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One Year after Federal Welfare Reform

A Description of State Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) Decisions as of October 1997

Other Availability: PDF | Printer-Friendly Page
Posted to Web: May 01, 1998
Permanent Link: http://www.urban.org/url.cfm?ID=307472

Assessing the New Federalism is a multi-year Urban Institute project designed to analyze the devolution of responsibility for social programs from the federal government to the states, focusing primarily on health care, income security, job training, and social services. Researchers monitor program changes and fiscal developments. In collaboration with Child Trends, Inc., the project studies changes in family well-being. The project aims to provide timely, nonpartisan information to inform public debate and to help state and local decisionmakers carry out their new responsibilities more effectively.

Key components of the project include a household survey, studies of policies in 13 states, and a database with information on all states and the District of Columbia, available at the Urban Institute's Web site. This paper is one in a series of occasional papers analyzing information from these and other sources.

The nonpartisan Urban Institute publishes studies, reports, and books on timely topics worthy of public consideration. The views expressed are those of the authors and should not be attributed to The Urban Institute, its trustees, or its funders.

The authors thank Sheila Zedlewski, Michael Wiseman, and the many state officials and others who provided comments on earlier drafts of this paper.

Notes: Those wishing to print this report may find it easier to use the PDF Version.


Contents


Tables

Table 1. Asset Limits for Recipients
Table 2. Asset Limit Implementation Dates
Table 3. Income Eligibility Limits for Recipients in the Initial Month and after One Year of Earnings for a Family of Three with No Unearned Income or Child Care Expenses, October 1997 and July 1996
Table 4. Diversion Assistance Payments under TANF
Table 5. Eligibility Rules and Time Limits for Two-Parent, Nondisabled Families
Table 6. State Time Limits, Exemptions, and Extensions
Table 7. Time Limit Implementation Dates
Table 8. Work Requirement Exemption Based on Age of Youngest Child
Table 9. Work Exemption Based on Age of Youngest Child Policy Implementation Dates
Table 10. Sanction Policies for Noncompliance with Work Activities Requirements
Table 11. Work Activities Sanction Policy Implementation Dates
Table 12. States Requiring Nonexempt Recipients to Engage in Employment or Unpaid Work Experience
Table 13. Monthly Benefit for a Single Parent with Two Children and No Income, October 1997 and July 1996
Table 14. Earnings Disregard Policies for TANF Recipients
Table 15. Earnings Disregard Policy Implementation Dates
Table 16. States with Family Cap Provisions
Table 17. Family Cap Implementation Dates
Table 18. Amount of Child Support Pass-Through
Table 19. Program Rules Determined by Counties
Table 20. States Allowing Counties to Obtain Waivers of TANF Program Rules
Table A.1 Detailed Income Eligibility Rules for TANF Recipients
Table A.2 Detailed Sanction Rules for Noncompliance with Work Requirements

Introduction

The Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 (PRWORA) created the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) block grant, replacing the Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) program and giving states flexibility to create new cash assistance programs for families with children. While the federal legislation establishes a variety of minimum requirements in some areas, there is considerable flexibility for states to exceed these minimum requirements and a number of areas are open to state discretion.(1)

This paper reviews some of the major decisions that states have made regarding the design of cash assistance programs under TANF, based on information available as of October 1997. This time period is appropriate because by October 1997 all state TANF plans had been approved and most states had enacted legislation in response to the new TANF block grant. Not all aspects of TANF programs are included in this review, however. State decisions concerning immunization requirements, treatment of interstate migrants, and teen parent school attendance requirements are among those not included in this paper. We focus on some of the major decisions regarding program eligibility and benefits, time limits, and work requirements.(2)

The following section of the paper discusses the sources used for the descriptions of state programs. The remaining sections describe different aspects of state programs as follows:

  • Asset limits
  • Income eligibility limits
  • Diversion assistance payments
  • Eligibility of two-parent families
  • Definition of time limits
  • Exemptions from time limits
  • Extensions to time limits
  • Implementation dates of time limits
  • Work exemptions based on the age of youngest child
  • Work sanctions
  • Work requirement time limits
  • Benefit amounts
  • Earnings disregards
  • Family caps
  • Child support pass-through

For each of these sections we describe briefly how these provisions were applied under the former AFDC program and under waivers, the changes made by PRWORA, and the decisions that states have made concerning each provision. The final section describes the potential for county variation within states.


Information Sources

Although all states have now replaced their AFDC programs with TANF-funded programs, the timing of the implementation of new programs has differed across states. Some states are continuing many of the program elements that had been in place under waivers before the passage of PRWORA. Others have redesigned their cash assistance programs since PRWORA, as reflected in the TANF plans submitted by the states to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). Several states have enacted new state legislation since the time that their state plan was originally submitted, modifying their existing program or creating an entirely new one.

The information sources used for this paper reflect this variety of ways that state programs have developed. For all states, TANF plans were obtained from DHHS and reviewed to understand the basic decisions made by the states. For states maintaining elements of their waivers under TANF, the terms and conditions of these waivers were used, along with information collected by the Urban Institute concerning which waiver provisions have been implemented. State legislation and/or regulations pertaining to TANF-funded programs were used in many cases to further understand state decisions, especially for states in which legislation was enacted after the submission of the original state plan. In a number of states, caseworker manuals for cash assistance programs were used to extract more detailed information about program rules. For the section on child support, information collected by the federal Office of Child Support Enforcement was used in conjunction with the aforementioned sources. Finally, a draft version of this paper was sent to TANF administrators in all 50 states and the District of Columbia for review, and subsequent comments were incorporated into the final paper.

The program rules described in this paper reflect the most recent information available on state programs as of October 1997.(3) For some states, the program rules described here have already been implemented; however for other states in which legislation has recently been enacted, the provisions may not have been implemented yet. We provide information on dates of implementation for different program rules in tables in each section. For states in which the program is in the process of being phased in across the state, we describe the program that will be in place once the phase-in is complete.(4)


Eligibility

Asset Limits(5)

Under AFDC, families receiving assistance were not allowed to accumulate more than $1,000 in countable resources. This limit excluded the value of certain assets, including the value of a vehicle up to $1,500. Under waivers, many states increased the asset limit for recipient families, increased the value of the vehicle exemption, or allowed families to establish restricted savings accounts. Restricted savings accounts allow recipients to contribute earned income to an account to be used for certain specified purposes, and the savings accumulated are not counted toward the asset limit.

Under PRWORA, the federal government made no provisions regarding asset limits, including vehicle exclusions, so states have the flexibility to set their own asset rules. PRWORA did give states the authority to use TANF funds to create individual development accounts (IDAs), a form of restricted savings account that allows recipients to accumulate savings to be used for postsecondary education, homeownership, and business capitalization.

Table 1 shows the asset limits that states have adopted under TANF. Thirty-nine states have increased the asset limit for recipients above the $1,000 limit allowed under AFDC. Forty-eight states have increased the vehicle exemption from the $1,500 exemption allowed under AFDC, with 22 states excluding at least the full value of the first vehicle from consideration. Twenty-two states allow recipients to accumulate additional savings in a restricted savings account set aside for a specific purpose allowed by the state.

Table 2 shows the implementation dates for changes in policy regarding the total countable asset limit. Implementation dates for changes to vehicle exemption and restricted savings account policy are not shown. The table shows whether current policies were adopted before 1992, between 1992 and the passage of PRWORA (August 1996), or after the passage of PRWORA. The time period between 1992 and the passage of PRWORA roughly corresponds to the time period in which states were implementing changes under waivers. However, some waivers that were approved prior to passage of PRWORA were not implemented until the state began its TANF program.

Twelve states have maintained the asset limit that was set for recipients under the former AFDC program. Eleven states implemented changes to the AFDC asset limit through a waiver. The remaining 28 states implemented changes to their asset limit after the passage of PRWORA. Of the states that changed their asset limit, five implemented it in selected counties and later expanded it to cover all counties.


Table 1. Asset Limits for Recipients


State Asset Limit Vehicle Exemption Restricted
Savings Account

Alabama $2,000/3,000(32)                     One vehicle(30) ---
Alaska   1,000 All vehicles for approved purposes(31) ---
Arizona   2,000 One vehicle 9,000
Arkansas   3,000 One vehicle *
California   2,000/3,000(32) 4,650 5,000
Colorado   2,000 One vehicle *
Connecticut   3,000 One vehicle ---
Delaware   1,000 4,650 5,000
Dist. of Columbia   1,000 1,500 ---
Florida   2,000 8,500 ---
Georgia   1,000 4,650 5,000
Hawaii   5,000 One vehicle ---
Idaho   2,000 4,650 ---

State Asset Limit Vehicle Exemption Restricted
Savings Account

Illinois   3,000 One vehicle ---
Indiana   1,500 1,000 ---
Iowa   5,000 3,889(33) *
Kansas   2,000 One vehicle ---
Kentucky   2,000 One vehicle 5,000
Louisiana   2,000 10,000 6,000
Maine   2,000 One vehicle 10,000
Maryland   2,000 One vehicle ---
Massachusetts   2,500 5,000 ---
Michigan   3,000 One vehicle(34) ---
Minnesota   5,000(35) 7,500(36) ---

State Asset Limit Vehicle Exemption Restricted
Savings Account

Mississippi   1,000 1,500 ---
Missouri   5,000(37) One vehicle; $1,500 of second ---
Montana  3,000 One vehicle(38) No limit
Nebraska   4,000/6,000(39) One vehicle ---
Nevada   2,000 One vehicle ---
New Hampshire   2,000 One vehicle(40) ---
New Jersey   2,000 9,500 ---
New Mexico   1,500 One vehicle *
New York   2,000/3,000(41) 4,650 *
North Carolina   3,000 5,000 ---
North Dakota   5,000/8,000(42) One vehicle ---
Ohio   1,000 4,650 10,000
Oklahoma   1,000 5,000 2,000
Oregon  2,500/10,000(43) 10,000 *(44)

State Asset Limit Vehicle Exemption Restricted
Savings Account

Pennsylvania   1,000 One vehicle *
Rhode Island   1,000 4,650 ---(45)
South Carolina   2,500 10,000 10,000
South Dakota   2,000 4,650(46) 1,000
Tennessee   2,000 4,600 ---
Texas   2,000/3,000(47) 4,650 ---
Utah   2,000 8,000(48) ---
Vermont  1,000 One vehicle 10,000(49)
Virginia   1,000 7,500(50) 5,000
Washington   1,000 5,000(51) 3,000
West Virginia   2,000 4,500(52) ---
Wisconsin   2,500 10,000 ---
Wyoming   2,500 12,000(53) ---

Source: Urban Institute summary of state TANF decisions as of October 1997.

Note: Asset rules may differ for families applying for assistance and for families who are already receiving assistance. This table refers only to asset rules for recipient families.

* Limit on restricted savings is unspecified.




Table 2. Asset Limit Implementation Dates


Implementation of
Current Policy:

Implementation of
Current Policy

State Before
1/92
1/92–
8/96
After 8/96 State Before
1/92
1/92–
8/96
After 8/96

Alabama X Montana X*(54)
Alaska X Nebraska X
Arizona X Nevada X
Arkansas X New Hampshire X
California X New Jersey X
Colorado X New Mexico X
Connecticut X New York X
Delaware X North Carolina X
Dist. of Columbia X North Dakota X*(55)
Florida X(56) Ohio X
Georgia X Oklahoma X
Hawaii X Oregon X*(57)
Idaho X Pennsylvania X

Implementation of
Current Policy

Implementation of
Current Policy

State Before
1/92
1/92–
8/96
After 8/96 State Before
1/92
1/92–
8/96
After 8/96

Illinois X Rhode Island X
Indiana X South Carolina X
Iowa X South Dakota X
Kansas X Tennessee X
Kentucky X Texas X
Louisiana X Utah X*(58)
Maine X Vermont X
Maryland X Virginia X
Massachusetts X Washington X
Michigan X West Virginia X*(59)
Minnesota X(60) Wisconsin X
Mississippi X Wyoming X
Missouri X

Source: Urban Institute summary of state TANF decisions as of October 1997.

Note: This table refers only to the implementation of states' asset limits on total countable resources. The table does not reflect implementation dates for vehicle exemption and restricted savings accounts policies.

* Asset limit began in selected countries or with a limited number of cases and later expanded to cover all cases.

Income Eligibility Limits

Under AFDC, recipient families were subject to two income eligibility tests.(6) First, a family's income before earnings disregards (gross income) had to be less than 185 percent of the state's need standard. The need standard was based on each state's definition of the cost of meeting basic living needs for a family of a given size. Second, a family's income after the application of the earned income disregard (i.e., their net income) had to be less than the payment standard; otherwise the computed benefit would be less than zero and the family would be ineligible.(7) Under waivers, a few states made changes to income eligibility tests, such as removing the gross income test or setting income eligibility limits in relation to the federal poverty level. Changes to income eligibility limits were also made implicitly whenever states changed need or payment standards or modified earnings disregards under waivers. PRWORA did not specify the income eligibility tests that states were to use under TANF, and this implicitly gave them the flexibility to either maintain the AFDC eligibility rules or create new ones.

Many states have maintained the income eligibility tests that existed under AFDC, but several have made changes. Income eligibility rules under TANF are described in detail in table A.1. The rules themselves do not provide an easy basis for comparison of state policies for a number of reasons. First, some states compare income to the need or payment standard and others compare it to the poverty threshold, but without knowing the size of the need or payment standards relative to the poverty threshold it is difficult to compare eligibility limits. Second, a number of state policy choices--including benefit levels, earned income disregards, and income tests--interact in ways that make it difficult to understand the ultimate effect of these policies.

For these reasons, we have computed the income eligibility limit for a recipient family of three with no unearned income or child care expenses, in order to compare state policies.(8) The results of these calculations as of October 1997 and July 1996 are shown in table 3. Because the earned income disregard, which affects net income, varies over time in some states, we show income eligibility limits in the initial month and in the 13th month of earnings. The income eligibility limits (also referred to as breakevens) shown in table 3 should be interpreted as the earnings level at which eligibility ends for a recipient family of three. Families of three with earnings less than the amount shown would presumably receive a benefit.(9)

The first column shows that in the initial month, income eligibility limits in October 1997 vary from as high as $1,740 in Alaska to $400 in Texas. In 5 states--Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi, Nevada, and New Jersey--all earnings are disregarded in the initial month of earnings and there is no gross income limit, so there is effectively no earned income limit in the initial month. The limits at the thirteen month of earnings in October 1997 vary from $1,640 in Hawaii to $210 in Alabama. Income eligibility limits are lower in the 13th month than in the initial month in the 16 states that phase out earnings disregards over time.

The middle two columns in table 3 show the income eligibility limits in July 1996, just prior to the passage of PRWORA.(10) The final two columns in table 3 show how income eligibility limits have changed for recipients between July 1996 and October 1997. Ten states have made no changes to their income limits. Twenty-five states have increased the income limits for both the initial month and the 13th month of earnings, and two have lowered eligibility limits for both time periods. Six states have made changes to their earnings disregards that have caused the income eligibility limits to be lower in the initial month than they had been under AFDC but higher in the 13th month. Alabama has increased income limits in the first month but decreased them in the 13th month. Three states have increased income limits in the 13th month while the income limits in the first month remain unchanged, and two states have increased income limits in the first month while the income limits in the 13th month remain unchanged.(11)

Table 3. Income Eligibility Limits for Recipients in the Initial Month and after One Year of Earnings for a Family of Three with No Unearned Income or Child Care Expenses, October 1997 and July 1996


TANF Income Eligibility
Limit in October 1997

AFDC Income Eligibility
Limit in July 1996

Change in Income
Eligibility Limit

State 1st Month
of Earnings
13th Month
of Earnings
1st Month
of Earnings
13th Month
of Earnings
1st Month
of Earnings
13th Month
of Earnings

Alabama *(61) $210       $370         $250         **         ($50)        
Alaska $1,740       1,560       1,660       1,120       $70       440      
Arizona 590       590       640       440       (60)       150      
Arkansas 560       560       430       290       130       260      
California 1,360       1,360       1,220       1,220       140       140      
Colorado 750       510       750       510       nc       nc      
Connecticut 1,110(62) 1,110(62) 1,080(62) 1,080(62) 30       30      
Delaware 1,370       920       630       430       740       500            
Dist. of Columbia 690       470       740       510       (50)       (40)      
Florida 810       810       570       390       230       410      
Georgia 760       510       760       510       nc       nc      
Hawaii 1,640       1,640       1,190       800       450       840      
Idaho 610       610       600       410       20       210      
Illinois 1,110       1,110       1,080       1,080       30       30      
Indiana 550(63) 380(63) 550       380       nc       nc      
Iowa 1,070       1,070       1,070       1,070       nc       nc      
Kansas 790       790       760       520       30       280      
Kentucky *       650       910       620       **       30      
Louisiana 1,210       310       410       280       810       30      
Maine 1,020(64) 1,020(64) 950       640       70       380      
Maryland 520       520       680       460       (160)       60      
Massachusetts 1,050(65) 1,050(65) 1,050(65) 1,050(65) nc       nc      
Michigan 770       770       770       770       nc       nc      
Minnesota 1,310*** 1,310*** 920       620       **       **      
Mississippi *(66) 460       670       460       **       nc      
Missouri 560       380       560       380       nc       nc      
Montana 800       800       960       650       (160)       150      
Nebraska 670       670       670       450       nc       220      
Nevada *       440       640       440       **       nc      
New Hampshire 1,100       1,100       950       640       160       460      
New Jersey *       850       780       530       **       320      
New Mexico 720       720       700       480       20       240      
New York 1,070       1,070       990       670       80       400      
North Carolina 940       630       940       630       nc       nc      
North Dakota 1,140*** 1,140*** 770       520       **       **      
Ohio 930       930       930       630       nc       300      
Oklahoma 730       730       580       400       150       340      
Oregon 620       620       620       550       nc       70      
Pennsylvania 800       800       720       490       80       310      
Rhode Island 1,280       1,280       950       640       330       640      
South Carolina 930       630       910       610       20       20      
South Dakota 630       630       880       600       (250)       30      
Tennessee 830       830       1,140       770       (310)       60      
Texas 400       280       400       280       nc       nc      
Utah 950       950       950       950       nc       nc      
Vermont 960       960       950       950       20       20      
Virginia 1,110(67) 1,110(67) 1,080(67) 1,080(67) 30       30      
Washington 1,090       1,090       940       640       150       450      
West Virginia 440       440       500       340       (60)       100      
Wisconsin 1,280(68) 1,280(68) 740/900(69) 740/610(69) 540/380       540/670      
Wyoming 540       540       1,010       680       (470)       (140)      

Source: Urban Institute summary of state TANF decisions as of October 1997.

Notes: The income eligibility limit (also known as the breakeven) refers to the earnings level at which eligibility ends. However, most states do not pay benefits of less than $10, with the result that actual benefit eligibility ends at a slightly lower earnings level in these states. The income eligibility limits shown are for recipients; income eligibility limits may be different for applicant families. For states in which income eligibility levels vary within the state because of variation in benefit levels, the income limit shown is for the area with the largest portion of the state population.
    All values have been rounded to the nearest $10. Values in final two columns may not reflect the difference between the 1997 and 1996 values shown due to rounding error.

* There is effectively no income limit because 100 percent of earnings are disregarded in the initial month of earnings.

** Change cannot be determined because there is no income limit in 1997 or TANF and food stamps are issued as a combined benefit in 1997.

*** TANF and food stamps are issued as a combined benefit, with one set of program rules, so eligibility levels reflect both TANF and Food Stamps program rules.

"nc" indicates no change.

Numbers in parentheses indicate a reduction in income eligibility limits.

Diversion Assistance Payments

Diversion assistance payments are offered to families who are eligible for TANF with the intent of providing assistance to families with short-term needs.(70) By accepting the diversion assistance payment, the family generally agrees not to reapply for cash assistance for a specified period of time. Payment may be made in cash or as a vendor payment--that is, a restricted payment made directly to a third party for a specific purpose such as payment of rent or car repair. Often, diversion payments are a multiple of the maximum monthly benefit that a family would have received if the family received TANF. States sometimes provide supportive services such as child care or Medicaid along with diversion assistance.

Three states (Montana, Utah, and Virginia) began providing diversion assistance payments under waivers, but under TANF states are free to provide such payments without waivers and a total of 22 states have decided to do so. Table 4 shows the states that are providing diversion payments statewide under TANF and some of the major policy options they have concerning such payments, including the maximum payment amount, the form of the payment, the frequency with which a family is eligible for a payment, and the period of ineligibility following receipt of the diversion assistance payment. A typical maximum payment for many states is a payment equal to three months of cash assistance. Of the 21 states in which the method of payment is known, 11 make cash payments, 7 make cash or vendor payments, 1 (Maine) makes only vendor payments, and 2 (California and Colorado) have left the method of payment for counties to decide. Of the 16 states in which the frequency of payment is known, six allow a family to receive only one diversion payment in a lifetime and 10 allow the possibility of more than one payment to a family. The period of ineligibility for TANF following receipt of diversion assistance varies across states but is often equal to or greater than the number of months included in the diversion payment. In six states, there is no initial period of TANF ineligibility, but each state has a period of time where the diversion payment counts against the benefit.

Table 4. Diversion Assistance Payments under TANF


State Maximum Diversion
Assistance Payment(70)
Form of
Payment(71)
How Often
Payment
Can Be Received
Period of TANF
Ineligibility after
Receiving Payment

Alaska       2 months Cash Once per 12 months None (3 months)(72)
Arizona(73)       3 months Cash ** None (3 months)(74)
Arkansas       3 months Cash Once per lifetime 100 days
California        * * ** **
Colorado(75)        3 months * * *
Florida       2 months Cash Once per lifetime 3 months
Idaho       3 months Cash Once per lifetime Twice the number of months included in payment
Kentucky       $1,500 Cash or vendor Once per 12 months 12 months(76)
Maine