BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    



                                                                  AB 1058
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          ASSEMBLY THIRD READING
          AB 1058 (Beall and Fuentes)
          As Amended  June 1, 2009
          Majority vote 

           HUMAN SERVICES      5-2         APPROPRIATIONS      12-5        
           
           ------------------------------------------------------------------ 
          |Ayes:|Beall, Ammiano, Hall,     |Ayes:|De Leon, Ammiano, Charles  |
          |     |Portantino, Torres        |     |Calderon, Davis, Fuentes,  |
          |     |                          |     |Hall, John A. Perez,       |
          |     |                          |     |Price, Skinner, Solorio,   |
          |     |                          |     |Torlakson, Krekorian       |
          |     |                          |     |                           |
          |-----+--------------------------+-----+---------------------------|
          |Nays:|Tom Berryhill,Logue       |Nays:|Nielsen, Duvall, Harkey,   |
          |     |                          |     |Miller,                    |
          |     |                          |     |Audra Strickland           |
          |     |                          |     |                           |
           ------------------------------------------------------------------ 
           SUMMARY  :  Reforms the California Work Opportunity and  
          Responsibilities to Kids' (CalWORKs) asset tests that county  
          welfare workers use to determine benefit eligibility.   
          Specifically,  this bill  : 

          1)Eliminates, for both applicants and recipients, the  
            eligibility requirement that each family have a vehicle worth  
            no more than $4,650.

          2)Eliminates, for recipients, the eligibility requirement of no  
            more than $2,000 in cash on hand

          3)Adjusts annually, for recipients, the $2,000 cash on hand  
            eligibility limit by using the CA Necessities Index.

          4)Makes findings and declarations regarding the negative effect  
            that asset tests have on low-income families' ability to save  
            and become self sufficient. 

           EXISTING LAW  imposes limits on the amount of income and personal  
          and real property an individual or family may possess in order  
          to be eligible for aid under the CalWORKs program, including  
          that assets shall not exceed the following: 









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          1)$2,000 in savings and $3,000 for a family with a member age 60  
            or above.

          2)One house that the family lives in.

          3)One car with a value of $4,650 or less.

          4)Savings and interests in restricted federally qualified  
            accounts for the purpose of saving for college, retirement,  
            starting a business, purchasing a home, or overcoming an  
            episode of homelessness.

           FISCAL EFFECT  :  According to the Assembly Appropriations  
          Committee, net savings of approximately $3 million per year:

          1)By no longer requiring county eligibility workers to determine  
            the worth of an applicant's vehicle, the state could save  
            approximately $6 million per year in the Temporary Assistance  
            to Needy Families (TANF) and General Fund (GF) by reducing  
            county administrative eligibility activities.

          2)Information from Los Angeles County (LA) suggests that very  
            few people each month are denied CalWORKs solely because their  
            vehicles are over the asset limit.  Therefore, excluding the  
            vehicle from eligibility determination should not lead to a  
            significant increase in the CalWORKs caseload.  Based on LA  
            data, estimates suggest increased grant costs of about  
            $400,000 in the first year, growing to about $3 million per  
            year after that. 

          3)Actual administrative savings would likely be less as the  
            CalWORKs program has not received funding increases to keep  
            pace with actual operations costs since 2001.  However,  
            reducing the workload associated with CalWORKs eligibility  
            could help relieve the funding pressures faced by county  
            welfare departments.

           COMMENTS :  The author seeks to encourage CalWORKs families to  
          build their personal savings and asset accumulation in order to  
          become self-reliant and end their dependence on government  
          assistance.  An additional goal is to reduce the administrative  
          burden on local welfare agencies by streamlining the application  
          process, simplifying the program rules, decreasing paperwork and  
          cutting down on county time that would be better served on the  








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          other human services programs it is entrusted by the state to  
          administer.

          To accomplish this, this bill would modify the following  
          CalWORKs state eligibility rules: 

          1)Eliminate theeligibility  requirement that each family have a  
            vehicle worth no more than $4,650.

          2)Eliminate the eligibility requirement that recipients have no  
            more than $2,000 cash on hand.

          3)Adjusts annually, using the CA Necessities Index, an  
            applicants $2,000 cash on hand eligibility limit.
           
           Background  :  TANF was created by a massive bi-partisan federal  
          Welfare Reform effort in 1996.  The intent was to get needy  
          families with children from welfare to work and end the welfare  
          entitlement program as we knew it.  The four stated goals of the  
          TANF legislation are to:



          1)End a needy family's dependence on government assistance by  
            preparing them for a job and marriage;


          2)Help families so that children are cared for in their own  
            homes or in those of relatives;


          3)Prevent out-of-wedlock pregnancies; and


          4)Encourage the formation of two-parent families.


          Despite its lauded overhaul in 1996, thirteen years after  
          welfare reform, it is clear that many families are still  
          struggling to move from welfare to work due to specific policies  
          built into California Work Opportunity and Responsibility to  
          Kids (CalWORKs), the TANF program as it is known in this state.   
          These policies are hampering the primary goals of welfare reform  
          from being achieved: economic independence and personal  








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          responsibility.



          In the 1980s and '90s, the federal government started to shift  
          program and financial responsibility to states, in large part to  
          reduce federal spending for open-ended programs (i.e.  
          entitlements).  TANF allowed states the flexibility to continue  
          and to start programs that had previously required federal  
          waivers, but also capped federal spending on welfare by creating  
          fixed funding in the form of block grants for each state.  This  
          shift allowed California to customize its program to fit the  
          varying needs of its needy family population while adhering to  
          the federal statutory and regulatory requirements.


          In particular, TANF allowed significant state flexibility on  
          eligibility rules for families applying to CalWORKs for cash and  
          employment assistance.  Specifically, states can decide the  
          income level and property or asset levels that an applicant or  
          recipient must meet in order to be eligible.  In California, an  
          applicant and recipient, both, must have a vehicle worth no more  
          than $4,650, and cash on hand of no more than $2,000.  

           Asset Building for CalWORKs  :  The sponsor of this bill, the New  
          America Foundation (New America), has an "Asset Building"  
          program that seeks to encourage savings for low-income working  
          families.  In the following paragraph, New America speaks to the  
          tension between ensuring that only needy families are accessing  
          public services and forcing an applicant to "spend down" all of  
          their assets before they can seek help.  "For families making  
          the difficult transition from welfare-to-work, developing assets  
          is critical to achieving true economic independence.  In order  
          to prevent a complete backslide to public assistance, low income  
          working families must begin to develop their own safety nets  
          through personal saving for use in the event of an unexpected   
          income shock due to illness or temporary employment.  As  
          personal saving is essential to achieving self-sufficiency, the  
          stated goal of the CalWORKs program,  saving should be  
          encouraged, not penalized  , by welfare policy and social service  
          agencies."  At present, applicants and recipients of the  
          CalWORKs program find their progress restricted by an asset  
          limit which restricts families to no more than $2,000 in savings  
          and one car with a value of no more than $4,650.  








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          New America believes that asset limits are doing more harm than  
          good for three reasons: 1) Inefficient: because counties are  
          forced to administer a complex asset test on low-income  
          households that studies have shown are without assets; 2)  
          Counterproductive: because  achieving economic security requires  
          the accumulation of savings; and, assets limits discourage  
          families from building their savings; and 3) Inequitable:  
          because they completely exclude families who have only slightly  
          more economic resources from participation than families who are  
          currently eligible for the benefits.

          Similarly, Michael Sherraden writes in his 1991 book,  Assets and  
          the Poor  , "For the vast majority of households, pathway out of  
          poverty is not through consumption, but through savings and  
          accumulation.  Simply stated, not many people manage to spend  
          their way out of poverty."

          This bill would eliminate the vehicle asset test in its entirety  
          from consideration for eligibility into the CalWORKs program.

           Case for eliminating the vehicle test  :  The vehicle test was  
          last increased thirteen years ago.

          According to the sponsor, California is currently tied with  
          Texas and Idaho in having the most restrictive asset test for  
          vehicles of any state in the country.  The following is the  
          vehicle asset policy of the rest of the nation:

          1)Twelve states exclude all vehicles owned by the household; 

          2)Fifteen exclude at least one vehicle per household; and 

          3)Twenty have substantially increased the value of the vehicle  
            exclusion.  

          In comparison, California employs a much more restrictive  
          vehicle asset test.  The sponsor states that this policy  
          undermines a worker's ability to gain and maintain employment,  
          thereby encouraging continued reliance on public assistance.   
          Additionally, California requires no vehicle test for the Food  
          Stamp Program or MediCal, weakening the rationale for a vehicle  
          test under CalWORKs.  Lastly, a recent report by the County of  
          Los Angeles on the transportation barriers faced by low-income  








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          families concludes that "car ownership is strongly correlated  
          with employment status, and increases the likelihood of  
          employment." Sixty percent of welfare-to-work job seekers  
          relying on transit indicated they had transportation  
          difficulties in seeking work  compared with only 29% of welfare  
          to work job seekers who owned welfare-to-work participants who  
          had unlimited access to a car were gainfully employed, compared  
          with only 44% who relied on public transit or sharing rides.

           Case for changing the $2,000 resource test  :  The resource test  
          was last increased in 1985, twenty-four years ago.  

           For any publicly funded service, the policy should be to ensure  
          that the only eligible persons receive services.  For CalWORKs  
          applicants, the need to ensure eligibility seems reasonable, but  
          can the same case be made for recipients?  Recipients have  
          already passed the "gatekeeper," proving that they are asset  
          poor and therefore needy for services.  The Committee may wish  
          to consider whether the resource test for recipients is actually  
          a disincentive to work.  The state's policy should be, if you  
          want to work longer hours or apply for your Earned Income Tax  
          Credit (EITC), then you should be able to keep it and save it.   
          The author argues that under this type of rewards system  
          recipients may even exit CalWORKs early.  This bill would  
          eliminate the resource test for recipients.

          For applicants, the author wishes to adjust the resource test  
          annually as specified by the California Necessities Index.  This  
          is a very modest step that seeks to provide a backstop to this  
          amount from further eroding especially after not being increased  
          for over two decades.

           Added eligibility protections :  Overall, the nature of the  
          CalWORKs' 60-month lifetime limit on cash aid and the fact that  
          recipients must comply with the lengthy and cumbersome  
          application requirement, weeks of "job club," federally-mandated  
          work-hour requirements, quarterly reporting of income and  
          assets, and annual eligibility recertifications make it  
          undesirable and highly unlikely that any undeserving person  
          would apply to or remain on CalWORKs.

           Related legislation  :   
           AB 2368 (Fuentes), 2008 would have eliminated the vehicle asset  
          test for CalWORKs applicants and recipients.








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          AB 2480 (S. Runner), 2007-2008 would have amended the CalWORKs  
          eligibility vehicle asset limit by adding leased vehicles to the  
          list of countable resources. 

          AB 1078 (Lieber), Chapter 622, Statutes of 2007, in addition to  
          EITC awareness provisions, excluded funds in specified  
          retirement and educational accounts authorized under federal law  
          from being considered as income or resources for purposes of  
          CalWORKs benefits for applicants.  

          AB 167 (Bass), 2007 would have eliminated the CalWORKs asset  
          test for applicants and recipients.  

          AB 2466 (Daucher and Arambula), Chapter 781, Statutes of 2006  
          excluded funds in specified retirement and educational accounts  
          authorized under federal law from being considered as income or  
          resources for purposes of CalWORKs benefits for current  
          recipients, not for new applicants.  In addition, it added  
          financial management education as an allowable welfare-to-work  
          activity for adults receiving CalWORKs benefits. 
           

          Analysis Prepared by  :    Frances Chacon / HUM. S. / (916)  
          319-2089 


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