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History of TANF. President Clinton signed welfare legislation “changing welfare as we know it” on August 22, 1996. This eliminated the entitlement to the Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) TANF block grant was seen as great opportunity for flexibility among the states.
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History of TANF • President Clinton signed welfare legislation “changing welfare as we know it” on August 22, 1996. • This eliminated the entitlement to the Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) • TANF block grant was seen as great opportunity for flexibility among the states. • Block grant of federal funds and a repeal of most of the federal regulations • States were encouraged to design programs that best met needs of state populations • Block grant amount has not increased since 1997
Participation Requirements • TANF recipients are required to participate in activities designed to move them to employment in exchange for receipt of TANF grant. (eg. Job search, education and training, barrier removal etc) • Federal government requires 50% of TANF population to participate full time • Federal definitions of what counts as participation are very restrictive. • In the past Washington has met the requirement with a mix of participation, caseload reduction credit and investment of excess Maintenance of Effort funding (MOE). • Federal rules have changed and Washington may no longer be able to meet the participation rate • Failure to meet the participation rate results in a financial penalty to the state TANF redesign effort identified federal regulations as a major barrier to doing the right thing for families.
Two Possible Solutions: • Assist low income working families to increase our participation rate. This was done in the past but stopped because of budget reductions. • Federal TANF waiver which would measure outcomes (how many families actually move to employment) rather than hours of participation.