Tennessee House Strengthens Temporary Assistance For Needy Families Program

Tennessee House Of Representatives Passes Legislation Strengthening TANF Program To Help Tennessee Families Thrive. 

Tennessee Capitol Building in Nashville

Photo Credit: Catherine Scott / CC

Published April 19, 2021

By William Haupt III [Tennessee Watchdog Journalist, Columnist, Author, and Citizen Legislator]

The House chamber on Thursday unanimously passed legislation strengthening and improving the state’s Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program.

House Bill 142 was recommended by a group appointed to study possible changes to the program, which currently has $710 million in reserves.

The funds, which come from a federal block grant, provide important support to working families such as child care assistance, temporary cash assistance, transportation, job training, employment activities and other support services offered through the state’s Families First Program.

This legislation creates a two-year pilot program which provides enhanced cash assistance to individuals who are actively pursuing educational opportunities.

The bill also distributes $180 million through a new Tennessee Opportunity Pilot Program, which will create large-scale programs benefiting TANF recipients.

The legislation also increases the TANF allotment. For example, it increases the monthly amount a family of three receive from $277 to $387.

House Bill 142 will create the Families First Community Grants to infuse $50 million in TANF reserves funds into the community through grants to organizations providing services to low-income families.

It includes the Two-Generation program, which focuses on inter-generational poverty through a “whole family” approach by combining parent and child interventions to break the cycle of poverty and create a pathway to economic security.

The bill requires that $191 million will be reserved to ensure the program’s stability during an economic downturn.

However, once those reserves are in place, it provides that funding not spent from the department’s previous year will be used for community grants that will be spread statewide to build stronger families and a thriving Tennessee.

Finally, the bill creates The TANF Advisory Board consisting of up to 21 people to approve grantees and provide important input regarding the effectiveness of existing Families First and Two-Generation Program policies and grant programs.

The board will also be responsible for selecting recipients for Tennessee Opportunity Pilot Program grants, community grants and selecting research partners to evaluate the successes of grant programs awarded through TANF.

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About the Author:

William Haupt III is a retired professional journalist, author, and citizen legislator in California for over 40 years. He got his start working to approve California Proposition 13. His work also appears in The Center SquareThe Western JournalNeighbor NewspapersKPXJ 21 (Shreveport, LA)Killeen Daily HeraldAberdeen American NewsInsideNovaKankakee Daily JournalMonterey County WeeklyOlean Times HeraldThe Greeneville Sun and more.

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