February 27, 2007

  • I live in low-income housing,  I am in danger of losing my home.  The welfare state sucks!
    I only receive MA and a small ($10.00) amount of food support, I am NOT on welfare!

     
    Welfare State Growing Despite
    Overhauls

    By STEPHEN OHLEMACHER


    WASHINGTON (AP) – The welfare state is bigger than ever despite a decade of
    policies designed to wean poor people from public aid.

    The number of families receiving cash benefits from welfare has plummeted
    since the government imposed time limits on the payments a decade ago. But other
    programs for the poor, including Medicaid, food stamps and disability benefits,
    are bursting with new enrollees.

    The result, according to an Associated Press analysis: Nearly one in six
    people rely on some form of public assistance, a larger share than at any time
    since the government started measuring two decades ago.

    Critics of the welfare overhaul say the numbers offer fresh evidence that few
    former recipients have become self-sufficient, even though millions have moved
    from welfare to work. They say the vast majority have been forced into
    low-paying jobs without benefits and few opportunities to advance.

    “If the goal of welfare reform was to get people off the welfare rolls,
    bravo,” said Vivyan Adair, a former welfare recipient who is now an assistant
    professor of women’s studies at Hamilton College in upstate New York. “If the
    goal was to reduce poverty and give people economic and job stability, it was
    not a success.”

    Proponents of the changes in welfare say programs that once discouraged work
    now offer support to people in low-paying jobs. They point to expanded
    eligibility rules for food stamps and Medicaid, the health insurance program for
    the poor, that enable people to keep getting benefits even after they start
    working.

    “I don’t have any problems with those programs growing, and indeed, they
    were intended to grow,” said Ron Haskins, a former adviser to President Bush on
    welfare policy.

    “We’ve taken the step of getting way more people into the labor force and
    they have taken a huge step toward self-sufficiency. What is the other choice?”
    he asked.

    In the early 1990s, critics contended the welfare system encouraged
    unemployment and promoted single-parent families. Welfare recipients, mostly
    single mothers, could lose benefits if they earned too much money or if they
    lived with the father of their children.

    Major changes in welfare were enacted in 1996, requiring most recipients to
    work but allowing them to continue some benefits after they started jobs. The
    law imposed a five-year limit on cash payments for most people in the Temporary
    Assistance for Needy Families program, or TANF. Some states have shorter time
    limits.

    Nia Foster fits the pattern of dependence on government programs. She stopped
    getting cash welfare payments in the late 1990s and has moved from one clerical
    job to another. None provided medical benefits.

    The 32-year-old mother of two from Cincinnati said she supports her family
    with help from food stamps and Medicaid.

    Foster said she did not get any job training when she left welfare. She
    earned her high-school equivalency last year at a community college.

    “If you want to get educated or want to succeed, the welfare office don’t
    care,” Foster said. “I don’t think they really care what you do once the
    benefits are gone.”

    Foster now works in a tax office, a seasonal job that will end after April
    15. She hopes to enroll at the University of Cincinnati this spring and would
    like to study accounting. She is waiting to find out if she qualifies for enough
    financial aid to cover tuition.

    “I like data processing, something where it’s a bunch of invoices and you
    have to key them in,” Foster said. “I want to be an accountant so bad.”

    Shannon Stanfield took a different, less-traveled path from welfare, thanks
    to a generous program that offered her a chance to get a college education.

    Stanfield, 36, was cleaning houses to support her two young children four
    years ago when she learned about a program for welfare recipients at nearby
    Hamilton College, a private liberal arts school in Clinton, N.Y.

    “At the time I was living in a pretty run-down apartment,” said Stanfield,
    who was getting welfare payments, Medicaid and food stamps. “It wasn’t
    healthy.”

    The program, called the Access Project, accepts about 25 welfare-eligible
    parents a year. Hamilton waives tuition for first-year students and the program
    supplements financial aid in later years. Students get a host of social and
    career services, including help finding internships and jobs and financial
    assistance in times of crisis.

    About 140 former welfare recipients have completed the program and none still
    relies on government programs for the poor, said Adair, the Hamilton professor
    who started the Access Project in 2001.

    Stanfield, who still gets Medicaid and food stamps, plans to graduate in May
    with a bachelor’s degree in theater. She wants to be a teacher.

    “I slowly built up my confidence through education,” Stanfield said. “I
    can’t honestly tell you how much it has changed my life.”

    Programs such as the Access Project are not cheap, which is one reason they
    are rare. Tuition and fees run about $35,000 a year at Hamilton, and the
    program’s annual budget is between $250,000 and $500,000, Adair said.

    In 2005, about 5.1 million people received monthly welfare payments from TANF
    and similar state programs, a 60 percent drop from a decade before.

    But other government programs grew, offsetting the declines.

    About 44 million people – nearly one in six in the country – relied on
    government services for the poor in 2003, according to the most recent
    statistics compiled by the Census Bureau. That compares with about 39 million in
    1996.

    Also, the number of people getting government aid continues to increase,
    according to more recent enrollment figures from individual programs.

    Medicaid rolls alone topped 45 million people in 2005, pushed up in part by
    rising health care costs and fewer employers offering benefits. Nearly 26
    million people a month received food stamps that year.

    Cash welfare recipients, by comparison, peaked at 14.2 million people in
    1994.

    There is much debate over whether those leaving welfare for work should be
    offered more opportunities for training and education, so they do not have to
    settle for low-paying jobs that keep them dependent on government programs.

    “We said get a job, any job,” said Rep. Jim McDermott, chairman of the
    House subcommittee that oversees welfare issues. “And now we expect them to be
    making it on these minimum-wage jobs.”

    McDermott, D-Wash., said stricter work requirements enacted last year, when
    Congress renewed the welfare overhaul law, will make it even more difficult for
    welfare recipients to get sufficient training to land good-paying jobs.

    But people who support the welfare changes say former recipients often fare
    better economically if they start working, even in low-paying jobs, before
    entering education programs.

    “What many people on TANF need first is the confidence that they can succeed
    in the workplace and to develop the habits of work,” said Wade Horn, the Bush
    administration’s point man on welfare overhaul.

    “Also, many TANF recipients didn’t have a lot of success in the classroom,”
    Horn said. “If you want to improve the confidence of a TANF recipient, putting
    them in the classroom, where they failed in the past, that is not likely to
    increase their confidence.”

    Horn noted that employment among poor single mothers is up and child poverty
    rates are down since the welfare changes in 1996, though the numbers have
    worsened since the start of the decade.

    Horn, however, said he would like to see local welfare agencies provide more
    education and training to people who have already moved from welfare to work.

    “I think more attention has to be paid to helping those families move up the
    income scale, increasing their independence of other government welfare
    programs,” Horn said.

    “The true goal of welfare to work programs should be self-sufficiency.”

    I love you!!

Comments (16)

  • Interesting article. You know… something that started off helping people has somehow become something bad. <— probably makes no sense. I should just hush most times!

    I hope you have a great day!

  • :heartbeat: i wish i could say it was going to get better, but you know.

    love you laurie.

  • Too many people, inside and outside government view assistance as a hand out.   It should be considered a helping hand up.

  • The good news is, you haven’t given up.

    You recognize where the difficulties are and you have a lot going for you. You’re intelligent, attractive and inspiring and you have identified certain areas of huge challenge where you can decide, with the help, advice and encouragement of your friends, how best to proceed to attack them as priorities and resources allow. 

    During walks with your friends, you’ll be able to talk about things specifically one minute and breath in the fresh, cold air and beauty of late winter the next, realizing that your challenges, like the winter’s  snow will melt away gradually as you plow through them and the energy around you begins to resonate with your spirit and melt every last remaining chunk of snow and ice.

    There will be new winters, new challenges but there have been challenging times in the past as well and you somehow made it through. You will again.

    Think of which of your friends might most likely want to give you a pep-talk. Call them and set aside a time for a walk in a park or nature center or just around the neighborhood – if only just the two of you. Maybe make it a regular date and offer your friends an ear and some advice as well. You are certainly capable of cheering and inspiring people as witnessed by the comments on your blog. Your friends need your wisdom too. Just sneak it in between the jokes.

    I hope your day goes well and that one by one, you find ways each week, to be as inspired by your friends as you are to us.

    Take care, Laurie. You’re gonna make it!

    Rob

  • I agree with BB61….Plus, The government wouldn’t be doing all this crap if it meant screwing themselves….they make the big bucks, so what do they care about people they think are beneath them?  All a bunch of jerks…… 

    RYC:  Well, does that mean you are NOT a Sooner fan???..LOL….We can always convert ya!….LOL…Have a good week!

  • Butt jiggle . . . now that is a different way to say goodbye

  • Life sucks sometimes…but it does get better…keep your chin up.
    :sunny:  :heartbeat:

  • Anytime you need a friend……………hugs.:wave::):sunny:

  • I hope that you are not evicted or anything. I love your personality, and your upward thinking. I hope that everything goes well for you. I’d hate for anything bad to happen :(

    Do you receive disability, or no?

    ryc: THANKS! I appreciate the support. :love:

  • See yourself either not losing your housing or finding even better housing. Start doing affirmations right now. Ask your Higher Power what the next step is. It will be fine. Love you, Judi

  • It is happening all over the world. They have money to make war but not t ohelp people.

  • Irony of ironies…Nixon enacted food stamps AND the post-ADC welfare system that the Reaganauts hated and Clinton destroyed :eek:

    Meanwhile GW starts a war so those poor stockholders of Halliburton don’t suffer :mad:

  • Wish I could help you. Sending good vibes. {{{{{}}}}}}
    This time of the year sucks and being worried about losing a home couldn’t come at a worse time.

    Lynn

  • That’s terrible. I hope everything works out for you.

  • The last one is too funny!

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