Stakeholder Resource

How Can Child Protection Agencies and Faith-Based Organizations Work Together to Meet Family Needs?

This resource, released by Casey Family Programs, examines how child protection agencies can work alongside faith-based and community-based organizations to better meet the needs of families involved in or at risk of involvement with the child welfare system. It highlights how these partnerships can expand the reach of trusted, community-rooted supports that families often turn to first—such as mentoring, material assistance, emotional support, and informal navigation help.

Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) programs can be part of this broader support ecosystem where child welfare agencies and community partners are already engaging families. TANF-funded services—such as cash assistance, work supports, child care assistance, and case management—can connect more intentionally with faith-based and community organizations that are addressing immediate, practical needs like food security, housing stability, and family support. This alignment helps ensure families are not moving between disconnected services, but instead receiving complementary supports that reinforce stability and self-sufficiency goals. Strengthening these connections can reduce fragmentation across systems and improve continuity of care for families navigating multiple challenges at once.

Source
Partner Resources
OFA Initiatives
A Home for Every Child
Topics/Subtopics
Employment
Family Strengthening
Two-Generation Approaches
Supportive Services
Child Welfare
TANF Program Administration
Case Management
Collaborations and Partnerships
Publication Date
2026-04-15
TANF Regulatory Codes
45 CFR Part 260.20 – (a)
45 CFR Part 260.34 – (a)