[NIFL-WORKPLACE:347] from HandsNet WebClipper Digest

From: Barb Van Horn (blv1@psu.edu)
Date: Mon Nov 12 2001 - 12:10:37 EST


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Dear subscribers, the following blurb about HHS evaluation of welfare 
to work strategies sounded interesting, so I checked it out. I've 
included the general URL for the HHS reports and the specific URL for 
getting to the reports on welfare reform. I have also copied the 
executive summary from the publication listed for your information. 
Information about the Portland, OR program noted below can be found 
under the heading The Features of the Most Effective Program.

HandsNet WebClipper Digest

The following information is from WebClipper Digest, HandsNet's 
weekly overview of cross-cutting human services news from throughout 
the World Wide Web.

************************************
NOVEMBER 9, 2001

HHS EVALUATION OF WELFARE TO WORK STRATEGIES -  This study of the 
effectiveness of 11 mandatory welfare-to-work programs compared the 
effects of programs that emphasize early employment with those that 
emphasize skill-building. The most successful program, implemented in 
Portland, OR, used an approach that  emphasized both employment 
search and education or training. This finding, along with other past 
research, suggests that a "mixed" approach might be the most 
effective.
http://www.aspe.hhs.gov/
http://www.aspe.hhs.gov/hsp/NEWWS/index.htm


How Effective Are Different Welfare-to-Work Approaches?  Five-Year 
Adult and Child Impacts for Eleven Program.  [Executive Summary]  By 
Gayle Hamilton, Stephen Freedman, Lisa Gennetian, 
Charles Michalopoulos, Johanna Walter, Diana Adams-Ciardullo, and 
Anna Gassman-Pines, MDRC, Sharon McGroder, Martha Zaslow, 
Surjeet Ahluwalia, Jennifer Brooks, Child Trends, with Electra Small 
and Bryan Ricchetti, MDRC.  November 2001.

For the past 30 years, federal and state policymakers have been 
legislating various types of programs to increase employment among 
welfare recipients. How people can best move from welfare to work, 
however, has been the subject of long-standing debate. This report, 
summarizing the long-term effects of 11 mandatory welfare-to-work 
programs on welfare recipients and their children, represents a major 
advance in resolving this debate. The findings are the final ones 
from the National Evaluation of Welfare-to-Work Strategies (NEWWS), a 
multi-year study of alternative approaches to helping welfare 
recipients find jobs, advance in employment, and leave public 
assistance.

"What works best, and for whom?" is the central question animating 
this report and the NEWWS Evaluation as a whole. In particular, the 
evaluation compares the effects of two alternative pre-employment 
strategies, for different groups of welfare recipients: programs that 
emphasize short-term job search assistance and encourage people to 
find employment quickly (referred to as "Labor Force Attachment" 
[LFA] or, more broadly, "employment-focused" programs); and programs 
that emphasize longer-term skill-building activities, primarily basic 
education (referred to as "Human Capital Development" [HCD] or, more 
broadly, "education-focused" programs). The effects of each approach 
are estimated from a wealth of data pertaining to over 40,000 single 
parents (mostly mothers) and their children, and a five-year 
follow-up period (falling somewhere between 1991 and 1999, depending 
on the site), using an innovative and rigorous research design based 
on the random assignment of individuals to one or more program groups 
(with services) or to a control group (without services).

Findings in Brief
The research designs that were implemented in the NEWWS Evaluation 
permit many comparisons. The key ones examined the programs' economic 
effects on adults and the "spillover" effects on noneconomic outcomes 
and child well-being, as summarized below.

Comparing All 11 Programs to What Would Have Happened in the Absence 
of the Programs
*	In the absence of any welfare-to-work program over a 
five-year follow-up period, approximately three-quarters of 
single-parent welfare recipients found jobs, and more than half left 
the welfare rolls. Few of the 11 studied programs improved on this 
already-high rate of job-finding, but nearly all programs helped 
single parents work during more quarters of the follow-up and earn 
more than they would have in the absence of a program. Moreover, all 
programs decreased welfare receipt and expenditures over the five 
years.
*	Measured combined income, however, was largely not affected: 
The programs led to individuals' replacing welfare and Food Stamp 
dollars with dollars from earnings and Earned Income Tax Credits 
(EITCs), but the programs did not increase income above the low 
levels of the control group.
*	The programs achieved their economic gains with few spillover 
effects on such family measures as marriage, fertility, and household 
composition. Notably, the adults' gains in self-sufficiency (defined 
as increased employment and decreased welfare receipt) were achieved 
with few indications of harm or benefit to the well-being of their 
children. This was particularly true for mothers with young children, 
who in 1988 were newly mandated to participate in programs. Because 
the new mandate's implications for children were of considerable 
concern at the time, these families were the subject of intense study 
in this evaluation.

Comparing Labor Force Attachment (LFA) and Human Capital Development 
(HCD) Programs
*	By rigorously comparing LFA and HCD programs - versions of 
employment-focused and education-focused programs designed to magnify 
the differences between the two types of strategies and operated side 
by side in three evaluation sites - it was found that the HCD 
approach did not produce added economic benefits relative to the LFA 
approach.
*	Moreover, the LFA approach moved welfare recipients into jobs 
more quickly than did the HCD approach - a clear advantage when 
federally funded welfare months are time-limited.
*	Finally, the LFA approach was much cheaper to operate than 
the HCD approach and, at the same time, did not affect sample 
members' overall financial well-being or their children's well-being 
any differently than the HCD approach.
*	Surprisingly, these findings held true for program enrollees 
who lacked a high school diploma or a General Educational Development 
(GED) certificate as of study entry - the subgroup of welfare 
recipients who were expected to derive the greatest benefit from an 
initial investment in basic education - as well as for those who 
already possessed these education credentials.

Comparing Employment-Focused and Education-Focused Programs
*	Dividing all 11 programs into two broad categories - 
employment-focused programs and education-focused programs - programs 
in the former category generally had larger effects on employment, 
earnings, and welfare receipt than those in the latter category.
*	Given the large number of programs examined and their variety 
of served populations, implementation features, and labor markets, 
these results provide more support for the advantages of 
employment-focused programs than for education-focused ones.

These results should not be taken as an indictment of the benefits of 
education and training in general in welfare-to-work programs. 
Nonexperimental work done as part of the NEWWS Evaluation has 
suggested that obtaining a GED and, especially, obtaining a GED and 
then receiving some type of vocational training, can result in 
employment and earnings gains for those who achieve these 
milestones.(1) However, in the context of mandatory welfare-to-work 
programs, few people make it this far, for many reasons, including: 
people leave welfare and therefore do not stay in welfare-to-work 
programs, and thus education or training classes, for very long; 
adults supporting families cannot afford an up-front deferment of 
employment and earnings that may or may not have a longer-run payoff; 
and only a small minority of welfare recipients report that, if given 
a choice, they prefer to go to school to study basic reading and math 
over going to school to learn a job skill or going to a program to 
get help looking for a job.(2) It should be noted as well that none 
of these programs made assignments to or emphasized college.

The Features of the Most Effective Program
*	One program - the Portland (Oregon) one - by far outperformed 
the other 10 programs in terms of employment and earnings gains as 
well as providing a return on every dollar the government invested in 
the program.
*	The Portland employment-focused program, unlike either the 
LFA or the HCD programs or the other education-focused programs, 
initially assigned some enrollees to very short-term education or 
training and others (the majority) to job search. Also, in another 
departure from the other programs, job search participants in 
Portland were counseled to wait for a good job, as opposed to taking 
the first job offered. While other aspects of the Portland program, 
such as its use of job developers and staff's experience operating 
job search programs, were also noteworthy, these distinctive 
features, along with other past research, suggest that a "mixed" 
approach - one that blends both employment search and education or 
training - might be the most effective.

Findings for Children
*	Considering the six programs (three sites) in which children 
who were preschool age at random assignment were studied in depth, 
impacts were found on a small number of measures of child 
well-being - predominantly in the area of the young children's social 
skills and behavior. Overall, the young-child impacts differed more 
often by site than by welfare-to-work approach.
*	Program effects on child care - one important way in which 
children might be affected by welfare-to-work programs - diminished 
from the two-year follow-up point to the end of the five-year 
follow-up. As of this latter point, only the Portland program was 
still producing an increase in the use of child care.
*	In the seven programs (four sites) in which a limited number 
of measures were examined for children of all ages, few effects were 
evident. Some impacts, however, were found relating to young 
adolescents' academic functioning (but in only two of the four sites 
for which data are available), and these impacts on adolescents were 
predominantly unfavorable. As was the case for young children, 
impacts on children of all ages did not differ by welfare-to-work 
program approach.

Comparisons Shedding Light on Other Welfare-to-Work Program Design Issues
*	Of the two programs with low enforcement of the participation 
mandate, one had no impact on employment and earnings, and the other 
had only small effects. It appears that a minimum level of 
enforcement by program staff is required to produce at least moderate 
employment impacts, likely because this extra "push" is needed in 
order to engage in program activities those who normally would not 
participate on their own initiative.
*	Two of the three programs that used "integrated," as opposed 
to "traditional," case management worked well for those who entered 
the study without a high school diploma or GED. In integrated case 
management, one worker fulfills the responsibilities related to the 
payment of welfare and other benefits, normally performed by income 
maintenance staff, as well as the responsibilities related to the 
provision of employment-related services, usually assigned to 
welfare-to-work program staff. In traditional case management, each 
welfare recipient has two different case managers. Two programs that 
implemented different versions of well-funded and well-supported 
integrated case management produced relatively large impacts for 
nongraduates; the third program, which also used an integrated case 
management model but one that was hampered by tight funding, had 
limited impacts.

The Limits of Pre-Employment Strategies
Average income levels among control group members over the five-year 
follow-up period were low. Despite the successes of these programs, 
no program, not even Portland's, met the long-range goal of making 
enrollees substantially better off financially. Most program group 
members continued to have low incomes from various combinations of 
earnings, the EITC, welfare, and Food Stamps. In fact, among 
individuals who lacked a high school diploma or GED as of study 
entry, some programs had the five-year result of making them 
financially worse off. These findings suggest that the challenge of 
the future is to identify other types of programs or initiatives that 
can provide welfare recipients with better and more stable jobs, 
increase their income, and improve the well-being of their children.
-- 
******************
Barbara Van Horn
NIFL-WORKPLACE List Co-Moderator
Co-Director, Institute for the Study of Adult Literacy
Co-Director, Goodling Institute for Research in Family Literacy
College of Education, The Pennsylvania State University
102 Rackley Building, University Park, PA 16802-3202
Phone:   814-865-5876	Fax:     814-863-6108
E-mail:  BLV1@PSU.EDU

"Moving adult literacy from the Margins to the Mainstream"



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