Opinion by
KEITH RAPP, Judge:
{1 The trial court plaintiff, Rita Laws (Laws), an adoptive parent of G.L., appeals the trial court decision sustaining in part the decision of the Oklahoma Department of Human Services (State) to deny adoption assistance benefits for GL. to Laws. The State appeals the same trial court decision which overruled in part the State's administrative decision denying adoption assistance benefits.
BACKGROUND
2 Although this case comes for review in the context of the very real concerns surrounding the adoption of children with special needs, the defining issue herein is one of statutory construction. It is undisputed that GL. qualifies as a special needs child.
T3 Congress enacted the Adoption and Child Welfare Act of 1980 to provide financial assistance to parents who adopt children with special needs. 1980 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1448, 1450. With regard to the payments of financial assistance 42 U.S.C. § 673(a)(8), provides, in part, that payments may not "exceed the foster care maintenance payment which would have been paid during the period if the child with respect to whom the adoption assistance payment is made had been in a foster family home." 1 This has been named the IV-E Program.
[82]*82T4 Oklahoma's statute, enacted in response to the federal scheme, was codified as 10 0.9.2001, §§ 7510-1.2-7510-1.5. The statute, in Section 7510-1.5(A), provided, in part:
A. When a parent or parents are found and approved for adoption of a child who is certified as eligible for subsidy, and before the final decree of adoption is issued, there must be a written agreement between the family entering into the subsidized adoption and the Department of Human Services. Adoption subsidies in individual cases may commence with the adoption placement or at the appropriate time after the adoption decree, and shall be based on the needs of the child as well as the availability of other resources to meet the child's needs. The subsidy may be for special services only, or for money payments, and either for a limited period, or for a long term, or for any combination of the foregoing. The amount of the time-limited or long-term subsidy may in no case exceed that which would be allowable from time to time for such child under foster family care, or in the case of a special service, the reasonable fee for the service rendered.
T5 The State, via its agency, DHS, in implementing the IV-E program utilized a two-tier system whereby payments to adoptive parents were less than payments to foster parents so that adoptive parents were precluded from negotiating for assistance equal to that provided to a foster parent. Also, the State imposed additional criteria before an adoptive parent could be eligible. Under the State's view, the lower payment schedule was valid because the statute permitted any payment so long as the amount did not exeeed the foster parent payment and the State has the authority to establish a rate structure, subject to the foster care limit.
T6 Thus, the first issue necessary for review is whether the excerpted provision of the federal Act is merely a cap on payments, as argued by the State. For reasons herein set out, this Court holds it is not.
T7 Laws, contra to the State's position, asserts she was entitled to negotiate for a payment up to the amount available to foster parents. She contends the federal law authorizes her to be able to negotiate up to the foster parent level and that any limit impairing that authority is unlawful.
T8 G.L., the special needs child adopted by Laws, was born on December 9, 1992. The adoption became final January 1, 1999.2 Under the scheme of assistance established by the State, a higher level of assistance to a special needs child would become available upon a child reaching age six. Thus, Laws initiated a request for assistance in August of 1998, and renewed the request in November [83]*83of 1998, because G.L. would be six in December of 1998.
T9 After an administrative hearing before an ALJ and review, the State denied Laws' request for adoption assistance at the foster parents' level of assistance as of G.L.'s sixth birthday because the pre-April 19, 1999, payment schedule differentiated between foster parent assistance and adoptive parent assistance, with the former at a higher level of payment. The State justified this result by reference to the statutory language requiring that adoption assistance not exceed foster parent assistance set out in Section 7510-1.5(A), quoted above.
1 10 There are, in this matter, three periods of time involved due to regulation changes made by the State. These periods are: (a) pre-April 14, 1999, going back to GL.'s sixth birthday on December 9, 1998; (b) April 14, 1999, when regulatory changes were made, to October 18, 1999, when additional regulatory changes were made on October 19, 1999; and, (c) October 19, 1999, to December 31, 1999. Laws began receiving the maximum assistance available on January 1, 2000. The trial court, after review of the DHS ALJ's finding, reversed the State's administrative ruling in part by directing that Laws receive that maximum retroactively for the period back to October 19, 1999.3
T 11 The State amended the regulations on April 14, 1999, to add two levels of payments for adoption assistance. However, these new levels were available only to children who were qualified for Social Security supplemental income (SSI) and who were adopted by a special class of licensed foster parents.4 The administrative ruling held that Laws failed to qualify under either part of the regulation.5 The ruling further stated that the regulation was not a condition on receipt of adoption assistance, but rather a set of criteria for a specific rate of payment.6 Laws does not dispute that factually she did not qualify under the regulation, but asserts that the scheme was a continuation of the differentiation between foster parent assistance and adoptive parent assistance, and therefore unlawful as an impediment to her right to negotiate for the higher level of assistance. This assertion then represents the second issue of this cage.
€ 12 The regulations were again amended effective October 19, 1999, with the effect of removing the differentiation between adoptive and foster parents. Laws was approved for payments assistance under these revised regulations, effective January 1, 2000. The State denied assistance prior to that time on the ground of ineligibility, stating that G.L. had not been approved for services through DDSD.7
113 The District Court affirmed the administrative ruling denying her benefits up to October 18, 1999. The District Court, on appeal, also ruled that payment to Laws should be retroactive to the amendment on October 19, 1999. The State appeals the retroactive ruling.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
"14 The appellate court has the plenary, independent, and nondeferential authority to reexamine a trial court's legal rulings. Neil Acquisition, L.L.C. v. Wingrod Investment Corp., 1996 OK 125, 932 P.2d 1100 n. 1. Matters involving legislative intent present questions of law which are examined independently and without deference to the [84]*84trial court's ruling. Salve Regina College v.
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Opinion by
KEITH RAPP, Judge:
{1 The trial court plaintiff, Rita Laws (Laws), an adoptive parent of G.L., appeals the trial court decision sustaining in part the decision of the Oklahoma Department of Human Services (State) to deny adoption assistance benefits for GL. to Laws. The State appeals the same trial court decision which overruled in part the State's administrative decision denying adoption assistance benefits.
BACKGROUND
2 Although this case comes for review in the context of the very real concerns surrounding the adoption of children with special needs, the defining issue herein is one of statutory construction. It is undisputed that GL. qualifies as a special needs child.
T3 Congress enacted the Adoption and Child Welfare Act of 1980 to provide financial assistance to parents who adopt children with special needs. 1980 U.S.C.C.A.N. 1448, 1450. With regard to the payments of financial assistance 42 U.S.C. § 673(a)(8), provides, in part, that payments may not "exceed the foster care maintenance payment which would have been paid during the period if the child with respect to whom the adoption assistance payment is made had been in a foster family home." 1 This has been named the IV-E Program.
[82]*82T4 Oklahoma's statute, enacted in response to the federal scheme, was codified as 10 0.9.2001, §§ 7510-1.2-7510-1.5. The statute, in Section 7510-1.5(A), provided, in part:
A. When a parent or parents are found and approved for adoption of a child who is certified as eligible for subsidy, and before the final decree of adoption is issued, there must be a written agreement between the family entering into the subsidized adoption and the Department of Human Services. Adoption subsidies in individual cases may commence with the adoption placement or at the appropriate time after the adoption decree, and shall be based on the needs of the child as well as the availability of other resources to meet the child's needs. The subsidy may be for special services only, or for money payments, and either for a limited period, or for a long term, or for any combination of the foregoing. The amount of the time-limited or long-term subsidy may in no case exceed that which would be allowable from time to time for such child under foster family care, or in the case of a special service, the reasonable fee for the service rendered.
T5 The State, via its agency, DHS, in implementing the IV-E program utilized a two-tier system whereby payments to adoptive parents were less than payments to foster parents so that adoptive parents were precluded from negotiating for assistance equal to that provided to a foster parent. Also, the State imposed additional criteria before an adoptive parent could be eligible. Under the State's view, the lower payment schedule was valid because the statute permitted any payment so long as the amount did not exeeed the foster parent payment and the State has the authority to establish a rate structure, subject to the foster care limit.
T6 Thus, the first issue necessary for review is whether the excerpted provision of the federal Act is merely a cap on payments, as argued by the State. For reasons herein set out, this Court holds it is not.
T7 Laws, contra to the State's position, asserts she was entitled to negotiate for a payment up to the amount available to foster parents. She contends the federal law authorizes her to be able to negotiate up to the foster parent level and that any limit impairing that authority is unlawful.
T8 G.L., the special needs child adopted by Laws, was born on December 9, 1992. The adoption became final January 1, 1999.2 Under the scheme of assistance established by the State, a higher level of assistance to a special needs child would become available upon a child reaching age six. Thus, Laws initiated a request for assistance in August of 1998, and renewed the request in November [83]*83of 1998, because G.L. would be six in December of 1998.
T9 After an administrative hearing before an ALJ and review, the State denied Laws' request for adoption assistance at the foster parents' level of assistance as of G.L.'s sixth birthday because the pre-April 19, 1999, payment schedule differentiated between foster parent assistance and adoptive parent assistance, with the former at a higher level of payment. The State justified this result by reference to the statutory language requiring that adoption assistance not exceed foster parent assistance set out in Section 7510-1.5(A), quoted above.
1 10 There are, in this matter, three periods of time involved due to regulation changes made by the State. These periods are: (a) pre-April 14, 1999, going back to GL.'s sixth birthday on December 9, 1998; (b) April 14, 1999, when regulatory changes were made, to October 18, 1999, when additional regulatory changes were made on October 19, 1999; and, (c) October 19, 1999, to December 31, 1999. Laws began receiving the maximum assistance available on January 1, 2000. The trial court, after review of the DHS ALJ's finding, reversed the State's administrative ruling in part by directing that Laws receive that maximum retroactively for the period back to October 19, 1999.3
T 11 The State amended the regulations on April 14, 1999, to add two levels of payments for adoption assistance. However, these new levels were available only to children who were qualified for Social Security supplemental income (SSI) and who were adopted by a special class of licensed foster parents.4 The administrative ruling held that Laws failed to qualify under either part of the regulation.5 The ruling further stated that the regulation was not a condition on receipt of adoption assistance, but rather a set of criteria for a specific rate of payment.6 Laws does not dispute that factually she did not qualify under the regulation, but asserts that the scheme was a continuation of the differentiation between foster parent assistance and adoptive parent assistance, and therefore unlawful as an impediment to her right to negotiate for the higher level of assistance. This assertion then represents the second issue of this cage.
€ 12 The regulations were again amended effective October 19, 1999, with the effect of removing the differentiation between adoptive and foster parents. Laws was approved for payments assistance under these revised regulations, effective January 1, 2000. The State denied assistance prior to that time on the ground of ineligibility, stating that G.L. had not been approved for services through DDSD.7
113 The District Court affirmed the administrative ruling denying her benefits up to October 18, 1999. The District Court, on appeal, also ruled that payment to Laws should be retroactive to the amendment on October 19, 1999. The State appeals the retroactive ruling.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
"14 The appellate court has the plenary, independent, and nondeferential authority to reexamine a trial court's legal rulings. Neil Acquisition, L.L.C. v. Wingrod Investment Corp., 1996 OK 125, 932 P.2d 1100 n. 1. Matters involving legislative intent present questions of law which are examined independently and without deference to the [84]*84trial court's ruling. Salve Regina College v. Russell, 499 U.S. 225, 111 S.Ct. 1217, 113 L.Ed.2d 190 (1991); Keizor v. Sand Springs Ry. Co., 1993 OK CIV APP 98, ¶ 5, 861 P.2d 326, 328. The appellate court will review de novo an administrative agency's interpretation of a statute. Oklahoma Employment Security Comm'n v. Oklahoma Merit Protection Comm'n, 1995 OK CIV APP 76, ¶ 5, 900 P.2d 470, 473.
115 When construing a statute the fundamental rule is to give effect to the legislature's intent and purpose of the legislation. May v. National Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, Pa., 84 F.3d 1342, 1348 (10th Cir.1996); Samson Hydrocarbons Co. v. Oklahoma Tax Comm'n, 1998 OK 82, ¶ 7, 976 P.2d 532, 535. Courts will seek to construe a statute in light of its general policy and purpose and to give effect to the policy and purpose of the statute. Nealis v. Baird, 1999 OK 98, ¶ 55, 996 P.2d 438, 460. Thus, the courts construe statutes "in order to champion the broad public policy purposes that underlie them." Haggard v. Haggard, 1998 OK 124, ¶ 12, 975 P.2d 439, 442.
ANALYSIS AND REVIEW
First Issue-Different Payment Schemes: Adoptive Parents and Foster Parents
116 This Court notes and determines that the provision of 42 U.S.C. § 673(2)(8) limiting assistance to no more than that sum provided to foster parents is not a license to discriminate against adoptive parents. Adoptive parents are entitled under the Act to negotiate for an amount of assistance up to, but not in excess of, that amount of assistance available to foster parents. Here, the State arbitrarily and without authority, limited adoptive parents to an amount less than that provided to foster parents. The State's administrative ruling, and the trial court's affirmance thereof, are contrary to the statutory language and erroneous.
I 17 The error under review while narrow in seope nonetheless has consequences upon the adoptive family. The State may indeed pay less to an adoptive parent than to a foster parent because individual cases may and do vary as the needs of each individual child vary. However, the crux here is that the State may not impose a ceiling different for each class of case, such that the adoptive parent may never under any circumstances obtain assistance equal to assistance provided to foster parents.
1 18 The legislative history of IV-E states: The amount of the adoption assistance would be agreed upon between the parents and the agency, could not exceed the foster care maintenance payment that would be paid if the child were in a foster family home, and could be readjusted by agreement of the parents and the local ageney to reflect any changed cireumstances.
1980 U.S.C.C.N. at 1450.
$19 The United States Department of Health and Human Services' Childrens' Bureau (Bureau) administers the federal statute. That agency has published, in question and answer form, its interpretation of the law in the form of a Child Welfare Policy Manual (Manual). Such informal interpretations are not entitled to deference, but are of assistance in ascertaining the purpose, policy, and meaning of a statute. Hunnicutt v. Hawk, 229 F.3d 997, 999 (10th Cir.2000).
120 The Bureau recognizes that the Act establishes that the amount of assistance in an individual case based upon needs of the child and family cireumstances after negotiation between parents and the local agency. Manual, 8.2D.4 (Question 1). The specific interpretation given by the Bureau states:
Q. Please explain how the State agency should set rates for title IV-E adoption assistance payments.
A. The amount of the adoption assistance payment cannot exceed the amount the child would have received if s/he had been in a foster family home, but otherwise must be determined through agreement between the adoptive parents and the State or local title IV-E agency. Unlike other public assistance programs in the Social Security Act, the title IV-E adoption assistance program is intended to encourage an action that will be a lifelong social benefit to certain children and not to meet short-term monetary [85]*85needs during a crisis. Further, the adoptive parents' income is not relevant to the child's eligibility for the program. Title IV-E adoption assistance is not based upon a standard schedule of itemized needs and countable income. Instead, the amount of the adoption assistance payment is determined through the discussion and negotiation process between the adoptive parents and a representative of the State agency based upon the needs of the child and the circumstances of the family. The payment that is agreed upon should combine with the parents' resources to cover the ordinary and special needs of the child projected over an extended period of time and should cover anticipated needs, e.g., child care. Anticipation and discussion of these needs are part of the negotiation of the amount of the adoption assistance payment.
Manual, 8.2D4 (Question 1). added.) (Emphasis
Q. Some State's foster care rate structures are based on levels of care. How would such a rate structure impact (sic) the adoption assistance rates?
A. If a State's foster care payment schedule includes higher level-of-care rates that are paid across-the-board for certain children, the State may pay up to that amount in adoption assistance if that specific child would have received the higher level-of-care rate in foster care.
Manual, 8.2D.4 (Question 5).
[ 21 The fatal flaw in the pre-October 1999 limitation imposed by the State is that the limitation artificially frustrates the purpose of the Act "to encourage an action that will be a lifelong social benefit to certain children" and to do so "through the discussion and negotiation process" so as to meet the needs of the child and to consider the family circumstances. Here, the State has not demonstrated any basis whatsoever to justify its decision to place a cap on assistance to adoptive parents other than the maximum tied to foster care payments.
1 22 This Court emphasizes and recognizes that payment of the maximum is obviously not automatically required in every case. The purpose of the IV-E Program is to encourage adoption of special needs children by providing assistance to alleviate the financial burdens associated with the special needs of the children. Only the individual needs of the child and circumstances of the family govern the limits, subject to the cap, of that assistance.
123 Moreover, unlike other subsidy laws, here there is no means test.8 "The use of a means test is prohibited in the process of selecting a suitable adoptive family, or in negotiating an adoption assistance agreement, including the amount of the adoption assistance payment." Manual, 824.2 (Question 1). The Bureau's prohibition against a means test reinforces this Court's conclusion. The policy is that persons qualified to adopt, and who are willing to adopt a special needs child, shall be entitled to obtain assistance when that child's needs and their cireum-stances warrant. The policy encourages and supports adoption of special needs children who otherwise might not be adopted simply because of financial burdens.9 The absence of a means test is further indication that the underlying legislative intent is to make the subsidy available to all adoptive parents and in an amount up to the maximum provided by law.
124 The State's approach, until October 1999, frustrated the purposes of adoption [86]*86assistance and the policy underlying that purpose. Hence, the State's actions in establishing a two-tier system were not in conformity to the federal law and unlawful.
125 Moreover, the State's approach finds no support in Oklahoma law as set out in the Statute. Section 7510-1.5, set out above, directs that adoption subsidies be based on needs of the child, without exceeding the foster care subsidy. 10 0.8.2001, $ 7510-1.5(A).
$26 The State in support of its position cites two Louisiana Court of Appeals cases. The first, In re Martorana, 619 So.2d 1121 (La.App.1993), presented a situation in which the Louisiana Department of Health and Human Resources promulgated a program manual providing for assistance up to eighty percent of foster care payments. The Louisiana legislature had established, by state law, an assistance program in response to federal law. The state act provided that payments may vary depending upon needs, but could not exceed the costs of foster care. Id. at 1122.
T27 The Louisiana Court of Appeals upheld their agency's eighty percent rule. In so doing, the Court limited its review to state law, particularly guided by the state's budgetary analysis argument. Id. at 1123. In light of the absence of application by that court of the federal law, this Court finds Martorama not to be persuasive.
The second case, In re B.M., 787 So.2d 331 (La.App.2001), involved a situation in which the trial court had ordered an adoption subsidy of $1,200.00 plus one hundred percent of the foster care rate. Thus, the payment subsidy ordered exceeded the maximum foster care assistance. Moreover, the subsidy offered by the state agency while the child was in foster care had been agreed to by the foster parent, who was also the prospective adoptive parent. This case wholly fails to provide the State authority to establish an artificial barrier to negotiation for the full foster care assistance amount as an adoption subsidy.10
The Regulatory Barriee-April 19, 1999 to October 18, 1999
129 During this time period, the State regulations established two criteria: (1) SSI eligibility and approval by the Developmental Difficulties Service Division, (DDSD), to receive Specialized Foster Care through the Home and Community Based Waiver Service, (HCBWS), at the time the adoption is initiated and the time the adoption is finalized; and, (2) adoption by a special class of foster parent.
T30 The State's reliance upon the first criterion to deny assistance operates as a denial of assistance because of a regulation not in effect when Laws made her adoption application in 1998. It does not appear that Laws was afforded any opportunity to qualify after the regulation was promulgated. Moreover, it appears highly unusual that the State would seek to apply a rule applicable on its face to adoption cases in their inception whereas Laws' adoption had been finalized January 1, 1999, some four months prior to the effective date of the regulation. Finally, the record here shows that GL., as a foster child, had qualified for DDSD services.
31 The second requirement dealing with foster parent(s) clearly restricts adoption subsidies to a special class of persons. The State has failed to demonstrate authority or need for this special classification, especially in light of a complete absence of or even an implication of such authority in the federal Act. Moreover, the classification frustrates the purposes of the Act to encourage adoption of special needs children by limiting to a special class the opportunity to negotiate for a maximum assistance.
32 The provision of the regulation giving preference to a specific class of foster parents not only fails to find support in the Oklahoma Statutes, but also is contrary to the provisions of Section 7510-1.4(B).11 This [87]*87subsection provides that a child will be eligible for subsidy when adopted by parents other than foster parents. The State's application of the regulation to Laws precluded her from qualifying G.L. for permitted subsidy assistance apparently because she had not been a member of the special class of foster parents. Subsection B recognizes that not every special needs child will be adopted by the class of foster parents specified in the regulation. Thus, the trial court erred in failing to reverse the State's Administrative decision and not recognizing Laws' right to negotiate within the statutory limits on the amount of assistance available.
Retroactive Qualification Post-October 19, 1999
€33 The State has appealed the trial court's retroactive grant of services from October 19, 1999. For the reasons set out in subsequent paragraphs, that decision is affirmed.
1 34 Laws has qualified for assistance under the regulations promulgated after October 19, 1999. The two-tier scheme was removed, but eligibility requirements existed. The three requirements in issue here are: (a) GL. must be determined to be retarded; (2) GL. must meet level of care requirements; and (8) DDSD must establish a written plan of care to receive HCBWS. The State, in defense, argues that assistance to G.L. was not available until January 2000, because the last requirement was not completed until that time.
1135 Hence, the issue is whether the trial court erred by making the qualification retroactive to October 19, 1999. The simple fact is that GL., as a foster child, had already met the first two of these requirements prior to 1998 when G.L. had his sixth birthday. Any plan deemed appropriate as a prerequisite for those services either was, or could have been, established then.
1836 Moreover, Laws had established her claim well prior to January 1, 2000. The trial court did not err by making the qualification retroactive and that portion of the decision is affirmed.
CONCLUSION
(37 Even though the trial court did not err by deciding to make the adoption assistance retroactive to October 19, 1999, the court did err in its decision not to afford Laws the opportunity to negotiate for assistance at the maximum foster care rate beginning on G.L.'s sixth birthday up to that date. The pre-October 1999 problem was that a two-tiered scheme prevented Laws from negotiating for the maximum foster care assistance. As determined here, that scheme was unlawful.
138 However, this leaves unresolved the amount of assistance from G.L.'s sixth birthday up to October 19, 1999. The amount, determined by negotiation, involves facts concerning G.L.'s needs and Laws' cireum-stances, all of which are not determined in the record here. Therefore, this Court reverses the trial court's decision to deny to Laws negotiation of assistance from G.L.'s sixth birthday to October 19, 1999.
39 This Court remands this case to the trial court with instructions to the trial court to direct the State to negotiate a rate of assistance with Laws in an amount not to exeeed the maximum foster parent assistance from and after the time of G.L.'s sixth birthday to October 19, 1999, with due speed.
140 AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
GOODMAN, P.J., and REIF, J., concur.