Welfare Reform-various takes

Kevin Robert Dean qualiall_2 at yahoo.com
Mon Feb 4 08:47:23 PST 2002


THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY OFFICE OF NEWS AND INFORMATION 3003 N. Charles Street, Suite 100 Baltimore, Maryland 21218-3843 Phone: (410) 516-7160 / Fax (410) 516-5251

February 1, 2002

MEDIA ADVISORY To: Reporters, Editors, Producers From: Amy Cowles (410) 516-7800 amycowles at jhu.edu Glenn Small (410) 516-6094 glenn at jhu.edu

Re: Welfare Reform Sources

As Congress prepares to debate re-authorization of the 1996 Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA), consider the following Johns Hopkins researchers as sources for putting the welfare reform experiment into proper perspective. The list of experts covers areas such as the relationship between welfare benefits and out-of-wedlock childbearing, housing issues, the effects of welfare reform on families and efforts to help the hardest to employ get jobs and build skills.

Effects of welfare reform on families Andrew Cherlin, sociologist Cherlin is the principal investigator of a four-year, three-city study on the effects of welfare reform laws on families. (View the project s website at http://www.jhu.edu/~welfare/). Cherlin's research focuses on the well-being of the children of welfare reform.

To many people, the welfare story ends when families go off the rolls, Cherlin says. In truth, no one knows for sure what will happen. This is the greatest social experiment with the lives of poor children since the welfare program was created during the Great Depression.

Cherlin is a national expert on family issues, with an emphasis on public policy issues, and the effects of family changes on children. Some of his books include: "Marriage, Divorce and Remarriage," "Divided Families: What Happens to Children When Parents Part" and "The Changing American Family and Public Policy." (View Cherlin's Web site at http://www.soc.jhu.edu/) Contact: Amy Cowles

Welfare's impact on adolescents and young adults Lingxin Hao, sociologist Hao's research focuses on the American family and public policies. She is currently studying the consequences of welfare reform for adolescents and young adults. Hao suggests it is important to study young people because the success of welfare reform will be judged by its effects on the next generation to enter adulthood, some of whom will enter the welfare system. By examining school enrollment, youth employment, school-to-work transition, premarital teen births and welfare participation using a national, longitudinal survey of the most recent adolescent cohort, Hao hopes her study will further our understanding of the relationship between policy structure and young adult behavior while informing policy makers of the impact of welfare reform on adolescents and young adults.

She has recently completed research that examines patterns of single mothers' economic strategies to support their families and its effects on the children's social and emotional development, using large national, longitudinal survey data. (View Hao's Web site at http://www.soc.jhu.edu/) Contact: Amy Cowles

Helping the hardest-to-employ Melissa Siberts, project director, The Career Transcript System, the Johns Hopkins Institute for Policy Studies Over the past three years, in seven cities across the United States, Siberts and her colleagues worked on demonstrating that people with low literacy levels, poor job history and a history of welfare dependence, the so-called "hardest to employ," could not only find steady work but increase their skill and pay levels.

The approach was to pair a mentor from a community college with the employee and the employee's manager or supervisor, who together would assess the worker's skill set versus the job requirements and then make a plan for improvement. Siberts says that of the 1,100 who participated in the past three years, the study's participants held on to jobs longer and increased their pay by an average of $1 per hour, per year, compared with a similar group.

Siberts said the "preliminary results are good" and expects to publish the findings in a report due out in February 2002. The cities involved in the study include Baltimore, Chicago, Indian River, Ind.; Portland, Ore.; Long Beach, Calif.; Hartford, Conn.; and Davenport, Ill. Contact: Glenn Small

Racial issues and welfare Katrina Bell McDonald, sociologist McDonald's research centers on analyzing the life experiences of African-American women, past and present. She is particularly interested in a growing detachment, or sometimes tension, between middle-income and low-income black women, particularly those on welfare.

By analyzing urban migratory patterns, kinship ties and personal interviews with black women, she is working to shed light on a growing geographical, cultural and emotional distance between lower and middle classes of contemporary, urban black women. (View McDonald s website at http://www.soc.jhu.edu/) Contact: Amy Cowles

What came before welfare? Matthew A. Crenson, political scientist Crenson spent nearly a decade poring over thousands of documents and other materials relating to orphanages and wrote a book, "Building the Invisible Orphanage: A Prehistory of the American Welfare System," which examines the history of orphanages and how the current welfare system was really a reaction against the traditional orphanage.

While some conservatives have called for a return to the orphanage as a solution to welfare, Crenson can explain how the welfare system is actually cheaper and better than the orphanage system, and give anecdotes and examples. Contact: Glenn Small

The economics of welfare Robert A. Moffit, economist For 10 years, Moffitt has studied the possible connection between welfare benefits and out-of-wedlock child birth, research that recently earned him a prestigious National Institute of Health MERIT award. Part of his work has illuminated the role that declining wages and job prospects of undereducated men have played in out-of-wedlock child bearing, and his current focus is on determining if the 1996 welfare law is responsible for a recent surge in marriage rates. He is also the author of the recent book, "Evaluating Welfare Reform in an Era of Transition." Contact: Glenn Small

Housing and welfare reform Sandra J. Newman, director of the Johns Hopkins Institute for Policy Studies. Newman specializes in housing, social welfare and long-term care policy. She has written a book that looks at the impact of welfare reform on both assisted and unassisted housing, reviews the lessons learned about the role of housing in moving welfare recipients to economic self-sufficiency and identifies the special challenges welfare reform presents with regard to housing policy and research. In her recent book, "The Home Front: Implications of Welfare Reform for Housing Policy," Newman and her co-contributors examine the important but often overlooked relationship between housing policy and welfare reform. Contact: Glenn Small

===== Kevin Dean Buffalo, NY ICQ: 8616001 http://www.yaysoft.com

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