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Statement |
Committee on Ways and Means
Subcommittee on Human Resources
For Immediate Release
Contact: Press Office 202-225-8933
April 10, 2002
Chairman Herger Introduces Legislation to Build on
Welfare Reform Success
WASHINGTON - At the unveiling of his welfare reform
bill, Chairman Wally Herger (R-CA) made the following statement:
“I am honored to be a part of our common effort to
extend and strengthen the tremendously successful 1996 welfare reform
law.
“This law has achieved truly historic results. Since
1996 nearly 3 million children have been lifted from poverty.
Employment by mothers most likely to go on welfare rose 40 percent
between 1995 and 2000. And welfare caseloads fell by 9 million --
from 14 million recipients in 1994 to just 5 million today.
“Today we begin the next step in welfare reform,
based on the President’s priorities. The legislation I have sponsored
will help even more low-income parents know the dignity that comes
with a paycheck instead of a welfare check. Parents like so many in
my district in Northern California, including some who actually
feared going to work before reform. Now they are among the millions
who left welfare for a better life.
“We can help even more low-income Americans improve
their lives for themselves and their children. That is what the
welfare reform is all about.”
Click on the link for a copy of
H.R. 4090, or the letter from the
Republican Governors Association.
The Personal Responsibility,
Work,
And Family Promotion Act Of 2002
Introduced by Chairman Wally Herger on April 10,
2002
In keeping with the strong principles outlined by
President Bush, Chairman Wally Herger (R-CA) of the Ways and Means
Subcommittee on Human Resources has introduced “The Personal
Responsibility, Work and Family Promotion Act of 2002.” The
legislation reauthorizes the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families
(TANF) program and reflects the President’s proposals, with certain
modifications.
This legislation reinforces the President’s
principles, “Working Toward Independence”:
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Helping more welfare recipients achieve
independence through work.
-
Protecting children, strengthening families, and
promoting healthy marriages.
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Encouraging new and innovative solutions to help
welfare recipients gain independence.
-
Maintaining full funding for TANF and child care
programs, continuing the commitment Congress made in 1996 despite
unprecedented welfare caseload declines.
Chairman Herger’s bill also:
-
Enhances State flexibility by maintaining and
updating current incentives to reduce caseloads and count those
reductions toward State work requirements.
-
Increases States’ flexibility in using TANF
funds to provide childcare.
-
Conforms work requirements to allow for sick
leave and holidays.
-
Offers additional incentives for States to
pursue strategies to improve child well-being by strengthening
families and promoting healthy marriages.
Key Components of the Legislation
Helping Welfare Recipients Achieve Independence
Through Work
-
Increasing Minimum Work Requirements. Under
current law, at least 50% of TANF families are required to
participate in work and other activities designed to help them
achieve self-sufficiency. The President’s plan and Chairman
Herger’s bill increases the work requirement by 5% per year, so
that States are required to have 70% of welfare families working
and participating in other job-preparation activities 40 hours per
week in FY 2007. Chairman Herger’s legislation also allows
States to continue to get “credit” toward work participation rates
for caseload declines. Under current law, States get credit
for caseload declines since FY 1995; under the Herger bill, by 2005
and in subsequent years, States would get credit for caseload
declines in the prior 3 years.
-
Requiring Welfare Recipients to Put in a Full
Work Week. The President’s proposal builds on the
successful work requirements of the 1996 welfare reform law by
requiring welfare recipients to work 40 hours per week – either at
a job or in programs designed to help them achieve independence.
Chairman Herger’s bill also builds into the calculation a four-week
cushion for sick leave and holidays, simulating a typical American
work schedule. The plan makes special accommodations for
parents with infants and individuals who need substance abuse
treatment, rehabilitation or special work-related training.
As much as two days per week can be spent in these activities and
be counted as “work”.
Protecting Children & Strengthening Families
-
Protecting Children by Providing Historic Child
Care Funding and Increasing States’ Flexibility in Providing Child
Care for Low-Income Working Families. Chairman
Herger’s bill follows the President’s recommendation to continue
historically high levels of support for child care ($4.8 billion
per year) through the Child Care and Development Block Grant (CCDBG).
Chairman Herger also increases the amount of TANF block grant funds
that States can transfer to CCDBG from 30% (or 20% if a State
transfers 10% to the Social Services Block Grant) to a total of 50%
per year.
-
Strengthening Child Support Enforcement and
Encouraging States to Give Child Support Payments to Mothers And
Children. Under current law, government keeps a
substantial portion of the money collected to pay past-due child
support in cases of families that have received welfare. The
President’s proposal and Chairman Herger’s bill provide financial
incentives for the States to give as much of this money as possible
to mothers and children, especially mothers who have left welfare.
-
Encouraging Healthy Marriages and Two-Parent
Married Families as a Goal. Chairman Herger’s bill
reflects the President’s plan to direct up to $300 million annually
for programs that encourage healthy, stable marriages. These
programs include pre-marital education and counseling, as well as
research and technical assistance into promising approaches that
work. Chairman Herger’s bill also removes disincentives in
current law so States will spend more of their own funds on
programs designed to achieve the important goals of promoting
healthy marriages and strengthening families.
-
Providing New Grant Authority to Promote
Responsible Fatherhood. Chairman Herger’s bill authorizes
a $20 million grant fund, as provided for in the President’s 2003
budget and in the House Budget Resolution, to support community
efforts to improve parenting skills and promote responsible
fatherhood.
Encouraging Innovation by States
-
Establishing Broad New Waiver Authority to
Encourage State Program Innovation. Like the President’s
proposal, Chairman Herger’s bill offers new waiver authority for
programs within the Ways and Means Committee’s jurisdiction to
enable States to conduct “superwaiver” demonstration projects to
improve program effectiveness or integrate a range of programs in
order to improve service delivery. This new flexibility,
along with waiver authority to be provided by other Congressional
Committee action, will help States design fully integrated
assistance programs that could revolutionize service delivery.
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