(1) Each recipient shall
be assessed after determination of program eligibility and before
referral to job search. Assessments shall be based upon factors
that are critical to obtaining employment, including but not
limited to education, availability of child care, history of
family violence, history of substance abuse, and other factors
that affect the ability to obtain employment. Assessments may be
performed by the department or by a contracted entity. The
assessment shall be based on a uniform, consistent, transferable
format that will be accepted by all agencies and organizations
serving the recipient.
(2) Based on the assessment, an individual responsibility
plan shall be prepared that: (a) Sets forth an employment goal
and a plan for maximizing the recipient's success at meeting the
employment goal; (b) considers WorkFirst educational and training
programs from which the recipient could benefit; (c) contains the
obligation of the recipient to participate in the program by
complying with the plan; (d) moves the recipient into full-time
WorkFirst activities as quickly as possible; and (e) describes
the services available to the recipient either during or after
WorkFirst to enable the recipient to obtain and keep employment
and to advance in the workplace and increase the recipient's wage
earning potential over time.
(3) Recipients who are not engaged in work and work
activities, and do not qualify for a good cause exemption under
RCW 74.08A.270, shall engage in self-directed service as provided
in RCW 74.08A.330.
(4) If a recipient refuses to engage in work and work
activities required by the department, the family's grant shall
be reduced by the recipient's share, and may, if the department
determines it appropriate, be terminated.
(5) The department may waive the penalties required under
subsection (4) of this section, subject to a finding that the
recipient refused to engage in work for good cause provided in
RCW 74.08A.270.
(6) In consultation with the recipient, the department or
contractor shall place the recipient into a work activity that is
available in the local area where the recipient resides.
(7) Assessments conducted under this section shall include a
consideration of the potential benefit to the recipient of
engaging in financial literacy activities. The department shall
consider the options for financial literacy activities available
in the community, including information and resources available
through the financial education public-private partnership
created under RCW 28A.300.450. The department may authorize up
to ten hours of financial literacy activities as a core activity
or an optional activity under WorkFirst.
(8)(a) From July 1, 2011, through June 30, 2012, subsections
(2) through (6) of this section are suspended for a recipient who
is a parent or other relative personally providing care for one
child under the age of two years, or two or more children under
the age of six years. This suspension applies to both one and
two parent families. However, both parents in a two-parent
family cannot use the suspension during the same month.
Beginning July 1, 2012, the department shall phase in the work
activity requirements that were suspended, beginning with those
recipients closest to reaching the sixty-month limit of receiving
temporary assistance for needy families under RCW 74.08A.010(1).
The phase in shall be accomplished so that a fairly equal number
of recipients required to participate in work activities are
returned to those activities each month until the total number
required to participate is participating by June 30, 2013.
Nothing in this subsection shall prevent a recipient from
participating in the WorkFirst program on a voluntary basis.
Recipients who participate in the WorkFirst program on a
voluntary basis shall be provided an option to participate in the
program on a part-time basis, consisting of sixteen or fewer
hours of activities per week. Recipients also may participate
voluntarily on a full-time basis.
(b)(i) The period of suspension of work activities under
this subsection provides an opportunity for the legislative and
executive branches to oversee redesign of the WorkFirst program.
To realize this opportunity, both during the period of suspension
and following reinstatement of work activity requirements as
redesign is being implemented, a legislative-executive WorkFirst
oversight task force is established, with members as provided in
this subsection (8)(b).
(ii) The president of the senate shall appoint two members
from each of the two largest caucuses of the senate.
(iii) The speaker of the house of representatives shall
appoint two members from each of the two largest caucuses of the
house of representatives.
(iv) The governor shall appoint members representing the
department of social and health services, the department of early
learning, the department of commerce, the employment security
department, the office of financial management, and the state
board for community and technical colleges.
(v) The task force shall choose cochairs, one from among the
legislative members and one from among the executive branch
members. The legislative members shall convene the initial
meeting of the task force.
(c) The task force shall:
(i) Oversee the partner agencies' implementation of the
redesign of the WorkFirst program and operation of the temporary
assistance for needy families program to ensure that the programs
are achieving desired outcomes for their clients;
(ii) Determine evidence-based outcome measures for the
WorkFirst program, including measures related to equitably
serving the needs of historically underrepresented populations,
such as English language learners, immigrants, refugees, and
other diverse communities;
(iii) Develop accountability measures for WorkFirst
recipients and the state agencies responsible for their progress
toward self-sufficiency;
(iv) Make recommendations to the governor and the
legislature regarding:
(A) Policies to improve the effectiveness of the WorkFirst
program over time;
(B) Early identification of those recipients most likely to
experience long stays on the program and strategies to improve
their ability to achieve progress toward self-sufficiency; and
(C) Necessary changes to the program, including taking into
account federal changes to the temporary assistance for needy
families program.
(d) The partner agencies must provide the task force with
regular reports on:
(i) The partner agencies' progress toward meeting the
outcome and performance measures established under (c) of this
subsection;
(ii) Caseload trends and program expenditures, and the
impact of those trends and expenditures on client services,
including services to historically underrepresented populations;
and
(iii) The characteristics of families who have been
unsuccessful on the program and have lost their benefits either
through sanction or the sixty-month time limit.
(e) Staff support for the task force must be provided by
senate committee services, the house of representatives office of
program research, and the state agency members of the task force.
(f) The task force shall meet on a quarterly basis beginning
September 2011, or as determined necessary by the task force
cochairs.
(g) During its tenure, the state agency members of the task
force shall respond in a timely manner to data requests from the
cochairs.
[2011 1st sp.s. c 42 § 2; 2009 c 85 § 2; 2006 c 107 § 3; 2003 c 383 § 1; 1997 c 58 § 313.]
NOTES:
Findings -- Intent -- 2011 1st sp.s. c 42: "The legislature
finds that stable and sustainable employment is the key goal of
the WorkFirst and temporary assistance for needy families
programs. Achieving stable and sustainable employment is a
developmental process that takes time, effort, and engagement.
In times of fiscal challenge, temporary assistance for needy
families and WorkFirst resources must be invested in program
elements that produce the best results for low-income families
and the state of Washington.
The legislature further finds that the core tenets that are
the foundation of Washington state's WorkFirst program are: (1)
Achieving stable and successful employment; (2) recognizing the
critical role that participants play in their children's
development, healthy growth, and promotion of family stability;
(3) developing strategies founded on the principle that WorkFirst
is a transitional, not long-term, program to assist families on
the pathway to self-sufficiency while holding them accountable;
and (4) leveraging resources outside the funding for temporary
assistance for needy families is crucial to achieving WorkFirst
goals. It is the intent of the legislature, using evidence-based
and research-based practices, to develop a road map to
self-sufficiency for WorkFirst participants and temporary
assistance for needy families recipients.
The legislature further finds that parents are responsible
for the support of their children and that they have up to sixty
months of receipt of temporary assistance for needy families
benefits, absent any applicable hardship extension, to achieve
stable and sustainable employment or find other means to support
their family. It is the intent of the legislature to apply a
sixty-month time limit to the temporary assistance for needy
families program, including households in which a parent is in
the home and ineligible for temporary assistance for needy
families. The legislature intends that hardship extensions be
applied to families subject to time limits." [2011 1st sp.s. c
42 § 1.]
Effective date -- 2011 1st sp.s. c 42: "Except for section 6 of this act, 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, and takes effect July 1, 2011." [2011 1st sp.s. c 42 § 28.]
Finding -- 2011 1st sp.s. c 42: See note following RCW 74.04.004.
Findings -- Intent--Effective date -- 2006 c 107: See notes following RCW 74.08A.250.