The department shall provide grants to community action agencies or other local nonprofit organizations to provide job opportunities and basic skills training program participants with transitional support services, one-to-one assistance, case management, and job retention services.
[1997 c 58 § 327; 1993 c 312 § 8.]
NOTES:
Short title -- Part headings, captions, table of contents not law -- Exemptions and waivers from federal law -- Conflict with federal requirements -- Severability -- 1997 c 58: See RCW 74.08A.900 through 74.08A.904.
Findings -- Intent -- 1993 c 312: "The legislature finds that:
(1) Public assistance is intended to be a temporary
financial relief program, recognizing that families can be
confronted with a financial crisis at any time in life. Successful public assistance programs depend on the availability
of adequate resources to assist individuals deemed eligible for
the benefits of such a program. In this way, eligible families
are given sufficient assistance to reenter productive employment
in a minimal time period.
(2) The current public assistance system requires a
reduction in grant standards when income is received. In most
cases, family income is limited to levels substantially below the
standard of need. This is a strong disincentive to work. To
remove this disincentive, the legislature intends to allow
families to retain a greater percentage of income before it
results in the reduction or termination of benefits;
(3) Employment, training, and education services provided to
employable recipients of public assistance are effective tools in
achieving economic self-sufficiency. Support services that are
targeted to the specific needs of the individual offer the best
hope of achieving economic self-sufficiency in a cost-effective
manner;
(4) State welfare-to-work programs, which move individuals
from dependence to economic independence, must be operated
cooperatively and collaboratively between state agencies and
programs. They also must include public assistance recipients as
active partners in self-sufficiency planning activities. Participants in economic independence programs and services will
benefit from the concepts of personal empowerment,
self-motivation, and self-esteem;
(5) Many barriers to economic independence are found in
federal statutes and rules, and provide states with limited
options for restructuring existing programs in order to create
incentives for employment over continued dependence;
(6) The legislature finds that the personal and societal
costs of teenage childbearing are substantial. Teen parents are
less likely to finish high school and more likely to depend upon
public assistance than women who delay childbearing until
adulthood; and
(7) The legislature intends that an effort be made to ensure
that each teenage parent who is a public assistance recipient
live in a setting that increases the likelihood that the teen
parent will complete high school and achieve economic
independence." [1993 c 312 § 1.]
Emergency -- 1993 c 312: "This act is necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health, or safety, or support of the state government and its existing public institutions." [1993 c 312 § 19.]
Implementation program design -- 1993 c 312: "The department
of social and health services shall design a program for
implementation involving recipients of aid to families with
dependent children. A goal of this program is to develop a
system that segments the aid to families with dependent children
recipient population and identifies subgroups, matches services
to the needs of the subgroup, and prioritizes available services.
The department shall specify the services to be offered in each
population segment. The general focus of the services offered
shall be on job training, workforce preparedness, and job
retention.
The program shall be designed for statewide implementation
on July 1, 1994. A proposal for implementation may include
phasing certain components over time or geographic area. The
department shall submit this program to the appropriate
committees of the senate and house of representatives by December
1, 1993." [1993 c 312 § 9.]