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April 8, 2013  
GOVERNMENT RELATIONS ACTION ALERT

Reauthorization of 1996 Welfare Law

April 9, 2002

Congress is moving quickly on the reauthorization of the 1996 Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA), P.L. 104-193. The House is expected to pass a new bill before Memorial Day with the Senate to follow sometime in July. The President jump-started the process when he unveiled his framework for reauthorization in February (see www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2002/02/welfare-reform-announcement-book.html).

A handful of reauthorization bills have been introduced in the House and Senate, but NASW has not formally endorsed any of them. Rather, the association has found that promoting proposals, developed by NASW and others, that address specific issues is a more effective strategy for ensuring that the "social work voice" is heard. NASW has been building support for those proposals among other national organizations and advocating for them in meetings with targeted members of the House and Senate.

This week, Rep. Wally Herger (R-CA), who chairs the Human Resources Subcommittee of the House Ways and Means Committee, which has primary jurisdiction over welfare, is expected to introduce a bill that will encompass the majority of the President's plan and serve as the House's primary reauthorization bill. The Subcommittee is scheduled to mark-up the bill next week, most likely April 18. The full committee is expected to consider the bill the following week, most likely April 24.

The President's proposal fails to address NASW's policy priorities (reducing poverty, addressing barriers, creating a stable and professional workforce--see www.socialworkers.org/advocacy/welfare/legislation/recommend.pdf) and rather than improving current law, would actually make it worse. It would straight-jacket states and recipients by narrowing the current definition of what counts as work, requiring 70 percent of the caseload to be engaged in "work," and requiring recipients to be engaged in work or work-related activities for 40 hours a week. Current law contains a broader definition of work and requires 50 percent of the caseload to be engaged in work for 30 hours a week (20 hours for parents with young children). However, without the current caseload reduction credit, which allows states to count recipients who have left the rolls as "engaged in work," no state would meet the 50 percent requirement. Without the credit, some states' participation rate is as low as zero percent.

More stringent work requirements would severely limit opportunities for recipients to participate in education or training activities or to address any barriers to work, such as a mental disability, substance abuse, or domestic violence. Participants would be eligible for substance abuse treatment or other form of "rehabilitation" for only three months within a 24 month period. There are no provisions designed to improve the welfare workforce -- either through training, hiring more skilled staff, or addressing caseload size and working conditions.

ACTION NEEDED

Top Priority

Contacts with the Members of the House Ways and Means Committee. States represented by Committee members include Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Texas, Washington, and Wisconsin.

Please call your Representative TODAY! All Members can be reached through the Capitol Switchboard 202-225-3121. Individual office numbers are available through the Committee website.

Message (for greater effectiveness, personalize your message based on your own experience)

I am a professional social worker calling from (city of residence) to urge Representative (last name) to oppose welfare proposals that would hamper (state's) efforts to give people the tools and training they need to move toward social and economic well-being.

Plans to require 70 percent of the caseload to work for 40 hours a week are simply unworkable. States that have been creative in addressing the varied needs of their recipients will be forced to adopt a one-size-fits-all approach that ignores strategies found to be effective in moving families into jobs, sustaining them in jobs, and helping them move up the economic ladder.

Instead, I urge the Congressman/woman to support proposals that reward states for increasing access to education and training, providing services and supports for families addressing barriers, such as mental disorders, substance abuse, and domestic violence, and improving program performance through a more stable and professional welfare workforce. Without greater attention in these areas, the 2002 reauthorization of the 1996 welfare law will move current programs backward rather than forward. Thank you.

Timing

To be most effective, contacts should be made by April 24 -- the date the full Committee is expected to take action.

Comprehensive Welfare Reauthorization Legislation (introduced as of 04/08/02). (For bill language, cosponsors, etc., see http://thomas.loc.gov/).

Next Step in Reforming Welfare Act (H.R. 3625), introduced by Rep. Benjamin Cardin (D-MD).

  • Maintains current state discretion in defining work; expands access to education and training; rewards states that reduce child poverty; includes inflationary funding increase for TANF block grant.
  • Allows six months of activities to address barriers to count as work; requires outreach and review of cases for possible barriers prior to imposing sanctions.
  • Includes "staff training" as an allowable use of funds in a grant program designed to improve access to other federal programs.

TANF Reauthorization Act of 2001 (H.R. 3113), introduced by Rep. Patsy Mink (D-HI).

  • Significantly expands the definition of what "counts as work" to include the full range of educational activities, including caring for a child who is under age 6 or disabled, as well as activities to address barriers; "stops the clock" for recipients in compliance with program rules; eliminates state option to shorten the five year time limit; lifts the 20 percent cap on hardship exemptions; expands use of Individual Development Accounts (IDAs); rewards states that reduce child poverty.
  • Establishes standards and procedures for individuals to be assessed for barriers by qualified professionals; counts activities to address barriers as work; rewards states that are successful in addressing barriers; requires states to waive any program requirement that unfairly penalizes an individual who is addressing one or more barrier, including work requirements and time limits.
  • Requires states to train frontline workers in ensuring rights of recipients; rewards states that train caseworkers and supervisors in addressing barriers; requires use of qualified professionals to provide services for addressing barriers.

Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act Amendments of 2002 (S. 2052), introduced by Senator Jay Rockefeller (D-WV).

  • Maintains current work requirements and block grant funding; expands access to education and training; rewards states that reduce child poverty.
  • Provides grants to states to establish advisory review panels to improve policies and procedures for assisting individuals with barriers.
  • Requires states to outline in their state plan how they intend "to ensure a professional workforce with the resources, skills, and expertise necessary to successfully carry out the program" and requires the General Accounting Office (GAO) to conduct a survey and evaluation of state activities on workforce development. The GAO study must examine staff qualifications, education, training, turnover, and caseload size.

NASW's National Coalition Partners

TANF Workforce Coalition (NASW, Chair); Coalition on Human Needs (TANF Coordinating Committee); Poverty Reduction Working Group; Consortium for Citizens with Disabilities (TANF Task Force); Leadership Council on Civil Rights (Welfare Task Force); Welfare Advocates; Building Opportunities Beyond (BOB) Welfare.

NASW's Grassroots Partners

National Campaign for Jobs and Income Support; Welfare Made a Difference Campaign; Grassroots Organizing for Welfare Leadership (GROWL).

COMING SOON: NASW's NEW WELFARE REAUTHORIZATION WEBPAGE.

AS ALWAYS, THANKS FOR YOUR ADVOCACY!





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