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Implications
for Reauthorization
Expand the Role of Education and Training
The challenge for policymakers is to find ways to maintain
the employment orientation that underlies reform's success, while
opening the door to additional education and training. Results from
carefully designed tests of job-search-first programs, education-first
pro-grams, and mixed-strategy programs provide strong support for
the idea that education and training have an important, although
probably subsidiary, role to play in the future of welfare reform.
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Add
Services for the Hard-to-Employ
To make further progress in reducing welfare caseloads,
states will have to develop effective programs to overcome the barriers
to employment of the hard-to-employ. Thus, as caseloads have fallen
and as the five-year time limit approaches, states increasingly
find themselves working with people who have a range of persistent,
multiple, and, sometimes, severe employment barriers, such as substance
abuse and depression, that make it difficult for them to get and
keep a job. More
Enhance
States' Flexibility to Reward Work and Benefit Children
Although poverty reduction was not a TANF goal in 1996,
most states' conforming leg-islation included earnings supplement
provisions designed to reward work and raise family income. Now
the new bill is proposing to make improving the well-being of children
an addi-tional overarching purpose of TANF. New research evidence
shows that earnings supplement programs increase employment and
income and that, when the supplements are generous, elementary school-aged
children benefit (although adolescents do not). More
Set Reasonable Participation Standards
The states' dramatic success in reducing caseloads has
made the question of how to set participation standards in welfare
reform's next phase potentially one of the most contentious issues
related to TANF reauthorization. Some observers would like to end
the point-for-point caseload reduction credit because it sends the
message that caseload reductions are the main goal of TANF. The
administration wants to end the credit to keep the states under
pressure to perform. Not surprisingly, states would like to remain
free of the participation standard and therefore would prefer to
keep the caseload reduction credit in force. More
Require
Midterm Review of Time-Limit Policies and the Adequacy of the 20
Percent Exemption
The House-passed bill recommends few changes in the law's
time-limit provisions, an approach consistent with research findings
to date of no evidence that the imposition of time limits have resulted
in significant harm. But the final time-limit story has not yet
been told, since relatively few welfare recipients have reached
either the federal or a state time limit. In 16 states, time limits
only begin to kick in this year; and in eight of those states, time
limits will not expire until July 2002 or later. More
Invest
in Learning and Sustaining Innovation
Congressional support for research has built a remarkable
body of knowledge about what works - for families and children as
well as for government budgets and taxpayers - with respect to welfare-to-work
strategies, earnings supplements, and, to a lesser extent, time
limits. Indeed, to an important degree, TANF's very success builds
on a body of research that demonstrates the value of employment-focused
work-first programs. New research findings are poised to play a
similar role as states search for ways to fulfill TANF's new overarching
pur-pose: to improve child well-being. More
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