• McKinney-Vento Act

    The McKinney-Vento program is designed to address the problems that homeless children and youth have faced in enrolling, attending, and succeeding in school. Under this program, State educational agencies must ensure that each homeless child and youth has equal access to the same free, appropriate public education, including a public preschool education, as other children and youth. Homeless children and youth should have access to the educational and other services that they need to enable them to meet the same challenging State student academic achievement standards to which all students are held. In addition, homeless students may not be separated from the mainstream school environment. States and districts are required to review and undertake steps to revise laws, regulations, practices, or policies that may act as a barrier to the enrollment, attendance, or success in school of homeless children and youth.

     

     The McKinney-Vento Act defines “homeless children and youth” as the following:
     
                      ·Children and youth who are:
    - sharing the housing of other persons due to loss of housing, economic hardship, or a similar reason (sometimes referred to asdoubled-up)
     
    - living in motels, hotels, trailer parks, or camping grounds due to lack of alternative adequate accommodations;
     
          - living in emergency or transitional shelters;
     
          - abandoned in hospitals; or
     

          - awaiting foster care placement;

     

    • Children and youth who have a primary nighttime residence that is a public or private place not designed for, or ordinarily used as, a regular sleeping accommodation for human being
    •  Children and youth who are living in cars, parks, public spaces, abandoned buildings, substandard housing, bus or train stations, or similar settings; and
    •   Migratory children who qualify as homeless because they are living in circumstances described above.

     For more information on the McKinney-Vento Program, please contact Mr. Quezada at  714-569-9706.

Last Modified on March 26, 2021