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Health and Human Services DepartmentChildren and Families Administration
  • By Learn Laws®
  • Published 04/29/2026
  • Updated 04/29/2026

Federal Effort to Bolster Employment Program Evaluation: ACF Seeks One-Year Data Collection Extension for NextGen Project


On April 29, 2026, the Federal Register published a notice from the Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families (ACF), specifically its Office of Planning, Research, and Evaluation (OPRE). This notice formally requested a one-year extension for a vital data collection activity under the Next Generation of Enhanced Employment Strategies (NextGen) Project. The extension pertains to the project's second follow-up survey, a critical instrument for comprehensively evaluating the effectiveness of innovative employment programs designed to foster economic independence among vulnerable populations. The integrity of this impact study hinges on obtaining complete and representative data, making this administrative request central to the project's success.

NextGen Project: An Overview

The NextGen Project represents a significant federal initiative aimed at developing and testing new employment strategies. Its core mission is to assist individuals confronting complex barriers to employment, such as chronic health conditions, mental health issues, involvement with the criminal justice system, or limited prior work experience and skills. A key aspect of this project is its collaboration with the Social Security Administration, which introduces a specific focus on early interventions for individuals with current or foreseeable disabilities who possess limited work histories and are potential applicants for Supplemental Security Income (SSI). The broader project encompasses an impact study, a descriptive study, and a cost study. While the latter two have reached completion, the impact study, which measures program outcomes, remains ongoing and is the focus of this extension request.

The Rationale for the Extension

OPRE's request for a one-year extension is centered on ensuring the robustness of the impact study's findings. The second follow-up survey collects data 18 to 21 months after participant enrollment, tracking key outcomes like service receipt, employment rates, earnings, economic independence, overall well-being, health status, substance use, and engagement with the criminal justice system. These intermediate-term impacts are crucial because certain significant outcomes, particularly those related to sustained economic independence and long-term health improvements, often do not become apparent in the short term. Without this extension, participants who enrolled in the NextGen programs more recently would not have their data collected for the full 18-to-21-month follow-up period. This incomplete data collection could lead to significant data quality issues, potentially compromising the validity and reliability of the overall impact assessment. Furthermore, OPRE explicitly states that the extension is crucial to maintaining low differential attrition rates between the treatment and control groups across all NextGen programs. By allowing all participants to have follow-up periods of similar length, up to an additional six months for some, the extension aims to reduce nonresponse bias in the final impact estimates, thus ensuring a more accurate measure of program effectiveness.

Implications for Policy and Practice

The careful attention to data quality and comprehensive evaluation demonstrated by ACF's request underscores the federal government's commitment to evidence-based policymaking in the realm of employment support and disability services. Accurate data on program effectiveness is vital for policymakers to understand which interventions genuinely assist vulnerable populations in achieving economic independence. The findings from the NextGen Project, informed by this extended data collection, could significantly shape future federal funding decisions, program design, and policy initiatives aimed at addressing unemployment and underemployment among individuals with disabilities or other complex challenges. The insights gained are intended to provide tangible guidance for replicating successful strategies and refining less effective ones, ultimately leading to more efficient and impactful use of public resources.

Public Engagement and Administrative Process

The Federal Register notice invites public comments on this information collection request, with a deadline of May 29, 2026. This public comment period is a standard component of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) review process for federal information collections, as mandated by the Paperwork Reduction Act. It allows stakeholders, researchers, and the public to provide feedback on the proposed data collection, its necessity, accuracy, and potential burden. The request itself is made under the authority of Section 413 of the Social Security Act, as amended by the fiscal year 2017 Consolidated Appropriations Act (Public Law 115-31). The administrative transparency of this process ensures accountability and facilitates external scrutiny of federal data gathering efforts. The request specifies that the extension does not alter the average burden per response for the remaining data collection, but rather allows for an additional year of collection through April 2027 for a total of 160 respondents with an average burden of 0.83 hours, totaling 133 annual burden hours.

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