Search

Nadeau Bill Protects TANF Benefits for District Families – Office of Councilmember Brianne K. Nadeau

“No child in the District should be at risk because of an arbitrary deadline,” said Councilmember Nadeau. “At a time we’re investing unprecedented funding into ending homelessness and providing affordable housing, we shouldn’t cut families off from the safety net that’s keeping them in their homes. This bill represents my commitment as the Chair of the Human Services Committee to ensure TANF benefits do not lapse for families in need.”

Historically, the District did not limit its locally funded TANF assistance. In 2011, the DC Council enacted a step down of benefits for families who had been on the TANF program for longer than 60 months, but in FY16 and FY17, the Mayor and the Council chose to continue funding for families beyond 60 months and not to implement the full elimination of benefits. Current law mandates that the new 60 month time limit go into effect on October 1, 2017. When originally proposed, the time limit was intended to be followed by the promise of a subsidized job. Removing the safety net at 60 months will force families off a financial cliff.

Councilmember Nadeau was a participating member of the TANF Hardship Extension Policy Working Group convened by the Mayor this past summer. Together, lawmakers, customers, service providers, advocates, and agency representatives collaborated on recommendations for developing a permanent hardship extension policy and related improvements. This bill represents the group’s “Preferred Option” consensus on how to fix TANF so that families are not forced off the financial cliff.  

The TANF Child Benefit Protection Amendment Act of 2017 is available online at this link.

Related

The D.C. Council gave unanimous approval today to legislation that would allow developers to build more units and higher-quality housing in small and mid-sized buildings through a change to the building code.
Legislation that would revamp and provide stability and predictability to the District’s affordable housing finance ecosystem advanced today, getting its hearing before the D.C. Council’s Housing Committee. The Committee also heard legislation that would set new housing production targets to address the shortage of housing in D.C.
At a time when it is popular to lament the apparent slowdown in new housing and the shortage of affordable housing, these and other projects provide evidence that D.C. remains a viable and attractive place to develop new housing.

Most Recent

Search

Stay connected with Councilmember Nadeau

News & updates from our office, delivered to your inbox

Be sure to click “confirm my email” when you receive the confirmation email.