2014 -- S2476
Enacted 07/02/14
A N A C T
RELATING TO HUMAN SERVICES -- THE RHODE ISLAND WORKS PROGRAM
Introduced By: Senators Pichardo, and Crowley
Date Introduced: February 27, 2014
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows:
SECTION 1. Sections 40-5.2-12 of the General Laws in Chapter 40-5.2 entitled "The Rhode Island Works Program" is hereby amended to read as follows:
40-5.2-12. Work requirements for receipt of cash assistance. --
(a) The department of human services and the department of labor and training
shall assess the applicant/parent or non-parent caretaker relative's work
experience, educational, and vocational
abilities, and the department, together
with the parent, shall develop and enter
into a mandatory individual employment plan in accordance with subsection §40-5.2-10(e)
of this chapter.
(b) In the case of a family including
two (2) parents, at least one of the parents shall be required to participate
in an employment plan leading to full-time employment. The department may also
require the second parent in a two-(2) parent (2)
household to develop an employment plan if,
and when, the youngest child reaches six
(6) years of age or older.
(c) The written, individual employment plan shall specify, at minimum, the immediate steps necessary to support a goal of long-term, economic independence.
(d) All applicants and participants in
the Rhode Island Wworks employment program must attend and
participate in required appointments, employment plan development, and
employment-related activities, unless temporarily exempt for reasons specified
in this chapter.
(e) A recipient/participant temporarily exempted from the work requirements may participate in an individual employment plan on a voluntary basis, however, remains subject to the same program compliance requirements as a participant without a temporary exemption.
(f) The individual employment plan
shall specify the participant's work activity(ies) and the supportive services which that will
be provided by the department to enable the participant to engage in the work
activity(ies).
(g) Work Requirements for single-parent families. - In single-parent households, the participant parent or non-parent caretaker relative in the cash assistance payment, shall participate as a condition of eligibility, for a minimum of twenty (20) hours per week if the youngest child in the home is under the age of six (6), and for a minimum of thirty (30) hours per week if the youngest child in the home is six (6) years of age or older, in one or more of their required work activities, as appropriate, in order to help the parent obtain stable, full-time, paid employment, as determined by the department of human services and the department of labor and training; provided, however, that he or she shall begin with intensive employment services as the first step in the individual employment plan. Required work activities are as follows:
(1) At least twenty (20) hours per week must come from participation in one or more of the following ten (10) work activities:
(A) Unsubsidized employment;
(B) Subsidized, private sector employment;
(C) Subsidized, public sector employment;
(D) Work experience;
(E) On the Job Training;
(F) Job search and job readiness;
(G) Community service programs;
(H) Vocational educational training not to exceed twelve (12) months;
(I) Providing child care services to another participant parent who is participating in an approved community service program; and
(J) Adult education in an intensive
work readiness program not to exceed six (6) months.
(2) Above twenty (20) hours per week, the
parent may participate in one or more of the following three (3) activities in
order to satisfy a thirty-(30) hour (30)
requirement:
(A) Job skills training directly related to employment;
(B) Education directly related to
employment; and,
(C) Satisfactory attendance at a
secondary school or in a course of study leading to a certificate of general
equivalence if it is a teen parent under the age twenty (20) who is without a
high school diploma or General Equivalence Diploma (GED);.
(3) In the case of a parent under the age of twenty (20), attendance at a secondary school or the equivalent during the month, or twenty (20) hours per week on average for the month in education directly related to employment, will be counted as engaged in work.
(4) A parent who participates in a
work experience or community service program for the maximum number of hours
per week allowable by the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) is deemed to have
participated in his/her his or her required minimum hours per week in
core activities if actual participation falls short of his/her his or her
required minimum hours per week.
(5) A parent who has been determined
to have a physical or mental impairment affecting employment, but who has not been found eligible for Social
Security Disability Benefits or Supplemental Security Income must participate
in his or her rehabilitation employment plan as developed with the Ooffice of Rrehabilitative
Sservices which
that leads to employment and/or to
receipt of disability benefits through the Social Security Administration.
(6) A required work activity may be any other work activity permissible under federal TANF provisions or state defined Rhode Island Works Program activity, including up to ten (10) hours of activities required by a parent's department of children, youth and families service plan.
(h) Exemptions from Wwork Rrequirements
for the single parent family. - Work Rrequirements outlined in subsection §40-5.2-12(g)
above shall not apply to a single parent
if (and for so long as) the department finds that he or she is:
(1) Caring for a child below the age
of one,;
provided, however, that a parent may opt
for the deferral from an individual employment plan for a maximum of twelve
(12) months during the twenty-four (24) months of eligibility for cash
assistance, and provided further that a minor parent without a high school
diploma or the equivalent, and who is not married, shall not be exempt for more
than twelve (12) weeks from the birth of
the child;
(2) Caring for a disabled family member, who resides in the home and requires full-time care;
(3) A recipient of Social Security
Disability benefits or Supplemental Security Income or other disability
benefits which that have the same standard of disability as defined by the
Social Security Administration;
(4) An individual receiving assistance who is a victim of domestic violence as determined by the department in accordance with rules and regulations;
(5) An applicant for assistance in her third trimester or a pregnant woman in her third trimester who is a recipient of assistance and has medical documentation that she cannot work;
(6) An individual otherwise exempt by the department as defined in rules and regulations promulgated by the department.
(i) Work Rrequirement for two parent families.
(1) In families consisting of two (2) parents, one parent is required, and shall be engaged in, work activities as defined below, for at least
thirty-five (35) hours per week during the month, not fewer than thirty (30)
hours per week of which that are attributable to one or more of the
following listed work activities,; provided, however, that he or she shall begin
with intensive employment services as the first step in the Individual
Employment Plan. Two parent work requirements shall be defined as the
following:
(A) Unsubsidized employment;
(B) Subsidized private sector employment;
(C) Subsidized public-sector employment;
(D) Work experience;
(E) On-the-job training;
(F) Job search and job readiness;
(G) Community service program;
(H) Vocational educational training not to exceed twelve (12) months;
(I) The provision of child care services to a participant individual who is participating in a community service program; and
(J) Adult education in an intensive
work readiness program not to exceed six (6) months.
(2) Above thirty (30) hours per week, the following three (3) activities may also count for participation:
(A) Job skills training directly related to employment;
(B) Education directly related to employment; and
(C) Satisfactory attendance at secondary school or in a course of study leading to a certificate of general equivalence.
(3) A family with two (2) parents,
in which one or both parents participate in a work experience or community
service program, shall be deemed to have
participated in core work activities for the maximum number of hours per week
allowable by the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) if actual participation falls
short of his/her his or her required minimum hours per week.
(4) If the family receives child care assistance and an adult in the family is not disabled or caring for a severely disabled child, then the work-eligible individuals must be participating in work activities for an average of at least fifty-five (55) hours per week to count as a two-parent family engaged in work for the month.
(5) At least fifty (50) of the
fifty-five (55) hours per week must come from participation in the activities
listed in subdivision §40-5.1-12(i)(1).
Above fifty (50) hours per week, the
three (3) activities listed in subdivision
§40-5.1-(i)(2) may also count as
participation.
(6) A family with two (2) parents receiving child care in which one or both parents participate in a work experience or community service program for the maximum number of hours per week allowable by the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) will be considered to have met their required core hours if actual participation falls short of the required minimum hours per week. For families that need additional hours beyond the core activity requirement, these hours must be satisfied in some other TANF work activity.
(j) Exemptions from work requirements
for two parent families. - Work requirements outlined in subsection §40-5.2-12(i)
above shall not apply to two parent families if (and for so long as) the
department finds that:
(1) Both parents receive Supplemental Security Income (SSI);
(2) One parent receives SSI, and the
other parent is caring for a disabled family member who resides in the home, and who requires full time care; or
(3) The parents are otherwise exempt by the department as defined in rules and regulations.
(k) Failure to comply with work requirements. Sanctions and Terminations.
(1) The cash assistance to which an otherwise
eligible family/assistance unit is entitled under this chapter, shall be
reduced for three (3) months, whether or not consecutive, in accordance with
rules and regulations promulgated by the department, whenever any participant,
without good cause, as defined by the
department in its rules and regulations, has failed to enter into an individual
employment plan; has failed to attend a required appointment; has refused or
quit employment; or has failed to comply with any other requirements for the receipt
of cash assistance under this chapter. If the family's benefit has been
reduced, benefits shall be restored to the full amount beginning with the
initial payment made on the first of the month following the month in which the
parent: (1)(i) eEnters into an individual employment plan or
rehabilitation plan and demonstrates compliance with the terms thereof; or (2)(ii)
dDemonstrates
compliance with the terms of his or her existing individual employment plan or
rehabilitation plan, as such plan may be amended by agreement of the parent and
the department.
(2)(m)(2)
In the case where appropriate child care has been made available in accordance
with this chapter, a participant's failure, without good cause, to accept a
bona fide offer of work, including full-time, part-time, and/or temporary employment, or unpaid work
experience or community service, shall be deemed a failure to comply with the
work requirements of this section and shall result in reduction or termination
of cash assistance, as defined by the department in rules and regulations duly
promulgated.
(3)(n)(3) If the family/assistance unit's
benefit has been reduced for a total of three (3) months, whether or not
consecutive in accordance with this section due to the failure by one or more
parents to enter into an individual employment plan,
or failure to comply with the terms of his of her individual employment plan,
or the failure to comply with the requirements of this chapter, cash assistance
to the entire family shall end. The family/assistance unit may reapply for
benefits, and the benefits shall be restored to the family/assistance unit in the full amount the family/assistance unit is
otherwise eligible for under this chapter beginning on the first of the month
following the month in which all parents in the family/assistance unit who are
subject to the employment or rehabilitation plan requirements under this
chapter: (A a1) eEnter into an individual employment or
rehabilitation plan as applicable, and demonstrate compliance with the terms
thereof, or (B b2) dDemonstrate compliance with the terms of the
parent's individual employment or rehabilitation employment plan in effect at
the time of termination of benefits, as such plan may be amended by agreement
of the parent and the department.
(4)(o)(4) Up to ten (10) days following a
notice of adverse action to reduce or terminate benefits under this subsection,
the client may request the opportunity to meet with a social worker to identify
the reasons for non-compliance, establish good cause,
and seek to resolve any issues that have prevented the parent from complying
with the employment plan requirements.
(5)(p)(5) Participants whose cases had
closed in sanction status pursuant to Rhode Island's prior Temporary Assistance
for Needy Families Program,(federal TANF described in Title IVA of the federal
Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. section 601 et seq.), the Family Independence
Program, more specifically, subdivision §40-5.1-9(2)(c), due to failure to comply with
the cash assistance program requirements, but who had received less than
forty-eight (48) months of cash assistance at the time of closure, and who
reapply for cash assistance under the Rhode Island Wworks Pprogram, must demonstrate full compliance, as
defined by the department in its rules and regulations, before they shall be
eligible for cash assistance pursuant to this chapter.
(l) Good Cause. - Good Cause for failing to meet any program requirements including leaving employment, and failure to fulfill documentation requirements, shall be outlined in rules and regulations promulgated by the department of human services.
SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage.
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LC004676
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