If you are a welfare recipient living in public housing, are you less likely
than other recipients to succeed in the labor market or to benefit from government
welfare-to-work programs?
Recent research by the Manpower Demonstration Research
Corporation (MDRC) indicates that while recipients in public housing may be
a more difficult-to-employ group in some locales, they may also benefit the
most from mainstream welfare-to-work programs. It examines the evidence and
its implications for policymakers. This policy brief was written by Susan Blank
and James Riccio. It is based on an unpublished MDRC paper, written by James
Riccio and Alan Orenstein, Are Welfare Recipients in Public Housing Really
Harder to Employ? (2000). The study was supported by a grant from the
Fannie Mae Foundation and the resources provided by the funders of the Jobs-Plus
demonstration. This brief is one of a series on findings from the Jobs-Plus
demonstration and related research.
These findings open questions that need further exploration, but they
strongly suggest that public officials ought to make housing status a key
consideration in developing strategies to strengthen mainstream welfare-towork
programs. They also indicate that special efforts may be required in
order to promote big improvements in the self-sufficiency of welfare recipients
in public housing.
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