Resource Library

Further refine results by entering a keyword or selecting filters.

Sort Results

Displaying 1 - 10 of 74

This fact sheet provides information about the Family and Youth Services Bureau's Runaway and Homeless Youth Program.

This document provides information about Tribal PREP Grantees.

The purpose of the Title V Competitive Sexual Risk Avoidance Education (SRAE) Program is to competitively fund projects to implement education exclusively on sexual risk avoidance that teach youth to voluntarily refrain from sexual activity.

Maternity Group Homes

November 1, 2024

Learn about FYSB's Maternity Group Home Program.

Nationwide Efforts to End Adolescent Pregnancy

Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention Program Fact Sheet
June 27, 2016

FYSB supports state, Tribal, and community efforts to promote medically accurate, age appropriate education to prevent teen pregnancy and the spread of sexually transmitted infections.

This report documents that FYSB’s longtime commitment to combating youth homelessness worked to create a range of services available to young people across the Nation, so that they had somewhere to turn in fiscal years (FYs) 2010 and 2011. 


Additionally, as required by the Runaway and Homeless Youth Act, this report outlines “the status, activities, and accomplishments of entities that receive grants under parts A, B, C, D, and E,” in FY10 and FY11. The report also includes information about the monitoring of grantees, as required by Section 386 of the Act.

To prevent pregnancy and the spread of sexually transmitted infections among adolescents, FYSB supports state, Tribal and community efforts to promote comprehensive sex education, adulthood preparation programs and abstinence education.

Read More About APP

This document provides information about Personal Responsibility Education Innovative Strategies Grantees.

FYSB's Runaway and Homeless Youth (RHY) program awarded Maternity Group Homes for Pregnant and Parenting Youth (MGH) grants for FY2019. The MGH program supports homeless pregnant and/or parenting young people, as well as their dependent children. Youth must be between the ages of 16 and 22 to enter the program.

Estimated Basic Center Program funding allocations, by state and region, for Fiscal Year 2024.