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Temporary Assistance For Needy Families

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Eligibility is designated in Florida Statutes Chapter 414 and the TANF State Plan ... Statutes already outline diversions, transitional benefits and work activity ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Temporary Assistance For Needy Families


1
  • Temporary Assistance For Needy Families
  • Workforce Summit


2
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families
AGENDA
  • What Is TANF?
  • The Four Purposes of TANF
  • Penalties and Sanctions
  • Using TANF Funds in the Welfare Transition
    Program
  • Establishing Local Special Projects
  • Questions and Answers

3
What is TANF?
A Historical Perspective
  • TANF is a block grant that replaced the Aid to
    Families with Dependent Children or AFDC program
  • The Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity
    Reconciliation Act (PRWORA) was passed in 1996
  • PROWORA
  • Eliminated welfare as an entitlement
  • Created a block grant known as TANF, which
    increased state flexibility
  • Established requirements and work activities

4
What is TANF?
TANF Block Grant
  • States are required to operate an assistance
    program
  • Time limits
  • Eligibility requirements
  • Participation requirements
  • States are now able to operate non-assistance
    programs and provide services to further one or
    more of the four purposes of TANF
  • Diversions
  • Services to help working families transition off
    welfare to work
  • Family formation
  • Out of wedlock pregnancy prevention
  • States must develop a TANF State Plan to describe
    the operations of TANF programs and eligibility
    requirements

5
The Four Purposes of TANF
TANF Purpose One
  • Provide assistance to needy families so that
    children may be cared for in their own homes or
    in the homes of relatives
  • Temporary Cash Assistance (TCA) and the Welfare
    Transition (WT) program
  • Eligibility is designated in Florida Statutes
    Chapter 414 and the TANF State Plan
  • Provisions of assistance include specific
    requirements
  • Time limits (414.105 F.S.)
  • Work requirements (445.024 F.S.)
  • Sanctions (414.065 F.S.)
  • Self-sufficiency plan and assessments (45 CFR
    261.11 and 261.12)

6
The Four Purposes of TANF
TANF Purpose One Assistance
  • Assistance can only be provided under TANF
    purpose number one
  • Assistance has specific eligibility requirements
    and performance requirements attached to receipt
  • Assistance is not just cash payments, it may
    include support services

7
The Four Purposes of TANF
Rule of Thumb
  • Assistance may only be provided to TCA recipients
  • Assistance under federal law is defined as
  • Cash payments, vouchers and any other form of
    benefits designed to meet a familys ongoing
    basic needs
  • Childcare and transportation for families who are
    not employed

8
The Four Purposes of TANF
TANF Purpose One How Do We Pull it All Together?
  • Federal Regulations, TANF State Plan, statutes
    and guidance allows for the use of funds to
    develop work activities, for example
  • Family literacy programs can combine work
    activities and education
  • Intensive job search and job preparation programs
  • Mentoring programs
  • On the job training and work subsidy programs
  • Federal Regulations, TANF State Plan, statutes
    and guidance allows for the use of funds to
    provide support services during work activity
    participation
  • Development of activities and the use of funds
    for support services must meet the intent of
    federal legislation

9
The Four Purposes of TANF
TANF Purpose Two
  • End the dependence of needy parents on government
    benefits by promoting job preparation, work and
    marriage
  • Individuals served under purpose two must be
    needy
  • Individuals must be a part of a needy family
  • In Florida, needy is defined for most programs
    under purpose two as below 200 of the Federal
    Poverty Level

10
The Four Purposes of TANF
TANF Purpose Number Two
  • All activities and services provided must further
    the purpose end the dependence of needy parents
    on government benefits
  • Transitional services (445.028, 445.029, 445.030,
    445.031 F.S.)
  • Up-Front Diversion and Relocation Assistance as a
    Diversion (445.017, 445.020, 445.021)
  • Other diversion services (445.017, 445.018,
    445.020 F.S.)
  • Non-custodial parent employment programs (445.065
    F.S.)
  • Programs are established in law and the TANF
    State Plan
  • Transitional services
  • Diversions
  • Non-custodial parent employment programs
  • Youth program
  • Working needy poor programs

11
The Four Purposes of TANF
TANF Purpose Number Three
  • Prevent and reduce the incidence of
    out-of-wedlock pregnancies and establish annual
    numerical goals for preventing and reducing the
    incidence of these pregnancies
  • Not restricted by federal law to needy or
    families
  • All activities must further the purpose
  • Is not limited to youth
  • Often includes media campaigns and youth programs

12
The Four Purposes of TANF
TANF Purpose Number Four
  • Encourage the formation and maintenance of two
    parent families
  • Does not include the term needy
  • Does include the terms two parent families
  • May include
  • Family counseling
  • Parental counseling
  • Parenting classes
  • Visitation arrangements

13
The Four Purposes of TANF
Rule of Thumb
  • For purposes two, three and four, only
    non-assistance may be provided when appropriate
  • Non-assistance is defined as
  • Childcare, transportation, and other supportive
    services provided to families that are employed
  • Non-recurrent, short term benefits, which are
    designed to deal with a specific crisis situation
    or episode of need and are not intended to meet
    recurrent or ongoing needs and will not extend
    beyond four months

14
Rule of Thumb
Non-assistance Continued
  • Work subsidies
  • Refundable earned income tax credits
  • Contributions to and distributions from IDAs
  • Education or training, including tuition
    assistance (not including stipends)
  • Counseling, case management, peer support, child
    care information and referral, transitional
    services, job retention, job advancement and
    other employment related services that do not
    provide basic income support

15
Penalties and Sanctions
  • Misusing TANF funds (intentional and not
    intentional)
  • Failing to meet minimum work requirements (4 of
    adjusted SFAG for each quarter)
  • Failing to enforce five year time limit
  • Failing to penalize recipients who refuse to
    engage in work (1-5 of adjusted SFAG)
  • Sanctioning parents needing childcare for child
    under 6

16
TANF Funds
TANF Funds Cannot Be Spent On
  • Medical services
  • Cost sharing or matching requirement of another
    federal program unless specifically authorized by
    federal law
  • The transfer to another federally funded program
    other than CCDF or the SSBG
  • The transfer directly in to another program.
    States must contract for services and benefits
  • The construction or purchase of buildings,
    facilities or real estate
  • The general expenses required to carry out other
    responsibilities of the State (roads, etc.)
  • Penalties or fines imposed by the court
  • Parent fees for child care

17
TANF Funds
TANF Funds MUST Be Spent On
  • Necessary costs
  • Reasonable costs
  • Allocable costs

18
Using TANF Funds in the WT Program
Flexibility Provided Under Federal Law
  • Diversions
  • Work Activities-must be aligned with State
    Statute definitions under 445.024
  • Worksite development
  • Combining worksite and education
  • Education and services for English Speakers of
    Other Languages (ESOL)
  • Subsidies for employers
  • Employment related training
  • Mentoring programs
  • Support services
  • Employer and participant incentives
  • Transitional services

19
Using TANF Funds in the WT Program
Innovation
  • MDRC at http//www.mdrc.org/publications_inpractic
    e.html provides How to Guides with ideas for
    moving participants from welfare to work
  • Community service program that work
  • Employer led programs
  • Promoting participation
  • HHS provides information regarding programs at
    http//www.acf.dhhs.gov/

20
Using TANF Funds in the WT Program
Innovation
  • Successful programs are including specific
    elements
  • Mentoring
  • Social work inclusion
  • Community agency inclusion in case management
    processes (staff meetings, case staffing)
  • Detailed self-sufficiency plan and required
    updates
  • Staff training to deal with difficult people,
    difficult situations, community agency referrals
    and balancing work (calendars, clients,
    paperwork, etc.)
  • Reasonable caseload size
  • Employment service staff that secure worksites,
    mentor clients, provide training to employers,
    meet with clients and employers, develop goals
    with clients and employers, conduct frequent
    evaluations, etc.

21
Establishing TANF Projects
  • The RWB utilizes TANF dollars to establish both
    the WT program, locally, and other projects
  • First determine the key principles
  • What is the program providing?
  • Who is the program serving?
  • What purpose is the program serving?
  • Are there any provisions in Federal Regulations,
    the TANF State Plan or State law?
  • Was the program successful?

22
Key Principles
  • What provisions does the RWB want to provide to
    the population?
  • Assess the need
  • List out the services that will be provided
  • List the activities that will be included in the
    project
  • Who is the program serving?
  • Assess the need
  • Determine the population needs to be served

23
Key Principles
  • Why?
  • Do these services need to be provided?
  • Is the population in need?
  • What is the need?
  • Based on the why, what purpose does the
    services and program provisions further?
  • Ensure all activities further the purpose
    selected
  • Outline the eligibility guidelines based on the
    purpose
  • Develop local operating procedures

24
Key Principles
  • Are there any provisions in federal or State law?
  • Check the State Plan to ensure the provisions and
    services are allowed and included in the States
    TANF program delivery design
  • Statutes already outline diversions, transitional
    benefits and work activity definitions so, use
    this information
  • Federal law limits certain activities for work
    participation rate inclusion

25
Key Principles
  • What is the RWB trying to accomplish?
  • Was the program successful?
  • Before the program ever begins, develop the goals
  • Number of persons the project will serve
  • Number of persons the project will train
  • Number of persons that will obtain a job
  • Number of employed persons that will gain an
    increase in pay, increase in benefits, or a
    higher paying job
  • The percentage of youth that will not become
    pregnant
  • The number of non-custodial parent visitation
    hours per parent
  • The number of months non-custodial parents
    maintain child support

26
Key Principles
Non-custodial Parents
  • Must reside in the State of Florida
  • Must have a related child residing in the State
    of Florida
  • Custodial family must be included in income
    requirements (if required based on purpose or
    program)
  • Non-custodial parent must be engaged with Child
    Support Enforcement (particularly for TANF
    purpose number two) to pay child support

27
Local Operating Procedures
Put It In Writing
  • Reduce differential treatment
  • Provide guidance to participants and staff
  • Are guidelines that may be presented in a
    grievance
  • Provide documentation to review in case of
    monitoring or an audit
  • Should be developed prior to program
    implementation
  • Each update should be documented and previous
    versions retained

28
Questions to Consider
  • Can we provide training and education to
    unemployed individuals who are not on cash
    assistance?
  • Can we provide support services to individuals
    who are unemployed and not on cash assistance?
  • Can we develop a project to serve sanctioned WT
    participants?
  • Can we provide employment services to applicants
    of cash assistance without providing Up-Front
    Diversion cash payments?

29
Questions to Consider
  • Can we re-train a WT participant who has quit
    work to go back to school?
  • Can we train a WT participant to obtain a job
    that is not high demand?
  • What activity can be developed for a refugee or
    immigrant without the ability to work?
  • What activities can be developed for a person who
    has low education scores and has not retained
    employment longer than a month?

30
The End
  • Your questions and comments
  • Thank you for attending
  • Please, do not hesitate to contact us if you need
    assistance
  • Erica Mott erica.mott_at_awi.state.fl.us
  • JenniLee Robins jrobins_at_workforceflorida.com
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