It's a supplemental payment that some children are eligible for. It helps to pay for medical and therapeutic needs and it is separate from the monthly post-adoption subsidy. Some children are eligible at the time of their adoption, but for others (like mine) it can be applied for at a later point in time.
"Vendor payments provide assistance for services or treatment for handicapping conditions which existed prior to the time of the child's placement for adoption. It is not necessary for these conditions to have been identified prior to the placement, but rather to have existed....
Vendor payments may be provided up to a maximum of $2400 per year for any combination of medical and/or non-medical services or treatment not covered by any medical insurance program...
Non-medical services include any services that help to alleviate a condition that existed prior to the adoptive placement. Based on the individual needs of a child, non-medical may include psychological, therapeutic, or any other service that remedies a condition that is a result of a condition that existed prior to the adoptive placement....
Examples include, but are not limited to:
- tutorial services for documented educational delays and remedial needs.
- tuition to facility providing remedial and/or supportive educational services
- child care facility to meet child's documented developmental needs
- orthopedic appliances (braces, special shoes, etc.,) orthodonic appliances (braces, retainers, etc.)
- Repair of broken glasses, eyeglasses, wheelchairs, hearing aids, computers and other learning aids
- Respite care
- Specialized clothing or equipment
Examples of Non-Approved Services:
- Toys
- Clothes
- Computers
- Video games
- Child Care (unless a specialized program is needed)
- After school care (unless a specialized program is needed)
- Summer camp
- Recreational and extra curricular activities/lessons"
I'll probably use some of my son's next summer. His occupational therapy office offers mini camps that combine camp activities (depending on theme) with occupational therapy goals. Because of his IEP for ADHD and Developmental Delays, he would qualify to use some of his vendor funds for those types of programs.