The Honorable Leticia Van de Putte, R.Ph. Chair, Committee on Veteran Affairs and Military Installations Texas State Senate Post Office Box 12068 Austin, Texas 78711-2068
Re: Whether the Texas Workforce Commission is prohibited from using block grants to fund programs listed under section
Dear Senator Van de Putte:
You ask whether the Texas Workforce Commission (the "Commission") is prohibited from using block grants to fund programs listed under section
The legislature created the Commission in 1995 to administer the state's unemployment compensation system and to "operate an integrated workforce development system in this state, in particular through the consolidation of job training, employment, and employment related educational programs available in this state." Tex. Lab. Code Ann. §
Under chapter 2308 of the Government Code, local workforce boards may be created by local elected officials. See Tex. Gov't Code Ann. §
Subchapter D of chapter 302 of the Labor Code provides for the allocation of workforce development funds and a block grant program for workforce development. With respect to the latter, section 302.062, enacted in 1995 with the Commission's creation,3 generally requires the Commission to provide funds for workforce training and employment services to local workforce areas through block grants. Section 302.062(a) establishes the general block grant funding requirement and permits the Commission to retain administrative costs not to exceed five percent:
Effective July 1, 1996, the commission shall provide to the local workforce development areas in which local workforce development boards have been certified and local plans approved by the governor, through a block grant process, funds available to the commission for workforce training and employment services, unless superseded by federal law. Administrative costs under this subsection may not exceed five percent of the total amount of funds available to the commission for block grants for workforce training and services.
Tex. Lab. Code Ann. §
Section 302.062(g), which you ask about, provides as follows:
(g) Block grant funding under this section does not apply to:
(1) the work and family policies program under Chapter 81;
(2) a program under the skills development fund created under Chapter 303;
(3) the job counseling program for displaced homemakers under Chapter 304;
(4) the Communities In Schools program under Subchapter E, Chapter 33, Education Code, to the extent that funds are available to the commission for that program;
(5) the reintegration of offenders program under Chapter 306;
(6) apprenticeship programs under Chapter 133, Education Code;
(7) the continuity of care program under Section
501.095 , Government Code;(8) employment programs under Chapter 31, Human Resources Code;
(9) the senior citizens employment program under Chapter 101, Human Resources Code;
(10) the programs described by Section 302.021(b)(2);
(11) the community service program under the National and Community Service Act of 1990 (
42 U.S.C. Section 12501 et seq.);(12) the trade adjustment assistance program under Part 2, Subchapter II, Trade Act of 1974 (
19 U.S.C. Section 2271 et seq.);(13) the programs to enhance the employment opportunities of veterans; and
(14) the functions of the State Occupational Information Coordinating Committee.
Id. § 302.062(g) (Vernon Supp. 2005) (emphasis added).4
You note that the Commission "has block granted" several programs listed in section 302.062(g)5 and ask whether this is appropriate. Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1. We gather that you believe that section 302.062(g) may prohibit the Commission from funding these programs by block grants, requiring the Commission to contract for or provide the program services directly as opposed to distributing funds to local workforce development boards to contract for or provide program services.
In construing this statute, we must give effect to the legislature's intent. See Tex. Gov't Code Ann. §§
On its face, section 302.062(g) does not prohibit the Commission from using block grant funding to implement the listed programs. When the legislature intends to prohibit an entity from engaging in certain conduct, it generally uses the phrase "may not" or "shall not." See Tex. Gov't Code Ann. §
The conclusion that section 302.062(g) does not establish a prohibition but rather creates an exemption to mandatory block grant funding under section 302.062(a)-(f) is also supported by an uncodified provision in House Bill 1863, the 1995 bill that created the Commission and enacted section 302.062. Section 11.77 of House Bill 1863 required the Commission's executive director to report to the legislature and the governor "the results of an analysis conducted by [the] commission as to whether block grant funding under Section 302.062 . . . should be extended to the programs exempted from block grant funding under Section (g) of that section."6 This provision indicates that the legislature intended section 302.062(g) to exempt the listed programs from mandatory block grant funding under section 302.062(a), which was to go into effect July 1, 1996, but did not intend to foreclose block grants as a funding mechanism for those programs.
On the basis of section 302.062's express language and section 11.77 of House Bill 1863, we conclude that section 302.062(g) does not prohibit block grant funding but rather exempts the programs listed under section 302.062(g) from mandatory block grant funding under section 302.062(a)-(f). However, this conclusion does not resolve whether the Commission is permitted to fund the section 302.062(g) programs with block grants. The fourteen programs listed in section 302.062(g) are governed by other state statutes, some of which have been amended since 1995, as well as federal law. In addition, chapter 302 generally requires the Commission to consolidate workforce development programs and to contract with local boards for program planning and delivery. See, e.g., id. § 302.002(a)(1), (9) (requiring the executive director to consolidate programs "to achieve efficient and effective delivery of services" and to "contract with local workforce development boards for program planning and service delivery"); see also Tex. Gov't Code Ann. §
For example, section 302.062(g)(8) lists "employment programs under Chapter 31, Human Resources Code." Tex. Lab. Code Ann. §
Similarly, section 302.062(g)(5) lists "the reintegration of offenders program under Chapter 306 [Project RIO]," id. § 302.062(g)(5), a project administered by the Commission, seeid. § 306.003 (Vernon 1996). Section
By contrast, section 302.062(g)(3) lists "the job counseling program for displaced homemakers under chapter 304 [of the Labor Code]." Tex. Lab. Code Ann. §
In sum, section 302.062(g) exempts certain programs from the mandatory section 302.062(a) block grant funding requirement, but does not preclude the Commission from funding the programs by block grants. Whether the Commission may fund a particular program listed in section 302.062(g) by block grants must be determined on the basis of the laws governing the particular program, in light of the Commission's general duty to consolidate programs and to ensure that workforce development services are planned and delivered at the local level.
Very truly yours,
GREG ABBOTT Attorney General of Texas
BARRY McBEE First Assistant Attorney General
NANCY S. FULLER Chair, Opinion Committee
Mary R. Crouter Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
