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Showing 1 to 15 of 81 results Save | Export
Schumacher, Rachel; Greenberg, Mark – 1999
This report presents key findings from a review of data focusing on child care arrangements among people who have left welfare. Most states have conducted studies of former welfare recipients using administrative data, surveys of welfare leavers, or a combination of the two. Data from these surveys indicate that most people who have left welfare…
Descriptors: Children, Day Care, Early Childhood Education, Employed Parents
Acs, Gregory; Loprest, Pamela – 2001
This study examines the status of former welfare recipients in the District of Columbia (DC), highlighting families who left Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) in the last quarter of 1997 and of 1998. Researchers used data from the DC Department of Human Services and interviews with people who left in 1998. Between 1997-99, DC's cash…
Descriptors: Blacks, Children, Day Care, Early Childhood Education
Clhild Care Action Campaign Issue Brief, 1997
The recent overhaul of the federal welfare system gives states new flexibility to set child care policies, develop child care programs, and fund new initiatives. The Child Care Action Campaign (CCAC) conducted an audioconference on July 31, 1997, to examine key elements of new state plans and to take a close look at how one state, Illinois, made…
Descriptors: Day Care, Financial Support, Policy Formation, Program Descriptions
Child Care Action Campaign, New York, NY. – 1997
On December 11, 1997, the Child Care Action Campaign (CCAC) hosted an audioconference to explore the issue of how parents seeking to get off welfare can learn about subsidies available for child care in the transition from welfare to work. Presenters were Doug Baird, president of Associated Day Care Services in Boston, who discussed lessons of a…
Descriptors: Day Care, Diffusion (Communication), Early Childhood Education, Grants
Ooms, Theodora; Herendeen, Lisa – 1990
One of a series of family impact seminars, the meeting described in this document was held to discuss the child care provisions of the Family Support Act (FSA). This document provides highlights of the seminar and a background briefing report prepared before the meeting. The highlights section summarizes presentations by the seminar's four…
Descriptors: Day Care, Early Childhood Education, Federal Aid, Federal Legislation
Miller, Laurie – 1996
This report from a 1996 Child Care Action Campaign national audioconference concerns approaches taken by Wisconsin and Minnesota in designing and implementing federally funded child care subsidy systems. Wisconsin Works phases out Aid to Families with Dependent Children cash assistance and redirects funds into job training, child care, and health…
Descriptors: Child Welfare, Day Care, Early Childhood Education, Program Descriptions
Seefeldt, Kristin S.; Leos-Urbel, Jacob; McMahon, Patricia; Snyder, Kathleen – 2001
Michigan is a leader in state efforts to gain more autonomy over social service programs. Many changes, including those made to the child care and child welfare systems, were part of the governor's blueprint for reform, To Strengthen Michigan Families. This report begins with a profile of Michigan's demographic, economic, and political conditions,…
Descriptors: Child Welfare, Day Care, Low Income Groups, Social Services
Ehrle, Jennifer; Seefeldt, Kristin; Snyder, Kathleen; McMahon, Pat – 2001
Wisconsin's new welfare program was a dramatic departure from the old income maintenance system of welfare and moved beyond other states' work-based welfare reform programs. This report describes Wisconsin's approach to welfare reform, using data collected in 1999 and 2000 from state and local administrators, direct service providers, and, in some…
Descriptors: Child Welfare, Day Care, Low Income Groups, Social Services
Capizzano, Jeffrey; Koralek, Robin; Botsko, Christopher; Bess, Roseana – 2001
Colorado's welfare reform legislation significantly departs from the state's traditional emphasis on education and training while further embracing a decentralized administrative structure. The state's welfare system has shifted from an education and training model to a work-first model. This report presents findings from data collected in 1999…
Descriptors: Child Welfare, Day Care, Low Income Groups, Social Services
Gallagher, Peg; Pearlmutter, Sue; Wang, Edward; Coulton, Claudia; Bania, Neil; Katona, Michelle – 1997
As of the 1997 Ohio welfare reform laws, families not receiving cash assistance and earning 135 percent or less of the poverty income were eligible for subsidized child care (non-assistance subsidized child care). This study sought to estimate the number of working families in Cuyahoga County, Ohio that could take advantage of non-assistance…
Descriptors: Day Care, Economically Disadvantaged, Employed Parents, Family Needs
Long, Sharon K.; Kirby, Gretchen G.; Kurka, Robin; Waters, Shelley – 1998
As part of the Assessing the New Federalism project, this report describes the child care assistance system in place just before the implementation of the Personal Responsibility and Work opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 (PRWORA) and provides some early indications of how states will use the increased freedom of the Child Care and…
Descriptors: Agency Cooperation, Day Care, Federal Legislation, Program Development
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Young Children, 1995
Provides important information to better prepare advocates participating in the welfare reform debate. Presents excerpts from reports by the General Accounting Office and the Advisory Committee of the Department of Health and Human Services. Suggests that virtually all of the reform proposals require much more stringent work participation by…
Descriptors: Day Care, Educational Finance, Educational Legislation, Eligibility
Ross, Jane L. – 1995
In response to congressional efforts to assess the potential impact that various welfare reform proposals might have on child care availability, continuity, and subsidy programs, this report examines the difficulties parents have trying to identify and secure child care while they work or attend school. The four child care programs created by the…
Descriptors: Day Care, Early Childhood Education, Employed Parents, Financial Support
Bowen, Gary L.; And Others – 1991
The Recycling Fund Concept was conceptualized as a special allocation of money for the purpose of expanding child care services for preschool children of low-income parents who were or had been recipients of Aid to Families with Dependent Children in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. In 1985, North Carolina's Child Care Resources Incorporated…
Descriptors: Day Care, Economically Disadvantaged, Federal Programs, Financial Support
Bowen, Gary L.; Neenan, Peter A. – 1990
This report describes the context, design, and findings of an evaluation of a welfare reform initiative, the Recycling Fund Concept, in Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. The proposed fund would allocate money to parents of preschool children who receive Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC). The concept assumes that lack of child care…
Descriptors: Day Care, Experimental Programs, Low Income Groups, Preschool Children
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