§ 5105. Research and assistance activities
(a)
Research
(1)
Topics
The Secretary shall, in consultation with other Federal agencies and recognized experts in the field, carry out a continuing interdisciplinary program of research, including longitudinal research, that is designed to provide information needed to better protect children from abuse or neglect and to improve the well-being of abused or neglected children, with at least a portion of such research being field initiated. Such research program may focus on—
(B)
causes, prevention, assessment, identification, treatment, cultural and socio-economic distinctions, and the consequences of child abuse and neglect, including the effects of abuse and neglect on a child’s development and the identification of successful early intervention services or other services that are needed;
(C)
appropriate, effective and culturally sensitive investigative, administrative, and judicial systems, including multidisciplinary, coordinated decisionmaking procedures with respect to cases of child abuse;
(D)
the evaluation and dissemination of best practices consistent with the goals of achieving improvements in the child protective services systems of the States in accordance with paragraphs (1) through (12) of section
5106a
(a) of this title;
(E)
effective approaches to interagency collaboration between the child protection system and the juvenile justice system that improve the delivery of services and treatment, including methods for continuity of treatment plan and services as children transition between systems;
(F)
an evaluation of the redundancies and gaps in the services in the field of child abuse and neglect prevention in order to make better use of resources;
(G)
the nature, scope, and practice of voluntary relinquishment for foster care or State guardianship of low income children who need health services, including mental health services;
(H)
the information on the national incidence of child abuse and neglect specified in clauses (i) through (xi) of subparagraph (H); [1] and
(I)
the national incidence of child abuse and neglect, including—
(i)
the extent to which incidents of child abuse are increasing or decreasing in number and severity;
(iii)
the number of substantiated cases that result in a judicial finding of child abuse or neglect or related criminal court convictions;
(iv)
the extent to which the number of unsubstantiated, unfounded and false reported cases of child abuse or neglect have contributed to the inability of a State to respond effectively to serious cases of child abuse or neglect;
(v)
the extent to which the lack of adequate resources and the lack of adequate training of individuals required by law to report suspected cases of child abuse have contributed to the inability of a State to respond effectively to serious cases of child abuse and neglect;
(vi)
the number of unsubstantiated, false, or unfounded reports that have resulted in a child being placed in substitute care, and the duration of such placement;
(vii)
the extent to which unsubstantiated reports return as more serious cases of child abuse or neglect;
(viii)
the incidence and prevalence of physical, sexual, and emotional abuse and physical and emotional neglect in substitute care;
(ix)
the incidence and prevalence of child maltreatment by a wide array of demographic characteristics such as age, sex, race, family structure, household relationship (including the living arrangement of the resident parent and family size), school enrollment and education attainment, disability, grandparents as caregivers, labor force status, work status in previous year, and income in previous year; and
(2)
Research
The Secretary shall conduct research on the national incidence of child abuse and neglect, including the information on the national incidence on child abuse and neglect specified in subparagraphs (i) through (ix) of paragraph (1)(I).
(3)
Report
Not later than 4 years after June 25, 2003, the Secretary shall prepare and submit to the Committee on Education and the Workforce of the House of Representatives and the Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions of the Senate a report that contains the results of the research conducted under paragraph (2).
(b)
Provision of technical assistance
(1)
In general
The Secretary shall provide technical assistance to State and local public and private agencies and community-based organizations, including disability organizations and persons who work with children with disabilities, to assist such agencies and organizations in planning, improving, developing, and carrying out programs and activities, including replicating successful program models, relating to the prevention, assessment, identification, and treatment of child abuse and neglect.
(2)
Evaluation
Such technical assistance may include an evaluation or identification of—
(A)
various methods and procedures for the investigation, assessment, and prosecution of child physical and sexual abuse cases;
(3)
Dissemination
The Secretary may provide for and disseminate information relating to various training resources available at the State and local level to—
(A)
individuals who are engaged, or who intend to engage, in the prevention, identification, and treatment of child abuse and neglect; and
(B)
appropriate State and local officials to assist in training law enforcement, legal, judicial, medical, mental health, education, and child welfare personnel in appropriate methods of interacting during investigative, administrative, and judicial proceedings with children who have been subjected to abuse.
(c)
Authority to make grants or enter into contracts
(d)
Peer review for grants
(1)
Establishment of peer review process
(A)
The Secretary shall, in consultation with experts in the field and other federal [2] agencies, establish a formal, rigorous, and meritorious peer review process for purposes of evaluating and reviewing applications for grants under this section and determining the relative merits of the projects for which such assistance is requested. The purpose of this process is to enhance the quality and usefulness of research in the field of child abuse and neglect.
(B)
In establishing the process required by subparagraph (A), the Secretary shall appoint to the peer review panels only members who are experts in the field of child abuse and neglect or related disciplines, with appropriate expertise in the application to be reviewed, and who are not individuals who are officers or employees of the Administration on Children and Families. The panels shall meet as often as is necessary to facilitate the expeditious review of applications for grants and contracts under this section, but may not meet less than once a year. The Secretary shall ensure that the peer review panel utilizes scientifically valid review criteria and scoring guidelines for review committees.
(2)
Review of applications for assistance
Each peer review panel established under paragraph (1)(A) that reviews any application for a grant shall—
(B)
rank such application with respect to all other applications it reviews in the same priority area for the fiscal year involved, according to the relative merit of all of the projects that are described in such application and for which financial assistance is requested; and
(C)
make recommendations to the Secretary concerning whether the application for the project shall be approved.
The Secretary shall award grants under this section on the basis of competitive review.
(3)
Notice of approval
(A)
The Secretary shall provide grants and contracts under this section from among the projects which the peer review panels established under paragraph (1)(A) have determined to have merit.
(B)
In the instance in which the Secretary approves an application for a program without having approved all applications ranked above such application (as determined under paragraph (2)(B)), the Secretary shall append to the approved application a detailed explanation of the reasons relied on for approving the application and for failing to approve each pending application that is superior in merit, as indicated on the list under paragraph (2)(B).
(e)
Demonstration programs and projects
The Secretary may award grants to, and enter into contracts with, States or public or private agencies or organizations (or combinations of such agencies or organizations) for time-limited, demonstration projects for the following:
(1)
Promotion of safe, family-friendly physical environments for visitation and exchange
The Secretary may award grants under this subsection to entities to assist such entities in establishing and operating safe, family-friendly physical environments—
(2)
Education identification, prevention, and treatment
The Secretary may award grants under this subsection to entities for projects that provide educational identification, prevention, and treatment services in cooperation with preschool and elementary and secondary schools.
[1] So in original. Probably should refer to clauses (i) through (x) of subparagraph (I).
[2] So in original. Probably should be capitalized.