Public Act 90-0074 of the 90th General Assembly

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Public Act 90-0074

SB755 Enrolled                                 LRB9003229SMdv

    AN ACT to amend the Illinois Public Aid  Code  by  adding
Section 12-4.33.

    Be  it  enacted  by  the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:

    Section 5.  The Illinois Public Aid Code  is  amended  by
adding Section 12-4.33 as follows:

    (305 ILCS 5/12-4.33 new)
    Sec.    12-4.33.     Welfare    reform    research    and
accountability.
    (a)  The  Illinois  Department  shall  collect and report
upon all data in connection with federally funded or assisted
welfare programs as federal law may require,  including,  but
not  limited  to,  Section 411 of the Personal Responsibility
and Work Opportunity  Reconciliation  Act  of  1996  and  its
implementing  regulations  and  any amendments thereto as may
from time to time be enacted.
    (b)  In addition to and on the same schedule as the  data
collection  required  by  federal law and subsection (a), the
Department shall collect and report  on  further  information
with  respect  to the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families
("TANF") program, as follows:
         (1)  With respect to  denials  of  applications  for
    benefits,  all  of  the same information about the family
    required under the federal law, plus the specific  reason
    or reasons for denial of the application.
         (2)  With  respect  to all terminations of benefits,
    all of the same information as required under the federal
    law,  plus  the  specific  reason  or  reasons  for   the
    termination.
    (c)  The Department shall collect all of the same data as
set  forth  in  subsections (a) and (b), and report it on the
same schedule, with respect to all cash  assistance  benefits
provided  to  families  that  are  not  funded  from the TANF
program  federal block grant or are not otherwise required to
be  included  in  the  data  collection  and   reporting   in
subsections (a) and (b).
    (d)  Whether  or  not  reports under this Section must be
submitted to the federal government, they shall be considered
public and they shall be promptly  made  available  to    the
public  at  the  end of each fiscal year, free of charge upon
request.  The data  underlying  the  reports  shall  be  made
available   to   academic   institutions  and  public  policy
organizations involved in the  study  of  welfare  issues  or
programs    and  redacted  to conform with applicable privacy
laws.  The cost shall be no more than that  incurred  by  the
Department in assembling and delivering the data.
    (e)  The  Department  shall, in addition to the foregoing
data collection and reporting activities, seek  a  university
to  conduct,  at  no  cost  to the Department, a longitudinal
study of the  implementation  of  TANF  and  related  welfare
reforms.   The  study  shall  select  subgroups  representing
important  sectors  of  the  assistance population, including
type of  area  of  residence  (city,  suburban,  small  town,
rural),  English  proficiency, level of  education, literacy,
work experience, number of adults  in  the  home,  number  of
children  in  the  home,  teen  parentage, parents before and
after the age of 18, and other  such  subgroups.    For  each
subgroup,  the  study  shall  assemble  a statistically valid
sample of cases entering the TANF program at least  6  months
after its implementation date and prior to July 1, 1998.  The
study shall continue until December 31, 2004.  The Department
shall  report  to  the  General  Assembly and the Governor by
March 1 of each year, beginning March 1,  1999,  the  interim
findings  of  the study with respect to each subgroup, and by
March 1, 2005,  the  final  findings  with  respect  to  each
subgroup.  The  reports shall be available to the public upon
request. No later than November 1, 1997, the  Department,  in
consultation with an advisory panel of specialists in welfare
policy,  social  science,  and  other  relevant  fields shall
devise the study and identify the factors to be studied.  The
study  shall,  however,  at  least  include   the   following
features:
         (1)  Demographic   breakdowns   including,  but  not
    limited to, race, gender, and number of children  in  the
    household at the beginning of Department services.
         (2)  The   Department  shall  obtain  permission  to
    conduct the study from the  subjects  of  the  study  and
    guarantee  their  privacy  according to the privacy laws.
    To facilitate this permission, the study may be  designed
    to  refer to subjects by pseudonyms or codes and shall in
    any event guarantee anonymity  to  the  subjects  without
    limiting  access  by  outsiders  to  the data (other than
    identities) generated by the study.
         (3)  The subjects of the  study  shall  be  followed
    after  denial or termination of assistance, to the extent
    feasible.   The  evaluator  shall  attempt  to   maintain
    personal  contact  with  the  subjects  of the study, and
    employ such  methods  as  meetings,  telephone  contacts,
    written  surveys,  and  computer  matches with other data
    bases to accomplish this  purpose.  The  intent  of  this
    feature of the study is to discover the paths people take
    after  leaving  welfare  and  the  patterns  of return to
    welfare, including the factors that may influence   these
    paths and patterns.
         (4)  The   study  shall  examine  the  influence  of
    various employability, education, and  training  programs
    upon   employment,  earnings,  job  tenure,  and  cycling
    between welfare and work.
         (5)  The  study  shall  examine  the  influence   of
    various supportive services such as child care (including
    type  and  cost),  transportation, and payment of initial
    employment  expenses  upon  employment,   earnings,   job
    tenure, and cycling between welfare and work.
         (6)  The   study  shall  examine  the  frequency  of
    unplanned occurrences in subjects' lives, such as illness
    or  injury,  family  member's  illness  or  injury,   car
    breakdown, strikes, natural disasters, evictions, loss of
    other  sources  of  income, domestic violence, and crime,
    and their impact upon employment, earnings,  job  tenure,
    and cycling between welfare and work.
         (7)  The  study  shall  examine  the wages and other
    compensation, including health  benefits  and  what  they
    cost  the  employee,  received  by  subjects  who  obtain
    employment,  the  type  and  characteristics of jobs, the
    hours and time of day of  work,  union  status,  and  the
    relationships  of  such  factors to earnings, job tenure,
    and cycling between welfare and work.
         (8)  The  study  shall  examine  the   reasons   for
    subjects'  job  loss,  the   availability of Unemployment
    Insurance, the reasons for a subject's return to welfare,
    programs or services utilized by subjects in  the  search
    for  another  job,  the  characteristics of the subjects'
    next job, and  the  relationships  of  these  factors  to
    re-employment,  earnings,  job tenure on the new job, and
    cycling between welfare and work.
         (9)  The study shall examine the impact of mandatory
    work requirements, including the types of work activities
    to which  the  subjects  were  assigned,  and  the  links
    between   the   requirements   and   the  activities  and
    sanctions, employment, earnings, job tenure, and  cycling
    between welfare and work.
         (10)  The  study  shall  identify  all  sources  and
    amounts  of  reported    household  non-wage  income  and
    examine  the  influence  of  the  sources  and amounts of
    non-wage non-welfare income on employment, earnings,  job
    tenure, and cycling between welfare and work.
         (11)  The  study  shall examine sanctions, including
    child support  enforcement  and  paternity  establishment
    sanctions,  the  reasons  sanctions  are  threatened, the
    number threatened, the number imposed,  and  the  reasons
    sanctions   are   not  imposed  or  are  ended,  such  as
    cooperation achieved or good cause established.
         (12)  The study shall track the subjects'  usage  of
    TANF  benefits  over  the course of the lifetime 60-month
    limit of TANF eligibility, including patterns  of  usage,
    relationships  between consecutive usage of large numbers
    of months and other factors, status of all study subjects
    with respect  to  the  time  limit  as  of  each  report,
    characteristics  of  subjects  exhausting the eligibility
    limit, types of exceptions granted to the 60-month limit,
    and numbers of cases within each type of exception.
         (13)  The study shall track subjects'  participation
    in  other  public  systems, including the public schools,
    the child welfare system, the  criminal  justice  system,
    homeless  and  food  services,  and others and attempt to
    identify the positive or negative ripple effects in these
    systems of welfare policies, systems, and procedures.
    (f)  The Department shall cooperate  in  any  appropriate
study  by  an  independent expert of the impact upon Illinois
resident  non-citizens  of  the  denial  or  termination   of
assistance  under  the  Supplemental  Security  Income,  Food
Stamps, TANF, Medicaid, and Title XX social services programs
pursuant  to  the  changes  enacted  in  the federal Personal
Responsibility and Work  Opportunity  Reconciliation  Act  of
1996.   The  purpose  of  such a study must be to examine the
immediate and long-term effects on this population and on the
State  of  the  denial  or  termination  of  these  forms  of
assistance, including the  impact  on  the  individuals,  the
alternate means they find to obtain support and care, and the
impact  on    state  and  local  spending  and human services
delivery  systems.   An  appropriate  study  shall  select  a
statistically valid sample of persons  denied  or  terminated
from  each  type  of benefits and attempt to track them until
December 31, 2000.  Any reports from the  study  received  by
the  Department  shall  be  made  available  to  the  General
Assembly  and  the  Governor upon request, and a final report
shall be submitted upon completion. These  reports  shall  be
available to the public upon request.

    Section  99.  Effective date.  This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.

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