January 31, levels. 820 First Street NE, Suite 510 Washington, DC Tel: Fax:

Similar documents
Average Loan or Lease Term. Average

medicaid and the How will the Medicaid Expansion for Adults Impact Eligibility and Coverage? Key Findings in Brief

46 Children s Defense Fund

Wilma Rudolph Student Athlete Achievement Award

2017 National Clean Water Law Seminar and Water Enforcement Workshop Continuing Legal Education (CLE) Credits. States

STATE CAPITAL SPENDING ON PK 12 SCHOOL FACILITIES NORTH CAROLINA

Disciplinary action: special education and autism IDEA laws, zero tolerance in schools, and disciplinary action

BUILDING CAPACITY FOR COLLEGE AND CAREER READINESS: LESSONS LEARNED FROM NAEP ITEM ANALYSES. Council of the Great City Schools

Two Million K-12 Teachers Are Now Corralled Into Unions. And 1.3 Million Are Forced to Pay Union Dues, as Well as Accept Union Monopoly Bargaining

FY year and 3-year Cohort Default Rates by State and Level and Control of Institution

A Profile of Top Performers on the Uniform CPA Exam

Discussion Papers. Assessing the New Federalism. State General Assistance Programs An Urban Institute Program to Assess Changing Social Policies

Housekeeping. Questions

cover Private Public Schools America s Michael J. Petrilli and Janie Scull

NASWA SURVEY ON PELL GRANTS AND APPROVED TRAINING FOR UI SUMMARY AND STATE-BY-STATE RESULTS

CLE/MCLE Information by State

2014 Comprehensive Survey of Lawyer Assistance Programs

State Limits on Contributions to Candidates Election Cycle Updated June 27, PAC Candidate Contributions

Proficiency Illusion

Trends in Tuition at Idaho s Public Colleges and Universities: Critical Context for the State s Education Goals

The Effect of Income on Educational Attainment: Evidence from State Earned Income Tax Credit Expansions

Free Fall. By: John Rogers, Melanie Bertrand, Rhoda Freelon, Sophie Fanelli. March 2011

ObamaCare Expansion Enrollment is Shattering Projections

2013 donorcentrics Annual Report on Higher Education Alumni Giving

Understanding University Funding

The following tables contain data that are derived mainly

STATE-BY-STATE ANALYSIS OF CONTINUING EDUCATION REQUIREMENTS FOR LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS

Adult Education and Literacy Letter Index AEL Letters 2016 AEL Letters 2015 AEL Letters 2014 AEL Letters 2013 AEL Letters 10/11/17

Fisk University FACT BOOK. Office of Institutional Assessment and Research

Set t i n g Sa i l on a N e w Cou rse

NCSC Alternate Assessments and Instructional Materials Based on Common Core State Standards

November 6, Re: Higher Education Provisions in H.R. 1, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. Dear Chairman Brady and Ranking Member Neal:

Stetson University College of Law Class of 2012 Summary Report

Rethinking the Federal Role in Elementary and Secondary Education

Governors and State Legislatures Plan to Reauthorize the Elementary and Secondary Education Act

State Budget Update February 2016

GRADUATE STUDENTS Academic Year

Higher Education. Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education. November 3, 2017

Teach For America alumni 37,000+ Alumni working full-time in education or with low-income communities 86%

Data Glossary. Summa Cum Laude: the top 2% of each college's distribution of cumulative GPAs for the graduating cohort. Academic Honors (Latin Honors)

No Child Left Behind Bill Signing Address. delivered 8 January 2002, Hamilton, Ohio

A Snapshot of the Graduate School

2016 Match List. Residency Program Distribution by Specialty. Anesthesiology. Barnes-Jewish Hospital, St. Louis MO

TRENDS IN. College Pricing

The Value of English Proficiency to the. By Amber Schwartz and Don Soifer December 2012

Student Admissions, Outcomes, and Other Data

Steve Miller UNC Wilmington w/assistance from Outlines by Eileen Goldgeier and Jen Palencia Shipp April 20, 2010

Connecting to the Big Picture: An Orientation to GEAR UP

A Comparison of the ERP Offerings of AACSB Accredited Universities Belonging to SAPUA

EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT

FACT: FACT: The National Coalition for Public Education. Debunking Myths About the DC Voucher Program

Title II of WIOA- Adult Education and Family Literacy Activities 463 Guidance

Imagine this: Sylvia and Steve are seventh-graders

Wisconsin 4 th Grade Reading Results on the 2015 National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP)

About the College Board. College Board Advocacy & Policy Center

Executive Summary. Laurel County School District. Dr. Doug Bennett, Superintendent 718 N Main St London, KY

National Survey of Student Engagement Spring University of Kansas. Executive Summary

LEWIS M. SIMES AS TEACHER Bertel M. Sparks*

HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES AS REVISED BY THE COMMITTEE ON EDUCATION APPROPRIATIONS ANALYSIS

NCEO Technical Report 27

Suggested Citation: Institute for Research on Higher Education. (2016). College Affordability Diagnosis: Maine. Philadelphia, PA: Institute for

Program Change Proposal:

SCICU Legislative Strategic Plan 2018

2007 NIRSA Salary Census Compiled by the National Intramural-Recreational Sports Association NIRSA National Center, Corvallis, Oregon

ASCD Recommendations for the Reauthorization of No Child Left Behind

Definitions for KRS to Committee for Mathematics Achievement -- Membership, purposes, organization, staffing, and duties

Teacher Supply and Demand in the State of Wyoming

Building a Grad Nation

Strategic Plan Update, Physics Department May 2010

Accommodation for Students with Disabilities

SHEEO State Authorization Inventory. Nevada Last Updated: October 2011

Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education. Title I Comparability

The College of New Jersey Department of Chemistry. Overview- 2009

NBCC NEWSNOTES. Guidelines for the New. World of WebCounseling. Been There, Done That: Multicultural Training Can. Always be productively revisted

Arkansas Private Option Medicaid expansion is putting state taxpayers on the hook for millions in cost overruns

Appendix IX. Resume of Financial Aid Director. Professional Development Training

Moving the Needle: Creating Better Career Opportunities and Workforce Readiness. Austin ISD Progress Report

The number of involuntary part-time workers,

UTILITY POLE ATTACHMENTS Understanding New FCC Regulations and Industry Trends

EDUCATION POLICY ANALYSIS ARCHIVES A peer-reviewed scholarly journal

Produced by the Feminist Majority Foundation s Campus Leadership Program East Coast: 1600 Wilson Blvd Suite 801, Arlington, VA

The Policymaking Process Course Syllabus

NCAA Division I Committee on Academic Performance Academic Performance Program Access to Postseason and Penalty Waiver Directive

Systemic Improvement in the State Education Agency

ATTRIBUTES OF EFFECTIVE FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT

University of Massachusetts Amherst

1.0 INTRODUCTION. The purpose of the Florida school district performance review is to identify ways that a designated school district can:

Governors Workforce Policy Advisors 2005 Handbook

How Might the Common Core Standards Impact Education in the Future?

Michigan and Ohio K-12 Educational Financing Systems: Equality and Efficiency. Michael Conlin Michigan State University

CONTINUUM OF SPECIAL EDUCATION SERVICES FOR SCHOOL AGE STUDENTS

CHAPTER XXIV JAMES MADISON MEMORIAL FELLOWSHIP FOUNDATION

2009 National Survey of Student Engagement. Oklahoma State University

top of report Note: Survey result percentages are always out of the total number of people who participated in the survey.

ADMINISTRATIVE DIRECTIVE

The Ohio State University Library System Improvement Request,

Why Science Standards are Important to a Strong Science Curriculum and How States Measure Up

IUPUI Office of Student Conduct Disciplinary Procedures for Alleged Violations of Personal Misconduct

1GOOD LEADERSHIP IS IMPORTANT. Principal Effectiveness and Leadership in an Era of Accountability: What Research Says

Testimony to the U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions. John White, Louisiana State Superintendent of Education

Transcription:

820 First Street NE, Suite 510 Washington, DC 20002 Tel: 202-408-1080 Fax: 202-408-1056 center@cbpp.org www.cbpp.org January 31, 2006 DESPITE INCLUSION OF MARRIAGE-PROMOTION FUNDING, BUDGET BILL WOULD PENALIZE STATES THAT PROVIDE TANF ASSISTANCE TO POOR MARRIED FAMILIES By Sharon Parrott In December, the House and Senate each passed slightly different versions of the budget reconciliation conference agreement. 1 The bills include a set of provisions related to the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) block grant, including significant changes in the work requirements that states and families must meet. These changes differ significantly from previous versions of TANF legislation that passed the House (both as free-standing TANF bills and as part of the House version of the budget reconciliation bill) and from the TANF bill the Senate Finance Committee approved last year with bipartisan support. One prominent difference lies in the conference agreement s treatment of poor married-couple families that receive assistance. The conference agreement requires states to enroll 90 percent of the two-parent families that they assist in work programs for at least 35 hours each week of every month. 2 States that do not meet the bill s work participation requirements would be subject to financial penalties. 3 Both researchers and state officials have long recognized that such a requirement would be virtually impossible for even the best-run, highest-performing state programs to meet. This provision of the conference agreement thus effectively means that any state that elects to provide aid to poor two-parent families with TANF-related funds would fail to meet the federally imposed work requirements and face fiscal penalties as a consequence. Prior versions of TANF legislation that passed the House (on three separate occasions) and the Senate Finance Committee, as well as the Bush Administration s own TANF reauthorization proposal, did not impose these unrealistic work participation requirements on two-parent families. 1 When the Senate considered the budget reconciliation conference agreement, it removed several provisions that violated Senate rules. Thus, the conference agreement has not secured final congressional approval because the versions passed by the House and Senate differ. The House reportedly will vote on the Senate-passed version of the bill on February 1. The House can amend the Senate-passed bill, however, and then send it back to the Senate for consideration. The House also can vote down the bill. 2 The bill also requires states to meet a 50 percent participation rate when all families both single parent and two parent families are considered. 3 HHS has flexibility to waive penalties in some circumstances or to reduce the size of a penalty below the maximum levels.

To the contrary, both the Administration s proposal and all earlier House and Senate versions of TANF reauthorization legislation including the version of the reconciliation bill that the House passed in November eliminated the separate work participation requirement for two-parent families contained in current law because of its inherent anti-marriage bias. Instead, these proposals considered two-parent families on the same basis as single-parent families when determining a state s overall work participation rate. The Administration s own description of its welfare reform plan, originally submitted to Congress in 2002, explained: The Administration s proposal will end the separate [work] participation rate for two-parent families; the same participation rate will apply to both single- and two-parent families. This policy removes a disincentive to equitable treatment of two-parent families. Under current law, twoparent families have a far more rigorous work participation rate requirement than do single-parent families 4 The budget reconciliation conference agreement takes a very different tack. It makes the existing work participation requirements for two-parent families considerably more stringent and far more difficult for states to meet. It thereby significantly increases disincentives for states to treat two-parent families equitably compared to single-parent families, or even to assist poor two-parent families at all. Creating new incentives for states to restrict aid for two-parent families is a sharp reversal of the policy trend of the past decade. Over the past ten years, about 40 states have eliminated rules from the former Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) program that made it more difficult for two-parent families to receive assistance than single-parent families. The elimination of the old AFDC-era rules has been viewed by policymakers across the country as an important step in ensuring that benefit program rules do not encourage family break-up. The imposition of new disincentives for states to aid two-parent families is particularly ironic given that the conference agreement also includes significant new funding for marriage-promotion programs. The bill provides $150 million per year in funding for marriage promotion and fatherhood programs. (Fatherhood programs can receive no more than $50 million of this funding.) These funds are intended to support public relations programs that promote marriage, marital counseling and education programs, and Programs to reduce the disincentives to marriage in meanstested aid programs 5 How Would the Budget Bill Change States Work Requirements? Under current law, states must meet a specified work participation rate that is, a specified percentage of families that receive assistance in a state s TANF-funded programs must participate in a set of federally defined work activities for a prescribed number of hours each week. The required work participation rate for all TANF families (as a group) is 50 percent. In other words, parents in 4 Working Toward Independence, http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2002/02/welfare-book-04.html. 5 See Section 7103 of the conference agreement on the budget reconciliation bill (conference agreement 109-362). 2

Administration Calls for Removal of Marriage Disincentives in TANF In testimony before the Senate Finance Committee in May 2002, Wade Horn the senior HHS official with responsibility for TANF explained why the Administration s TANF reauthorization proposal called on states to remove marriage disincentives in their TANF programs and eliminated the separate, higher work participation requirements on two-parent families: Second, it is about the government striving to remove disincentives to marriage. In our proposal we seek to remove disincentives to marriage under the welfare system that punish rather than support low-income couples who choose to marry. We would, for example, require States to describe in their State TANF plans their efforts to provide equitable treatment for twoparent married families. We also would remove the current disincentive to equitable treatment of two-parent families by eliminating the separate two-parent family work participation rate. Under our proposal the same participation rate would apply to both single- and two-parent families. In two-parent families, either adult s creditable work activities would count toward the proposed 40-hour requirement. Source: http://finance.senate.gov/hearings/testimony/051602whtest.pdf 50 percent of all families that receive TANF assistance in a state must participate in work activities for a specified number of hours each week (30 hours for parents with children ages six and over, 20 hours for parents with younger children). For two-parent families on TANF, there is a separate, higher participation rate requirement: 90 percent of them are supposed to participate in work activities for at least 35 hours per week (or 55 hours per week if the family receives subsidized child care). Yet while states have engaged large numbers of families in welfare-to-work activities, states have not actually been required to meet these 50-percent and 90-percent participation rates, for two reasons. First, under current law, a state s work participation rate requirement is reduced to reflect the extent to which the number of families receiving TANF assistance in that state has fallen below the number assisted in 1995. Because cash assistance caseloads declined substantially during the late 1990s in every state, the applicable work participation rates, after adjustment for this factor, are significantly below the 50-percent and 90-percent rates specified in the law. Second, many states have placed some or all of their two-parent families into separate programs that are supported entirely with state funds. Under current law, the federal work participation rate requirements do not apply to families receiving assistance in programs funded solely with state resources. (The state funds that are used in such programs are referred to as maintenance-ofeffort funds. States are required to spend a certain amount of state dollars to qualify for federal TANF block grant funding, and the funds states spend on separate programs for two-parent families count toward this maintenance-of-effort requirement.) A Government Accountability Office analysis found that when states provide aid to two-parent families in a separate state-funded program, they still require parents to participate in work activities. 6 (See box below.) Providing assistance through a state-funded program simply ensures 6 U.S. General Accounting Office, With TANF Flexibility, States Vary in How They Implement Work Requirements and Time Limits, GAO-02-770, pages 19-20, July 2002, http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d02770.pdf. 3

that the state will not be penalized if it fails to meet the requirement that 90 percent of all two-parent families receiving assistance participate in work activities for at least 35 hours each week. 7 Researchers and state officials have long noted that even the best-run, high-performing state programs cannot meet a 90-percent participation rate because there are numerous legitimate reasons why more than 10 percent of these families cannot attend every hour of scheduled activities every week of every month. Parents who become ill and miss just a few days of scheduled activities will not count toward their state s participation requirement, even though they have not broken any program rules or failed to comply with any requirements. Similarly, parents who must miss a few days during a month for school or medical appointments for their children a number of whom have special needs and physical and mental disabilities as well as parents who are waiting for a state work program to begin or for a slot in a work program to open also do not count toward the requirement. For these reasons, a 90-percent participation rate is widely understood to be unattainable. What the Budget Bill Would Do The conference agreement makes the following changes to the TANF work requirements: The requirements would apply for the first time to programs that are funded entirely with state funds. States no longer would get credit toward the work participation rate for decreases in their caseloads below the 1995 level; they would get credit only if their cash-assistance caseloads fell below the 2005 level. 8 As a result, states now would have to meet the unrealistic 90-percent requirement for two-parent families, which virtually none of them could do, and would be subject to financial penalties when they were unable to do so. These seemingly simple changes could have large impacts on states and on state behavior. TANF caseloads already are at very low levels; HHS data show that fewer than half of the families poor enough to qualify for TANF assistance receive aid through the program. This means that states are unlikely to see significant downward adjustments in their work participation requirements based on declines in their caseloads below the 2005 levels unless they remove significant numbers of poor families from their programs. 7 States also use separate state programs when they want families both single-parent and two-parent families to participate in employment programs that do not count toward the federal work participation requirements. For example, some states provide aid to families through a separate state program when the parent is participating in a community college, vocational training, or other postsecondary education program that lasts more than 12 months, because that kind of training does not count toward the prescriptive federal work participation requirements, even when such training has shown to be effective at helping parents secure stable jobs. States also have provided aid through separate state programs to some parents who have significant barriers to employment and need specialized rehabilitative services such as mental health treatment, drug treatment, or certain remedial education programs. 8 The conference agreement also gives the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services significant new regulatory authority to rule on which work activities count and how states should collect information about recipients participation in work activities. 4

GAO Report Shows State-Funded Programs Impose Significant Work Requirements on Two-Parent Families In 2002, the Government Accountability Office (then called the General Accounting Office) issued a report on state welfare-to-work efforts that examined states use of wholly state-funded programs to assist two-parent families. GAO found that states were using these separate state programs not to bypass work requirements in fact, states were imposing their own work requirements on families in those programs but instead to shield themselves from penalties that otherwise could result from failure to meet the overly ambitious federal work participation rates for two-parent families. According to GAO, states agencies had found that many of the two-parent families that need assistance face as many (and in some cases more) severe barriers to employment than single-parent families do: Providing cash assistance through separate state programs has offered states additional flexibility, as federal work requirements do not apply to families served through these programs. [Of] the 26 states with separate state programs, 16 states used these programs to provide cash assistance to two-parent families. Several state officials told us they provide aid in this way to avoid the risk of financial penalties for failing to meet the federal two-parent participation rate requirement. State officials told us that two-parent families often have as many or more challenges as single parents, making the higher participation rate for two-parent families difficult to meet. However, states that provided cash assistance through separate state programs typically imposed their own work requirements on families receiving aid. We found that approximately nine-tenths of the families receiving cash assistance in separate state programs are still subject to a state work requirement. While states generally imposed work requirements, about half of them also have policies in place to exclude families facing significant barriers to work from work requirements. For example, 13 states exclude families with an adult who is disabled and 13 states exclude families who care for someone with a disability. Source: U.S. General Accounting Office, With TANF Flexibility, States Vary in How They Implement Work Requirements and Time Limits, GAO-02-770, pages 19-20, July 2002, http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d02770.pdf Of particular concern, states no longer would be able to place two-parent families in separate state programs to shield themselves from fiscal penalties imposed on states that fail to meet an unrealistic 90-percent work participation rate. Impact on States and Married Families Faced with these new requirements, states would have to decide whether to continue providing assistance to poor two-parent families who need temporary income assistance to meet basic needs. If states choose to continue assisting these families using either federal TANF funds or state maintenance-of-effort funds, they almost certainly will fail to meet the federal work participation requirements and, thus, could be subject to fiscal penalties. 9 (HHS has the flexibility to waive penalties in certain circumstances, including penalties on states that have crafted a corrective compliance plan that is approved by HHS, but a CBO analysis of the TANF provisions projects that some states will be subject to fiscal penalties.) 9 States that fail to meet one or both of the TANF work participation rates also are required to meet a higher state spending requirement, known as the maintenance-of-effort requirement. 5

States will be able to avoid these consequences, however, if they deny aid to all or nearly all twoparent families by imposing old-style discriminatory welfare rules on them. This would take income assistance programs back to the bad old days, when two-parent families faced significantly more stringent eligibility criteria than did single-parent families. 10 Table I shows the number of two-parent families in each state that are currently receiving assistance funded with TANF funds or state maintenance-of-effort funds. Two-Parent Families Receiving Income Assistance Are Very Poor Two-parent families receiving assistance usually have very little income. The typical (or median) two-parent family that receives income assistance through either a TANF program or a separate state-funded program has income of just 63 percent of the federal poverty line, even when the family s income assistance and food stamps are counted, according to HHS data. Without the modest aid they are receiving in food stamps and cash assistance, most of these families would be destitute. Moreover, nearly three-quarters of the two-parent families who receive income assistance in a TANF or separate state program) have no cash savings to draw upon should they lose this assistance. Poor two-parent families may need assistance for a variety of reasons. In some cases, they may need temporary help during a period of joblessness. In other cases, these families can face an array of problems, including very poor health, mental impairments, low literacy levels, or the need to care for a severely disabled child. Two-parent families are less likely to qualify for income assistance because they are less likely to be very poor and are more likely to have at least one parent who is employed. But those two-parent families that do find themselves in need of aid often face very difficult circumstances, and the denial of aid to these families could plunge many of them and their children into deep poverty. 10 States also could avoid these penalties by providing state-funded assistance to two-parent families with state funds that do not count toward the state s maintenance-of-effort requirement. It is unclear, however, how many states would dedicate state resources above their maintenance-of-effort requirement in order to provide assistance to these families, since that could significantly increase state costs. 6

TABLE 1: TWO PARENT FAMILIES RECEIVING ASSISTANCE IN TANF OR SEPARATE STATE PORGRAMS, FY 2004 Alabama 264 Alaska 646 Arizona 401 Arkansas 223 California 44,150 Colorado 990 Connecticut 1,442 Delaware 126 Dist. of Col. 176 Florida 1,795 Georgia 525 Hawaii 2,300 Idaho 62 Illinois 167 Indiana 3,166 Iowa 1,929 Kansas 1,176 Kentucky 798 Louisiana 154 Maine 528 Maryland 360 Massachusetts 1,807 Michigan 3,712 Minnesota 4,610 Mississippi 0 Missouri 2,646 Montana 768 Nebraska 1,050 Nevada 515 New Hampshire 268 New Jersey 1,868 New Mexico 827 New York 8,678 North Carolina 345 North Dakota 0 Ohio 3,406 Oklahoma 104 Oregon 479 Pennsylvania 3,817 Rhode Island 1,125 South Carolina 777 South Dakota 0 Tennessee 761 Texas 4,176 Utah 40 Vermont 626 Virginia 1,360 Washington 6,496 West Virginia 1,511 Wisconsin 452 Wyoming 2 U.S. Totals 113,603 Source: The source should be: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/ofa/caseload/caseloadindex.htm#2005. 7