[Federal Register Volume 61, Number 112 (Monday, June 10, 1996)]
[Notices]
[Pages 29398-29404]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 96-14557]
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[[Page 29399]]
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Administration for Children and Families
New and Pending Demonstration Project Proposals Submitted
Pursuant to Section 1115(a) of the Social Security Act: May 1996
AGENCY: Administration for Children and Families, HHS.
ACTION: Notice.
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SUMMARY: This notice lists new proposals for welfare reform and
combined welfare reform/Medicaid demonstration projects submitted to
the Department of Health and Human Services for the month of May, 1996.
It includes both those proposals being considered under the standard
waiver process and those being considered under the 30 day process.
Federal approval for the proposals has been requested pursuant to
section 1115 of the Social Security Act. This notice also lists
proposals that were previously submitted and are still pending a
decision and projects that have been approved since May 1, 1995. The
Health Care Financing Administration is publishing a separate notice
for Medicaid only demonstration projects.
Comments: We will accept written comments on these proposals. We
will, if feasible, acknowledge receipt of all comments, but we will not
provide written responses to comments. We will, however, neither
approve nor disapprove new proposals under the standard application
process for at least 30 days after the date of this notice to allow
time to receive and consider comments. Direct comments as indicated
below.
ADDRESSES: For specific information or questions on the content of a
project contact the State contact listed for that project.
Comments on a proposal or requests for copies of a proposal should
be addressed to: Howard Rolston, Administration for Children and
Families, 370 L'Enfant Promenade, SW., Aerospace Building, 7th Floor
West, Washington DC 20447. FAX: (202) 205-3598; PHONE: (202) 401-9220.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Under Section 1115 of the Social Security Act (the Act), the
Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) may approve research and
demonstration project proposals with a broad range of policy
objectives.
In exercising her discretionary authority, the Secretary has
developed a number of policies and procedures for reviewing proposals.
On September 27, 1994, we published a notice in the Federal Register
(59 FR 49249) that specified (1) The principles that we ordinarily will
consider when approving or disapproving demonstration projects under
the authority in section 1115(a) of the Act; (2) the procedures we
expect States to use in involving the public in the development of
proposed demonstration projects under section 1115; and (3) the
procedures we ordinarily will follow in reviewing demonstration
proposals. We are committed to a thorough and expeditious review of
State requests to conduct such demonstrations.
On August 16, 1995, the Secretary published a notice in the Federal
Register (60 FR 42574) exercising her discretion to request proposals
testing welfare reform strategies in five areas. Since such projects
can only incorporate provisions included in that announcement, they are
not subject to the Federal notice procedures. The Secretary proposed a
30 day approval process for those provisions. As previously noted, this
notice lists all new or pending welfare reform demonstration proposals
under section 1115. Where possible, we have identified the proposals
being considered under the 30 day process. However, the Secretary
reserves the right to exercise her discretion to consider any proposal
under the 30 day process if it meets the criteria in the five specified
areas and the State requests it or concurs.
II. Listing of New and Pending Proposals for the Month of May, 1996
As part of our procedures, we are publishing a monthly notice in
the Federal Register of all new and pending proposals. This notice
contains proposals for the month of May, 1996.
Project Title: California--Work Pays Demonstration Project
(Amendment).
Description: Would amend Work Pays Demonstration Project by adding
provisions to: reduce benefit levels by 10% (but retaining the need
level); reduce benefits an additional 15% after 6 months on assistance
for cases with an able-bodied adult; time-limit assistance to able-
bodied adults to 24 months, and not increase benefits for children
conceived while receiving AFDC.
Date Received: 3/14/94.
Type: AFDC.
Current Status: Pending.
Contact Person: Glen Brooks, (916) 657-3291.
Project Title: California--Work Pays Demonstration Project
(Amendment).
Description: Would amend the Work Pays Demonstration Project by
adding provisions to not increasing AFDC benefits to families for
additional children conceived while receiving AFDC.
Date Received: 11/9/94.
Type: AFDC.
Current Status: Pending.
Contact Person: Bruce Wagstaff, (916) 657-2367.
Project Title: California--Assistance Payments Demonstration
Project/California Work Pays Demonstration Project (Amendment)
Description: Would amend the Assistance Payments Demonstration
Project/California Work Pays Demonstration Project by adding provisions
to California to allow two additional AFDC benefit reductions: (1)
reduce the Maximum Aid Payment (MAP) by 4.9 percent across-the-board
statewide; and (2) divide California counties into two regions based on
housing costs, and reduce both the Need Standard and the MAP in the
region with the lower costs. In addition, the State is requesting
blanket authority for future reductions in AFDC payment levels in
conjunction with welfare reform state law changes.
Date Received: 3/13/96.
Type: AFDC/Medicaid.
Current Status: Pending.
Contact Person: Bruce Wagstaff, (916) 657-2367.
Project Title: California--Assistance Payments Demonstration
Project/California Work Pays Demonstration Project (Amendment)
Description: Would amend the Assistance Payments Demonstration
Project/California Work Pays Demonstration Project by adding provisions
to allow one additional provision: income of a senior parent living in
the same household with a minor parent with a dependent child will not
be deemed to the minor parent's child.
Date Received: 3/13/96.
Type: AFDC.
Current Status: Pending.
Contact Person: Bruce Wagstaff, (916) 657-2367.
Project Title: Florida--Family Responsibility Act.
Description: Statewide, would require dependent children and
caretaker relatives under age 18 to remain in school; pay half the AFDC
benefit increment for the first child conceived by an AFDC recipient
and provide no cash benefits for a second or subsequent child; exclude
from the AFDC budget child support payments for children subject to the
family cap; require AFDC recipients not participating in JOBS or
actively seeking employment to engage
[[Page 29400]]
in 20 hours per week of community employment or work experience.
Date Received: 10/4/95.
Type: Combined AFDC/Medicaid.
Current Status: Pending.
Contact Person: Sallie P. Linton, (904) 921-5572.
Project Title: Georgia--Jobs First Project.
Description: In ten pilot counties, would replace AFDC payment with
paid employment; extend transitional Medicaid to 24 months; eliminate
100 hour employment rule for eligibility determination in AFDC-UP
cases.
Date Received: 7/5/94.
Type: AFDC.
Current Status: Pending (not previously published).
Contact Person: Nancy Meszaros, (404) 657-3608.
Project Title: Hawaii--Pursuit Of New Opportunities (PONO).
Description: Would limit benefits to 60 months in a lifetime for
all households except those exempt from work requirements; for all non-
exempt households, progressively reduce the grant amount, by 20% after
2 months, then in annual stages to 50% in the fifth year of
eligibility; exclude the income of dependent, minor student recipients
from the 185% Gross Income Test; require all non-high school graduate
or non-GED certified minor parent heads of households to participate in
educational activities; use a Benefit Reduction Rate formula to allow
participants to offset progressive grant reductions by keeping a larger
portion of any earned income; eliminate all of AFDC-UP categorical
requirements; strengthen JOBS participation requirements by eliminating
certain exemptions such as, remoteness due to excessive travel time,
current work activity, the non-principal earner in a two parent
household, or full-time VISTA participants, etc.; allow families to
retain up to $5,000 in resources; disregard one motor vehicle,
regardless of equity value, needed for self-sufficiency purposes;
delete the $50 child support pass-through; disregard all student loans,
grants and scholarships as income.
Date Received: 05/07/96.
Type: AFDC.
Current Status: New (replaces previous pending application).
Contact Person: Kristine Foster, (808) 586-5729.
Project Title: Illinois--Six Month Paternity Establishment
Demonstration.
Description: In 20 counties, would require the establishment of
paternity, unless good cause exists, within 6 months of application or
redetermination as a condition of AFDC and Medicaid eligibility for
both mother and child; would deny Medicaid to children age 7 and under,
exclude children from filing rules, and exempt Department from making
protective payments to eligible children, when custodial parent has not
cooperated in establishing paternity; delegate the establishment of
paternity in uncontested cases to caseworkers who perform assistance
payment or social service functions under title IV-A or XX.
Date Received: 7/18/95.
Type: AFDC/Medicaid.
Current Status: Pending.
Contact Person: Karan D. Maxson, (217) 785-3300.
Project Title: Indiana--Impacting Families Welfare Reform
Demonstration--Amendments.
Description: Statewide, proposes expansions and amendments to
current demonstration to impose a lifetime 24-month limit on cash
assistance and categorical Medicaid eligibility (12 months for resident
alien); allow 1 month AFDC credit (to a maximum of 24 at any one time)
for each 6 consecutive months full-time employment; count each month of
AFDC receipt from another state within the previous 3 years as 1 month
against the lifetime limit; restrict permissible ``specified
relatives'' for AFDC children and minor parents; extend AFDC, Medicaid,
and food stamp fraud disqualification penalties; establish 3 unexcused
absences per year as the statewide definition of unacceptable school
attendance; provide a voucher equal to 50% of assistance amount for
family cap child for goods and services related to child care; divert
AFDC grants to subsidize child care costs; establish an option for an
employed AFDC recipient to receive guaranteed child care or an AFDC
payment equal to the family's benefit before employment; require a
child's mother to establish paternity as a condition of eligibility for
the child and the caretaker; establish additional conditions of
eligibility for AFDC; impose penalties for illegal drug use; base CWEP
hours on the combined value of AFDC and Medicaid assistance; make JOBS
volunteers subject to the same sanctions as mandatory participants;
continue eligibility for AFDC recipients until countable income reaches
100% of the federal poverty guidelines; expand voluntary quit
definition and penalties; impose income limits on transitional Medicaid
and child care and limit each to 12 months in a person's lifetime; with
some exceptions, deny Medicaid under all coverage provisions to those
determined ineligible as a result of AFDC welfare reform provisions;
restrict Medicaid payments made to employees with employer's health
care benefits to the lesser of the employee's insurance premium or the
amount the state would otherwise pay; and require minor parents to live
with a legally responsible adult and count the income and resources of
non-parent adults. Additional provisions: Food Stamp recipients could
be required to participate CWEP and job search; increase AFDC and Food
Stamp penalties for non-compliance with CWEP and job search; require
cooperation with child support as condition of eligibility for Food
Stamps.
Date Received: 12/14/95; Amendment received 2/6/96.
Type: Combined AFDC/Medicaid.
Current Status: Pending.
Contact Person: James H. Hmurovich, (317) 232-4704.
Project Title: Kansas--Actively Creating Tomorrow for Families
Demonstration.
Description: Amended pending demonstration to provide that the
demonstration would: replace $30 and \1/3\ income disregard with
continuous 40% disregard; disregard lump sum income, income and
resources of children in school and interest income; count income and
resources of adults, and at State option children, who receive SSI;
exempt one vehicle without regard for equity value; eliminate 100-hour
rule and work history requirements for UP cases; expand AFDC
eligibility to pregnant women in 1st and 2nd trimesters; eliminate
eight week job search limitation; allow alcohol and drug screening and
treatment as a JOBS activity; eliminate the 20-hour work requirement
limit for parents with children under 6; delay the effective date of
changes in household composition; make work requirements in the AFDC
and Food Stamp programs more uniform; and increase sanctions for not
cooperating with child support enforcement activities and violations of
employment and JOBS requirements.
Date Received: 7/26/94; amendment received 4/30/96.
Type: Combined AFDC/Medicaid.
Current Status: Pending.
Contact Person: Diane Dystra, (913) 296-3028.
Project Title: Maine--Welfare to Work Program.
Description: Statewide, would require caretaker relatives to sign a
family contract; require participation in parenting classes and health
care services; provide one-time vendor payments in lieu of AFDC for the
[[Page 29401]]
purpose of obtaining/retaining employment; provide voucher payments to
both married and unmarried minor parents; limit JOBS exemptions; expand
eligibility for Transitional Medicaid and Child Care and replace
sliding-scale fees with flat-rate fees; reduce Transitional Medicaid
reporting requirements; disregard entire value of one vehicle; and
apply any federal savings to the JOBS program services. In selected
sites, implement ASPIRE-Plus, a subsidized employment program, would
cash out food stamps, divert AFDC benefits and pass through all child
support collected to families who participate in ASPIRE-Plus.
Date Received: 9/20/95.
Type: AFDC/Medicaid.
Current Status: Pending.
Contact Person: Susan Dustin, (207) 287-3104.
Project Title: Maryland.
Description: Statewide, would expand, with some modifications,
previously approved Family Investment Program (FIP) pilot county
provisions to be statewide and introduce new provisions: replace the
current $90 and $30-and-one-third exclusions with a flat 20% earned
income deduction, 50% for self-employed earned income; limit the child
care disregard to $175 in all cases; allow case managers to set AFDC
certification periods up to 1 year and require eligibility to be re-
established before the end of each certification period; modify JOBS
exemption requirements; allow $2,000 in countable resources and exclude
one vehicle per household, life insurance, and certain real property;
count stepparent income only if it is more than 50% of the poverty
level; allow non-custodial parents and stepparents to participate in
JOBS; provide welfare avoidance grants of up to 3 months benefit amount
(up to 12 months in special circumstances); allow IV-A child care funds
in lieu of AFDC for families diverted from cash assistance; impose
immediate full-family sanctions for fraud and for failure to cooperate
with JOBS or child support enforcement requirements; reduce the adverse
notification period to 5 days; eliminate the $50 child support pass-
through; allow only 1 assistance unit per family or payee; eliminate
deprivation as an eligibility factor; change treatment of lump sums;
eliminate JOBS assessment and employability plans; and modify JOBS
program requirements.
Date Received: 4/26/96.
Type: AFDC.
Current Status: Pending.
Contact Person: Kathy Cook, (410) 767-7055.
Project Title: Michigan--To Strengthen Michigan Families
Demonstration Project (Amendment).
Description: Statewide, would require minor parents to live with
their parent or other suitable adult; and require minor parents who
have not graduated from high school to attend school as a condition of
family eligibility.
Date received: 4/26/96.
Type: AFDC.
Current Status: Pending.
Contact Person: Dan Cleary, (517) 335-0015.
Project Title: Minnesota--Work First Program.
Description: In pilot counties, would provide vendor payments in
lieu of regular AFDC benefits for applicants' rent and utilities for up
to six months; sanction for at least six months job-ready applicants
who fail to comply with job search and other applicants who fail to
participate in JOBS orientation; and require part-time CWEP of
unemployed, nonexempt job-ready individuals who fail to participate in
job search for 32 hours/week or who after eight weeks of job search are
not employed for at least 32 hours/week or not self-employed with a net
income equal to the family's AFDC benefit. Individuals who refuse to
participate in CWEP or are terminated from a CWEP job would incur a
whole family sanction and become ineligible for AFDC for at least six
months. Non-job-ready participants would be assigned appropriate
education and training. Post-placement services would be provided for
up to 180 days and Transitional Child Care and Medicaid without regard
to AFDC receipt in 3 of the 6 months preceding ineligibility.
Date Received: 4/4/96.
Type: AFDC/Medicaid.
Current Status: Pending.
Contact Person: Gus Avenido, (612) 296-1884.
Project Title: Minnesota--AFDC Barrier Removal Project.
Description: Statewide, would expand AFDC-UP eligibility; treat
minor parents living with a caretaker parent on AFDC as a separate
filing unit and disregard the caretaker parents' earned income up to
200 percent of the federal poverty guideline; disregard earned income
of dependent children who are at least half-time students as well as
all their savings deposited into an individual development account;
increase the auto-equity limit to $4,500; cease recovering overpayments
(once every two years per case) due to an individual's new employment
resulting in ineligibility; and determine AFDC benefit amount for a
family in which all members have resided in the State for less than 12
months based on the payment standard of the state of immediate prior
residence if less than Minnesota's.
Minnesota has amended this application to include a proposed
provision in which families who have resided in the State of Minnesota
for less than 30 days would not be eligible for AFDC with the following
exceptions: (1) Either the child or caretaker relative was born in
Minnesota; (2) either the child or caretaker relative has resided in
the State for 365 consecutive days in the past; (3) either the child or
the caretaker relative went to Minnesota to join a close relative who
has resided in the State for at least one year; or (4) the caretaker
relative went to Minnesota to accept a bona fide offer of employment
for which he or she was eligible. For purposes of the exemption close
relative is defined as a parent, grandparent, brother, sister, spouse,
or child. The State would allow county agencies to waive the 30 day
requirement in cases of emergency or where unusual hardship would
result from denial of benefits.
Date Received: 4/4/96; amendment received 5/28/96.
Type: AFDC.
Current Status: New (Amendment only).
Contact Person: Ann Sessoms, (612) 296-0978.
Project Title: New Hampshire--Earned Income Disregard Demonstration
Project.
Description: AFDC applicants and recipients would have the first
$200 plus \1/2\ the remaining earned income disregarded.
Date Received: 9/20/93.
Type: AFDC.
Current Status: Pending.
Contact Person: Avis L. Crane, (603) 271-4255.
Project Title: New Hampshire--New Hampshire Employment Program and
Family Assistance Program.
Description: Statewide, would replace AFDC with Employment Program
administered by both Employment Security Agency and Family Assistance
Program; require job search and other employment-related activities for
first 26 weeks of receipt followed by work-related activities for 26
weeks; eliminate JOBS target group funding requirement and change JOBS
reporting requirements; require recipients attending post-secondary or
part-time vocational training to participate in work-related
activities; eliminate JOBS services priority for volunteers; establish
limits for provision of transportation and other JOBS services
[[Page 29402]]
based on activity and local conditions; eliminate remoteness as
exemption from JOBS; require non-custodial parents to participate in
JOBS; increase earned income disregard to 50%; eliminate AFDC-UP
eligibility requirements; allow transitional case management for up to
one year; raise resource limit to $2,000 and exclude one vehicle and
life insurance policies; pass through child support directly to family;
take SSI income into account in determining eligibility/payment;
eliminate conciliation and apply JOBS sanction of 50% of AFDC benefits
for three months followed by no payment for three months, allowing
option to increase initial sanction up to 100%; exempt pregnant women
from JOBS only during third trimester; for minor parents cases, include
in assistance unit any parent or sibling living in the home; eliminate
gross income test; disregard educational grants; allow emergency
assistance for families with employment-related barriers; allow States
to eliminate the certificate option for child care and development
block grant funds and use of these funds for capital improvement;
eliminate ceiling on At Risk Child Care funds; provide that FFP for
AFDC not be reduced during life of demonstration; fund computer system
modifications at 80% FFP; require pregnant recipients to cooperate with
child support; require that AFDC apply for Medicaid as a unit and not
individually; eliminate requirement of receipt of AFDC for 3 of last 6
months in order to receive transitional Medicaid; and allow States to
require that some individuals be assigned to a managed care program;
substitute outcome measures for JOBS participation rates; change
participation requirements for parents with children under 6, UP
recipients and minors; establish a medical deduction; increase the
sanction for non-cooperation with child support; exempt individuals
with significant employment barriers from JOBS; treat lump sum income
and all real property, except a home, as a resource; and use 20% of
gross earned income as a Medicaid disregard. Also contains various Food
Stamp waivers.
Date Received: 9/18/95.
Type: AFDC.
Current Status: Pending.
Contact Person: Marianne Broshek, (603) 271-4442.
Project Title: New Hampshire--New Hampshire Employment Program.
Description: In three pilot sites, would require work after 6
months of AFDC receipt; eliminate the exemption from JOBS for women in
the second trimester of pregnancy; eliminate the JOBS exemption for
caretaker of a child under 3 but not less than 1 year of age; replace
the earned income disregard of $90 and $30 and \1/3\ with a 50%
disregard which is not time-limited; raise the resource limit for
recipients to $2,000; disregard full value of one vehicle per adult for
applicants and recipients; apply a full family sanction voluntarily
quitting a job or refusing to accept a job; apply a sanction of
reducing the payment standard by 30% for one month for failure to
comply with JOBS in the first instance, by 60% in the second instance
for one month, and in the third instance apply a full-family sanction
for three months or until compliance; and require non-custodial parents
to participate in JOBS.
Date Received: 10/6/95.
Type: AFDC.
Current Status: Pending.
Contact Person: Marianne Broshek, (603) 271-4442.
Project Title: New York--Learnfare Program.
Description: Would phase in statewide a provision that would
require AFDC children in grades 1 through 6 to attend school regularly
by mandating a sanction of removal of the child's needs from the budget
group for three months in those cases, where after counseling, the
child has 5 or more unexcused absences in a quarter. Benefits for
parents will be terminated, for failure without good cause, to sign the
release form for educational records.
Date Received: 5/31/96.
Type: AFDC.
Current Status: New.
Contact Person: Jeff Gaskell, (518) 486-3415.
Project Title: New York--Intentional Program Violation
Demonstration.
Description: Statewide would change the sanction for Intentional
Program Violations making the period of ineligibility of the person
committing the violation dependant on both the number of offenses and
the amount of the overpayment incurred as a result of the violation.
Date Received: 5/31/96.
Type: AFDC.
Current Status: New.
Contact Person: Jeff Gaskell, (518) 486-3415.
Project Title: Oklahoma--Welfare Self-Sufficiency Initiative.
Description: In four pilots conducted in five counties each, would
(1) extend transitional child care to up to 24 months; (2) require that
all children through age 18 be immunized and require that responsible
adults with preschool age children participate in parent education or
enroll the children in Head Start or other preschool program; (3) not
increase AFDC benefits after birth of additional children, but provide
voucher payment for the increment of cash benefits that would have been
received until the child is two years old; and (4) pay lesser of AFDC
benefit or previous state of residence or Oklahoma's for 12 months for
new residents.
Date Received: 10/27/95.
Type: AFDC.
Current Status: Pending.
Contact Person: Raymond Haddock, (405) 521-3076.
Project Title: Pennsylvania--School Attendance Improvement Program.
Description: In 7 sites, would require school attendance as
condition of eligibility.
Date Received: 9/12/94.
Type: AFDC.
Current Status: Pending.
Contact Person: Patricia H. O'Neal, (717) 787-4081.
Project Title: Pennsylvania--Savings for Education Program.
Description: Statewide, would exempt as resources college savings
bonds and funds in savings accounts earmarked for vocational or
secondary education and disregard interest income earned from such
accounts.
Date Recevied: 12/29/94.
Type: AFDC.
Current Status: Pending.
Contact Person: Patricia H. O'Neal, (717) 787-4081.
Project Title: Tennessee--Families First.
Description: Description: Statewide, would impose 18 month time
limit with 60 month lifetime limit on cash assistance for non-exempt
families (extensions available under certain circumstances); require
full-time (40 hours) work or combination of work and other activities
such as education, training, or job search, unless exempt; eliminate
many JOBS exemptions including lowering youngest-child exemption to
those with a child less than 16 weeks of age; remove limits on periods
of job search; impose a family cap with no increase in benefits for
additional children; require unmarried teen parents without high school
diploma or GED to participate in education or other approved activity;
deny AFDC for three months if recipients voluntarily quit job or if
applicant voluntarily quits employment within two months of AFDC
application; impose whole family sanction for noncompliance with
employment, training or work preparation activities; impose sanctions
without a prior conciliation period; provide transitional child care
and
[[Page 29403]]
transitional Medicaid for 18 months and without regard to months of
AFDC receipt; change earned income disregards; eliminate the 100-hour
rule, work history and quarters of work requirements when AFDC
recipient marries and disregard new stepparent's income up to set
limit; hold harmless child support arrearages owed by the new husband/
wife to his/her child in the new family unit as long as the parent
continues to reside in the home; require that applicants and recipients
sign Personal Responsibility Plan as condition of eligibility and
assure that children attend school, receive regular immunizations and
health checks, and the caretaker cooperates with child support
enforcement; impose significant sanction for failure of children to
attend school or obtain immunizations; impose whole family sanction for
failure to cooperate with child support enforcement; deny AFDC for 10
years for those convicted of fraudulently receiving benefits from two
states simultaneously; allow low-income entrepreneurs to establish
special accounts up to $5,000; conform AFDC and Food Stamp rules by
increasing resource limit to $2,000 and counting lump sum income as a
resource in the month received and after, if retained; and increase
auto limit to $4,600. In 12 counties allow individual development
accounts up to $5,000 and in 1 county operate a Responsible Fatherhood
Demonstration Pilot using IV-D funds.
Date Received: 5/1/96.
Type: Combined AFDC/Medicaid.
Current Status: Pending.
Contact Person: Glenda Shearon, (615) 313-5652.
Project Title: Utah--Single-Parent Employment Demonstration
(Amendments).
Description: Would amend the current Single Parent Employment
Demonstration (SPED), requiring preschool children to be immunized and
other children to attend school; considering as a single filing unit
each family with a child in common, including all children in the
household related to either parent; permitting parents removed from the
grant due to non-cooperation or fraud to remain eligible for JOBS
services, including support services; and allowing a ``best estimate''
of earnings in lieu of actual earnings so long as estimate is within
$100 of actual earnings. These amendments would initially be limited to
the Kearns office and later expanded to other SPED sites.
Date Received: 2/7/96.
Type: AFDC.
Current Status: Pending.
Contact Person: Bill Biggs, (801) 538-4337.
Project Title: Virginia--Virginia Independence Program (Amendment).
Description: Would amend the Virginia Independence Program to
require AFDC applicants and recipients (including specified relatives
other than a parent) to provide information sufficient to identify the
non-custodial parent. Failure to provide the required information would
result in sanctions. In any case where an applicant/recipient does not
claim good cause or good cause does not exist, an affidavit from the
custodial parent attesting to the lack of information about the non-
custodial parent/putative father, in and of itself, would not meet the
definition of cooperation. If the first two genetic tests exclude the
named putative fathers, the State will impose a sanction until
paternity is established. If a relative other than the parent maintains
that he does not know the identity of the child's parent and has no way
to help identify the parent, the sanction would not be imposed.
Date Received: 5/24/96.
Type: AFDC.
Current Status: Pending (amended provisions not previously
published).
Contact Person: Barbara Cotter, (804) 692-1811.
Project Title: Wisconsin--Work Not Welfare and Pay for Performance
Projects (Amendments).
Description: Statewide, would lower the JOBS exemption from a
parent whose youngest child is one year old or younger to a parent
whose youngest child is 12 weeks old or younger; require up to 40 hours
a week in CWEP regardless of the amount of the family's AFDC grant and
require participation in substance abuse and mental health treatment,
as appropriate; include intentional failure or voluntary quit in a work
component as a failure to cooperate with JOBS and apply JOBS program
sanctions to the entire family; and limit AFDC receipt to 60 months in
a lifetime, with exemptions and case-by-case extensions. The state
would extend child care to families earning up to 165 percent of
poverty with graduated co-payments based on the cost of care, and
change IV-A cases headed by a non-needy non-legally responsible
relative to IV-E cases and provide cases headed by an adult SSI
recipient a special child-only grant supplement in lieu of the regular
AFDC payment for the child. Both types of cases would be exempt from
the time limit and work requirements. Further, the state would require
minor parents to live with a parent or in an adult-supervised setting.
Also the state would establish a competitive process for selection of
contractors to administer county programs.
Date Received: 5/8/96; Amendments received 5/17/96.
Type: AFDC.
Current Status: New.
Contact Person: Jean Sheil, (608) 266-0613.
Project Title: Wisconsin--Wisconsin Works (W2).
Description: Statewide, would establish performance standards for
the administration of Wisconsin Works (W2) along with a competitive
process for selection of contractors to administer county programs. The
State would provide--but not guarantee--work positions, child care and
health care coverage to families (as defined by the State), whose gross
income does not exceed 115 percent of the federal poverty level (FPL),
whose resources do not exceed $2,500 (excluding a homestead), and whose
total auto equity assets do not exceed $10,000, with a 60-day State
residency requirement for eligibility. The State would count all earned
and unearned income, including child support (which will be paid
directly to the custodial parent), except for EITC when determining W2
eligibility. The State would require participation in substance abuse
and mental health treatment, as appropriate; exempt from a work
requirement parents with a child less than 12 weeks old; and provide
for an appeal process for W2 eligibility and benefit decisions. The
State would review an individual W2 agency's financial eligibility
decision only if the applicant petitions the State within 15 days of
the decision and would not pay benefits pending a decision. Applicants
would be required to search for unsubsidized employment during
eligibility determination, and would be denied eligibility if they
refused a bona fide offer of employment in the 180 days prior to
application. The State would automatically refer all W2 participants to
child support for services. The State would require minor parents to
live with a parent or in an adult-supervised setting to receive W2 non-
employment/non-cash benefits, e.g., financial planning assistance, case
management; but minor parents would not be eligible for W2 employment/
cash benefits. Teen children must attend school regularly. The state
would provide children whose parents are SSI recipients a payment of
$77.
The W2 payment amount would be determined according to job
placement: unsubsidized job, trial job (including up to $300 per month
wage subsidy to employer), community service job (benefit of $555 per
month), and
[[Page 29404]]
transitional placement (benefit of $518 per month). Community service
Jobs would require 30 hours per week of work plus 10 hours per week of
education and training; transitional placement jobs would require 28
hours per week of work plus 12 hours of education and training. In
addition CWEP participation would be increased up to 40 hours per week.
The State would sanction individuals $4.25 per each hour of non-
participation in work requirements. In addition sanctions would be
imposed upon the entire family for refusal to participate, without good
cause, in a W2 employment position. Three refusals to participate in
any W2 employment category would result in permanent ineligibility for
that category. To assist families with one-time expenses, the State
would provide Job Access Loans for employment support needs, e.g., car
repair, uniforms, etc; and would extend child care to families earning
up to 165 percent of poverty with graduated co-payments based on family
income and the category of care used. Child care would only be provided
to children under 13.
The State would limit participation to 24 months in any one W2
employment position and would limit lifetime eligibility for benefits
to 60 months, with extensions on a case-by-case basis; the 60-month
limit would apply to certain JOBS participants beginning July 1, 1996.
The State would change AFDC cases headed by a non-legally responsible
relative to a IV-E case; provide job search assistance and case
management to non-custodial parents with a child support order; impose
stricter sanctions for non-cooperation with child support; and
permanently deny W2 employment after three Intentional Program
Violations. Benefit overpayments will be recouped for intentional
violations at a rate set by the State. Corrective payments would not be
made for underpayments. Eligibility for Emergency Assistance for
certain homeless persons would be limited to once in a 36-month period
unless the homelessness was caused by domestic abuse, and the State
would allow displacement of regular employees by W2 participants in
certain cases: i.e., partial displacement (reduction in hours);
impairment of existing contracts; infringement upon promotional
opportunities; and filling of any established unfilled position.
The State would eliminate transitional Medicaid and expand Medicaid
(i.e., the W2 Health Plan) to families with gross income up to 165 of
FPL, who would then remain eligible until their income increases to 200
percent of FPL; and would incorporate a mandatory HMO enrollment or
primary provider program for W2 participants. Participants would be
required to pay a share of W2 Health Plan premiums according to a
sliding scale, and the State would impose stricter Medicaid sanctions
for non-cooperation with child support. The State would merge the Food
Stamps E&T program with the W2 Work Program; modify the Food Stamps
work program exemptions; eliminate the Food Stamps gross income test;
require nutrition education for Food Stamps recipients; and cash out
food stamps.
Date Received: 5/29/96.
Type: Combined AFDC/Medicaid.
Current Status: New.
Contact Person: Jean Sheil, (608) 266-0613.
Project Title: Wyoming--New Opportunities and New
Responsibilities--Phase II (Amendments).
Description: Proposes expansion of original demonstration statewide
and amendments to the current demonstration to establish a 5-year
lifetime limit on cash assistance for adults, beginning with time on
AFDC from July 1, 1987 (with limited exemptions and extensions);
require school attendance for teen parents who do not have a high
school education or its equivalent; pursue child support from the
absent minor parent's parents; freeze benefits based on household size
10 months after initial qualification; replace existing earnings
disregards for recipients (except no disregard will apply for
recipients disqualified due to fraud, education time limits, illegal
alien) with a maximum earned income disregard of $200 for recipients;
expand pay-for-performance from AFDC-UP to the regular AFDC population,
with limited exemptions, where failure to perform any item in the self-
sufficiency plan would cause disqualification of the parent for AFDC,
Food Stamps, and Medicaid; reduce the grant by $40 when a nonexempt
child fails to meet the performance requirements; require able-bodied
applicants and recipients to do job search for up to 16 weeks unless
otherwise exempted; terminate the case when there is loss of contact
with the client for 1 month after nonpayment for failure to meet the
performance requirements; exclude the earned income and resources of a
dependent child who is a full-time high school student; allow payment
of the supplied shelter grant for households with a SSI recipient,
unmarried minor parents, or recipients disqualified for other reasons
(fraud, education time limits, illegal aliens); exclude one licensed
vehicle with a fair market value of less than $12,000; increase the
resource limit to $2,500 for those in compliance with, or exempted
from, the performance requirements; and exclude veteran's service
connected disability compensation if the annual income is less than the
poverty level.
Date Received: 5/13/96.
Type: Combined AFDC/Medicaid.
Current Status: Pending (provisions not previously published).
Contact Person: Marianne Lee, (307) 777-6849.
III. Listing of Approved Proposals Since May 1, 1995
Project Title: Minnesota Family Investment Program (MFIP)
(Amendment).
Contact Person: Chuck Johnson (612) 297-4727.
Project Title: South Carolina--Family Independence Program.
Contact Person: Linda Martin (804) 737-6010.
IV. Requests for Copies of a Proposal
Requests for copies of an AFDC or combined AFDC/Medicaid proposal
should be directed to the Administration for Children and Families
(ACF) at the address listed above. Questions concerning the content of
a proposal should be directed to the State contact listed for the
proposal.
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Program, No. 93562;
Assistance Payments--Research)
Dated: June 4, 1996.
Karl Koerper,
Director, Division of Economic Independence, Office of Planning,
Research and Evaluation.
[FR Doc. 96-14557 Filed 6-7-96; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4184-01-P