D.C.’s Longtime Welfare Recipients Facing Cuts To Assistance
The District government is looking to cut off assistance to longtime welfare recipients. More than 230,000 D.C. residents receive either food stamps, Medicaid help or welfare checks.
About 8 percent of those residents receive welfare checks from a federal program called Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, or TANF. But their eligibility only lasts five years.
“More than half of the clients we have on TANF have been on assistance for over five years,” [Department of Human Services Director David] Berns said. “We haven’t really had a community-focused way … into moving them into self-sufficiency, so they’ve languished in the system.”
The cutoff for TANF federal funding was put in place in 1996. But jurisdictions, including D.C., were slow to enforce that and often found supplemental funding through grants or other programs. Berns said the city is now spending several million dollars annually to keep paying benefits to individuals who ran out the clock on federal assistance.
Read more at: washingtonexaminer.com