Texas Child Protection Law Bench Book

August 2015 edition

A. What Is Permanency Care Assistance?

The Permanency Care Assistance (PCA) Program provides certain benefits and supports to qualifying kinship families who take permanent managing conservatorship (PMC) of a child. PCA families are eligible for:

•   Monthly cash assistance similar to adoption assistance;

•   Medicaid health coverage; and

•   A one-time reimbursement of nonrecurring expenses, including legal fees, incurred in the process of obtaining custody of the child, up to a maximum of $2,000.

The maximum monthly payments are the same as those for adoption assistance and depend upon the child’s authorized service level at the time the PCA is negotiated. Tex. Fam. Code § 264.852(a).

Caregivers who apply must be:

•   Related or has a longstanding relationship with the child / children being placed; and

•   Verified foster parents who have been verified by a child placing agency for at least six consecutive months during which time the child resided with the family. (In other words, the family must be verified for six months, and the child must live with the family for at least six months AFTER verification and BEFORE the court awards PMC and dismisses the case).

DFPS may enter into a permanency care assistance agreement with a kinship provider who is the prospective managing conservator of a foster child only if the kinship provider meets the eligibility criteria under federal and state law and DFPS rule. Tex. Fam. Code § 264.852(b). A court may not order DFPS to enter into a PCA agreement with a kinship provider unless the kinship provider meets the eligibility criteria under federal and state law and DFPS rule, including the requirements relating to criminal history background check of a kinship provider. Tex. Fam. Code § 264.852(c).