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Minnesota Department of Human Services (DHS) is a cabinet level executive agency responsible for implementing major social programs like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, Medical Assistance (The Minnesota Medicaid program) and Minnesota Family Investment Program (the Minnesota Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program). It also enforces child support and child protection and provides care people who are mentally unwell, developmentally disabled, or chemically dependent through Minnesota Direct Care and Treatment.
Agency overview | |
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Jurisdiction | State of Minnesota |
Headquarters | 444 Lafayette Road, Saint Paul, Minnesota 55155 |
Employees | 7000+ (2024) [1] |
Annual budget | $45 Billion[2] |
Agency executives |
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Website | mn |
Map | |
With a budget of over $40 billion, DHS is the largest Minnesota agency by budget and employee count.
History
editThe Minnesota Department of Human Services was founded in 1983 when the Department of Public Welfare was integrated into the state Medicaid agency and hospital system.[4]
Intended Split
editIn 2023, the Minnesota Legislature passed a law dividing the responsibilities of the Department of Human Services into a new, smaller DHS and two new agencies.[5] The new Minnesota Direct Care and Treatment will operate the state hospitals caring for disabled and mentally unwell people, as well as the Minnesota Sex Offender's program and Minnesota Department of Children, Youth and Families, which will oversee adoption, child protection and other family services.[6]
References
edit- ^ "DHS FTE Equivalent Data".
- ^ "DHS Activity Summary" (PDF).
- ^ "DHS Executive Team Site".
- ^ "MN legislative reference library DHS Entry".
- ^ "Announcement of DHS Split".
- ^ "The Department of Human Services is breaking up. What does that mean for Minnesotans? (Star Tribune)". Star Tribune. 14 March 2024.