This litigation originated as a challenge to the validity of
Illinois' Emergency Assistance to Needy Families with Children (EA)
program under Title IV-A of the Social Security Act (SSA). The
Court of Appeals, reversing the District Court, first held that the
program was invalid because it limited eligibility for such
assistance more narrowly than § 406(e)(1) of the SSA, which
makes federal matching funds available under a state EA program for
emergency aid to intact families with children if threatened with
destitution, regardless of the cause of the need. In a later appeal
involving the validity of a proposed alternative to the EA program,
the Court of Appeals held that § 403(a)(5) of the SSA, which
authorizes federal funding of a state EA program, is the exclusive
source of federal funds for a state program of emergency
assistance, and that therefore a new "special needs" program that
Illinois proposed to operate under its Title IV-A Aid to Families
with Dependent Children (AFDC) program, funded under §
403(a)(1) of the SSA, in place of its withdrawn EA program, must,
as a
de facto EA program, extend aid to all persons
eligible under § 406(e)(1).
Held:
1. There is nothing in the policies or history of the EA statute
to indicate that Illinois' proposed "special needs" program should
not be judged solely under the requirements for an AFDC program
funded under § 403(a)(1) without regard to the EA requirements
of §§ 406(e) and 403(a)(5). Pp.
436 U. S.
735-736.
2. The proposed "special needs" program is permissible as part
of an AFDC program alone. A plan to meet certain emergency needs of
AFDC recipients -- specifically actual or threatened loss of
shelter due to damage or eviction -- is not necessarily improper as
an AFDC "special needs" program simply because it addresses a
nonrecurring need that could alternatively be provided for under an
EA program. Pp.
436 U. S.
737-739.
3. Neither § 402(a)(10) of the SSA, which makes AFDC, not
EA, eligibility criteria mandatory, nor § 406(e), which
defines the
permissible
Page 436 U. S. 726
scope of an EA program for purpose of federal funding, imposes
mandatory eligibility standards on States that elect to participate
in the EA program, and therefore Illinois is not precluded from
receiving matching federal funds for either an EA or a "special
needs" program simply because it limits eligibility for aid under
that program more narrowly than § 406(e). Pp.
436 U. S.
739-747.
545 F.2d 1062, reversed and remanded.
STEWART, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which all
other Members joined except BLACKMUN, J., who took no part in the
consideration or decision of the cases.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART delivered the opinion of the Court.
These cases require examination of the interplay between state
option and federal mandate within the system of cooperative
federalism created by the public assistance programs of Title IV-A
of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 601
et seq.
The ultimate question to be decided is whether a
Page 436 U. S. 727
State may ever receive federal matching funds for a program of
emergency assistance to needy families, either under the general
program of Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) [
Footnote 1] or under the specific
provisions for Emergency Assistance to Needy Families with Children
(EA), [
Footnote 2] if it
limits
Page 436 U. S. 728
eligibility for such aid more narrowly than the federal EA
statute.
I
Title IV-A of the Social Security Act establishes several
different public aid programs under the general rubric of "Grants
to States for Aid and Services to Needy Families with Children." In
order to receive federal funds under any of the Title IV-A programs
a State must adopt a "state plan for aid and services to needy
families with children" that is approved by the United States
Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW) as meeting the
requirements set forth in § 402 of the Act.
AFDC is the core of the Title IV-A system. As the Court observed
in one of its earliest forays into Title IV, AFDC is a categorical
aid program, and
"the category singled out for welfare assistance . . . is the
'dependent child,' who is defined in § 40B of the Act . . . as
an age-qualified 'needy child . . . who has been deprived of
parental support or care by reason of the death, continued absence
from the home, or physical or mental incapacity of a parent, and
who is living with' any one of several listed relatives."
King v. Smith, 392 U. S. 309,
392 U. S. 313.
A State's expenditures for AFDC, under an approved § 402 state
plan, are reimbursed by the Federal Government according to the
formula set forth in § 403(a)(1).
The federal EA program was added to Title IV as part of the
omnibus Social Security Amendments of 1967. Pub.L. 90-248, §
206, 81 Stat. 893. It was described in the Senate Finance Committee
report as
"a new program optional with the States [to] authorize
dollar-for-dollar Federal matching to provide temporary assistance
to meet the great variety of situations faced by needy children in
families with emergencies."
S.Rep. No. 744, 90th Cong., 1st Sess., 4 (1967).
Page 436 U. S. 729
To participate in the program, a State must include a provision
for EA in its § 402 state plan, and funding at a flat rate of
50% of program expenses is authorized by § 403(a)(5).
Unlike AFDC, eligibility for EA is not limited to "dependent
children." Instead, the term "emergency assistance to needy
families with children" is broadly defined in § 406(e) to
include money payments and other kinds of aid provided on a
temporary basis "to avoid destitution . . . or to provide living
arrangements" for a "needy child under the age of 21 who is . . .
without available resources." 42 U.S.C. § 606(e)(1). Thus,
under the EA statute, federal matching funds are available for
emergency aid to intact families with children if threatened with
destitution, regardless of the cause of their need.
The State of Illinois, however, elected to adopt an EA program
of much narrower scope. It provided only for (1) aid to AFDC
families who were without shelter as a result of either damage to
their homes or court-ordered eviction for reasons other than
nonpayment of rent; and (2) aid to applicants determined to be
presumptively eligible for AFDC who were in immediate need of
clothing or household furnishings.
In 1973, the respondents instituted a class action against state
and federal officials on behalf of all "AFDC recipients, applicants
for AFDC, and other families with needy children" in Illinois
seeking a declaratory judgment that the Illinois EA program
violated federal law by defining eligibility more narrowly than
406(e)(1), and an injunction restraining the defendants from
administering the allegedly unlawful program. [
Footnote 3] The United States District Court for
the Northern
Page 436 U. S. 730
District of Illinois held, in an unreported opinion, that the
State's program was not inconsistent with federal law. The Court of
Appeals for the Seventh Circuit reversed this judgment, ruling
that
"Illinois may no longer conduct an emergency assistance program
under [§ 406(e)] in which some of the families with needy
children described in [§ 406(e)] are given aid and some are
not."
Mandley v. Trainor, 523 F.2d 415, 423 (
Mandley
I).
After the Court of Appeals' mandate was returned to the District
Court, the plaintiffs submitted a proposed final order requiring
the State to conform its EA program to the provisions of §
406(e) and further requiring the federal defendants to promulgate
regulations consistent with the Court of Appeals' interpretation of
the statute. The state and federal defendants not only opposed the
substantive terms of the proposed order, but also filed motions to
dismiss the complaint altogether on the ground that the case had
been rendered moot by the State's decision to withdraw entirely
from the EA program. In support of its motion, the State filed an
affidavit from the Chief Fiscal Officer of its Department of Public
Aid stating that
"the Department would immediately cease all activities and
requests for federal reimbursement pursuant to the 'Emergency
Assistance' program of § 406(e) of the Social Security
Act,"
and that "no additional § 406(e)
Page 436 U. S. 731
federal funds [would] be drawn for the balance . . . of the
current fiscal year."
In opposing the motions to dismiss, the plaintiffs argued that,
even though the State would no longer request federal reimbursement
for emergency aid under §§ 406(e) and 403(a)(5), it
intended nonetheless to operate virtually the identical program as
an AFDC "special needs" program, and to seek federal reimbursement
under § 403(a)(1). They contended that such a course of
conduct would be equally unlawful. The District Court took the
position that the validity of any proposed program under the AFDC
provisions presented a new question that had not been raised in the
original lawsuit, and that the plaintiffs' challenge to the §
406(e) program had indeed been rendered moot by the State's
decision to withdraw altogether from the EA program. When the
plaintiffs declined to amend their complaint to allege that the new
program would also be in violation of § 403(a)(1), the
District Court entered an order dismissing the cause "for lack of
case or controversy."
The Court of Appeals again reversed.
Mandley v.
Trainor, 545 F.2d 1062 (
Mandley II). Noting that the
defendants
"admit[ted] that they [were] conducting the same program under
the label 'special assistance' that they formerly conducted under
the label of emergency assistance,"
Id. at 1068, the Court of Appeals held that the change
in funding arrangements did not raise issues beyond the scope of
the plaintiffs' pleadings, and did not render the case moot. As the
appellate court viewed the situation, the plaintiffs were still
claiming, as they always had, that any federally funded program for
emergency assistance must conform with the eligibility standards of
§ 406(e)(1), and that the defendants were still violating the
federal law by using federal funds to operate an emergency
assistance program that defined eligibility more narrowly than
§ 406(e)(1). On the merits, the Court of Appeals agreed with
the plaintiffs that § 403(a)(5)
Page 436 U. S. 732
is the exclusive source of federal funds for a program of
emergency assistance, and therefore held that Illinois' proposed
new program, as a
de facto EA program, must extend aid to
all persons eligible under § 40(e)(1).
Because of the lengthy and, in its view, wrongful delay in the
implementation of its
Mandley mandate, the Court of
Appeals then considered
sua sponte the defendants'
objections to the terms of the final order that had been proposed
by the plaintiffs after the first remand, and directed the District
Court on remand to enter the proposed order with minor
modifications. As to the state defendants, this order would
provide:
"Defendants . . . are enjoined, so long as Illinois receives
federal funding under Title IV-A of the Social Security Act, from
claiming reimbursement for emergency assistance (however
designated) under any other section of the Act than §§
406(e) and 403(a)(5), and are enjoined from using any other means
of limiting eligibility for emergency assistance more narrowly than
the provisions of § 406(e), and are further enjoined from
denying emergency assistance . . . to any member of the plaintiff
class with a needy child [who is eligible under he definition in
§ 406(e)]. [
Footnote
4]"
In addition the Secretary of HEW was to be
"enjoined from approving state plans for emergency assistance
which limit eligibility more narrowly than
Page 436 U. S. 733
§ 406(e) of the Act or funding an emergency assistance
program (however designated) under any provision of the Act other
than §§ 406(e) and 403(a)(5). [
Footnote 5]"
The broad injunction ordered by the Court of Appeals raises two
distinct statutory questions: whether a program of emergency aid to
AFDC families may qualify for federal funding under a provision
other than § 403(a)(5), and more particularly as an AFDC
"special needs" program under § 403(a)(1); [
Footnote 6] and whether a State that adopts
an EA program under §§ 403(a)(5) and 406(e) must define
eligibility no more narrowly than § 406(e). [
Footnote 7] We granted certiorari, 431
Page 436 U. S. 734
U.S. 953, to consider these important questions affecting the
nationwide administration of a major federal welfare program.
II
As the Court of Appeals readily conceded, its holding in
Mandley I that federal eligibility standards are mandatory
upon States that adopt the optional EA program in no way obligates
a State to continue that program. The federal definition of
eligibility in § 406(e), like the other provisions of Title IV
of the Social Security Act, simply governs the dispensation of
federal funds.
See Townsend v. Swank, 404 U.
S. 282,
404 U. S. 292
(BURGER, C.J., concurring in result). And while Congress may attach
strings to its offer of federal funding, it does not require the
States to accept any federal funds at all.
The Court of Appeals also acknowledged that § 406(e)
Page 436 U. S. 735
does not, by its own terms, attach any eligibility "strings" to
a program funded under the AFDC provisions. If Illinois' plan to
meet the emergency needs of AFDC recipients by means of AFDC
"special needs payments" was proper under § 403(a)(1), the
broader EA eligibility definition would have no application. The
Court of Appeals believed, however, that the requirements of §
406(e) would be "totally eviscerated" if States could evade them
simply by resorting to the AFDC provisions. This effect, in its
view, compels the conclusion that § 403(a)(5) is the exclusive
source of federal funds for emergency needs, and therefore that
emergency payments of the kind contemplated by the Illinois plan
[
Footnote 8] cannot be
reimbursed under § 403(a)(1) as AFDC "special needs."
A
Even assuming the Court of Appeals' premise that § 406(e)
does impose mandatory standards of eligibility for EA, its
conclusion simply does not follow. If a State adopts a program that
is, for whatever reason, not a proper EA program, it is no
"evasion" of the requirements of § 406(e) to seek alternative
funding. It is merely an election not to operate an EA program, but
to do something quite different instead. Since the statute clearly
offers the States an option whether or not to adopt an EA program,
it is in no sense "eviscerated" when a State chooses to forgo the
offer.
The legislative history does not indicate a contrary intent. The
Court of Appeals found highly significant the description
Page 436 U. S. 736
of EA as an altogether "new" program that would provide federal
matching for emergency assistance "[f]or the first time," 13
Cong.Rec. 36319 (197) (remarks of Sen. Curtis). But, as we have
already observed, a critical distinction between EA and AFDC is
that eligibility for the former does not depend on the absence of a
parent from the home. Thus the, enactment of EA extended aid to an
entirely new class of families that had not previously been
eligible for any form of federal assistance. [
Footnote 9] In this context, the fact that EA was
described as a "new" program hardly implies an understanding that
the emergency needs of persons who
were eligible for AFDC
could not be met under the existing program. [
Footnote 10] Indeed the contrary understanding
is revealed in the observation that emergency assistance to AFDC
applicants was "
frequently . . . unavailable under State
programs today." S.Rep. No. 744, 90th Cong., 1st Sess., 165 (1967).
(Emphasis supplied.)
There is nothing, therefore, in the policies or history of the
EA statute to indicate that Illinois' proposed AFDC special needs
program should not be judged solely under the requirements for an
AFDC program funded under § 403(a)(1), without regard to the
EA requirements of §§ 406(e) and 403(a)(5). Accordingly,
we must consider whether the special needs program proposed by
Illinois is permissible as part of an AFDC program alone.
Page 436 U. S. 737
B
Illinois' proposed program would recognize specified emergency
needs as "special needs items" within its AFDC "standard of need."
The standard of need is a dollar figure set by each State
reflecting the amount deemed necessary to provide for essential
needs, such as food, clothing, and shelter. [
Footnote 11]
See Rosado v. Wyman,
397 U. S. 397,
397 U. S. 408.
It is the "yardstick" for measuring financial eligibility for
assistance, but the level of benefits actually paid is not
necessarily a function of the standard of need.
Ibid. At
least as early as 1966, federal regulations recognized that States
could properly include special needs items in their standards of
need for AFDC. [
Footnote 12]
These
"are usually defined as those needs that are recognized by the
State as essential for some persons, but not for all, and that must
therefore be determined on an individual basis."
U.S. Dept. of HEW, Social and Rehabilitation Service, Assistance
Payments Administration, Characteristics of State Plans for Aid to
Families with Dependent Children xiii (1974) (AFDC Survey).
Whenever the special need is found to exist, it is budgeted in the
total standard of need.
Ibid.
Frequently the special need is a regular or recurring expense,
such as medication or a medically indicated diet, but this is not
always the case. On the contrary, the 1974 AFDC Survey,
supra, reveals that HEW has approved state plans that
cover a wide variety of needs under the rubric of "special
circumstance items," including one-time emergency needs like
Page 436 U. S. 738
replacing major appliances, [
Footnote 13] home repair, [
Footnote 14] and catastrophic loss.16 [
Footnote 15] Similarly, the loss of shelter
because of damage or eviction is a particular, nonrecurring event
that befalls some, but not all, AFDC recipients, which may be
reflected in an adjustment in the standard of need whenever that
event occurs.
By approving state plans that cover nonrecurring emergencies as
special needs, HEW has expressed its view that such items are
properly included in the AFDC standard of need for reimbursement
under § 403(a)(1). The interpretation of the agency charged
with administration of the statute is, of course, entitled to
substantial deference.
New York Dept. of Social Services v.
Dublino, 413 U. S. 405,
413 U. S. 421.
Moreover, this view is entirely consistent with the well
established principle that the States have "undisputed power to set
the level of benefits and the standard of need" for their AFDC
programs.
King v. Smith, 392 U.S. at
392 U. S. 334;
Dandridge v. Williams, 397 U. S. 471,
397 U. S. 478;
Rosado v. Wyman, supra at
397 U. S. 408;
Jefferson v. Hackney, 406 U. S. 535,
406 U. S. 541.
See n 11,
supra.
Since Illinois has not, in fact, submitted a proposed special
needs program for approval,
see n 8,
supra, there is no way of knowing whether
such a plan would comply in all other respects with the
requirements for an AFDC program. But it is clear that a plan to
meet certain emergency needs of AFDC recipient -- specifically,
actual or threatened loss of shelter due to damage or eviction --
is not necessarily improper as an AFDC special needs program simply
because it addresses a
Page 436 U. S. 739
nonrecurring need that could alternatively be provided for under
an EA program.
III
Although the Court of Appeals' opinion in
Mandley II
focused on the proposed special needs program, the injunction it
ordered to be entered on remand would prohibit not only the
operation of such a program under AFDC, but any program of
emergency assistance that defines eligibility more narrowly than
§ 406(e). In substance, therefore, the injunction would
enforce
Mandley I's holding that § 406(e) imposes
mandatory eligibility standards on States participating in the EA
program. Since there is still a live controversy over this issue,
see n 7,
supra, it is to that question that we now turn.
Section 406(e) defines EA in terms of four distinct
considerations. First, unlike AFDC, it specifies a time limitation:
EA may be provided only for a period not to exceed 30 days in any
12-month period. Second, it describes the persons on whose behalf
aid may be furnished: needy children under the age of 21 who are
living with specified relatives. Third, it defines the
circumstances under which aid may be provided: where the child is
without resources, and aid is necessary to "avoid destitution . .
or to provide living arrangements" for the child. Finally, it
describes the method by which aid may be provided: not only cash
payments and medical or remedial care, as under AFDC, but also
payments in kind and "such services as may be specified by the
Secretary." In summary, under EA, any family with children that is
for any reason threatened with destitution is eligible for
emergency aid at least once in a 12-month period, and that aid may
be provided by almost any means.
In declaring that Illinois is prohibited from narrowing these
broad standards in any way, [
Footnote 16] the Court of Appeals relied on
Page 436 U. S. 740
a long line of this Court's cases mapping out the mandatory
reach of the AFDC eligibility provisions. As to AFDC, the law is
indeed clear. Each State is entirely free to set its own monetary
standard of need and level of benefits.
King v. Smith,
supra at
392 U. S. 334;
Dandridge v. Williams, supra, at
397 U. S. 478;
Rosado v. Wyman, 397 U.S. at
397 U. S. 408;
Jefferson v. Hackney, supra at
406 U. S. 541.
[
Footnote 17] But the States
are not free to narrow the federal standards that define the
categories of people eligible for aid. Beginning with
King v.
Smith, supra, this Court has consistently held that States
participating in the AFDC program must make assistance available to
all persons who meet the criteria of § 406(a) of the Act.
Carleson v. Remillard, 406 U. S. 598;
Townsend v. Swank, 404 U. S. 282.
See also Lewis v. Martin, 397 U.
S. 552. The statutory foundation for this conclusion is
§ 402(a)(10), which requires that a State's "plan for aid and
services to needy families with children" must provide that "aid to
families with dependent children shall be furnished with reasonable
promptness to all eligible individuals." 42 U.S.C. §
602(a)(10).
Page 436 U. S. 741
The question to be decided is whether these interpretive
principles are to be applied to the EA program as well.
A
The short answer is that, since § 402(a)(10), on its face,
applies only to "aid to families with dependent children," and not
to the separately designated program of "emergency aid to needy
families with children," it cannot be the basis for making the
§ 406(e) eligibility requirements mandatory on the States.
The Court of Appeals recognized that § 402(a)(10) was
limited by its language to AFDC, but nevertheless concluded that
Congress intended to treat EA "in the same way" because it is "part
of the same statutory scheme," and rooted in the "same
Congressional concern with [the] deprivation of children that
brought forth the AFDC program. . . ."
Mandley I, 523 F.2d
at 422. But Congress' choice of precise language in this complex
statute cannot be glossed over with such generalities.
The § 402 "state plan for aid and services to needy
families with children" is the central, organizing element of the
Title IV-A program. A State's plan establishes both its funding
relationship with the Federal Government and the substantive terms
of all Title IV-A programs in which it has elected to participate.
Thus, the plan reflects not only the basic AFDC program of cash
assistance defined in § 406(b), but also Title XX social
services,
see § 402(a)(15) and 42 U.S.C. § 1397
et seq. (1970 ed., Supp. V), and, if the State chooses to
adopt them, the optional programs of EA, defined in § 406(e),
and AFDC Unemployed Fathers (AFDC-UF), established by §
407.
Section 402(a) lists some 20 specific requirements for which a
state plan "must provide." Some clearly apply to the plan as a
whole. These generally concern program administration.
E.g., § 402(a)(1) ("provide that it shall be in
effect in all
Page 436 U. S. 742
political subdivisions of the State"); § 402(a)(5)
("provide . . . such methods of administration . . . as are found
by the Secretary to be necessary [and] proper . . ."); §
402(a)(9) ("provide safeguards which restrict the use or disclosure
of information concerning applicants or recipients . . ."). Others,
like § 402(a)(10), refer specifically to "aid to families with
dependent children."
E.g., § 402(a)(7) ("provide that
the State agency shall, in determining need, take into
consideration any other income and resources of any child or
relative claiming aid to families with dependent children"); §
402(a)(11) ("provide for prompt notice . . . to the State child
support collection agency . . . of the furnishing of aid to
families with dependent children with respect to a child who has
been deserted or abandoned . . . ").
The term "aid to families with dependent children" is given a
very specific meaning in § 406(b) -- and "emergency assistance
to needy families with children" as defined in § 406(e) means,
as we have observed, something quite different. It is true that
both the EA and AFDC programs must be reflected in a State's §
402 plan, and both will be governed by those parts of § 402
that apply to the plan as a whole. But there is no basis for
assuming that, when § 402 refers specifically to AFDC, those
references are either meaningless or inadvertent. On the contrary,
there is every reason to suppose that the exclusion of EA from
specific substantive requirements of § 402, in particular
§ 402(a)(10)'s imposition of mandatory eligibility standards,
was deliberate, since the absence of mandatory eligibility
standards is wholly consistent with the nature and purpose of the
EA program.
B
The EA program was adopted by means of an amendment to §
406 defining the new term "emergency assistance to needy families
with children." Pub.L. 90-248, § 206(b), 81 Stat. 893. But
nowhere in the EA statute is there a
Page 436 U. S. 743
precise definition of eligibility comparable to the terms that
have been held mandatory in AFDC. As to the latter, the term "aid
to families with dependent children" is defined in § 406(b) as
"money payments . . . in behalf of [a] dependent child. . . ." The
term "dependent child" is separately defined in § 406(a) as a
needy child who has been deprived of parental support, is living
with specified relatives, and is either under the age of 18 or
under the age of 21 and regularly attending school. It is this very
specific definition of "dependent child" in § 406(a) that has
been held to be mandatory upon the States in
King v.
Smith, 392 U. S. 309
("deprived of parental support"),
Carleson v. Remillard,
406 U. S. 598
("continued absence from the home"), and
Townsend v.
Swank, 404 U. S. 282
("regularly attending a school").
On the other hand, the term "emergency assistance to needy
families with children" is defined in § 406(e) as payments and
services furnished "in the case of a needy child" who meets certain
requirements and is facing destitution. The structure of this
statutory provision thus parallels § 406(b) --
i.e.,
while it describes eligible persons, it is, in terms, a definition
of the program for which federal funding is available. But in the
EA program, there is no separate provision, parallel to §
406(a), that defines the terms used to describe eligible persons.
[
Footnote 18] There is no
statutory language, therefore, that can reasonably be understood as
imposing uniform standards of eligibility on every state EA
program. [
Footnote 19]
Page 436 U. S. 744
The conclusion that Congress in fact intended to treat EA and
AFDC quite differently is fully consistent with its purposes in
enacting the EA program. Unlike the basic AFDC program and the
optional AFDC-UF extension, EA is not a comprehensive system of
income maintenance, but rather a program designed to allow quick,
ad hoc responses to immediate needs. Indeed, one of the
primary purposes of making EA available to persons not receiving or
eligible for AFDC was to "encourag[e] the States to move quickly in
family crises, supplying the family promptly with appropriate
services," in the hope that this "would, in many cases, preclude
the necessity for the family having to go on [AFDC] assistance on a
more or less permanent basis." 113 Cong.Rec. 23054 (1967) (remarks
of Cong. Mills). This purpose reflects not only all awareness of
the distinct difference between AFDC and EA, but also an
understanding that EA would not be surrounded with all of the
trappings that § 402 requires of the ongoing AFDC cash
payments program. In short, EA was designed
"to assure needed care for children, to focus maximum effort on
self-support by families, and to provide
more flexible and
appropriate tools to accomplish these objectives."
S.Rep. No. 744, 90th Cong., 1st Sess., 15 (1967). (Emphasis
supplied.)
Page 436 U. S. 745
As a matter of historical fact, Congress has always left the
States broad discretion in shaping the programs that, like EA,
authorize assistance to persons not eligible for AFDC in the hope
of preventing lasting welfare dependency. Under the former §
406(d) family services program, [
Footnote 20] the States had "considerable latitude in
providing services to non-welfare recipients on the grounds that
they [were]
former or potential' recipients." S.Rep. No.
93-1356, p. 9 (1974). And the declared purpose of the new Title XX
social services program enacted in 1975, 42 U.S.C. § 1397
et seq. (1970 ed., Supp. V), was to
"encourag[e] each State,
as far as practicable under the
conditions in that State, to furnish services directed at the
goal of . . . achieving or maintaining economic self-support to
prevent, reduce, or eliminate dependency. . . ."
42 U.S.C. § 1397 (1970 ed., Supp. V). (Emphasis supplied.)
The legislative history of that statutory program reflects
Congress' awareness that the very magnitude of its purpose would
require that
"the States . . . have the ultimate decisionmaking authority in
fashioning their own social service programs within the limits of
funding established by Congress."
S.Rep. No. 93-1356,
supra, at 6. [
Footnote 21]
By the same token, the very breadth of the potential reach of EA
-- to virtually any family with needy children of a
Page 436 U. S. 746
certain age that faces a risk of destitution -- argues against
the inference that Congress intended to require participating
States to extend aid to all who were potentially eligible under
§ 406(e). A literal application of all of the § 406(e)
standards, as required by the Court of Appeals' proposed order,
would create an entirely open-ended program, not susceptible of
meaningful fiscal or programmatic control by the States.
The Court of Appeals believed that ,under its interpretation of
the Act, Illinois would retain "substantial control" of its program
through its ability to limit the amount of assistance actually
paid:
"It will be able to choose the level of benefits that it will
provide, and to set the standard of need. It may reasonably limit
the amounts paid out in emergency assistance,
Dandridge v.
Williams, 397 U. S. 471, . . . but it will
not be able to declare ineligible those who come within the federal
definition of eligibility in [§ 406(e)]. . . . This need not
result in additional expense to the state, but, with existing
appropriations, should at least result in helping a broader number
of persons, although more moderately than at present."
Mandley I, 523 F.2d at 422-423. But this application of
the distinction drawn in the AFDC cases between eligibility
criteria and financial need standards,
see supra at
436 U. S. 740,
fundamentally misconceives the purpose of the EA program. A family
that is facing destitution because its home has burned down is not
helped at all by a "moderate" grant insufficient to see it through
the crisis. As the Illinois Director of the Department of Public
Aid stated in his report to the Legislative Advisory Committe on
Public Aid, the decision in
Mandley I created an untenable
tension between fiscal and programmatic integrity in the EA
system:
"But even if the Department could so limit [expenditures as
suggested by the Court of Appeals] the results would be to divide a
limited amount of Emergency Assistance
Page 436 U. S. 747
money among a very expanded group of individuals, thus reducing
the amount of assistance paid in each individual case to a
meaninglessly small amount. The agency is thus faced with the
prospect, if it continues the program, of potentially unlimited
financial expenses, if it meets actual need in Emergency Assistance
payments, or the payment of meaninglessly small amounts (and the
possibility of legal challenge and subsequent mandatory order of
additional financial payments)."
The intent of Congress in enacting EA thus would not be
furthered by a statutory interpretation that requires a State to
meet less than what it believes is the actual emergency need of an
eligible family in order to retain financial control of its
program. On the other hand, that intent will be effectuated by the
natural reading we give to the relevant statutory provisions.
Neither § 402(a)(10), which makes AFDC eligibility criteria
mandatory, nor § 406(e), which defines the permissible scope
of an EA program for purposes of federal funding, imposes mandatory
eligibility standards on States that elect to participate in the EA
program.
For the foregoing reasons the judgment of the Court of Appeals
is reversed, and the cases are remanded for further proceedings
consistent with this opinion. [
Footnote 22]
It is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN took no part in the consideration or
decision of these cases.
* Together with No. 76-1416,
Califano, Secretary of Health,
Education, and Welfare v. Mandley et al., also on certiorari
to the same court.
[
Footnote 1]
The AFDC program is established and defined in several related
provisions of Title IV-A of the Social Security Act. Section 406(b)
of the Act, as set forth in 42 U.S.C. § 606(b), provides, in
pertinent part:
"The term 'aid to families with dependent children' means money
payments with respect to, or . . . medical care in behalf of or any
type of remedial care recognized under State law in behalf of a
dependent child. . . ."
The term "dependent child" is defined in § 406(a), 42
U.S.C. § 606(a), as
"a needy child (1) who has been deprived of parental support or
care by reason of the death, continued absence from the home, or
physical or mental incapacity of a parent, and who is living with
[specified relatives] in a place of residence maintained by one or
more of such relatives as his or their own home, and (2) who is (A)
under the age of eighteen, or (b) under the age of twenty-one and
(as determined by the State in accordance with standards prescribed
by the Secretary) a student regularly attending a school . . . [or]
course of vocational or technical training. . . ."
[
Footnote 2]
Section 406(e) of the Act, as set forth in 42 U.S.C. §
606(e), provides in pertinent part:
"(1) The term 'emergency assistance to needy families with
children' means any of the following, furnished for a period not in
excess of 30 days in any 12-month period, in the case of a needy
child under the age of 21 who is . . . living with any of the
relatives specified in subsection (a)(1). . . but only where such
child is without available resources, the payments, care, or
services involved as necessary to avoid destitution of such child
or to provide living arrangements in a home for such child, and
such destitution . . . did not arise because such child or relative
refused without good cause to accept employment or training for
employment -- "
"(A) money payments, payments in kind, or such other payments as
the State agency may specify . . . or medical care or any other
type of remedial care recognized under State law on behalf of, such
child or an other member of the household in which he is living,
and"
"(B) such services as may be specified by the Secretary;"
"but only with respect to a Stale whose State plan approved
under section 602 of this title includes provision for such
assistance."
"(2) Emergency assistance as authorized under paragraph (1) may
be provided . . . to migrant workers with families in the State or
in such part or parts thereof as the State shall designate."
[
Footnote 3]
The complaint also alleged that the Illinois program violated
the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and the
Illinois Public Aid Code.
While none of the defendants questioned the District Court's
subject matter jurisdiction, the Court of Appeals properly
considered the question
sua sponte. It held that the
District Court had jurisdiction of claims against the state
defendants under 28 U.S.C. § 1343 and 42 U.S.C.1983, since the
plaintiffs' constitutional claims were not insubstantial.
Mandley v. Trainor, 523 F.2d 415, 419 n. 2 (
Mandley
I).
It found the question of jurisdiction over the federal
defendants more troublesome,
ibid. We express no view as
to the Court of Appeals' theory of jurisdiction in light of the
intervening amendment of 28 U.S.C. § 1331, which, by
eliminating the requirement of $10,000 in controversy in any action
"against the United States, any agency thereof, or any officer or
employee thereof in his official capacity," 28 U.S.C. §
1331(a) (1976 ed.), clearly confers jurisdiction over the federal
defendants in these cases.
Andrus v. Charlestone Stone Products
Co., ante at
436 U. S.
607-608, n. 6.
[
Footnote 4]
As stated in the order, any child:
"(i) who is under the age of 21,"
"(ii) Who is living with any of the relatives specified in
§ 46(a)(1) of the Act in a place of residence maintained by
such relative as a home,"
"(iii) where such child is without available resources,"
"(iv) where emergency assistance is necessary to avoid
destitution of or to provide living arrangements in a home for such
child, and"
"(v) such destitution did not arise because such child or
relative refused without good cause to accept employment or
training for employment."
[
Footnote 5]
The order would further require HEW to
"file with the court proposed regulations governing emergency
assistance, which proposed regulations shall be in accord with the
opinion of the Court of Appeals, with this order and with 45 CFR
§ 233.10(a)(1)(ii)(A)."
The plaintiffs' originally proposed order would have
specifically required that the regulations
"include,
inter alia, definitions of such terms as
'necessary to avoid destitution' and 'lack of available resources'
which are compatible with providing emergency assistance when a
needy child is approaching destitution."
While the Court of Appeals thought "it would be salutary to
include such definitions in the new regulation," it declined to
"order HEW specifically to include any items in its new
regulation." 545 F.2d at 1073.
[
Footnote 6]
The petitioners have not raised in this Court the claim that the
validity of the proposed AFDC special needs program was beyond the
scope of the pleadings in this case.
[
Footnote 7]
We agree with the Court of Appeals that the cases were not
rendered moot by Illinois' decision to withdraw from the §
406(e) program. For even if the proposed arrangement is entirely
legal under §§ 402 and 403(a)(1), the State's decision to
withdraw voluntarily from the § 406(e) program in no way
mooted the Court of Appeals' prior determination that that program
was being operated in violation of federal law.
See United
States v. W. T. Grant Co., 345 U. S. 629.
By granting the defendants' motions to dismiss, as it was bound
to do if the case was indeed moot, the District Court rendered the
entire proceeding a nullity. There was no longer any judgment
binding on the defendants to prevent them from returning to the old
program. And, while the defendants' good faith representation that
they had no intention of doing so might properly have led the
District Court to deny injunctive relief,
see Hecht Co. v.
Bowles, 321 U. S. 321, it
could not operate to deprive the successful plaintiffs, and indeed
the public, of a final and binding determination of the legality of
the old practice.
United States v. W. T. Grant Co., supra
at
345 U. S.
632.
Since the Court of Appeals correctly concluded that the District
Court had erred in dismissing the case as moot, the controversy was
still alive as to the legality of both the old EA program and the
proposed AFDC special needs program. We note that, in a status
report to the Illinois Advisory Committee on Public Aid, the
State's Director of the Department of Public Aid stated that he
intended to request that
"HEW clarify its [§ 406(e)] Emergency Assistance Program,
[since] there are aspects of a [§ 406(e)] program that we feel
superior to a special need program, and we would prefer, if so
allowed, to maintain the [§ 406(e)] Emergency Assistance
Program of the present scope."
(This status report was filed in the District Court as Exhibit 1
to Plaintiffs' Answer to Defendants' Motions to Dismiss.) Thus,
while the Court of Appeals had already passed on the legality of
the Illinois EA program in
Mandley I, there was no
jurisdictional bar to its directing entry of a judgment on
remand from
Mandley II resolving the entire dispute by
enjoining the operation of both programs.
[
Footnote 8]
The record does not contain an actual proposal for the
contemplated special needs program, since Illinois had not, at the
time of the Court of Appeals' decision, drafted or submitted such a
plan to HEW for approval. The court assumed, and the parties
agreed, that the program would parallel the old EA program:
i.e., it would cover emergencies in AFDC families arising
out of the actual or threatened loss of shelter due to damage or
eviction and the immediate needs of presumptively eligible AFDC
applicants.
[
Footnote 9]
"For the first time, the Federal Government will match money for
emergency assistance. This has not been in the law before. For a
period of 30 days,
emergency assistance can be paid in cases
where they cannot meet other qualifications."
113 Cong.Rec. 36319 (1967) (remarks of Sen. Curtis). (Emphasis
supplied.)
See also S.Rep. Na. 744, 90th Cong., 1st Sess.,
166 (1967).
[
Footnote 10]
Even if their import were clearer, as an expression of Congress'
understanding as to the scope of the preexisting AFDC statute, such
post hoc observations by a single member of Congress carry
little if any weight.
See Los Angeles Dept. of Water &
Power v. Manhart, 435 U. S. 702,
435 U. S.
714.
[
Footnote 11]
The States have a "great deal of discretion" in setting the
standard of need, and "some States include in their
standard of
need' items that others do not take into account." Rosado v.
Wyman, 397 U. S. 397,
397 U. S.
408.
[
Footnote 12]
U.S. Dept. of HEW, Handbook of Public Assistance Administration,
Part IV, § 3131(3) (1966). Current regulations provide
that
"[i]f the State agency includes special need items in its
standard [the state plan must] (a) describe those that will be
recognized, and the circumstances under which they will be
included, and (b) provide that they will be considered in the need
determination for all applicants and recipients requiring
them."
45 CFR § 233.20(a)(2)(v) (1977).
[
Footnote 13]
Illinois and Minnesota. AFDC Survey 59, 100.
[
Footnote 14]
Arizona, Connecticut, Guam, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, New
Hampshire, and South Dakota.
Id. at 11, 27, 46, 69, 73,
100, 15, 179.
[
Footnote 15]
California's plan provided for "replacement of clothing and
certain household items because of sudden or unusual circumstances
beyond [the] control of [the] family."
Id. at 19.
Connecticut, North Dakota, and Rhode Island covered needs arising
out of "catastrophic" events as special circumstance items.
Id. at 27, 147, 171.
[
Footnote 16]
The original plan actually invalidated in
Mandley I
narrowed EA eligibility by limiting it to persons also eligible (or
presumptively eligible) for AFDC, and by recognizing as
circumstances of emergency need only an AFDC recipient's loss of
shelter due to damage or eviction, and an AFDC applicant's
immediate need for household effects. Other States, however, have
imposed different kinds of restrictions on EA eligibility. Some,
for example, exclude AFDC recipients if the emergency need is one
theoretically covered by the basic assistance grant, reasoning that
the State should not pay double benefits when recipients have
failed to budget their resources properly.
See generally
Note, Meeting Short-Term Needs of Poor Families: Emergency
Assistance for Needy Families with Children, 60 Cornell L.Rev. 879,
888-892 (1975).
The injunction ordered by the Court of Appeals in
Mandley
II apparently reaches all such limitations. It requires
Illinois, so long as it receives any funds under Title IV-A and
operates an emergency aid program, to provide assistance to all
persons who fit the federal description of eligible individuals,
and it prohibits HEW from "approving state plans for emergency
assistance which limit eligibility more narrowly than §
406(e)."
[
Footnote 17]
By controlling these two elements, which determine actual
payments under the program, every State retains the ability to
control its total AFDC expenditures.
Cf. Jefferson v.
Hackney, 406 U.S. at
406 U. S.
539-541.
[
Footnote 18]
By contrast, the other optional Title IV-A program, AFDC-UF, is
defined by reference to the key statutory term "dependent child."
§ 407(a), 42 U.S.C. § 607(a). This indicates that, when
Congress intended that a separate program should be treated "in the
same way" as AFDC, it was able to express that intent clearly by
actually incorporating the identical terms.
[
Footnote 19]
The Court of Appeals thought that "the problem of setting
workable definitions for the somewhat amorphous eligibility
criteria in [§ 406(e) could] be addressed by HEW rulemaking,"
Mandley I, 523 F.2d at 422423, and indeed required such
rulemaking in its
Mandley II order.
See n 5,
supra. The statute does
not, however, require the Secretary to promulgate implementing
regulations to clarify the scope of § 406(e).
Compare
§ 406(e)
with § 407(a) (AFDC-UF).
Cf.
Batterton v. Francis, 432 U. S. 416. And
the regulations in fact adopted by the Secretary interpret the
statute as leaving the States with broad discretion as to EA
eligibility requirements. 45 CFR § 233.120 (1977). The
Secretary's contemporaneous interpretation of the statute is
entitled to considerable deference.
New York Dept. of Social
Services v. Dublino, 413 U. S. 405,
413 U. S. 421.
In the absence of an express delegation of authority to the
Secretary, there is simply no basis for assuming that Congress
intended that he, rather than the States, must make definite -- and
mandatory -- the generalized standards of eligibility it wrote into
the EA statute.
Cf. n 21,
infra.
[
Footnote 20]
Section 406(d) of the Act, as set forth in 42 U.S.C. §
606(d), defined "family services" as
"services to a family or any member thereof for the purpose of
preserving, rehabilitating, reuniting, or strengthening the family,
and such other services as will assist members of a family to
attain or retain capability for the maximum self-support and
personal independence."
Section 406(d) has been repealed and replaced by the new Title
XX Social Services program. Pub.L. 93-647, §§ 2, 3(a)(5),
88 Stat. 2337, 2348.
See 42 U.S.C. § 1397
et
seq. (1970 ed., Supp. V).
[
Footnote 21]
This conclusion was based on the
"lengthy history of legislative and regulatory action in the
social service area [which] made it clear . . . that the Department
of Health, Education, and Welfare can neither mandate meaningful
programs nor impose effective controls upon the States."
S.Rep. No. 93-1356, at 6.
[
Footnote 22]
The Court of Appeals did not reach the respondents'
constitutional and state law claims,
see n 3,
supra. They remain open for
consideration on remand.