Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Walker calls for special session to increase food stamp work levels

Able-bodied adults requiremen­t would go up to 30 hours, from 20

- Jason Stein

“With more people working in Wisconsin than ever before, we can’t afford to have anyone on the sidelines: we need everyone in the game.” Gov. Scott Walker

MADISON - With unemployme­nt low and a tough election looming, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker called Thursday for a special legislativ­e session to overhaul the state’s welfare programs.

The GOP governor is pushing for a series of welfare bills, including requiring able-bodied parents of children on food stamps to work or get training to receive more than three months of benefits and increasing the existing work requiremen­t for all able-bodied adults from 20 hours a week to 30.

This existing requiremen­t — offered by Walker in 2013 — has led so far to about 3.5 recipients losing benefits for every one who secured a job through the program. It’s not known whether the recipients who lost benefits found jobs later.

The push comes before Walker’s annual “state of the state” speech on Wednesday and just two days after his party was stunned by a special election loss in a northweste­rn Wisconsin Senate district.

“With more people working in Wisconsin than ever before, we can’t afford to have anyone on the sidelines: we need everyone in the game,” Walker said in a statement. “We want to remove barriers to work and make it easier to get a job, while making sure public assistance is available for those who truly need it.”

Walker has referred to Tuesday’s loss in Wisconsin’s 10th Senate District as “wake-up call for Republican­s” and this week the governor has pushed aggressive­ly to remind his voters about his records and goals. He and GOP lawmakers don’t have much time to pass bills to do that — there are only about two months remaining in the legislativ­e session.

Republican­s say these proposals would make individual­s more self-sufficient and help employers find workers at a time when the state unemployme­nt rate is at 3%. Children would still get food stamps even if their parents don’t, they say.

Democrats like Senate Minority Leader Jennifer Shilling of La Crosse say these proposals are difficult to implement and potentiall­y cost state taxpayers more money than they save.

Taking parents’ food stamps will lower the household’s income and have an inevitable effect on their kids, they said.

“After Tuesday’s results, he’s clearly trying to fire up his base. It’s sad and desperate that he thinks the best way to win re-election is to go after struggling families who are trying to get ahead,” Shilling said.

The series of proposals did contain one bill that might win bipartisan support — a measure to allow low-income workers to collect Earned Income Tax Credit money on a monthly rather than a yearly basis. That proposal would require approval from the federal Internal Revenue Service in addition to state lawmakers.

The other bills deal in part with the food stamp program known as FoodShare, in which federal taxpayers pay for benefits and the state helps pay for administra­tive costs.

The changes would require parents with children between the ages of 6 and 18 to meet food stamp work requiremen­ts or lose benefits after three months. As of last year, there were 7,300 such households with no income in Wisconsin that might be affected by this proposal.

Lawmakers approved a pilot work requiremen­t for FoodShare parents last summer as part of Walker’s budget bill but dropped the governor’s proposal to expand the pilot statewide by January 2020. Under the new proposal, the requiremen­t would take effect in October 2019.

The state’s existing training requiremen­ts for

“After Tuesday’s results, he’s clearly trying to fire up his base. It’s sad and desperate that he thinks the best way to win re-election is to go after struggling families who are trying to get ahead.” Jennifer Shilling, Senate minority leader from La Crosse

childless adults cost the state roughly $33 million in state money over two years and have led to 24,420 able-bodied FoodShare participan­ts finding work through the program and 86,000 residents losing their federally funded benefits.

Some of those who lost benefits likely went on to get jobs outside the program but it’s not possible to track that.

The measure also would:

❚ Increase the work or training requiremen­t for all these FoodShare participan­ts from 20 hours a week to 30 hours. That would require about 130 hours of work a month for benefits from the program, which average about $212 per household.

❚ Require pay-for-performanc­e standards in the state’s contracts with private groups that help run the state’s FoodShare and separate Welfare to Work, or W-2, programs.

❚ Put asset limits on FoodShare and W-2 programs to exclude people with homes valued at more than $321,200 and personal vehicles worth more than $20,000.

❚ Create an up to $20 million fund to pay private contractor­s doing welfare, correction­s and training contracts. The state could use the money to pay vendors for reaching big cost savings or improvemen­ts in performanc­e.

❚ Create health savings accounts for Medicaid recipients.

❚ Put recipients’ photos on FoodShare cards as a way to cut down on fraud.

❚ Implement work requiremen­ts and drug testing for public housing programs.

Assembly Speaker Robin Vos (R-Rochester) said he wanted to pass all the bills through his house by February and get more people into the workforce.

“If you want to find a job, there’s no shortage of jobs available to find,” Vos said.

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