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Twenty Years Since Welfare 'Reform' [CityLab.com]

 

As recently as April of this year, former president Bill Clinton defended the welfare reform bill he signed into law on August 22, 1996—twenty years ago today—as one of the great accomplishments of his presidency. The bill scrapped the welfare program known as Aid to Families With Dependent Children (AFDC) and created a new one that lasts to this day—Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF). There was a grandiose idea behind the change: TANF was no simple safety net; it was also meant to be a springboard to self-sufficiency through employment, which it encouraged recipients to find work by imposing work requirements and limiting how long they could receive benefits.

Today, across the country, welfare is—at best—a shadow of its former self. In much of the Deep South and parts of the West, it has all but disappeared. In the aftermath of welfare reform, there has been a sharp rise in the number of households with children reporting incomes of less than $2 per person per day, a fact we documented in our book, $2 a Day. As of 2012, according to the most reliable government data available on the subject, roughly 3 million American children spend at least three months in a calendar year living on virtually no money. Numerous other sources of dataconfirm these findings. According to the most recent data available (2014), TANF rolls are now down to about 850,000 adults with their 2.5 million children—a whopping decline of 75 percent from 1996. TANF was meant to “replace” AFDC. What it did in reality was essentially kill the U.S. cash welfare system. (We use the term “cash welfare” to distinguish it from other forms of assistance, such as housing vouchers and food stamps, which have pre-designated uses.)



[For more of this story, written by Kathryn Edin and H. Luke Shaefer, go to http://www.citylab.com/work/20...lfare-reform/496922/]

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A critique about the "War on Poverty" that I'd heard, much later than my tours as a VISTA Volunteer, were "that it was merely a painfully timid assault on the consequences rather than the causes, of human misery".

Welfare reform was an absolute disaster and why I will never vote for a Clinton.  It devastated rural areas and urban inner city zones.  Now children are sold as chattel.  I will never get over it.    I will never forgive the "leaders" who abuse poor people including children and use them as scapegoats to advance their own personal and selfish goals.   Poverty has been the worse ACE I have ever experienced, along with the hatred by others around me of my white trash child self  - a hatred that resulted in a 12 yr old classmate of mine committing suicide by shooting himself in the head - yes at 12 years of age.  This was a result of unrelenting  torment by others who were goaded by these same politicians to dispise  the poor in all ways possible.  Poverty has been a worse ACE than child sexual abuse, child physical abuse, all child abuse, worse than anything.    Eating moldy bread meant to be fed to animals, picking in dumpsters to find scraps, getting wet in a leaky pinto, not knowing if you are going to be able to get to school and freezing in the winter --- all lead to chronic uncertainty, fear, and even a wish for death, because life wasn't worth living.  

 

Nope, I am not going to forgive these supposed "leaders." Never.    They haven't even done anything to help Flint yet and Snyder is still our governor.  It is a sick mess, in a sick country.   

I am ranting.  Poverty and welfare and the associated denigration of people that goes with it is a raw spot for me. 

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