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Report Shows Ohio Benefit Programs Moving in Opposite Directions

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Wednesday, February 4, 2015   

COLUMBUS, Ohio - The stage is set for a debate over human-service funding now that Gov. John Kasich has unveiled his state budget, and new research points to the importance of ensuring that benefit systems in Ohio work together to help low-income families.

Enrollment in the Medicaid extension exceeded 450,000 as of November, much higher than expectations, said Jon Honeck, director of public policy for the Center for Community Solutions. However, he added, participation in SNAP - or food stamps - and Ohio Works First is dropping.

"Here are these three major benefit programs, and they seem to be moving in opposite directions," he said. "The state needs to do a better job with food stamps and with Ohio Works First to make sure that these programs really are reaching the population that they should be reaching."

Honeck said the improvement in Ohio's unemployment rate is partly attributed to discouraged workers dropping out of the shrinking labor force. He said this needs to be considered when work requirements are discussed for benefit programs.

"These are the same people that are signing up for the Medicaid extension," he said. "This population faces a lot of barriers to employment, whether it's transportation, education levels and other things that make it difficult for them to find a job or to keep a job."

Honeck said the work requirements for the programs are taking a toll because they are too aggressive, and county agencies are not given enough resources to help clients. He added that a change in philosophy at the local level is needed that focuses on fully assessing the needs of those who come in for assistance.

"From there," he said, "building a personalized case-management plan to say, 'What are the steps that we need to take this person from their present situation to a steady job with a living wage?' "

Ohio Works First provides cash assistance to eligible families meeting certain work requirements, and the research found that caseloads have fallen almost 50 percent since January 2011. In the 12 months following a new work requirement for SNAP in most Ohio counties, total SNAP recipients declined by 5.4 percent statewide.

The report is online at ccs.memberclicks.net.


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