The
Nation...
This
Week
in Poverty: Disposable Families in Ohio
by Greg
Kaufmann
June 15,
2012
Editor’s
Note: This is long, but worthy of your time.
Since
January 2011, Ohio has thrown nearly 70,000 people—including 40,000
children—off
of the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) cash assistance
program,
called Ohio Works First (OWF). That’s nearly 25 percent of the state’s
TANF
caseload. The reason? The state faces up to $130 million in federal
penalties
if 50 percent of the adults receiving assistance don’t meet the federal
work
participation requirement by September 30.
“Seventy
thousand people is more than the entire TANF roll in thirty-nine
states,” says
Jack Frech, director of the Athens County Department of Job and Family
Services
in Appalachian Ohio, where he has worked with poor people for over
thirty
years. “You can imagine if someone announced they were going to throw
all the
children in Virginia off of cash assistance it would be national news.
But that
many get thrown off in Ohio and it’s barely even local news.”
Like Ohio,
four other states face similar penalties for achieving low
work-participation
rates among TANF recipients in 2007. Advocates assert that forcing
states to
maintain those rates during a recession runs counter to the program’s
goal of
providing basic assistance to children in poverty.
Last year
Ohio applied for relief from its penalty. But according to Liz Schott,
senior
fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities (CBPP), the
state’s
circumstances didn’t meet the “limited bases for relief” under federal
statute,
so the Obama administration denied its request
“Ohio’s
response has been to reduce the rolls as quickly as possible, by any
means
possible,” says Frech, adding that the people who are now getting
kicked off of
the program are the very people who have the greatest barriers to work.
A
recent report from the Urban Institute identifies many of those
barriers,
including: mental and physical health challenges; lack of a high school
diploma; caring for a child with special needs or another family member
with a
disability; and living with domestic violence. The authors conclude
that the
“one-size-fits all work approach” doesn’t work for parents who face
significant
barriers to employment.
“More than
50 percent of OWF recipients went to work in prior years and some
managed to
get off the rolls,” says Frech. “Many of the people who are left now
are the
folks who have the greatest barriers. So now we start over and say, OK,
now 50 percent
of the remaining people still have to work. That’s unfair on the face
of it.
The logical question we should be asking is this: Should we be denying
families
with children any cash whatsoever to live on—just because we’re not
able to get
their parents to go to a thirty-hour work assignment somewhere?”
Lisa
Hamler-Fugitt, executive director of the Ohio Association of Second
Harvest
Foodbanks in Columbus, has worked on poverty-related issues for
twenty-five
years. She agrees with Frech, adding, “Welfare policy has been
completely
disconnected from the realities that states and communities and
families are
facing every day.”
Indeed,
when families are cut off from TANF cash assistance, many are left to
survive
on food stamps (SNAP) alone, with no other cash income. In fact, the
United
States Department of Agriculture (USDA) reported that in 2010 nearly 20
percent
of SNAP households fit that description.
“And Ohio
is busy adding to that total by throwing tens of thousands of families
off OWF
every year,” says Frech.
Ohio is
hardly alone in this post–welfare reform phenomenon in which families
are left
to fend for themselves. The welfare reform law in 1996 created the TANF
block
grant, replacing Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC), which
had guaranteed
cash assistance to eligible families since 1935. States were given wide
discretion to determine eligibility, benefit levels and time limits,
and the
block grant was also frozen at the 1996 level without being indexed to
inflation; so the scarce dollars that families do get don’t stretch as
far as
they did in 1996.
Prior to
welfare reform, for every 100 families living in poverty, there were
sixty-eight families receiving cash assistance through AFDC. By 2010,
just
twenty-seven received cash assistance for every 100 families in
poverty. A
majority of states now provide benefits at less than 30 percent of the
poverty
line (about $5,200 annually for a family of three), and benefits are
below half
the poverty line in every state. In Ohio, the maximum benefit for a
family of
three is about $450 per month.
In his new
book, So Rich, So Poor: Why It’s So Hard to End Poverty in America,
Georgetown
University Law Center professor Peter Edelman notes that the difficulty
in
obtaining cash assistance along with the proliferation of low-wage work
has led
to a dramatic rise in the number of people living in “deep
poverty”—below half
the poverty line (less than $8,700 annually for a family of three).
That number
skyrocketed from 12.6 million people in 2000 to 20.5 million people in
2010, an
increase of over 60 percent.
Frech says
Ohio’s caseload reduction has resulted in the state’s distributing $10
million
less per month in cash assistance. Additionally, when a person is
thrown off
cash assistance due to a sanction—like a missed work assignment—he or
she can
be removed from the food stamp program as well. The state also has the
option
to throw the individual off of Medicaid. So a single mother with two
kids, for
example, suddenly finds herself with no cash assistance, one-third less
food
stamps and no Medicaid.
“The
punishment is just brutal,” says Frech. “And essentially what we are
doing is
sanctioning the poorest, most vulnerable families in the state by [more
than]
$120 million a year to avoid the $130 million penalty.”
Schott says
that Ohio likely could reach its work-participation rate target largely
through
its new Ohio Works Now (OWN) program, which pays employed low-income
families
that receive SNAP a $10 per month TANF benefit, and in that way raising
the
percentage of TANF recipients who are working. Oregon is in a similar
position
to Ohio, and has relied heavily on its version of an OWN-like program
in order
to raise the state’s work participation rate. This approach has allowed
Oregon
to avoid aggressive sanctioning and also the burdensome application
process
that keeps many Ohioans from even getting through the “front door” of
the cash
assistance program in the first place.
“The fact
is the work participation rate [rule] is so broken it interferes with
states’
efforts to connect families to work, and it drives states to use harsh
policies
to not serve families, by keeping people off or kicking them off,” says
Schott.
But Frech
says he has been a lonely voice in protesting Ohio’s aggressive
approach to throwing
people off of the rolls. He says the County Welfare Directors
Association “is
wholeheartedly embracing and supporting this,” and the Ohio Department
of Jobs
and Family Services “is basically taking the position that these folks
are just
lazy, they don’t want to work, and we have no choice but to sanction
them
off—they are choosing to sanction themselves off by not showing up for
work.
Never mind that 78 percent of OWF participants don’t even own a
vehicle—who can
afford a car if you’re living off $400 a month?—and travel allowances
average
just $25 to $50 per month. Pretty tough to get to the
thirty-hours-per-week
work assignment—especially for people in rural areas like Athens
County.”
Frech also
says there is way too much silence from people in Ohio advocacy groups
whom he
has considered friends and allies for decades
“They’re
all scared to death of the governor,” he says. “They’ve all basically
been told
if the state has to pay this $130 million penalty it’s going to come
out of
your budgets.”
Hamler-Fugitt
has a different take.
“We’ve been
consumed with fighting off legislative efforts to drug test cash
assistance
applicants and a total war on all fronts on SNAP benefits,” she says.
“We may
not be blasting [politicians] in the media, but we’re attempting to
have
meaningful conversations and bring folks to understand the broader
issue.”
She is
hopeful that Governor John Kasich is hearing the advocacy community and
that he
will “carry our message back to Congress and the Obama Administration.”
“We’ve got
to sit down and negotiate a better deal on welfare,” she says. “We’ve
got to
index the block grant to keep pace with inflation, fix these work
participation
rates and put a moratorium on these penalties. The biggest increases in
demand
for emergency food we are now seeing is coming from what could formerly
be
described as solidly middle-income or upper-income communities. And
when
poverty hits the ’burbs like this, you know we got serious problems in
this
country.”
So far, the
Obama administration has remained silent on the Ohio approach to
caseload
reductions—an approach similar to that taken by many states across the
nation.
“There is
no acknowledgment from the administration that this policy leads to
children
living on food stamps with no cash income whatsoever,” says Frech. “It
goes
unacknowledged because no one likes to point the finger at Bill Clinton
and
Newt Gingrich and John Kasich—and everyone else who keeps saying
welfare reform
worked—and say honestly, ‘Your welfare reform plan stinks. It doesn’t
work. It
increases deep poverty and hardship for children.’ Whom do you report
child
neglect to when the greatest perpetrator is the state?”
If you’re a
regular reader of this blog, you know that janitors in Houston are on
strike,
seeking a raise to $10 an hour over the next three years. They are
currently
paid an hourly wage of $8.35 and earn an average of $8,684 annually,
despite
cleaning the offices of some of the largest and most powerful
corporations in
the world—Chevron, ExxonMobil, Wells Fargo, Shell, JPMorgan Chase, and
others.
Yesterday,
more than 450 people gathered in the city’s Skyline District at a
peaceful
demonstration calling for the end of poverty-wage jobs in Houston. They
were
outside JP Morgan Chase when police horses trampled some protesters,
including
janitor Hernan Trujillo (whom I interviewed here). A woman who
attempted to
assist Trujillo after he fell was arrested.
“There’s a
great deal at stake for all of Houston. We are not going to be
intimidated by
the Houston Police Department and we are not going to be intimidated by
the
building owners like Shell, Exxon, or JP Morgan Chase,” Tom Balanoff,
president
of SEIU Local 1, told me. “We will be in the streets now and in the
coming days
until we win justice for Houston’s janitors.”
The Senate
continued consideration of the Farm Bill, which currently includes a
$4.5
billion cut to SNAP over ten years, reducing benefits by $90 per month
for an
estimated 500,000 households. Since the average SNAP household receives
$284
per month ($4.46 per person, per day), the proposed cut is deep and
significant.
Fortunately
Senator Kirsten Gillibrand has introduced an amendment that restores
the $4.5
billion cut to SNAP over ten years and invests $500 million in the
Fresh Fruit
and Vegetable Snack program, which provides healthy produce to more
than 3
million children through their local schools. The Gillibrand amendment
seems to
be gaining momentum, with more senators singing on as cosponsors. You
can reach
your senators and tell them to cosponsor through the Senate switchboard
at
(202) 224-3121.
“Nearly
half of every SNAP dollar goes to feed children, and with one in five
children
already affected by hunger, Senator Gillibrand’s amendment comes at a
critical
moment for America’s kids,” said Bruce Lesley, president of First Focus
Campaign for Children.
The
importance of food stamps as an anti-poverty measure can’t be
overstated. The
program lifted 3.9 million Americans above the poverty line in 2010,
including
1.7 million children and 280,000 seniors. The average beneficiary
household has
an income of only 57 percent of the federal poverty line (about $9,900
for a
family of three), and 84 percent of all benefits go to households with
a child,
senior or disabled person. It’s also worth noting that USDA research
indicates
that every dollar of SNAP benefits generates $1.79 in economic activity.
A good way
to stay informed about this bill is to sign up for the Food Research
and Action
Center’s email alerts and bookmark its Farm Bill 2012 page.
See the
video and read the article at The Nation
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