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"The safety net in Michigan"

3 Comments -

1 – 3 of 3
Blogger Ted Paulson said...

So in attempting to apply for food stamps and IL kid care (government assisted health care), it took me a couple of hours to navigate online, figure out if I was eligible, and try and apply. I needed my college degree to understand the legalese on every form. It was shaming, horrendous, and difficult. Well said on how the system is geared towards the auditors and not the users. Thanks!

June 30, 2011 at 11:16 PM

Anonymous RC said...

Really appreciate your blog, Daniel. Thank you.

There are various models that address your third point. See, for example, The Benefit Bank, which is one approach prominent in Ohio. http://www.thebenefitbank.com/

Of course, even that model still requires trained volunteers to help walk people through the complicated process of accessing assistance.

As for points one and two, imagine if the Office of Economic Opportunity had not been strategically disbanded. You might have today a more rational system of programs for the poor. Instead, even though many of the programs and CAAs still exist, the funding streams and programs are housed in so many different agencies that it is nearly impossible for local agencies to make sense of funding without very sophisticated development and accounting depts. The process also forces agencies to pass complexity on to clients. (Funds ostensibly even for reasonably similar purposes come with strings like narrow scope, eligibility requirements, different reporting requirements, etc.) I've spoken with agencies that are trying to help persons experiencing homeless that deal with over 40 streams of funding, all with different requirements.

July 1, 2011 at 5:48 PM

Blogger Peter T said...

This seems to be a US thing, at least in the extreme. Australia is a federal state too, yet federal and state programs welfare are mostly delivered through a single joint system. In some ways the US never made the leap to a professional bureaucracy (this has its good side too).

July 2, 2011 at 7:45 AM

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