View stories by State
HOME RSS FEEDS ARCHIVES ABOUT US SITE MAP PUBLICATIONS
Search using      Advanced
Saturday, November 21, 2009
or Browse All States
CRIME & COURTS
ECONOMY & BUSINESS
EDUCATION
ELECTIONS
ENERGY
ENVIRONMENT
GOVS' SPEECHES
HEALTH CARE
HOMELAND SECURITY
POLITICS
RECESSION & RECOVERY
SOCIAL POLICY
TAXES & BUDGET
TECHNOLOGY
TRANSPORTATION
ARCHIVES
COMMENTARY
PUBLICATIONS
RSS FEEDS
STATE SPEECHES
NEWS ALERTS
PUBLIC POLICY LINKS
TOOLBARS
STATE BLOGS
ISSUE BLOGS


Register to comment on Stateline.org Stories

Monday, December 06, 1999

Twenty-Seven States Win Awards For Welfare Successes

Comments Write the editor Print this story

Minnesota and 26 other states have won $200 million in bonuses from the federal government for moving welfare recipients into jobs, President Clinton announced Saturday.

Awards vary from $503,393 for South Dakota to $45.4 million for California. The final amount is tied to each state's yearly grant under the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program. Congress established the awards in the 1996 welfare law.

When announcing the bonuses in his weekly radio address, Clinton also reported that the number of people on welfare has continued to fall. As of June 1999, 6.9 million Americans collected cash assistance under the TANF program, a drop of more than 700,000 in six months.

The states competed in four categories: how many adults they placed in jobs; whether those people kept their jobs and increased their paychecks; the biggest improvements in placing people in jobs between 1997 and 1998; and the biggest improvements in job retention and earnings.

The states submitted data to HHS, which chose the top ten states in each category.

Indiana won for placing the highest percentage of recipients into jobs. Minnesota helped the largest percentage of welfare recipients or former welfare recipients keep their jobs and increase their earnings.

Washington showed the biggest increase in 1998 in welfare recipients who found work. And, Florida won for showing the greatest improvement in 1998 in helping recipients keep jobs and increase their earnings.

States could win in more than one category. Minnesota was the only state to win in three. It ranked among the top ten in categories two and three, improvement in moving welfare recipients into jobs and improvement in helping them succeed at work.

Forty-five states and the District of Columbia competed, although every state did not compete in every category. Five states did not enter at all: Idaho, Maine, Nebraska, New Mexico and Virginia.

Noticeably absent from the winners was Wisconsin. It entered in all four categories and is considered on the cutting edge of welfare reform.

"Their success was early on. They were certainly on the leading edge on welfare early on," said Michael Kharfen, spokesman for HHS. "They did a lot of work in 1997 in getting people into work."

"It is a reflection of where they are in terms of their program," he said. Wisconsin is now working with more recipients who face barriers to success at work, Kharfen said.

In the law, Congress left it up to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to determine the parameters of the competition. It chose to emphasize work placement, retention and earnings.

"Full success requires not only getting recipients into jobs, but also keeping them in jobs and increasing earnings in order to reduce dependency and enable families to support themselves," the Department wrote in its guidelines.

Next year, however, HHS is expanding the competition. States will be able to compete against each other in promoting marriage and assuring eligible families receive Medicaid and food stamps.


Comment on this story in the space below by registering with Stateline.org.

COMMENTS (0)
There are no comments yet, would you like to add one?
Recession and Recovery
Read the latest news, analysis and research on the economic crisis in the states in Stateline.org's new Recession and Recovery special section.
The Stimulus and the StatesThe Stimulus and the
States

Follow how states are managing the stimulus money and which programs are receiving funding as part of the recovery effort using Stateline.org's stimulus special section.
Stateline Blogs
Stateline.org has compiled an extensive list of state issue political blogs to make it convenient for you to follow state government.

If a blog you find interesting and informative is not on our list, tell us about it by sending an email to editor@stateline.org.
Blogs organized by Issue
lineBlogs organized by State
State Public Policy Resources
Stateline.org has put together a list of state public policy resources organized by issue. Here, you will find useful links to essential information from government, academia, and think tanks. If you have a link to add, please email us.


The Pew Charitable Trusts applies the power of knowledge to solve today’s most challenging problems. Pew's Center on the States identifies and advances state policy solutions.