintains privacy for children and families as required by the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-191) and federal Family Education Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (Public Law 93-380) standards.
178175
179176
180177
181178 20003. (a) To be eligible to receive a grant under this chapter, an eligible entity shall submit an application to the department at the time, in the manner, and containing the information, as the department may require.
182179
183180 (b) At a minimum, the grant application shall include all of the following:
184181
185182 (1) A description of a plan to significantly improve the academic, health, and social outcomes of children living in an identified economically disadvantaged neighborhood and to support the healthy development and well-being of children and youth in the neighborhood by providing a continuum of cradle-to-career solutions. This plan shall address the needs of the whole child, whole family, and whole community, as identified by the needs assessment described in paragraph (4). The continuum of solutions shall be based on the best available evidence, including, if available, strong, or moderately strong evidence. The plan shall also ensure that, over time, pupils not living in the neighborhood who attend the target school or schools have access to services within the continuum of solutions.
186183
187184 (2) A description of the geographically defined area or neighborhood to be served and the level of distress in that area based on indicators of need and other relevant indicators. The statement of need in the neighborhood shall be based, in part, on results of a comprehensive needs assessment and segmentation analysis. The application may propose to serve multiple, noncontiguous areas.
188185
189-(3) A description of the applicants measurable short-term, long-term, and annual goals for expected outcomes of the grant, based on program and project indicators, as described in paragraph (2), which includes all of the following:
186+(3) A description of the applicants measurable short-term, long-term, and annual goals for expected outcomes of the grant, based on program and project indicators, as described in paragraph (2), that which includes all of the following:
190187
191188 (A) Performance goals for each year of the grant.
192189
193190 (B) Projected growth or change over time and a sustainability plan outlining the process for reviewing and working with partners on a strategy to strengthen the infrastructure, ensure that target populations that require services have access to them and continue improving the results they are achieving beyond the grant life.
194191
195192 (C) Annual goals for evaluating progress in improving systems, such as changes in policies, environments, or organizations that affect children and youth in the neighborhood.
196193
197194 (4) An analysis of the needs and assets of the neighborhood or neighborhoods identified that includes all of the following:
198195
199196 (A) A description of the process through which the needs assessment and segmentation analysis was produced, including a description of how family and community members were engaged in the analysis.
200197
201198 (B) An explanation of how the applicant used the needs assessment and segmentation analysis in the development of localized, equity-based, cradle-to-career solutions.
202199
203200 (C) A description of both the academic indicators and the available family and community support indicators, and social indicators that the applicant used to conduct the needs assessment.
204201
205202 (5) For PNs and other community-based networks:
206203
207204 (A) A description of solutions that will be used in the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions based on data collected, including a description of solutions specifically targeting subgroups of children, family members, community members, and children not attending schools or programs operated by the applicant and its partners.
208205
209206 (B) The process by which each solution will be implemented and an expected timeline for launching each solution.
210207
211208 (C) The estimated per child cost and cost projections over time, including administrative costs, to implement each solution.
212209
213210 (D) The estimated number of children, by age, in the neighborhood who will be served by each solution, including the percentage of all children of the same age group within the neighborhood proposed to be served with each solution and the annual targets required to increase the proportion of children served to reach scale over time.
214211
215212 (E) Financial projections of the cost of solutions over time.
216213
217214 (F) The best available evidence supporting each proposed solution.
218215
219216 (6) A description of the process used to develop the application, including the involvement of family and community members.
220217
221218 (7) If feasible, a description of the process by which to develop, launch, and implement a longitudinal data system that does both of the following:
222219
223220 (A) Integrates pupil-level or grade-level data from multiple sources to measure progress on academic, family, and community support indicators for all children in the neighborhood.
224221
225222 (B) Tracks appropriate social indicators, as determined by the department, for children and families in the neighborhood.
226223
227224 (8) A description of how the applicant has done all of the following:
228225
229226 (A) Description of a detailed data plan that includes the data collection process.
230227
231228 (B) Made or will make data accessible to parents, families, community residents, program partners, researchers, and evaluators at either the individual or aggregate level as appropriate while abiding by federal, state, and other privacy laws and requirements.
232229
233230 (C) Managed and maintained the data system over time.
234231
235232 (9) An explanation of how the applicant will continuously evaluate and improve the continuum of cradle-to-career solutions, including both of the following:
236233
237234 (A) A description of the required grant indicators and other local performance indicators that will be used to inform each solution of the cradle-to-career continuum.
238235
239236 (B) The processes for using data to improve instruction, optimize integrated pupil supports, provide for continuous program improvement, and hold staff and partner organizations accountable.
240237
241238 (10) An identification of the fiscal agent, which may be any eligible entity.
242239
243240 (11) A list of federal, state, local, and private sources of funding that the applicant will secure to comply with the matching funds requirement specified in Section 20004.
244241
245242 (c) Before receiving a grant under this chapter, the applicant shall do all of the following:
246243
247244 (1) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the academic and social indicators, and use them as program and project indicators.
248245
249246 (2) Collect data, including publicly available data, for the family and community support indicators and use them as program and project indicators.
250247
251248 (3) Perform an analysis of community assets within, or accessible to, the neighborhood, including, at a minimum, all of the following:
252249
253250 (A) Early learning programs and networks, including home visiting, high-quality childcare, Early Head Start programs, Head Start programs, and prekindergarten programs.
254251
255252 (B) Community centers, after school programs, and other opportunities for activities outside of school hours.
256253
257254 (C) Transportation.
258255
259256 (D) Parks.
260257
261258 (E) The availability of healthy food options and opportunities for physical activity.
262259
263260 (F) Existing family and pupil supports.
264261
265262 (G) Businesses and employers located in the community.
266263
267264 (H) Institutions of higher education.
268265
269266 (4) Provide evidence of successful collaboration that has led to changes in child outcomes within the neighborhood.
270267
271268 (d) An eligible entity, as part of the application, shall submit a preliminary memorandum of understanding, signed by each partner entity or agency. The preliminary memorandum of understanding shall describe, at a minimum, all of the following:
272269
273270 (1) Each partners commitment and contribution toward achieving each result at population level by using a backbone agency to coordinate a collective impact initiative.
274271
275272 (2) Each partners financial and programmatic commitment toward the strategies described in the application, including an identification of the fiscal agent.
276273
277274 (3) The governance structure proposed for the eligible entity, including a system for how the eligible entity will serve as a backbone agency and hold partners accountable, representation of the geographic area on the eligible entitys governing and advisory boards, and resident engagement from the neighborhood in the organizations decisionmaking.
278275
279276 (4) Each partners long-term commitment to providing cradle-to-career continuum services that, at a minimum, accounts for the cost of supporting the continuum, including the period after grant funds are no longer available, and potential changes in local government.
280277
281278 (5) Each partners mission and plan that will govern the work that partners do together, including an aligned theory of improvement.
282279
283280 (6) Each partners long-term commitment to supporting the cradle-to-career continuum through data-driven decisionmaking, including data collection, monitoring, reporting, and sharing.
284281
285282 (7) Each partners commitment to ensuring sound fiscal management and controls, including evidence of a system of supports and personnel.
286283
287284 (8) Each partners commitment to mobilizing local government service integration to improve outcomes for families and children in the neighborhood as measured by increased employment, improved education, decreased poverty, reduced crime, and improved health status.
288285
289286 (9) A proposed data governance plan with each partners commitment to and plan for data collection and data sharing, including a data privacy plan that maintains privacy for children and families as required by the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-191) and federal Family Education Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (Public Law 93-380) standards.
290287
291-20004. (a) For the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, the department shall competitively award grants as follows:(1) Planning grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state.(2) Implementation grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and to multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state to be expended pursuant to Section 20005.(b) All neighborhood-based and multineighborhood regional networks that received a planning grant in the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, but did not receive an implementation grant during these three years shall be eligible to receive an implementation grant starting in the 202627 fiscal year, contingent on future budget appropriations. All entities that continue to meet the requirements set forth in Sections 20005 and 20007 shall be eligible for an implementation grant extension two years after the original grant was awarded.(c) (1) (A) Each grant recipient shall contribute matching funds or in-kind contributions in an amount equal to, but not less than, 100 percent of the grant award.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), a PN or other community-based network located in a rural community or tribal community shall provide matching funds or in-kind donations equal to at least 50 percent of the grant award.(2) (A) The matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 10 percent coming from private sources.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), for a PN or other community-based network in a rural community or tribal community, the matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 5 percent coming from private sources.(3) (A) An applicant that is unable to meet the matching requirements required by paragraphs (1) and (2) shall include in its application a request to the department to reduce the matching requirement, including the amount of the requested reduction, the total remaining match contribution, and a statement of the basis for the request.(B) The department may grant a request described in subparagraph (A) if it finds the request reasonable and that doing so would further the purposes of this chapter.
288+20004. (a) For the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, the department shall competitively award grants as follows:(1) Planning grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state.(2) Implementation grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and to multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state to be expended pursuant to Section 20005.(b) All neighborhood-based and multineighborhood regional networks who that received a planning grant in the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, but did not receive an implementation grant during these three years shall be eligible to receive an implementation grant starting in the 202627 fiscal year, contingent on future budget appropriations. All entities that continue to meet the requirements set forth in Sections 20005 and 20007 shall be eligible for an implementation grant extension two years after the original grant was awarded.(c) (1) (A) Each grant recipient shall contribute matching funds or in-kind contributions in an amount equal to, but not less than, 100 percent of the grant award.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), a PN or other community-based network located in a rural community or tribal community shall provide matching funds or in-kind donations equal to at least 50 percent of the grant award.(2) (A) The matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 10 percent coming from private sources.(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), for a PN or other community-based network in a rural community or in tribal community, the matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 5 percent coming from private sources.(3) (A) An applicant that is unable to meet the matching requirements required by paragraphs (1) and (2) shall include in its application a request to the department to reduce the matching requirement, including the amount of the requested reduction, the total remaining match contribution, and a statement of the basis for the request.(B) The department may grant a request described in subparagraph (A) if it finds the request reasonable and that doing so would further the purposes of this chapter.
292289
293290
294291
295292 20004. (a) For the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, the department shall competitively award grants as follows:
296293
297294 (1) Planning grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state.
298295
299296 (2) Implementation grants to PNs or similar community-based networks over the three fiscal years, and to multineighborhood regional cradle-to-career networks over the three fiscal years, across the state to be expended pursuant to Section 20005.
300297
301-(b) All neighborhood-based and multineighborhood regional networks that received a planning grant in the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, but did not receive an implementation grant during these three years shall be eligible to receive an implementation grant starting in the 202627 fiscal year, contingent on future budget appropriations. All entities that continue to meet the requirements set forth in Sections 20005 and 20007 shall be eligible for an implementation grant extension two years after the original grant was awarded.
298+(b) All neighborhood-based and multineighborhood regional networks who that received a planning grant in the 202324 through 202526 fiscal years, but did not receive an implementation grant during these three years shall be eligible to receive an implementation grant starting in the 202627 fiscal year, contingent on future budget appropriations. All entities that continue to meet the requirements set forth in Sections 20005 and 20007 shall be eligible for an implementation grant extension two years after the original grant was awarded.
302299
303300 (c) (1) (A) Each grant recipient shall contribute matching funds or in-kind contributions in an amount equal to, but not less than, 100 percent of the grant award.
304301
305302 (B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), a PN or other community-based network located in a rural community or tribal community shall provide matching funds or in-kind donations equal to at least 50 percent of the grant award.
306303
307304 (2) (A) The matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 10 percent coming from private sources.
308305
309-(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), for a PN or other community-based network in a rural community or tribal community, the matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 5 percent coming from private sources.
306+(B) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A), for a PN or other community-based network in a rural community or in tribal community, the matching funds described in paragraph (1) shall come from federal, state, local, or nonpublic, nongovernmental, or other private sources, with at least 5 percent coming from private sources.
310307
311308 (3) (A) An applicant that is unable to meet the matching requirements required by paragraphs (1) and (2) shall include in its application a request to the department to reduce the matching requirement, including the amount of the requested reduction, the total remaining match contribution, and a statement of the basis for the request.
312309
313310 (B) The department may grant a request described in subparagraph (A) if it finds the request reasonable and that doing so would further the purposes of this chapter.
314311
315312 20005. (a) Each implementation grant recipient under this chapter shall use the grant funds for both of the following purposes:(1) To implement the cradle-to-career services based on results of the needs analysis described in the application and plans to build system and organizational capacity.(2) To continuously evaluate the success of the program and improve the program based on data and outcomes.(b) Each grant recipient may use grant funds to develop the administrative capacity necessary to successfully implement a continuum of solutions, such as managing partnerships, integrating multiple funding sources, supporting the operation of a longitudinal data system, and accessing technical assistance. Each grant recipient and its partners shall not expend more than 20 percent of funds on these administrative and capacity building costs. Development and implementation of new or improved data systems shall not be included within that 20-percent limitation.(c) Grant recipients developing new or expanded longitudinal data systems shall coordinate and align their data collection and reporting with the Cradle-to-Career Data System.
316313
317314
318315
319316 20005. (a) Each implementation grant recipient under this chapter shall use the grant funds for both of the following purposes:
320317
321318 (1) To implement the cradle-to-career services based on results of the needs analysis described in the application and plans to build system and organizational capacity.
322319
323320 (2) To continuously evaluate the success of the program and improve the program based on data and outcomes.
324321
325322 (b) Each grant recipient may use grant funds to develop the administrative capacity necessary to successfully implement a continuum of solutions, such as managing partnerships, integrating multiple funding sources, supporting the operation of a longitudinal data system, and accessing technical assistance. Each grant recipient and its partners shall not expend more than 20 percent of funds on these administrative and capacity building costs. Development and implementation of new or improved data systems shall not be included within that 20-percent limitation.
326323
327324 (c) Grant recipients developing new or expanded longitudinal data systems shall coordinate and align their data collection and reporting with the Cradle-to-Career Data System.
328325
329-20006. (a) The department shall establish performance standards to measure progress on indicators and results relevant to the evaluation of the grant program.(b) (1) The State Department of Education, in consultation with the State Department of Social Services, shall establish a core set of academic results and indicators by which the grant recipients will be measured. These indicators may be based on pupil-level or grade-level data that is available from the following academic results and indicators:(A) Children benefit from a high-quality early learning education program and demonstrate school readiness skills, as measured by both of the following:(i) Children enter kindergarten ready for success, as measured by the number and percentage of children who demonstrate age-appropriate functioning at the beginning of the program or school year, as demonstrated by literacy, math, science, self-regulation, social-emotional development, physical development, English language development, and oral language indicators.(ii) Children are provided with high-quality early learning experiences, as measured by a quality rating instrument.(B) Pupils are proficient in core academic subjects, as measured by both of the following:(i) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in mathematics based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(ii) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in English language arts and literacy based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(C) Pupils are engaged and families support learning, as measured by attendance rates and chronic absenteeism rates, as measured by both of the following:(i) The average daily attendance rates of students in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive.(ii) The percentage of pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, who are absent 10 percent or more of the instructional days those pupils are enrolled.(D) Percentage of pupils who received a high school diploma within four years of entering grade 9 or who complete their graduation requirements at an alternative school.(E) High school graduates obtaining a postsecondary degree, certification, or credential as measured by all of the following:(i) Percentage of high school graduates who are placed in the prepared level on the college or career indicator.(ii) The number and percentage of students who enroll in a two-year or four-year college or university after graduation.(iii) The number and percentage of students who graduate from a two-year or four-year college or university.(2) The department shall establish a core set of family and community support results and indicators by which the grant recipient will be measured. A grant recipient shall choose to measure and report on two or more family and community support results and indicators. A grant recipients project design and implementation of a whole community continuum of solutions are subject to, but not limited to, all of the following family and community support results and indicators:(A) Pupils feel safe at school and connected to their school community, as measured by locally implemented school climate surveys or other instruments.(B) Pupils live in stable communities, as measured by pupil mobility rates in schools within the designated geographic boundary.(C) Where the appropriate infrastructure is available, pupils that have access to 21st century learning tools, as measured by the number and percentage of pupils who have access to a high-speed broadband internet-connected computing device.(c) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall also establish at least two indicators related to health, social and emotional development, mental health, and wellness. A grant recipient may choose to report on additional social or socioemotional indicators, drawn from either of the following:(1) Existing surveys, including the California Healthy Kids Survey or the YouthTruth Student Survey.(2) Other sources, as determined by the eligible entity and their partner agencies.(d) The department may establish other engagement, academic, and social indicators.
326+20006. (a) The department shall establish performance standards to measure progress on indicators and results relevant to the evaluation of the grant program.(b) (1) The State Department of Education Education, in consultation with the State Department of Social Services, shall establish a core set of academic results and indicators by which the grant recipients will be measured. These indicators may be based on pupil-level or grade-level data that is available from the following academic results and indicators:(A) Children benefit from a high-quality early learning education program and demonstrate school readiness skills, as measured by both of the following:(i) Children enter kindergarten ready for success, as measured by the number and percentage of children who demonstrate age-appropriate functioning at the beginning of the program or school year, as demonstrated by literacy, math, science, self-regulation, social-emotional development, physical development, English language development, and oral language indicators.(ii) Children are provided with high-quality early learning experiences, as measured by a quality rating instrument.(B) Pupils are proficient in core academic subjects, as measured by both of the following:(i) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in mathematics based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments, Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(ii) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in English language arts and literacy based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments, Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.(C) Pupils are engaged and families support learning, as measured by attendance rates and chronic absenteeism rates, as measured by both of the following:(i) The average daily attendance rates of students in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive.(ii) The percentage of pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, who are absent 10 percent or more of the instructional days those pupils are enrolled.(D) Percentage of pupils who received a high school diploma within four years of entering grade 9 or who complete their graduation requirements at an alternative school.(E) High school graduates obtaining a postsecondary degree, certification, or credential as measured by all of the following:(i) Percentage of high school graduates who are placed in the prepared level on the college or career indicator.(ii) The number and percentage of students who enroll in a two-year or four-year college or university after graduation.(iii) The number and percentage of students who graduate from a two-year or four-year college or university.(2) The department shall establish a core set of family and community support results and indicators by which the grant recipient will be measured. A grant recipient shall choose to measure and report on two or more family and community support results and indicators. A grant recipients project design and implementation of a whole community continuum of solutions are subject to, but not limited to, all of the following family and community support results and indicators:(A) Pupils feel safe at school and connected to their school community, as measured by locally implemented school climate surveys or other instruments.(B) Pupils live in stable communities, as measured by pupil mobility rates in schools within the designated geographic boundary.(C) Where the appropriate infrastructure is available, pupils that have access to 21st century learning tools, as measured by the number and percentage of pupils who have access to a high-speed broadband internet-connected computing device.(c) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall also establish at least two indicators related to health, social and emotional development, mental health, and wellness. A grant recipient may choose to report on additional social or socioemotional indicators, drawn from either of the following:(1) Existing surveys, including the California Healthy Kids Survey or the YouthTruth Student Survey.(2) Other sources, as determined by the eligible entity and their partner agencies.(d) The department may establish other engagement, academic, and social indicators.
330327
331328
332329
333330 20006. (a) The department shall establish performance standards to measure progress on indicators and results relevant to the evaluation of the grant program.
334331
335-(b) (1) The State Department of Education, in consultation with the State Department of Social Services, shall establish a core set of academic results and indicators by which the grant recipients will be measured. These indicators may be based on pupil-level or grade-level data that is available from the following academic results and indicators:
332+(b) (1) The State Department of Education Education, in consultation with the State Department of Social Services, shall establish a core set of academic results and indicators by which the grant recipients will be measured. These indicators may be based on pupil-level or grade-level data that is available from the following academic results and indicators:
336333
337334 (A) Children benefit from a high-quality early learning education program and demonstrate school readiness skills, as measured by both of the following:
338335
339336 (i) Children enter kindergarten ready for success, as measured by the number and percentage of children who demonstrate age-appropriate functioning at the beginning of the program or school year, as demonstrated by literacy, math, science, self-regulation, social-emotional development, physical development, English language development, and oral language indicators.
340337
341338 (ii) Children are provided with high-quality early learning experiences, as measured by a quality rating instrument.
342339
343340 (B) Pupils are proficient in core academic subjects, as measured by both of the following:
344341
345-(i) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in mathematics based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.
342+(i) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in mathematics based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments, Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.
346343
347-(ii) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in English language arts and literacy based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.
344+(ii) The number and percentage of pupils meeting standards in English language arts and literacy based on pupil performance on the Smarter Balanced Summative Assessments, Assessments that are taken annually by pupils in grades 3 to 8, inclusive, and grade 11.
348345
349346 (C) Pupils are engaged and families support learning, as measured by attendance rates and chronic absenteeism rates, as measured by both of the following:
350347
351348 (i) The average daily attendance rates of students in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive.
352349
353350 (ii) The percentage of pupils in kindergarten and grades 1 to 12, inclusive, who are absent 10 percent or more of the instructional days those pupils are enrolled.
354351
355352 (D) Percentage of pupils who received a high school diploma within four years of entering grade 9 or who complete their graduation requirements at an alternative school.
356353
357354 (E) High school graduates obtaining a postsecondary degree, certification, or credential as measured by all of the following:
358355
359356 (i) Percentage of high school graduates who are placed in the prepared level on the college or career indicator.
360357
361358 (ii) The number and percentage of students who enroll in a two-year or four-year college or university after graduation.
362359
363360 (iii) The number and percentage of students who graduate from a two-year or four-year college or university.
364361
365362 (2) The department shall establish a core set of family and community support results and indicators by which the grant recipient will be measured. A grant recipient shall choose to measure and report on two or more family and community support results and indicators. A grant recipients project design and implementation of a whole community continuum of solutions are subject to, but not limited to, all of the following family and community support results and indicators:
366363
367364 (A) Pupils feel safe at school and connected to their school community, as measured by locally implemented school climate surveys or other instruments.
368365
369366 (B) Pupils live in stable communities, as measured by pupil mobility rates in schools within the designated geographic boundary.
370367
371368 (C) Where the appropriate infrastructure is available, pupils that have access to 21st century learning tools, as measured by the number and percentage of pupils who have access to a high-speed broadband internet-connected computing device.
372369
373370 (c) The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, shall also establish at least two indicators related to health, social and emotional development, mental health, and wellness. A grant recipient may choose to report on additional social or socioemotional indicators, drawn from either of the following:
374371
375372 (1) Existing surveys, including the California Healthy Kids Survey or the YouthTruth Student Survey.
376373
377374 (2) Other sources, as determined by the eligible entity and their partner agencies.
378375
379376 (d) The department may establish other engagement, academic, and social indicators.
380377
381378 20007. Each grant recipient shall prepare and submit an annual report to the department that shall include both of the following:(a) Information about the number and percentage of children, family members, and community members in the PN or similar community-based network who are served by the grant recipient, including a description of the number and percentage of children accessing each of the pipeline services and the number of family and community members served by each program.(b) Disaggregated data at population and program levels related to the grant recipients programs success in annual growth along program and project indicators. To the extent feasible, data should be disaggregated by all of the following:(1) Gender.(2) Major racial and ethnic groups.(3) English proficiency status.(4) Migrant status.(5) Disability status.(6) Economic disadvantage status.(7) Information relating to the performance metrics.(8) Other indicators that may be required by the department.
382379
383380
384381
385382 20007. Each grant recipient shall prepare and submit an annual report to the department that shall include both of the following:
386383
387384 (a) Information about the number and percentage of children, family members, and community members in the PN or similar community-based network who are served by the grant recipient, including a description of the number and percentage of children accessing each of the pipeline services and the number of family and community members served by each program.
388385
389386 (b) Disaggregated data at population and program levels related to the grant recipients programs success in annual growth along program and project indicators. To the extent feasible, data should be disaggregated by all of the following:
390387
391388 (1) Gender.
392389
393390 (2) Major racial and ethnic groups.
394391
395392 (3) English proficiency status.
396393
397394 (4) Migrant status.
398395
399396 (5) Disability status.
400397
401398 (6) Economic disadvantage status.
402399
403400 (7) Information relating to the performance metrics.
404401
405402 (8) Other indicators that may be required by the department.
406403
407404 20008. The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may establish an appropriate method, process, and structure for grant management, fiscal accountability, payments to grant recipients, and technical assistance and supports for grant recipients that ensures transparency and accountability in the use of state funds. The department may, at its discretion, contract with one or more entities, including, but not limited to, community development financial intermediaries, state financial entities, or other community-based organizations, for these purposes.
408405
409406
410407
411408 20008. The department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may establish an appropriate method, process, and structure for grant management, fiscal accountability, payments to grant recipients, and technical assistance and supports for grant recipients that ensures transparency and accountability in the use of state funds. The department may, at its discretion, contract with one or more entities, including, but not limited to, community development financial intermediaries, state financial entities, or other community-based organizations, for these purposes.
412409
413410 20009. Notwithstanding the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code), the department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may implement, interpret, or make specific this chapter without taking any regulatory action.
414411
415412
416413
417414 20009. Notwithstanding the rulemaking provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code), the department, in consultation with the State Department of Education, may implement, interpret, or make specific this chapter without taking any regulatory action.
418415
419416 20010. (a) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the personal services contracting requirements of Article 4 (commencing with Section 19130) of Chapter 5 of Part 2 of Division 5 of Title 2 of the Government Code.(b) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the Public Contract Code and the State Contracting Manual, and are not subject to the approval of the Department of General Services.
420417
421418
422419
423420 20010. (a) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the personal services contracting requirements of Article 4 (commencing with Section 19130) of Chapter 5 of Part 2 of Division 5 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
424421
425422 (b) Contracts or grants awarded pursuant to this chapter are exempt from the Public Contract Code and the State Contracting Manual, and are not subject to the approval of the Department of General Services.
426423
427424 20011. Implementation of this chapter shall be subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for the purposes of this chapter.
428425
429426
430427
431428 20011. Implementation of this chapter shall be subject to an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute for the purposes of this chapter.