Welfare Policy: TANF Reauthorization

February, 2004


Issue

In 1996, a new welfare program based on state block grants, the Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF) program, became law, replacing the Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) program. TANF eliminated the AFDC entitlement to assistance, mandating work as a condition of receiving benefits, imposing time limits and sanctions, focusing on family formation issues, and putting most of the control over the programs into the hands of the states. TANF was set to expire on October 1, 2002, but Congress was unable to complete work reauthorizing the law. The current program has simply been extended on a quarterly basis, with the current extension set to expire March 31, 2004.

Background

The House of Representatives passed a TANF bill last year (H.R. 4) that mirrored the Administration’s proposal. The Unites States Conference of Catholic Bishops’ (USCCB) and Catholic Charities USA (CCUSA) declined to support the bill. In the Senate, the Finance Committee approved a bill which overall fell short of addressing our policy priorities. The full Senate has yet to act on the bill. (Go to the USCCB and CCUSA website addresses listed below for more information on the bills).

Key Issues:
Supports for Working Families: For families leaving welfare, the availability of work supports, such as child care, health care, and food stamps, can be a key to making a lasting transition to self-sufficiency. Congress should make sure families leaving TANF have a full year of transitional Medicaid, and should include sufficient additional resources to ensure that low-income working families have access to adequate and safe child care. We also urge Congress to restore funding to the Social Services Block Grant program, through which states and agencies can provide crucial support services to families leaving TANF.

Work provisions: States must have specific percentages of TANF recipients engaged in “work activities,” or they lose part of their federal TANF grant as a penalty. A final TANF bill may increase the work requirements that states and welfare recipients must meet. USCCB and CCUSA support continuing TANF’s emphasis on work, but we urge Congress not to change the work requirements in ways that could limit states’ flexibility to develop programs that help recipients get decent jobs so they can support their families, or that put undue burdens on parents.

Also important is what activities states are allowed to count as “work.” We have urged that states be allowed to count genuine education and training as work for more than the 12 months currently allowed. Substance abuse and mental or physical health problems can be significant barriers to work. The work requirements should also be structured to allow TANF recipients to get the help they need in these areas, and to reflect the needs of those caring for young children or disabled family members.

Fairness for Legal Immigrants: The Catholic Community has long advocated for the availability of basic necessities to all those in need, regardless of their race, creed, ethnic origin, or nationality, and we have worked to restore necessary benefit eligibility for legal immigrants. We strongly urge the Congress to restore full benefits eligibility for legal immigrants. The restriction on assistance to legal immigrants and their families was a major reason we opposed the 1996 welfare reform act. Restoring this help is a major priority for the USCCB and CCUSA.

Marriage and Family Issues: The Catholic community has consistently affirmed the vital importance of marriage for raising children. Children do better economically, emotionally, and spiritually when raised by parents in the context of a stable, healthy marriage. A crucial first step in a pro-marriage policy is to end federal and state welfare rules that discriminate against two-parent families. USCCB and CCUSA also support: effective fatherhood programs; allowing states to pass-through child support directly to TANF families; funding for voluntary programs to support healthy marriages and strong families; and for research and technical assistance focusing on family formation and healthy marriage activities.

Twenty-three states have exercised their option under TANF law to deny benefits to children born while their family is receiving assistance. We will continue to oppose strongly the family cap option based upon both our pro-life and social justice convictions.

TANF Funding: The TANF block grant should be increased to reflect inflation, and additional assistance to states with historically low spending or experiencing economic difficulties should continue.

Our Position:

USCCB and CCUSA support welfare reform policies that: Protect human life and dignity; strengthen family life; encourage and reward work; preserve a safety net for the vulnerable; build public/private partnerships to overcome poverty; and invest in human dignity.

A central goal for TANF reauthorization should be to address the moral scandal of so much poverty in the richest nation on earth. Poverty reduction requires a three-pronged strategy of:

  • Supporting work,
  • Strengthening marriage and family life, and
  • Sustaining the needy and vulnerable among us, especially our children

Action Requested

Let your Senators and Representatives know that you want them to make our welfare system more effective at reducing poverty. Key priorities include:

  • restoring benefits eligibility to legal immigrants;
  • providing at least $5.5 billion in new mandatory child care assistance for working parents and providing year-long transitional Medicaid;
  • maintaining current law on hourly work requirements for participants, especially for parents with children under 6;
  • giving states greater flexibility to count genuine education and training as work; and
  • supporting marriage and families by removing barriers to two parent families receiving assistance and providing counseling resources to low-income couples where appropriate.

Resources

Moral Principles and Policy Priorities for Welfare Reform (1995); Putting Children and Families First (1992); TANF Reauthorization comments submitted to HHS by SDWP and by CCUSA, November 2001 Web sites: www.usccb.org www.catholiccharitiesusa.org

Contacts:
Kathy Curran, 202-541-3188, kcurran@usccb.org; Mark Gallagher 202-541-3142, mgallagher@usccb.org, Sharon Daly, 703-549-1390, sdaly@catholiccharitiesusa.org; Lisa Smith, 703-549-1390 lsmith@catholiccharitiesusa.org

Email us at sdwpmail@usccb.org
Social Development and World Peace | 3211 4th Street, N.E., Washington DC 20017-1194 | (202) 541-3180 © USCCB. All rights reserved.





Email us at JPHDmail@usccb.org
Justice, Peace and Human Development | 3211 4th Street, N.E., Washington DC 20017-1194 | (202) 541-3180 © USCCB. All rights reserved.