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Evaluators randomly assigned a total of 4,433 single-parent Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) recipients who were required to enroll in the Job Opportunities and Basic Skills (JOBS) program in Atlanta into the Labor Force Attachment (LFA) program, the Human Capital Development (HCD) program, or the comparison group. The random assignment occurred from January 1992 to June 1993 following a JOBS orientation. People often waited up to six months between an initial meeting with an income maintenance worker and being invited to a JOBS orientation. The study included two- and five-year follow-up surveys, which followed people who were randomly assigned into the LFA, HCD, or comparison conditions from March 1992 to June 1993. This review focuses on the LFA versus comparison group contrast for Atlanta. Other reviews contrast the HCD and comparison groups and the LFA and HCD groups.
People were randomly assigned from January 1992 to June 1993. The study reports impacts five years after random assignment.
The National Evaluation of Welfare-to-Work Strategies (NEWWS) was funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation and Office of Planning, Research, and Evaluation) and by the U.S. Department of Education.
The evaluation targeted single-parent recipients of AFDC. Among the 4,433 study participants—1,441 in the LFA group, 1,495 in the HCD group, and 1,497 in the comparison group—nearly 97 percent were female at an average age of about 33 when the study began. More than 96 percent of people in the sample were Black, and more than half of the participants were never married. Families had 1 and 2 children, on average. About 24 percent of parents had some earnings in the past 12 months, but less than 7 percent were employed at random assignment. Nearly 60 percent of parents had a high school diploma or equivalent certificate, and about 13 percent were enrolled in education or training in the past 12 months.
Georgia Department of Human Services (state AFDC agency)
NEWWS aimed to analyze the effectiveness of 11 mandatory welfare-to-work programs in 7 sites across the United States.
The LFA program focused on rapid job placement. Staff encouraged clients to move quickly into work without being selective about which job to take. In Atlanta, LFA program staff first assigned clients to up to three weeks in a job club (within the JOBS office and led by staff from a community action agency), followed by one to two weeks of time spent applying to jobs. Clients had to make 6 in-person inquiries or send 15 inquiry letters per week. People who did not find a job during this period could go on to participate in more job searching, vocational training, basic education, or unpaid work experience. Case managers emphasized customer service through counseling and assistance with child care and transportation. Case managers could sanction nonparticipating clients.
People in the comparison group could not receive any program services but were not subject to participation requirements (and therefore did not risk nonparticipation sanctions) for program services or employment. These clients could, however, participate in employment-related activities available in their communities.
People could face financial sanctions if they did not comply with participation requirements.
For the LFA group, job clubs lasted for about one month, and clients who completed job club but remained unemployed could receive multiple rounds of short-term education or vocational training for nine months. The study did not specify how long the program monitored clients to examine whether a sanction should be applied to their case.
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, through the Family Support Act
The study took place in Atlanta, GA.
Child well-being, Physical health, Household and personal circumstances, Fertility, Household composition, Housing, Domestic abuse, Child care