|
Article
from the March 11, 2005 edition of the CHN Human Needs Report:
Bipartisan TANF Bill Passes Senate Finance Committee (3/11/05)
All
but one of the Senate Finance Committee members present* voted to
approve the PRIDE bill (Personal Responsibility and Individual Development
for Everyone) at the Committee's March 9 mark-up meeting.
The
bill would reauthorize Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF)
and the Child Care and Development Block Grant through fiscal year
2010. It is most likely to reach the Senate floor sometime after
the beginning of April. In the interim, Congress will have to pass
another TANF extension, since the law is due to expire again at
the end of March.
The brief debate at the
mark-up was notable for the generally cooperative spirit among senators,
and for a passionate defense of new child care funding included
in the bill. The bill adds $6 billion in new child care funds compared
with current law. Although he voted for the PRIDE bill, Senator
Santorum (R-PA) was unenthusiastic about the additional child care
funding, saying that child care is a “Washington- based issue,”
that it was “not out in the states and communities.”
That dismissal prompted strong defenses of the need for child care
by Senators Hatch, Lincoln, Grassley and Snowe. Senator Hatch (R-UT)
recognized the large number of single mothers raising children and
said that it is not possible to increase work requirements without
more child care. He said adding child care funding is “the
right thing to do, the conservative thing to do.” Senator
Lincoln (D-AR) identified with other parents whose work demands
made child care a necessity. Chairman Grassley (R-IA) noted increased
funding for child care is needed to compensate for increased costs
of care due to inflation and for the increase in work requirements.
The discussion of child
care funding was also marked by concern about one of the offsets
found from the Earned Income Tax Credit, which would appear to deny
the EITC to certain immigrant families (see below). Chairman Grassley
(R-IA) pledged to see if redrafting could avoid loss of the EITC
by those immigrants who are currently receiving it. Senator Bingaman
(D-NM) announced that he would offer an amendment on the floor to
replace that offset with revenues from reducing tax avoidance by
corporations and individuals with overseas income.
Among the key provisions
in PRIDE:
• An increase in
the required work hours , to 34 per week for parents with children
older than 6, and to 24 per week for parents with children younger
than 6. States receive partial credit for adults working fewer hours
and extra credit for more than 34 hours of work per week. (Under
current law, states either receive full credit or
nothing.)
•
More activities counting towards the work requirement: for the first
24 hours of work per week, an important improvement in work activities
is included. In addition to paid or unpaid employment, job search,
and limited amounts of vocational training, PRIDE allows up to 6
months out of 24 for literacy training and rehabilitation services
for substance abuse or disabilities, with the possibility of extending
rehab services beyond six months to overcome work barriers. Postsecondary
education may count for 3 months out of 24 for the first 24 hours
of work per week. In addition, PRIDE includes the Parents as Scholars
program, for up to 10 percent of the TANF caseload to engage in
postsecondary education for longer periods.
• More child care
funding: the bill includes $6 billion more than current law in mandatory
child care funds over 5 years. The Committee paid for some of the
child care increase with modifications to the Earned Income Tax
Credit and Child Tax Credit. Although some of the changes closed
loopholes allowing people with higher incomes to claim these credits,
one controversial change would bar certain low-income families with
one or more family members who are immigrants from claiming the
EITC.
• Increase for
SSBG: The Social Services Block Grant is increased by
$1 billion over 5 years, paid for SSI pre-effectuation reviews.
• Increased funds
for marriage promotion: $1 billion in federal funds over 5 years,
of which $500 million is for matching grants to states and $500
million is for research and demonstration projects related to marriage.
Certain domestic violence and privacy protections have been included.
• Responsible Fatherhood
funding: $100 million over 5 years is provided in mandatory funding
for state demonstration projects plus $150 million over 5 years
in national demonstrations.
• The work participation
rate required of states rises gradually to 70 percent (from the
current 50 percent). This rate can be reduced by a new employment
credit; that is, states get credit when adults in families leaving
TANF find work; the state gets extra credit when jobs pay above
a certain minimum. Current law gives states credit for caseload
reduction, whether or not employment is achieved. States that fail
to meet the work participation rates will not incur financial penalties
if they show a 5 percentage point improvement in work rates.
• Additional grants
to states: The PRIDE bill includes $200 million over 5 years for
capitalizing and developing social services programs that serve
TANF recipients; $125 million for grants for low-income car ownership;
$1 billion for transitional jobs and business links programs for
job development; and $5 million over 5 years for a national teen
pregnancy prevention resource center.
• Child support
improvements: These provisions allow more child support dollars
to go to families rather than being retained by government and provide
additional enforcement tools.
• Transitional
Medical Assistance: Families leaving TANF will be eligible for continuing
Medicaid for 12 months with a state option to continue coverage
for an additional year.
• Tribal TANF:
PRIDE increases financial support to tribes operating their own
TANF programs.
A
number of amendments are expected to be offered on the floor as
PRIDE moves forward. Senator Bingaman, in addition to his amendment
to change the offset for child care, will offer amendments to allow
states to continue operating their TANF programs under waiver authority
(co-sponsored with Senator Wyden (D-OR)), and to clarify that state
and local governments are allowed to use their own funds to provide
health services to immigrants. Senator Smith (R-OR) is expected
to offer an amendment giving states the option to count individuals
receiving rehabilitative services towards the work participation
rate, if needed, beyond six months. Senator Baucus (D- MT) said
that he would offer an amendment related to abstinence only programs.
Senator Baucus and many other co-sponsors filed an amendment to
include the Immigrant Children's Health Improvement Act (ICHIA)
in PRIDE, giving states the option to cover eligible legal immigrant
pregnant women and children under Medicaid and SCHIP. It was not
included.
* Senator Lott (R-MS)
voted against the PRIDE bill. The other members present for the
mark-up were Grassley, Baucus, Bingaman, Hatch, Lincoln, Santorum,
Smith, Snowe, Thomas, and Wyden.
Coalition
on Human Needs
1120 Connecticut Ave. NW Suite 910 Washington, DC 20036
phone: (202) 223-2532 fax: (202) 223-2538 email: chn@chn.org
|