New Mexico Code § 9-23-15

Pilot program created; purpose; department development; eligibility; requirements; administration
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eligibility; requirements; administration.
A. As used in this section:
(1) "fictive kin" means a person not related by birth, adoption, marriage or
legal guardianship with whom a child has an emotionally significant relationship;
(2) "grandparent" means a biological or adoptive parent of a minor child's
biological or adoptive parent and includes a person married to a grandparent;
(3) "kinship caregiver" means a grandparent, next-of-kin or fictive kin who is
raising and supporting a child;
(4) "next-of-kin" means a relative of a child, other than a parent or
grandparent, who is raising and supporting a child;
(5) "participant" means a kinship caregiver for a child in this state who is a
New Mexico resident and who participates in the pilot program;
(6) "pilot program" means the kinship caregiver support pilot program; and
(7) "program partner" means a community organization, nonprofit or area
foundation in this state that collaborates and partners with the department in the
administration of the pilot program.
B. The "kinship caregiver support pilot program" is created within the department as
a three-year pilot program. The purpose of the pilot program is to:
(1) develop and implement the pilot program within five to seven counties in
the state and serve fifty participants in each of the communities; and
(2) improve the lives of children by referring participants to a program
partner's monthly economic support program and providing access to services or
referrals to help participants and the children cared for and supported by those
participants.
C. In establishing the pilot program provided in this section, the department, in
collaboration with the program partners, shall:
(1) develop and implement processes and eligibility criteria for kinship
caregivers to apply to, and become participants in, the pilot program. Criteria for
consideration shall include a kinship caregiver's current household income and the
needs of the child or children that are or will be cared for and supported by the kinship
caregiver;
(2) determine and establish processes necessary to implement and
administer the pilot program;
(3) identify and coordinate access to federal, state and local programs and to
services and referrals for participants, including legal representation, public assistance
and economic support services administered by program partners;
(4) determine the requirements necessary to use federal assistance or
resources, including Title IV-E of the federal Social Security Act funds, if available;
(5) engage with other community organizations and nonprofit organizations
and area foundations to identify the availability for additional resources and funds to
provide economic support for participants;
(6) develop and approve a budget for:
(a) salaries and benefits for staff to assist participants in applying for
participation in the pilot program and in accessing additional services available to
participants;
(b) legal assistance provided to participants who may wish to attain legal
custody or kinship guardianship of one or more children; and
(c) other costs to the department necessary for the administration of the pilot
program;
(7) administer the pilot program and collaborate with, and receive technical
assistance from, other state agencies, including the early childhood education and care
department and any appropriate community or nonprofit organizations;
(8) no later than June 1, 2025, promulgate and adopt rules for the
administration of the pilot program; and
(9) by December 1, 2025 and by December 1 of each subsequent calendar
year, and in consultation with the early childhood education and care department and
any other appropriate state agency, provide a report to the legislative finance committee
assessing the impact and outcomes of the pilot program and providing department
recommendations.
History: Laws 2025, ch. 131, § 1.

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