” STATE BUDGET UPDATE FROM SACRAMENTO The budget battle in Sacramento goes on. The budget conference committee has shut down, but the budget has a long way to go. The conference committee reconciles the differences between the Assembly version of the budget and the Senate version. Below is a description of what the conference committee did that is public in the CalWORKs program. In the final analysis the budget denies impoverished families with needy children a cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) enacted into law with the signature of Ronald Reagan for the fourth year in a row. Was denying a COLA to needy children nec- essary to balance the budget? Not really. The 1996 Federal Welfare Reform Bill (also known as TANF) gives California $3.7 billion and required California to put up 80%, which is $2.9 billion, to qualify for the $3.7 billion federal money in 2008-2009. The Republican Congress did not mandate that this money be used for the poor. States do have the option to use it for the non poor under the guise of state flexibility. The 2008-2009 state budget proposes that California will only spend $5.2 billion on poor children living with their parents on CalWORKs. That means a significant amount – $1.4 billion – will not be spent on CalWORKs children and families in 2008-2009. What happens to that money that by all moral standards should be used for impoverished families with children receiving CalWORKs. It goes many places except to the kids who go hungry in the last two weeks of most months in California. Yes. Americans love kids – who are not poor. The Budget does not include any of the mean-spirited Schwarzenegger proposals for anti-family and anti-child full family sanctions. CCWRO Weekly New Welfare News Coalition of California Welfare Rights Organizations, Inc. 1901 Alhambra Blvd.. Sacramento, CA 95816 Telephone (916) 736-0616 Cell (916) 712-0071 Fax (916) 736-2645 July 14, 2008, Issue #08-07 DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES Description Assembly Senate Difference Final Action 1. In-Home Supportive Services (IHSS) County Admin. Reduction 0 7,700,000 7,700,000 Senate Version 2. Food Stamp Program County Administration Reduction 0 14,371,000 14,371,000 Senate Version 3. Child Welfare Services: Resources Family Pilot Program (AB 340) -179,000 -608,000 429,000 Assembly version of 187 million reduction 4. Suspension of the June 2009 State SSP COLA 0 23,700,000 23,700,000 Assembly Version 5. CalWORKs Work Incentive Nutritional Supplement (WINS) 0 -8,387,000 8,387,000 $2 million in few counties 6. CalWORKs Pre-Assistance (PEARS) 0 691,000 691,000 Conf. Compromise*. 7. CalWORKs Self-Sufficiency Reviews for Sanctioned Cases 0 691,000 691,000 Assembly Version 8. CalWORKs Revised Income Disregard 0 -15,532,000 15,532,000 Assembly Version 9. Eliminate CalWORKs Pay for Performance Incentive Funding 0 10,000,000 10,000,000 Senate Version 10. Reduce County CalWORKs Single Allocation Funding 0 10,300,000 10,300,000 Assembly Version 11. CalWORKs Funding for the CA Alliance of Boys and Girls Clubs -5,000,000 0 5,000,000 Assembly Version 12. Eliminate the TANF Reserve 0 0 50,000,000 50,000,000 * – The conference compromise language is still being worked on. The language is intented to provide for a pro- gram that would be agreed to by all stakeholders and comport with federal law. CCWRO is a IOLTA funded support center serving IOLTA legal services programs in California. Types of Services Of- fered: Litigation, Co-Counseling, Fair Hearing, Representation, Consultation, Informational Services, Research Servic- es, In-Depth Consultation and Welfare Training. Programs Covered: CalWORKs, Welfare to Work (WtW), Food Stamps, Media Cal, General Assistance & Refugee\/Immigrant Eligibility. ”