|
Summary of Key Findings from Working Paper No. 14
Background
Even as the 1996 Personal Responsibility
and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA) increased
expectations of employment for welfare recipients, the authors
of the new federal law were aware that employment alone would
often fail to provide enough income to meet basic family needs.
Accordingly, PRWORA mandated that state welfare programs ensure
transitional child care, food stamps, and Medicaid to those
leaving welfare for low-wage work. But it is one thing to
have these provisions on the books and another to successfully
deliver them to the families who need them. Data from a three-
to four-year, in-depth, qualitative study of families in Cleveland
and Philadelphia are used to tell the story — from the viewpoint
of families — of how respondents struggled to meet basic needs
when they transitioned from welfare to employment.
Key Findings
- By the end of the study period, respondents who worked
reported significant gains in average income (net of work-related
expenses) than those who were not working.
- Families faced enormous challenges securing the public
work-based benefits to which they were entitled. Parents
who sought to apply and maintaining eligibility for child
care assistance and other subsidies were required to surmount
daunting bureaucratic hurdles, and many families’ food stamp
and Medicaid cases were closed incorrectly during the course
of the study. The level of “hassle” experienced by families
varied, indicating that small changes in fine-level details
of implementation could make a large difference in the ability
of working mothers to access and retain transitional benefits.
- Families’ private support systems, such as child care
provided by family members and local food pantries that
supplied emergency food rations, were highly variable in
their capacity to help respondents meet their children’s
basic needs.
Conclusion
This paper sharply delineates how difficult
it is for families who struggle to find stable employment
to receive the transitional benefits to which they are entitled.
Families’ ability to secure child care, food, and health care
resources depended on how programs were implemented; having
detailed knowledge of the benefits the welfare office is supposed
to provide; the cooperation of a competent, well-trained caseworker;
a family situation that allowed the family to take up these
benefits in the form the welfare department provided them;
and, too often, just plain luck.
|