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Welfare Reform: Rural TANF Programs Have Developed Many Strategies to Address Rural Challenges

GAO-04-921 Published: Sep 10, 2004. Publicly Released: Oct 12, 2004.
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Highlights

About 49 million people, or 17 percent of the country's total population, live in rural communities, and 18 states have at least a third of their population in rural areas. Rural areas often have less favorable employment conditions than urban areas and have fewer public transportation options to help people get to and from work. Given these conditions and the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program's emphasis on moving recipients into jobs and on the path toward self-sufficiency, some have questioned how welfare reform is working in rural areas. To inform discussions of these concerns, GAO is reporting on (1) the size and distribution of the rural TANF caseload and how the caseload's size has changed over time, (2) the challenges and strengths that rural TANF programs have in implementing welfare reform, (3) the strategies being used to address these challenges, and (4) what the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is doing to help rural areas address these challenges. To obtain this information, we used multiple methodologies, including analysis of county-level caseload data, as well as site visits, a review of studies on welfare reform in rural areas, and numerous interviews with caseworkers, government officials and other experts.

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Topics

Employment assistance programsPublic assistance programsRural economic developmentWelfare benefitsWelfare recipientsWorkfareRural areasTemporary assistance for needy familiesWelfare reformChild care programs