Federal News
Congress Reintroduces Tribal Child Abuse Prevention Bill
March 25, 2026
Congressional leaders including Senators Lisa Murkowski and Elizabeth Warren, along with Representative Adelita Grijalva, have reintroduced the bipartisan American Indian and Alaska Native Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act (AI/AN CAPTA). This legislation aims to enhance federal support for Tribal nations by increasing Tribal set-aside funding to 5% and ensuring equitable access to federal child abuse prevention grants. The bill addresses the disproportionate impact of child abuse on Native children and promotes culturally informed prevention strategies, signaling increased federal investment in Tribal child welfare programs.
- Why this matters: Procurement professionals should anticipate expanded grant opportunities and funding allocations specifically reserved for Tribal organizations under AI/AN CAPTA.
- Agencies and contractors working with Tribal communities may see increased demand for culturally tailored prevention services and program implementation support.
- Organizations involved in child welfare services should evaluate how this legislation could affect funding streams and contract requirements related to Tribal child abuse prevention.
- The bill underscores the federal commitment to treating Tribal nations as sovereign partners, which may influence procurement approaches and partnership models in Tribal-focused programs.
Protecting children must always be a top priority, but across the nation we continue to see the repercussions of underinvestment in the systems designed to keep Native children safe and healthy.
— Senator Lisa Murkowski
The 500% increase in tribal set-asides in the American Indian Alaska Native Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act will allow Tribes to access more funding to support their intervention and prevention efforts.
— Larry Wright Jr., Executive Director of National Congress of American Indians
This bill delivers long-overdue resources for community-led solutions, strengthens prevention efforts, and finally treats tribal nations as the sovereign partners they are.
— Representative Adelita Grijalva
Agencies
U.S. Senate, U.S. House of Representatives, Navajo Division for Children and Family Services