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STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

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STATE TANF PROGRAMS STATE TANF PROGRAMS
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Page 1: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

STATE TANF PROGRAMSSTATE TANF PROGRAMSSTATE TANF PROGRAMSSTATE TANF PROGRAMS

Page 2: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Purposes Of TANF• Provide assistance to needy families so

children may live in home with relatives• End dependence of needy parents through

job preparation, work, and marriage• Prevent and reduce out-of-wedlock

pregnancies• Encourage the formation and maintenance

of two-parent families

Page 3: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

What Is New About TANF?

• State flexibility -- re eligibility, spending, administration, etc.

• New Federal-State partnership • Funding -- Federal and State funds• Stronger work requirements, time

limits• Different accountability

Page 4: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

What Has Changed?• Increased work

• Declining caseloads

• Resources to meet emerging needs

– reach all families

– support working families

• Devolution

• New collaborations and partnerships

Page 5: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Federal TANF Funds State MOE Funds

TANF Grant

Commingled State & Federal TANF

Segregated State TANF

Separate State

Program

TANF PROGRAM

Transfer to:

CCDF & SSBG

Potential Funding Options

Page 6: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Regulations StatusRegulations Status

• Published in Federal Register on April 12, 1999

• Effective Date: October 1, 1999

• Available on-line at http:\www.acf.dhhs.gov\programs\ofa

Page 7: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

ScopeScope

Work

Penalties against StatesData collection and reporting

Page 8: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Basic Approach in Final Rules

• Recognize State progress

• Provide States flexibility to develop innovative approaches for supporting work and reaching all families

• Maintain State investments and ensure accountability

• Collect data in critical program areas

Page 9: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Provisions Affording State Flexibility

• Definition of Assistance

• Separate State Programs

• Child-only Cases

• Welfare Reform Waivers

• Domestic Violence Waivers

• Caseload Reduction Credits

• Administrative Costs

Page 10: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Provisions Assuring Accountability/Data

• MOE Expenditures/New Spending Test• Recipient & Workplace Protections• Reasonable Cause• Caseload Reduction Credits• Domestic Violence Waivers• Federal and State Spending• Goal 3 and 4 Activities• Diversion Programs

Page 11: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Definition of Assistance --Definition of Assistance --Why Does It Matter?Why Does It Matter?

• Determines which program requirements are applicable

– Many requirements--such as time limits, child support assignment, work requirements, and data collection and reporting -- apply only to families receiving assistance

Page 12: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Child-Only CasesChild-Only Cases

•These are cases that do not include an adult receiving assistance.

•Such cases are not included in the work participation rate and time-limit calculations.

•We have a special interest in tracking these cases.

Page 13: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Separate State Programs--Separate State Programs--What Are TheyWhat Are They

• States may contribute MOE funds to programs and activities that are either:

– part of the TANF program; or– outside the TANF program.

• Those outside of TANF are “separate State programs.”

•They are not subject to TANF rules

Page 14: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Welfare Reform Waivers--What Are They?

• Under section 1115 of prior law, the Secretary could waiver statutory requirements for research and demonstration purposes.

• Under PRWORA, States may operate under waiver provisions approved prior to TANF to the extent that they are inconsistent with TANF.

Page 15: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Treatment of Domestic Violence VictimsTreatment of Domestic Violence Victims

• Under Family Violence Option, States may implement programs to screen for domestic violence, refer victims to appropriate services, and waive program requirements.

Page 16: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Treatment of Domestic Violence VictimsTreatment of Domestic Violence Victims

• Good cause waivers that are federally recognized affect whether States get penalty relief (i.e., reasonable cause, penalty reduction, corrective compliance) if they fail work participation rate or time limit requirements.

Page 17: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Accountability

• Under TANF States are accountable for performance through 14 penalty provisions -- including work participation rates, time limits, MOE, use of funds, and data reporting.

• TANF also includes bonus provisions, State ranking provisions, and other performance measures.

Page 18: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Penalty Relief

• States may avoid most penalties through reasonable cause or corrective compliance.

• This relief is not available for:

– 3 MOE penalties

– Failure to repay a loan

– Failure to replace penalty amounts

Page 19: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Reasonable CauseGeneral Approach

• The basic approach in final rule is to limit the availability of reasonable cause. We would prefer that States come into compliance with statutory expectations.

Page 20: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Reasonable Cause--Regulatory Factors

• 3 general factors

• Secretarial discretion to grant others

• Special factors available for data reporting, time limit, and work participation penalties

Page 21: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

ork

Page 22: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Overall Participation Rates

Overall Rate

Participation RatesParticipation Rates

25%30%

35%40%

45%50%

1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002+

Fiscal Year

Page 23: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Two-Parent Participation Rates

75% 75%

90% 90% 90% 90%

1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002+

Fiscal Year

Page 24: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Factors Affecting Work Requirements & Penalties

•Caseload reduction credits

•Penalty reductions

•Reasonable cause and

corrective compliance

Page 25: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Time LimitTime Limit

Page 26: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Time Limit Months Count When:

• Family receives “assistance”

• Federal TANF funds are used

• Family includes an adult, minor-child, or pregnant minor head-of-household or spouse of the head-of-household

• A noncustodial parent who is the spouse of the head-of-household receives Federal TANF assistance

Page 27: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

20% Exception to Time Limit

• Assistance may extend beyond 5 years for up to 20% of cases

• Assistance may be extended based on:– Hardship, as defined by State, or– Battery or extreme cruelty, as defined in statute

• Exceptions apply after family reaches 60-month limit

Page 28: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Fiscal Matters

Page 29: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Funding Sources

• States receive Federal TANF grants based on prior funding -- to spend on TANF purposes or previously authorized activities

• States must contribute their own funds based on 1994 State funding. These funds are known as “MOE.”

Page 30: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Basic MOE Requirements

• Each FY a State participates in TANF

80% of what spent in FY 1994, or 75% if meet work participation rates

• If Tribe (or consortium) is awarded TFAG, then MOE amount is reduced by same percentage as the reduction in the State’s SFAG

Page 31: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Federal Funds

• Expenditure of Federal funds in violation of program rules or general grant requirements may result in a penalty for misuse of funds (and intentional misuse of funds).

• States have limited authority to transfer Federal TANF funds and have authority to reserve Federal funds for “rainy day.”

Page 32: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

MOE Funds Must Be Spent on Eligible Families

• Families must meet:

1) Family composition requirement

– child 1/w parent or other adult relative, or

– pregnant woman

2) Financial eligibility criteria established by State

– per appropriate income and resources (when applicable) standards

– contained in TANF plan

Page 33: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

MOE

• FOR PRE-EXISTING STATE AND LOCAL PROGRAMS, MOE claims are limited to “new spending”--

the amount by which total expenditures during the current fiscal year for eligible families exceed total expenditures in the program in ‘95

Page 34: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Administrative Costs

• There are separate 15-percent caps on administrative expenditures for Federal and State MOE funds.

Page 35: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Data Reporting

Page 36: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Major Data Provisions-- Reporting on TANF Programs

• States must submit quarterly reports containing detailed disaggregated case record information on families receiving assistance.

• These quarterly reports also contain limited aggregated information.

• States are subject to reporting penalties for failure to submit required data.

Page 37: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Major Data Provisions-- Reporting on SSP-MOE Programs

• Under final rules, States must submit SSP-MOE Data Report to receive Caseload Reduction Credit and High Performance Bonus (not for penalty reduction).

Page 38: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Major Data Provisions --TANF Financial Report

• States must submit quarterly financial reports that indicate how they spent their Federal TANF funds and their State MOE funds.

• Failure to submit required data could result in a reporting penalty, an MOE penalty, or a misuse of funds penalty.

Page 39: STATE TANF PROGRAMS TIP For additional advice see Dale Carnegie Training® Presentation Guidelines.

Major Data Provisions--Annual Reporting

• States must also submit an annual report containing aggregate information on State program characteristics.


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