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Launched in 1994, Floridas pilot Family Transition Program
(FTP) was the first welfare reform initiative in which some
families reached a time limit on their welfare eligibility
and had their benefits canceled. Today, almost all states
have welfare time limits (and there is a 60-month lifetime
limit on federally funded assistance), although relatively
few families have yet reached those limits.
FTP, which
operated in Escambia County (including Pensacola) until 1999,
limited most families to 24 months of cash welfare assistance
in any 60-month period (the least job-ready were limited to
36 months in any 72-month period) and provided a wide array
of services and incentives to help welfare recipients find
work. Floridas statewide welfare program incorporates
many of the pilot programs features but differs from
it in key ways; thus, the evaluation of FTP did not assess
the statewide program.
MDRC evaluated
FTP under a contract with the Florida Department of Children
and Families. Several thousand welfare applicants and recipients
(mostly single mothers) were assigned, at random, to FTP or
to the Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) group,
which was subject to the prior welfare rules. FTPs effects
were estimated by comparing how the two groups fared over
a four-year period.
Key Findings
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Reflecting
a sharp decline in Floridas overall welfare caseload,
most families in the AFDC group left welfare during the
study period. Nevertheless, owing to its time limit, FTP
substantially reduced long-term welfare receipt: Only
6 percent of families in the FTP group received welfare
for more than 36 months compared with 17 percent in the
AFDC group.
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Relative
to families in the AFDC group, FTP families gained more
in earnings than they lost in welfare payments, resulting
in a modestly higher average income for the FTP group.
However, these gains in earnings and income came in the
middle of the study period; by the end, the two groups
were equally likely to be working and had about the same
income.
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Only
17 percent of families in the FTP group reached their
time limit during the study period. Most of the others
did not accumulate 24 or 36 months of benefit receipt
(some received 24 or 36 months, but were granted medical
exemptions that stopped their time-limit clocks). Somewhat
less than half of those who reached their time limit worked
steadily in the subsequent 18 months, and many relied
heavily on family, friends, Food Stamps, and housing assistance
for support. Most of these families struggled financially,
but did not appear to be worse off than many other families
who left welfare for other reasons.
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FTP
had few impacts, positive or negative, on the well-being
of elementary-school-aged children. Among adolescents,
however, children in the FTP group performed somewhat
worse than their AFDC counterparts on a couple of measures
of school performance.
The final
results from the FTP evaluation show that, at least under
certain circumstances, time limits can be implemented without
having widespread, severe consequences for families. Nevertheless,
caution is in order: FTP operated in a strong local and national
labor market, had plentiful resources for staff and services,
and imposed no lifetime limit on welfare receipt. Where these
conditions do not hold, the consequences of time limits might
differ from those found in this evaluation.
Source: FTP: Final Results of Floridas Initial Time-Limited Welfare Program
by Dan Bloom, James J. Kemple, Pamela Morris, Susan Scrivener,
Nandita Verma, and Richard Hendra. The FTP evaluation was
funded by the Florida Department of Children and Families,
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and the
Ford Foundation. The organizations that funded the analysis
of FTPs effects on children are listed at the front
of the report
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Funders
MDRC's
evaluation of Florida's Family Transition Program (FTP) was
funded by a contract with the Florida Department of Children
and Families and with support from the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services and the Ford Foundation.
The study of FTP also benefited from the
support of the Project on State-Level Child Outcomes, which
is co-sponsored by the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services' Administration for Children and Families (ACF) and
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation
(ASPE). Additional federal funding to support the project
was provided by the Centers for Disease Control, National
Institute of Child Health and Human Development, and U.S.
Department of Agriculture. Private foundation funding has
been provided by the Annie E. Casey Foundation, David and
Lucile Packard Foundation, Edna McConnell Clark Foundation,
George Gund Foundation, and Smith Richardson Foundation.
The findings and conclusions presented in this report do not necessarily represent the official positions
or policies of the funders.
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