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Talking Points for the Times!
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To: New York Times Editorial Board
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Re: Your Coming Anti-Workfare Editorials
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The Times has just concluded a four-part, front-page series slamming
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New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani's workfare policies (e.g.,"EVIDENCE IS SCANT
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THAT WORKFARE LEADS TO FULL-TIME JOBS"). Even now, presses are stamping out the
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capper, the first of what will probably be many righteous editorials denouncing
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the program. It happens that workfare is an old hobbyhorse of Chatterbox's.
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Chatterbox thinks it's the key to successful welfare reform (which is the key
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to solving America's most pressing social problem, the problem of "ghetto
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poverty"). And, aside from Milwaukee, New York is the first big city to give
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workfare a try. If it can make it there ...
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One point your series made seems indisputable: If what Rachel Swarns
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reported is true, Giuliani simply doesn't have an adequate day care system in
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place yet. He'll have to do better. As for the rest of the series, let's stick
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with the major conceptual problems:
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Misconception #1: It's the Overriding Goal of Workfare to Move
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People into Private Jobs. Politicians like to say the purpose of welfare
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reform is to move people "from welfare to work." That's certainly a
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goal. But it's not true that unless welfare reform takes all the people on
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welfare and gets them private sector jobs, it's failed. The overall goal of
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reform, as President Clinton said in a neolib moment, is to "break the culture
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of poverty and dependence." It's a culture that traps the poor in isolated,
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fatherless ghettos. It's also a culture that hurts the larger society--not just
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those on welfare--by producing crime, destroying urban life, fanning racial
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tension, etc. To change that culture, you don't have to get every unmarried
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welfare mom into a job. The idea is to establish the principle that every
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family has to send somebody into the workforce. Enforce that principle,
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and some of those on welfare will go to work. Other mothers may choose to live
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with breadwinners and spend time with their children. Other women not on
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welfare--and this is the big payoff--may decide not to become single mothers at
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all, postponing childbirth until marriage. Eventually, communities of
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fatherless welfare families will become communities of intact, working
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families. That's the idea, anyway.
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Even if you think the point of welfare reform is to get everyone into a
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private job, that's not the immediate goal of workfare. Workfare is
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usually only one part of the larger welfare reform plan. Most plans attempt to
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"divert" those who apply for welfare into private jobs. They require those who
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do apply to search for work. Only those who fail to find private sector jobs
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are then offered workfare jobs so they can earn their benefits. Workfare, in
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effect, is the employer of last resort. (A fine old liberal notion!) It's crazy
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to expect the people who wind up in these last-resort workfare jobs--about
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17,000, out of 236,000 adults on welfare in New York City--to be the ones who
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will fly out the door into the private sector.
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Misconception #2: We should worry because only a third of those who leave
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welfare quickly turn up on the tax rolls as workers. The Times has
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made a big fuss about a New York state survey showing that "of the legions of
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people who came off the welfare rolls in New York City from July 1996 through
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March 1997, only 29 percent found full-time or part-time jobs" in the first
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full quarter after they left welfare. Yes, we want to know how many more people
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are working thanks to welfare reform. But the people welfare reform will push
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most successfully into the private sector are those who now never show up at
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the welfare office in the first place because they realize they'll do
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better just getting a job. The survey completely misses this group.
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For those who do go on welfare, the survey only counts those who then work
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for private sector employers who report them to the state for tax purposes. It
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doesn't count self-employed laborers, domestic workers and others if they don't
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report their income. It doesn't count those whose employers don't fill out the
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required forms. Many employers who do file their forms do it late. Experience
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with earlier groups of welfare-leavers shows that the 29 percent figure will
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rise about 10 more percentage points (to about 40 percent) when these
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late-filers eventually comply. Finally, just because someone doesn't get a job
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the first quarter doesn't mean they never will. A study of Maryland's reform
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discovered that 36 percent of those leaving welfare had earnings in the quarter
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they left, but 75 percent had earnings within 2.5 years.
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Even if a single mother leaves the rolls and doesn't get a job,
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remember, that doesn't mean reform has failed. She might have moved in with a
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man, even gotten married. She might be getting help from friends. If former
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recipients were showing up in shelters or on the streets, it would be bad news,
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but that doesn't seem to be happening.
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Misconception #3: Workfare workers shouldn't do work unionized city
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workers used to do. At times, your reporters object that workfarers do
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"menial," unskilled, dead-end work. At other times they complain that
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workfarers have taken good, desirable union jobs away from others. Which is it?
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It can't be both. The truth is that the more the mayor asks workfarers to do
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useful work, like street-cleaning, the more they will probably be doing work
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regular city workers once did. So? Is the work low paid? Sure. If workfare is
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going to be the employer of last resort, it can't pay good, union wages, or
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else half the city will go on welfare to get a workfare job. Nor did the
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Times show that any regular workers were laid off or fired to make way
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for cheaper workfarers.
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Chatterbox will go for now. Give 'em hell!
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