The dispute before us in this twenty-two year old case concerns the implementation of legislative reforms to Illinois’ foster care benefit program. See P.A. 89-21, amending, 20 ILCS 505/5. Earlier this year, the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services (“DCFS” or “the Department”) proposed its Home of Relative Reform Plan (“HMR Reform”), which was passed by the Illinois General Assembly and signed into law by Illinois’ Governor in June of this year. Under HMR Reform, all homes providing foster care must be licensed under state law before resident children will be eligible to receive foster care benefits. Prior to the effective date of the reforms (July 1, 1995), however, Illinois required a license only for homes providing foster care to non-relative children. Children who were cared for by relatives, by contrast, were eligible to receive benefits although they resided in unlicensed homes. The effect of the reforms, then, is to terminate the foster care benefits of children in relative homes while the homes attempt to become licensed.
Plaintiffs, a class of foster parents and children who stand to lose their benefits because their homes are not yet licensed, invoked the district court’s continuing jurisdiction to enforce the August 24,1976 judgment entered in this ease for the purpose of challenging the implementation of the reforms. Plaintiffs do not quarrel with the new licensing requirement but contend that their benefits cannot be terminated before they are provided an adequate opportunity to become licensed. They argue that the transition process, by denying them such an opportunity, violates the earlier judgment and the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. On the day before the reforms were to take effect, the district court enjoined the Department’s Director from terminating or suspending foster care payments to children in unlicensed relative homes without first providing those homes the opportunity to have a license application determined on its merits. The district court explained in a detailed opinion how the proposed implementation of HMR Reform would violate the 1976 judgment and plaintiffs’ right to due process. See Youakim v. McDonald, No. 73 C 635, slip op. (N.D.Ill. June 30, 1995). The Director appeals that interlocutory injunction to this court, invoking our jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1).
I. BACKGROUND
The relevant facts are not disputed. The parties stipulated to many of the facts below,
A The Earlier Case
The initial dispute in this case involved Illinois’ decision to exclude children in relative homes from eligibility for foster care benefits. See Miller v. Youakim,
B. Pre-Reform System
When DCFS takes over custody or guardianship of a child, it attempts to make a substitute placement with either a relative, a non-relative, a group home, or an institution. Subsequent to the Supreme Court’s decision in Miller, Illinois has paid foster care benefits to children placed in three categories of homes — preapproved, approved, and licensed. Both the preapproved and approved categories were comprised entirely of relative homes, because Illinois law still required, as it had prior to the Miller decision, that all non-relative caregivers be licensed. Although a relative home could also obtain a license, it was not required to do so before a child could be placed and receive foster care benefits.
In contrast to non-relative homes, DCFS is permitted to place a child in a relative home even before that home becomes licensed or approved under state law. The home must only pass an initial safety check that is considerably less detailed and onerous for both DCFS and the caregiving family than the licensing and approval processes. See 89 Ill.Admin.Code § 335.202 (detailing “pre-con-ditions” for placement of child in relative home) (repealed effective July 1, 1995). A home that has passed this initial safety check is referred to as a “preapproved” home. Such a home could subsequently become approved or licensed under state law, although it had no financial incentive to do so because licensure was not a requirement for the receipt of full foster care benefits. Because these homes were neither approved nor licensed under state law, however, the federal government did not reimburse the State for benefits paid to resident children under the terms of the Social Security Act. See 42 U.S.C. § 672(c) (providing for federal reimbursement of payments made only to children in licensed or approved homes).
In 1986, Illinois officially recognized a category of “approved” relative homes, which were required to meet standards “substantially the same with regard to the safety, health and welfare of children as those promulgated for licensure of unrelated foster family homes pursuant to the Child Care Act of 1969.” 89 Ill.Admin.Code § 335.102 (repealed effective July 1, 1995); see also 89 Ill.Admin.Code § 402 (setting out licensing standards for foster family homes) (amended
When a child is first placed in DCFS custody or guardianship, she is assigned a caseworker who attempts to procure a placement for that child. The caseworker also has the responsibility, once a placement is made, of shepherding the caregiver through the approval and licensing processes. The caseworker assigned in any given circumstance may be employed by DCFS itself, or by one of sixty-seven child welfare agencies (e.g., Catholic Charities) that work on behalf of the Department. As of April 30, 1995, the cases of 31,596 out of 47,007 dependent children placed in private homes were managed by private welfare agencies rather than by DCFS itself.
The district court found, moreover, that to the extent DCFS and the private agencies encouraged preapproved relative caregivers to become either approved or licensed, they generally encouraged the approval process, which was less onerous for both the placing agency and the caregiving family. Whether a relative home was licensed or merely approved also made no difference to the State’s ability under the Social Security Act to receive federal reimbursement for dispersed benefits. See 42 U.S.C. § 672(c). The statistical evidence before the district court revealed that as of April 30, 1995, only 1.2 percent of all children residing in relative homes lived in licensed homes, whereas 42.6 percent of those children lived in approved homes. An additional 22.2 percent lived in preapproved homes that had applications for approval pending.
C. HMR Reform
DCFS proposed HMR Reform on March 1, 1995, and it became law a little more than
Effective July 1, 1995, only foster care placements licensed as foster family homes pursuant to the Child Care Act of 1969 shall be eligible to receive foster care payments from the Department. Relative caregivers who, as of July 1, 1995, were approved pursuant to approved relative placement rules previously promulgated by the Department at 89 Ill.Adm.Code 335 and had submitted an application for licen-sure as a foster family home may continue to receive foster care payments only until the Department determines that they may be licensed as a foster family home or that their application for licensure is denied or until September 30,1995, whichever occurs first.
P.A. 89-21, amending 20 ILCS 505/5(u-5). Under HMR Reform, then, Illinois will pay foster care benefits only to those relative and non-relative homes that are licensed under state law. The new licensing requirement has no effect on non-relative homes, as Illinois has always required such homes to be licensed. For existing relative homes, however, the impact of the reforms is significant and potentially devastating. Children in pre-approved relative homes who qualified to receive foster care benefits prior to July 1, 1995 would have their benefits eliminated on that date, regardless of whether their care-giving home applied to DCFS for a license on or before June 30, 1995.
While HMR Reform cuts off benefits to children in preapproved relative homes, it eliminates entirely the category of approved relative homes. Those homes that were previously approved by the State of Illinois as meeting its licensing standards must also become licensed in order for resident children to retain their foster care benefits. In contrast to its treatment of preapproved homes, however, HMR Reform provides a transition process that enables approved homes to apply for a license while resident children retain their current benefits. If an approved home submits a license application on or before June 30, resident children retain their benefits until the Department denies the application or until September 30, 1995, whichever occurs first.
After the implementation of HMR Reform, relative and non-relative caregivers will be required to meet the same licensing standards, which are slightly more stringent than those that were in place prior to HMR Reform. A home that was licensed as of July 1,
Prior to HMR Reform, it was the Department’s policy that preapproved caregivers must apply to be approved or licensed to retain a child placed in their care. As the district court observed, however, the Department rarely enforced this policy because approximately one-third of relative homes were both unapproved and unlicensed as of April 30, 1995. (Dist.Ct.Mem.Op. at 12 n. 11.) Under HMR Reform, a preapproved relative home is required to obtain a license only to enable a resident child to receive foster care benefits; the lack of a license does not affect its ability to provide care for the child. Thus, DCFS will not remove children previously placed with approved or preapproved relative homes if those homes fail to apply for or to obtain a license under HMR Reform. It simply will refuse to pay foster care benefits to children in such homes.
DCFS began the process of implementing HMR Reform even before Illinois’ Governor signed the legislation into law. The Department first notified relative caregivers of the reforms in April 1995. It then provided a second notice on April 28,1995, and this time included a license application in notices sent to approved homes and preapproved homes with applications for approval pending. Pre-approved homes that had not yet applied for approval were instructed to obtain a license application from their caseworker. DCFS sent yet another notice to relative caregivers on approximately June 12, 1995.
D. The Proceedings Below
Plaintiffs invoked the district court’s continuing jurisdiction under the 1976 judgment to revive this long-dormant litigation, arguing that the implementation of HMR Reform would violate the judgment order. Plaintiffs asked that the implementation process be enjoined and that the Director be held in contempt. After expedited discovery and briefing, the district court absolved the Director of the contempt charge, but on the day before their scheduled effective date, the court enjoined the implementation of the reforms as to existing benefit recipients residing in approved and preapproved relative homes. Specifically, the court prevented the Director from eliminating the foster care benefits of children in unlicensed relative homes without first providing those homes an adequate opportunity to become licensed. The court concluded that the transition proposed by the Department would violate the judgment order, the Social Security Act, and the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. To remedy these violations, the court required DCFS to mail an additional notice of the reforms to both approved and preapproved relative caregivers and to include with the notice a license application. The caregiver would then have thirty-five days from the date of mailing to submit the application to the Department. DCFS would be entitled to eliminate the foster care benefits of any child in a relative home that failed to submit a license application within thirty-five days. For children in homes submitting timely applications, however, DCFS would be enjoined from eliminating benefits until a decision was rendered on the application. The court’s injunction had the effect, therefore, of prohibiting enforcement of the September 30,1995 (now January 1,1996) cut-off date as to those approved homes with timely license applications pending, and of preventing the July 1,1995 termination of benefits to children in preapproved homes.
II. DISCUSSION
We review the district court’s interlocutory injunctive order in accordance with Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a). We review the court’s factual findings for clear error and its conclusions of law de novo. Durasys, Inc. v. Leyha,
A 1976 Judgment Order
1.
Plaintiffs contend that the transition to HMR Reform violates the 1976 judgment, which prohibits the State from enforcing any law or administrative policy that has the effect of denying full foster care benefits to otherwise eligible children in relative homes. Plaintiffs maintain that by eliminating the foster care benefits of children in unlicensed relative homes, DCFS will be discriminating against those homes on the basis of their relative status. The Director disagrees, arguing that because relative and non-relative homes have the same opportunity to become licensed under HMR Reform, there is no violation of the earlier judgment. Yet the district court found that the licensing opportunities are the same only for relative children and parents who enter the foster care system after the July 1,1995 effective date of the reforms. All plaintiffs here were receiving foster care benefits under Illinois’ pre-reform system, and they challenge only the process of transition to rather than the substance of the reforms. The district court found that the Department’s proposed transition had the effect of denying full benefits to otherwise eligible children in relative homes solely because of their relative status. The court’s finding was based on the undisputed fact that Illinois had previously channelled relative homes toward the approved or pre-approved categories without providing those homes an equal opportunity to become licensed. The court concluded that by now eliminating the benefits of children in unlicensed relative homes, the Department would be disfavoring relative caregivers in violation of the earlier judgment order, and it therefore enjoined implementation of that aspect of the reforms.
The 1976 judgment is in the nature of an injunction, and in construing its terms, we must pay particular heed to the nature of the dispute in which it originated. In general terms, we must construe injunctions in light of the circumstances that produced them, which may include the nature of the original claim, the relief that was sought, the evidence presented at any hearing or trial, the issues actually decided by the earlier tribunal, and the mischief the injunction was designed to eradicate. See City of Vicksburg v. Henson,
The Director here argues that in finding a violation of the 1976 judgment, the district court impermissibly expanded the scope of a limited and relatively ancient injunction. In the Director’s view, the 1976 judgment was addressed only to a limited violation of the federal Social Security Act, and it thus should not be read to prohibit substantive
2.
In 1973, when the underlying lawsuit was filed, only children in homes licensed by the State of Illinois were eligible to receive foster care benefits. See Miller,
The Social Security Act sets out the circumstances under which the federal government will reimburse states for foster care payments made to dependent children. To qualify for reimbursement, the state must have placed a child in a “ ‘foster family home or child-care institution.’ ” Miller,
The district court, this court, and a unanimous United States Supreme Court all found that Illinois was violating the Act.
3.
The question here is whether Illinois’ transition to HMR Reform also denies benefits to otherwise eligible children in relative homes. Plaintiffs contend that by denying benefits to children in approved and preapproved relative homes while those homes attempt to become licensed under HMR Reform, the Director will violate paragraph four of the judgment order, which provides as follows:
Defendants, their agents, employees and all other persons in active concert with them are enjoined from:
*1285 (a) enforcing [Illinois law] and all implementing administrative policies and procedures, insofar as they exclude from eligibility, or deny full [Title IV-E] payments or ancillary benefits to, foster children living in foster homes maintained by related foster parents, and to these related foster parents, when such children and such parents are otherwise eligible for such payments and benefits;
(b) failing to pay full [Title IV-E] payments to foster children living in foster homes maintained by related foster parents, and to these related foster parents, when such children and parents are otherwise eligible for such payments....
(August 24,1976 Judgment ¶ 4.) The parties focus their dispute on whether relative children and parents in approved and preap-proved homes are “otherwise eligible” to receive foster care benefits under the terms of the judgment.
Plaintiffs maintain that relative children and parents are “otherwise eligible” under paragraph four “if they claim that they will meet federal statutory eligibility requirements, correctly interpreted.” (PI. Br. at 25.) Under plaintiffs’ interpretation, then, it would make no difference whether a home has been approved or only preapproved under the pre-reform system because homes in both categories could claim, in applying for a license, that they in fact will meet federal eligibility criteria. The Director, by contrast, contends that relative children and parents are not “otherwise eligible” under paragraph four unless their homes actually have been licensed under Illinois law. Because HMR Reform eliminates the category of approved relative homes, the Director believes that “ ‘approved’ relatives are no longer ‘otherwise eligible’ for [foster care benefits], unless [and until] they become licensed under the new licensing standards.” (Director’s Reply Br. at 8.) We do not believe that either of these interpretations is the correct one, as neither plaintiffs nor the Director pay proper heed to the nature of plaintiffs’ claim in the underlying litigation or the violation of federal law that the judgment was designed to eradicate.
The Supreme Court and this court found that Illinois’ former practice of paying foster care benefits only to children under the care of non-relatives who were licensed under state law violated the Social Security Act because homes approved by a state as meeting its licensing standards are encompassed within the Act’s definition of a “foster family home.” See Miller,
But what of the many homes that Illinois already has approved as meeting its licensing standards? Does the State’s subsequent elimination of the “approved” category have the effect, as the Director contends, of negating the status those homes previously attained and eliminating the State’s obligation to pay benefits under the Act? We think not, because the State previously approved these homes as meeting its licensing standards and made that approval effective for a period of four years. See 89 Ill.Admin.Code § 835.300 (repealed effective July 1, 1995). The State is now attempting to remove the “approved” designation prior to the expiration of the four-year period without providing the affected homes an adequate opportunity to obtain a license before losing their benefits. Yet because homes in the approved category meet Illinois’ licensing standards, as determined by the Department itself,
In short, the Director’s argument that approved relative homes are ineligible for foster care benefits because they are not licensed fares no better today than it did in the 1970s. See Youakim,
The Director tells us, however, that these situations are distinguishable because homes currently in the approved category always had the opportunity to become licensed but failed to avail themselves of that opportunity. Yet the district court found that DCFS itself was responsible for the unlicensed status of these homes (Dist.Ct.Mem.Op. at 23), and its findings in that regard have not been challenged on appeal. Specifically, the district court found that the licensing process was not effectively available to relative homes for two reasons. First, DCFS preferred to place children with relative caregivers, and “to the extent [it] encouraged relative caregivers to apply to become approved or licensed, DCFS usually encouraged the approval process, which was easier for both DCFS and the family involved.” (Dist.Ct.Mem.Op. at 10, 16.)
4.
The district court’s injunction was not limited to relative homes in the approved category, however, because it also prevents the Director from eliminating the benefits of children in preapproved relative homes.
As we explained above, section 672(e) defines a “foster family home” to in-elude licensed homes and those approved by the appropriate agency as meeting the state’s licensing standards. Significantly, the statute encompasses only those homes that have been approved (42 U.S.C. § 672(c)), not, as plaintiffs suggest, homes merely claiming to be capable of meeting approval requirements. Consistent with the language of the statute, then, each court that considered the Youakims’ earlier claim emphasized that the Youakim home had been approved by DCFS as' meeting the licensing standards of the State of Illinois. See
The fact that Illinois chose for a period of years to pay foster care benefits to children in preapproved homes does nothing to change the requirements of federal law. The State’s decision to eliminate payments that were never required by the Act could not itself violate the Act. Moreover, plaintiffs in the preapproved category do not argue, and the district court did not find, that the former approval process was unavailable to them. Those plaintiffs had a fair opportunity to become “approved.” Indeed, more than one-third of the relative homes in Illinois had been approved, and many more had applications for approval pending on the effective date of HMR Reform.
B. Due Process
The district court found that the proposed transition to HMR Reform also violates the procedural due process rights of children in approved and preapproved relative homes. The Director challenges this conclusion too, contending that the legislative reforms eliminated any property interest the children may have had in continued benefits, and alternatively, that the legislative process was all that was due. Having found that only those relative children residing in approved homes are entitled to relief under the earlier judgment, we must reach this constitutional question, as it also concerns the rights of children in preapproved homes.
In analyzing a claim under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment; we must answer two questions: first, whether plaintiffs were deprived of a protected property interest, and if so, what process was due them in connection with that deprivation. Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
The Director nonetheless contends that plaintiffs lack a protectable interest in that property because they have no legitimate claim of entitlement to foster care benefits after the effective date of HMR Reform. In Board of Regents of State Colleges v. Roth,
But that tautological argument misunderstands the due process jurisprudence of this court and the Supreme Court. Once a property interest has been created by a state, that interest may subsequently be eliminated, but only pursuant to constitutionally adequate procedures. See Cleveland Board of Educ. v. Loudermill,
The Director’s argument regarding the second aspect of our inquiry is more powerful. The Director contends that even if these plaintiffs have a protectable property interest, the legislative process that led to the elimination of their benefits provided all the process that was due. See Atkins v. Parker,
Atkins involved a congressional amendment to the Food Stamp Act that reduced the percentage of earned income that could be deducted in determining eligibility for program participation. Because the amendment effectively increased the income reported by nearly all participating households, it “caused a reduction of benefits in varying amounts, or a complete termination of benefits, for families whose income placed them close to the border between eligibility and ineligibility.”
The district court distinguished Atkins, however, by focusing on the Supreme Court’s observation that the Massachusetts legisla
The Director contests this distinction, in-' sisting that the plaintiffs in Atkins also sought individual determinations about the effect of a legislative change. Plaintiffs emphasize, however, that because Atkins involved an across-the-board change in the method of computing income, no individual eligibility determination could prevent or alter the reduction in benefits occasioned by the legislation. Even so, food-stamp recipients affected by the change could request a hearing and have their benefit levels frozen in the interim.
Plaintiffs argument finds support in the Ninth Circuit’s recent decision in Greene v. Babbitt,
We find the circumstances here to be virtually indistinguishable from those in Greene. The plaintiffs here, like the individual Samish Tribe members in Greene, were receiving government benefits prior to a legislative change that imposed a new eligibility requirement. The effect of that change, both here and in Greene, was to eliminate (at least temporarily) the benefits of current recipients while they attempted to satisfy the new requirement. Although the Illinois General Assembly was as free as Congress to alter its benefit program by adding a new eligibility requirement, we agree with the Ninth Circuit that the Due Process Clause does not permit the State to withhold benefits without determining whether current recipients can meet the new requirement. See Greene,
We similarly agree with the Ninth Circuit that Atkins does not control in these circumstances. The Court in Atkins was careful to distinguish the legislative change there from one involving individual determinations of program eligibility. See
Illinois has treated approved and preapproved relative homes differently in implementing HMR Reform, providing a transí
First, HMR Reform provides a process under which approved homes may attempt to become licensed while resident children retain their former benefits. That process is fundamentally flawed, however, in that it sanctions the elimination of benefits on a specified date even where a home has submitted a timely license application and the Department has yet to render a decision. The Due Process Clause requires at the very least that benefits not be terminated unless and until DCFS considers and denies the application. See Logan,
Children in preapproved homes are provided even less protection under HMR Reform. Indeed, because no transition process was provided to these children, the Director elim-mated their benefits in July of this year, after enforcement of the district court’s injunction was stayed. But as explained above, the Due Process Clause requires that like approved homes, preapproved homes be provided the opportunity to have a license application considered and determined on its merits before the benefits of resident children may be eliminated. The Director has therefore violated the due process rights of these children by discontinuing their benefits without providing such an opportunity.
C. Relief
To remedy the violations it identified, the district court first enjoined the Director from terminating the foster care benefits of children in approved and preapproved relative homes until it had provided those homes an opportunity to have a license application determined on its merits. The district court intends to require, moreover, that DCFS provide to relative caregivers an additional notice of the changes effected by HMR Reform and to include a license application with that notice. Relative caregivers would then be given thirty-five days from the date of mailing to submit the application, with resident children retaining their benefits until the Department renders a decision. The court’s order would also require the Director to make a caseworker available for questions and to provide other assistance to relative caregivers.
It is true that in any given situation, there may be more than one permissible method of remedying a constitutional violation, whether it arises under the Due Process or the Supremacy Clause. See Jefferson v. Hackney,
D. Plaintiffs’ Cross-Appeal
Plaintiffs have cross-appealed from the district court’s refusal to require the Director to permit administrative appeals from adverse licensing decisions. In refusing to grant this request, however, the district court did not consider the issue on its merits, noting instead that the information provided by the parties to date was insufficient to enable the court to reach a definitive conclusion on the issue. The court therefore expressly limited the scope of its June 30, 1995 opinion and order to the legality of the transition process without deciding whether administrative appeals were in fact available under HMR Reform or were required as a matter of law. (See Dist.Ct.Mem.Op. at 25-26.) Although we have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1) over an appeal from an order denying an injunction, we believe the administrative appeal issue must be developed further in the district court, and decided on the merits there, before we should consider it on appeal. See, e.g., Circuit Rule 50 (requiring district court to provide its reasons when entering an appealable interlocutory order). At present, there is nothing in the record to establish definitively whether or not the Director has provided all plaintiffs with the right to appeal an adverse licensing decision and whether he intends to continue to pay benefits during the pendency of such an appeal. The district court also has expressed no opinion on whether appeals and continued benefits are required under the Social Security Act or the Due Process Clause. Plaintiffs should further develop this issue before the district court and obtain a definitive ruling on the merits there before bringing the issue to this court.
III. CONCLUSION
We agree with the district court that Illinois’ transition to HMR Reform violates the due process rights of children residing in approved and preapproved relative homes. The transition also violates paragraph four of the 1976 judgment by denying benefits to children in approved relative homes. Plaintiffs are therefore entitled to an injunction that prohibits the Director from terminating their foster care benefits until he has provided them with an adequate opportunity to have a license application determined on its merits. The district court must nonetheless strike those portions of its order mandating an alternative means of implementing HMR Reform in order to permit the Director to propose his own procedure. With that exception, the injunction challenged in the Director’s appeal is affirmed. We similarly affirm, at this time, the order denying a further injunction that is challenged in plaintiffs’ cross-appeal. The parties shall each recover the costs they incurred in defending the other’s appeal. The stay entered on October 10, 1995, is dissolved.
It Is So ORDERED.
Notes
. The Director asked the district court to stay enforcement of its order pending resolution of his appeal. That court denied the Director’s motion, but another panel of this court agreed to expedite the Director’s appeal and to stay enforcement of the district court's injunction. This panel then heard oral argument on September 27, 1995, three days prior to the date on which children in approved but unlicensed relative homes were scheduled to lose their benefits. After argument, we vacated the stay order, thus preventing the Director from enforcing the scheduled cut-off date. On the following day, however, we were notified that DCFS had extended the cut-off date to January 1, 1996. Because this ensured that children in approved relative homes would retain their benefits during the pendency of this appeal, we granted the Director’s motion to reconsider and reimposed the stay.
.It does not appear that in 1973, when the Youakims filed this lawsuit, the State of Illinois maintained an official category of "approved” relative homes. The district court found as a factual matter, however, that the Youakim home had been approved by the State of Illinois as meeting its licensing standards for purposes of section 408 of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 608.
. More than half of the total number of children in DCFS custody had been placed in relative homes (26,368 out of 47,007), which was consistent with Illinois' preference for relative placements. See 20 ILCS 505/7(b) (amended effective July 1, 1995).
. The statistics are similar if relative homes themselves, as opposed to children in relative homes, are considered: 1.3 percent of relative homes were licensed, 35.2 percent were approved, and 26.1 percent had applications for approval pending.
. The foster care benefits of children in preap-proved homes were in fact eliminated in July of this year, after a panel of this court stayed enforcement of the district court's injunction pending resolution of the Director's appeal. Because the order we are reviewing speaks of the implementation process as a future event, rather than as having already begun, we follow the same format for the sake of consistency, recognizing however that certain of the reforms already have been implemented by the time of this writing.
. The Director’s counsel told us at oral argument that approximately ninety percent of homes in the approved category submitted license applications by June 30. As we explained supra, at n. 1, DCFS extended the September 30 cut-off date to January 1, 1996.
.When the court made that finding, the cut-off date was September 30, 1995, rather than January 1, 1996. The court’was unable from the evidence to estimate the time it would take DCFS to process the large number of license applications that would be generated by the reforms, finding only that the average period for processing an application would exceed ninety days. (Dist.Ct.Mem.Op. at 17-18.) The Director's counsel also was unable to estimate at oral argument how many license applications would remain pending after September 30.
. Prior to HMR Reform, a license was valid for two years unless revoked by the Department (89 Ill.Admin.Code § 402.6(a) (1994)), but a license issued under the new standards is valid for four years. 89 Ill.Admin.Code § 402.7(a) (effective July 1, 1995).
. See Ill.Admin.Code § 335.102 (repealed effective July 1, 1995) (approval standards "are substantially the same with regard to the safety, health and welfare of children as those promulgated for licensure of unrelated foster family homes pursuant to the Child Care Act of 1969.”).
. In that regard, the district court found:
As of April 30, 1995, only 1.2% of all related children in foster care resided in licensed homes, while 42.6% of such children lived in approved homes. In addition, 22.2% of the preapproved homes had applications for approval pending. With respect to number of homes, the evidence is similar. As of April 30, 1995, 1.3% of all homes with related children were licensed while 35.2% were approved. Homes with pending applications for approval accounted for 26.1% of the total number of homes with related children.
(Id. at 17.) Moreover, the Director stipulated below that DCFS created the "approved” category in 1986 in part to make it easier for the agency to place children with relative caregivers. (Id. at 9.)
. As to these homes, the district court's injunction will not cost Illinois a cent because the federal government reimburses the State for foster care benefits paid to dependent children in approved homes.
. The Director stopped paying benefits to these children, however, in July of this year, after a panel of this cotut stayed enforcement of the injunction.
.The district court did find that there were certain administrative problems at DCFS that hindered the approval and licensing processes (Dist.Ct.Mem.Op. at 11), but the court did not rely on this fact in concluding that homes in the preapproved category also were entitled to relief under the Judgment Order. The court’s findings in that regard, however, would not support a conclusion that the approval process was unavailable to relative homes.
. Plaintiffs therefore distinguish the many cases that have applied Atkins to legislative changes that eliminate or fundamentally alter a benefit system from those that add an additional eligibility requirement that current recipients are capable of meeting through further action. In each of the cited cases, as in Atkins, there was no action an affected individual could take to avoid the impact of the challenged legislation. Hence, there was no "individual eligibility determination” to be made. See, e.g., Story v. Green,
. As far as we can tell, the district court intends these procedures to apply to approved and pre-approved relative homes alike. We are unsure that further notice is required for approved relative homes, however, as they already were notified of the transition process available to them and were provided with a license application. Indeed, the Director’s counsel told us at oral argument that by July 1, 1995, approximately ninety percent of approved homes had applied to be licensed. We also did not understand plaintiffs to have argued below that the notice provided by the Department to approved homes was inadequate. Because the notice requirement of the district court’s injunction will in any event be stricken for the reasons explained in the text, we shall leave resolution of this issue to the parties and the district court.
