NYDIC Archive
This page is part of SparkAction's NYDIC archive.
National Youth Development Information Center Your browser does not support script. You must allow VB Scripts to run in order to see the menu bar.First Name
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Policy Briefs/Position Statements
Meeting the needs of Youth Under TANF
NYC POSITION
The National Collaboration for Youth believes that:
PUBLIC POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS
Include child well being as a purpose of TANF, with developmentally appropriate indicators of well being for both children and youth specified. Provide states with explicit authority to use TANF funds for positive youth development programs and activities that promote youth well being and prevent young people's future dependency on public cash assistance. Redirect TANF funds set-aside for the Illegitimacy Reduction Bonus to instead provide incentives to states to expand positive youth development programs and activities. Repeal the mandate that states deny TANF assistance to young parents who are unable to live with a parent, guardian, or adult relative, or secure an adult-supervised supportive living arrangement. Require instead that states arrange for adult-supervised supportive living arrangements (not merely "assist in locating" such arrangement, as is permitted in current law) for young parents unable to live with a parent, guardian, or adult relative. Provide explicit authority for a state to provide assistance during an initial period designed to help minor teen parents come into compliance with school and living arrangement provisions in order to receive TANF benefits. Specify that states may provide assistance for up to 180 days to assist the teen parent to come into compliance with the requirements. Add emergency shelters, transitional and permanent housing facilities serving homeless youth, such as Runaway and Homeless Youth Act-funded basic centers and transitional living programs, to the statutory list of suggested "appropriate, adult-supervised supportive living arrangements." Increase appropriations through TANF, Social Services Block Grant, the Runaway and Homeless Youth Act, and other federal housing, homeless assistance, and community development programs to enable states, localities, and nonprofit organizations to provide housing opportunities for young parents. Increase appropriations through ESEA, Homeless Education Act, Workforce Investment Act, Youth Opportunity Grants, Job Corps and other federal education and workforce programs to enable states to provide education and training supports for young parents. Expand permissible uses of abstinence-only-until-marriage funds authorized under TANF to include comprehensive sexuality education, which includes both abstinence and contraception. Stop the accrual of months on TANF assistance for older teen parents participating in education and training. Remove the 30 percent cap on the number of people in high school or vocational education that a state can count as engaged in a work activity. Require TANF plans to describe how states will count and track the number of young parents eligible for and enrolled in TANF and how states will work with schools, job training centers, child care providers, housing agencies and homeless assistance providers to meet young people's housing and support services. Provide funds to conduct additional research on the impact of welfare-to-work programs on adolescents in TANF families and young parents.NYDIC was developed with support from DeWitt Wallace-Reader's Digest Fund, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, The Edna McConnell Clark Foundation, The Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation and the Lilly Endowment Inc. through a partnership with the Indiana Youth Institute and other generous funding.
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