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HomeWelfare and Institutions CodeDiv. 9Pt. 6Ch. 3.3Art. 2§ 18236 Calworks School Attendance Projects

§ 18236 Calworks School Attendance Projects

Welfare and Institutions Code·California
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§ 18236 Calworks School Attendance Projects

Key Takeaways

  • •This law lets San Diego and Merced Counties try special projects to help kids on CalWORKs go to school more and graduate.
  • •If a kid keeps skipping school and the family doesn’t fix it, the county can cut the family’s CalWORKs money by the amount meant for that truant kid.
  • •The family gets their full money back if the kid goes to school every day for a month or follows an education plan made with the county and school.
  • •The projects must track things like better grades, fewer dropouts, and more teamwork between schools and agencies.

Example

A family gets CalWORKs money, but their 14-year-old kid skips school a lot. The county tries to help with counseling and extra support, but the kid still doesn’t go.

The county can reduce the family’s CalWORKs money by the amount meant for that kid. If the kid starts going to school every day for a month, the family gets their full money back.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 18236 Calworks School Attendance Projects

(a) The director may approve school attendance demonstration projects in San Diego and Merced Counties, at the option of each county, to demonstrate means of increasing school attendance and graduation rates of children or teens who receive benefits under the CalWORKs program. The project shall emphasize a social service approach to children and families who are experiencing truancy problems, and shall include collaboration with the academic community to support a successful school experience. Families shall be provided a range of services, resources, and tools to assist them in coping with issues related to their children’s school problems. These shall include integrated services involving the county and the appropriate school districts. After all other avenues to encourage a student to attend school have been exhausted and a family has failed to correct the truancy of a child in the family unit, a participating county may reduce a family grant by the amount of the truant child’s portion grant. The full grant shall be replaced upon a showing that the student has attended school full-time for one month or has otherwise cooperated with an education or training plan developed with the county and the school district. (b) Participating counties shall measure their success in achieving the following outcomes: (1) Increased attendance and graduation. (2) Decreased truancy. (3) Higher grade point averages. (4) Increased ADA. (5) Decreased dropout rates. (6) Increased collaboration among agencies providing services for children. (7) Reinforcement of parental responsibility. (c) Prior to being selected as a demonstration project site, the governing board of each school district shall approve the project and a clear delineation of the county’s and the school or school district’s responsibilities shall be established in a memorandum of understanding. (d) Each county shall identify how it plans to attain the goals of the demonstration project and the evaluation methodology and funding source that will be used to evaluate the extent to which the goals are attained. (Amended by Stats. 2019, Ch. 27, Sec. 116. (SB 80) Effective June 27, 2019.)

Last verified: January 23, 2026

Key Terms

educationgraduationagreementattendancebenefitsstudentdirectoracademic

Related Statutes

  • § 18237 County Truancy Coordinator Duties
  • § 19526 Blind Student Reader Assistance
  • § 12205 Federal Benefit Adjustment Method
  • § 14011.3 Medi-Cal Eligibility For Sponsored Immigrants
  • § 14051 Medically Needy Eligibility Criteria

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Welfare and Institutions Code. Section 18236.
View Official Source