2024 -- S 2337 SUBSTITUTE A | |
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LC004820/SUB A | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2024 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO HUMAN SERVICES -- THE RHODE ISLAND WORKS PROGRAM | |
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Introduced By: Senators Murray, DiMario, Pearson, Bissaillon, Euer, Acosta, Ciccone, | |
Date Introduced: February 12, 2024 | |
Referred To: Senate Finance | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Sections 40-5.2-10, 40-5.2-11 and 40-5.2-12 of the General Laws in Chapter |
2 | 40-5.2 entitled "The Rhode Island Works Program" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
3 | 40-5.2-10. Necessary requirements and conditions. |
4 | The following requirements and conditions shall be necessary to establish eligibility for |
5 | the program. |
6 | (a) Citizenship, alienage, and residency requirements. |
7 | (1) A person shall be a resident of the State of Rhode Island. |
8 | (2) Effective October 1, 2008, a person shall be a United States citizen, or shall meet the |
9 | alienage requirements established in § 402(b) of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity |
10 | Reconciliation Act of 1996, PRWORA, Pub. L. No. 104-193 and as that section may hereafter be |
11 | amended [8 U.S.C. § 1612]; a person who is not a United States citizen and does not meet the |
12 | alienage requirements established in PRWORA, as amended, is not eligible for cash assistance in |
13 | accordance with this chapter. |
14 | (b) The family/assistance unit must meet any other requirements established by the |
15 | department of human services by rules and regulations adopted pursuant to the Administrative |
16 | Procedures Act, as necessary to promote the purpose and goals of this chapter. |
17 | (c) Receipt of cash assistance is conditional upon compliance with all program |
18 | requirements. |
19 | (d) All individuals domiciled in this state shall be exempt from the application of |
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1 | subdivision 115(d)(1)(A) of Pub. L. No. 104-193, the Personal Responsibility and Work |
2 | Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996, PRWORA [21 U.S.C. § 862a], which makes any |
3 | individual ineligible for certain state and federal assistance if that individual has been convicted |
4 | under federal or state law of any offense that is classified as a felony by the law of the jurisdiction |
5 | and that has as an element the possession, use, or distribution of a controlled substance as defined |
6 | in § 102(6) of the Controlled Substances Act (21 U.S.C. § 802(6)). |
7 | (e) Individual employment plan as a condition of eligibility. |
8 | (1) Following receipt of an application, the department of human services shall assess the |
9 | financial conditions of the family, including the non-parent caretaker relative who is applying for |
10 | cash assistance for themself as well as for the minor child(ren), in the context of an eligibility |
11 | determination. If a parent or non-parent caretaker relative is unemployed or under-employed, the |
12 | department shall conduct an initial assessment, taking into account: |
13 | (A) The physical capacity, skills, education, work experience, health, safety, family |
14 | responsibilities, and place of residence of the individual; and |
15 | (B) The child care and supportive services required by the applicant to avail themself of |
16 | employment opportunities and/or work readiness programs. |
17 | (2) On the basis of this assessment, the department of human services and the department |
18 | of labor and training, as appropriate, in consultation with the applicant, shall develop an individual |
19 | employment plan for the family that requires the individual to participate in the intensive |
20 | employment services. Intensive employment services shall be defined as the work requirement |
21 | activities in § 40-5.2-12(g) and (i). |
22 | (3) The director, or the director’s designee, may assign a case manager to an |
23 | applicant/participant, as appropriate. |
24 | (4) The department of labor and training and the department of human services in |
25 | conjunction with the participant shall develop a revised individual employment plan that shall |
26 | identify employment objectives, taking into consideration factors above, and shall include a |
27 | strategy for immediate employment and for preparing for, finding, and retaining employment |
28 | consistent, to the extent practicable, with the individual’s career objectives. |
29 | (5) The individual employment plan must include the provision for the participant to |
30 | engage in work requirements as outlined in § 40-5.2-12. |
31 | (6)(i) The participant shall attend and participate immediately in intensive assessment and |
32 | employment services as the first step in the individual employment plan, unless temporarily exempt |
33 | from this requirement in accordance with this chapter. Intensive assessment and employment |
34 | services shall be defined as the work requirement activities in § 40-5.2-12(g) and (i). |
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1 | (ii) Parents under age twenty (20) without a high school diploma or general equivalency |
2 | diploma (GED) shall be referred to special teen-parent programs that will provide intensive services |
3 | designed to assist teen parents to complete high school education or GED, and to continue approved |
4 | work plan activities in accord with Rhode Island works program requirements. |
5 | (7) The applicant shall become a participant in accordance with this chapter at the time the |
6 | individual employment plan is signed and entered into. |
7 | (8) Applicants and participants of the Rhode Island works program shall agree to comply |
8 | with the terms of the individual employment plan, and shall cooperate fully with the steps |
9 | established in the individual employment plan, including the work requirements. |
10 | (9) The department of human services has the authority under the chapter to require |
11 | attendance by the applicant/participant, either at the department of human services or at the |
12 | department of labor and training, at appointments deemed necessary for the purpose of having the |
13 | applicant enter into and become eligible for assistance through the Rhode Island works program. |
14 | The appointments include, but are not limited to: the initial interview, orientation and assessment; |
15 | job readiness; and job search. Attendance is required as a condition of eligibility for cash assistance |
16 | in accordance with rules and regulations established by the department. |
17 | (10) As a condition of eligibility for assistance pursuant to this chapter, the |
18 | applicant/participant shall be obligated to keep appointments; attend orientation meetings at the |
19 | department of human services and/or the Rhode Island department of labor and training; participate |
20 | in any initial assessments or appraisals; and comply with all the terms of the individual employment |
21 | plan in accordance with department of human services rules and regulations. |
22 | (11) A participant, including a parent or non-parent caretaker relative included in the cash |
23 | assistance payment, shall not voluntarily quit a job or refuse a job unless there is good cause as |
24 | defined in this chapter or the department’s rules and regulations. |
25 | (12) A participant who voluntarily quits or refuses a job without good cause, as defined in |
26 | § 40-5.2-12(l), while receiving cash assistance in accordance with this chapter, shall be sanctioned |
27 | in accordance with rules and regulations promulgated by the department. |
28 | (f) Resources. |
29 | (1) The family or assistance unit’s countable resources shall be less than the allowable |
30 | resource limit established by the department in accordance with this chapter. |
31 | (2) No family or assistance unit shall be eligible for assistance payments if the combined |
32 | value of its available resources (reduced by any obligations or debts with respect to such resources) |
33 | exceeds five thousand dollars ($5,000). |
34 | (3) For purposes of this subsection, the following shall not be counted as resources of the |
| LC004820/SUB A - Page 3 of 16 |
1 | family/assistance unit in the determination of eligibility for the works program: |
2 | (i) The home owned and occupied by a child, parent, relative, or other individual; |
3 | (ii) Real property owned by a husband and wife as tenants by the entirety, if the property |
4 | is not the home of the family and if the spouse of the applicant refuses to sell his or her interest in |
5 | the property; |
6 | (iii) Real property that the family is making a good faith effort to dispose of, however, any |
7 | cash assistance payable to the family for any such period shall be conditioned upon such disposal |
8 | of the real property within six (6) months of the date of application and any payments of assistance |
9 | for that period shall (at the time of disposal) be considered overpayments to the extent that they |
10 | would not have occurred at the beginning of the period for which the payments were made. All |
11 | overpayments are debts subject to recovery in accordance with the provisions of the chapter; |
12 | (iv) Income-producing property other than real estate including, but not limited to, |
13 | equipment such as farm tools, carpenter’s tools, and vehicles used in the production of goods or |
14 | services that the department determines are necessary for the family to earn a living; |
15 | (v) One vehicle for each adult household member, but not to exceed two (2) vehicles per |
16 | household, and in addition, a vehicle used primarily for income-producing purposes such as, but |
17 | not limited to, a taxi, truck, or fishing boat; a vehicle used as a family’s home; a vehicle that |
18 | annually produces income consistent with its fair market value, even if only used on a seasonal |
19 | basis; a vehicle necessary to transport a family member with a disability where the vehicle is |
20 | specially equipped to meet the specific needs of the person with a disability or if the vehicle is a |
21 | special type of vehicle that makes it possible to transport the person with a disability; |
22 | (vi) Household furnishings and appliances, clothing, personal effects, and keepsakes of |
23 | limited value; |
24 | (vii) Burial plots (one for each child, relative, and other individual in the assistance unit) |
25 | and funeral arrangements; |
26 | (viii) For the month of receipt and the following month, any refund of federal income taxes |
27 | made to the family by reason of § 32 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, 26 U.S.C. § 32 (relating |
28 | to earned income tax credit), and any payment made to the family by an employer under § 3507 of |
29 | the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, 26 U.S.C. § 3507 [repealed] (relating to advance payment of |
30 | such earned income credit); |
31 | (ix) The resources of any family member receiving supplementary security income |
32 | assistance under the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 301 et seq.; |
33 | (x) Any veteran’s disability pension benefits received as a result of any disability sustained |
34 | by the veteran while in the military service. |
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1 | (g) Income. |
2 | (1) Except as otherwise provided for herein, in determining eligibility for and the amount |
3 | of cash assistance to which a family is entitled under this chapter, the income of a family includes |
4 | all of the money, goods, and services received or actually available to any member of the family. |
5 | (2) In determining the eligibility for and the amount of cash assistance to which a |
6 | family/assistance unit is entitled under this chapter, income in any month shall not include the first |
7 | three hundred dollars ($300) five hundred and twenty-five dollars ($525) of gross earnings plus |
8 | fifty percent (50%) of the gross earnings of the family in excess of three hundred dollars ($300) |
9 | five hundred and twenty-five dollars ($525) earned during the month. |
10 | (3) The income of a family shall not include: |
11 | (i) The first fifty dollars ($50.00) in child support received in any month from each |
12 | noncustodial parent of a child plus any arrearages in child support (to the extent of the first fifty |
13 | dollars ($50.00) per month multiplied by the number of months in which the support has been in |
14 | arrears) that are paid in any month by a noncustodial parent of a child; |
15 | (ii) Earned income of any child; |
16 | (iii) Income received by a family member who is receiving Supplemental Security Income |
17 | (SSI) assistance under Title XVI of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1381 et seq.; |
18 | (iv) The value of assistance provided by state or federal government or private agencies to |
19 | meet nutritional needs, including: value of USDA-donated foods; value of supplemental food |
20 | assistance received under the Child Nutrition Act of 1966, as amended, and the special food service |
21 | program for children under Title VII, nutrition program for the elderly, of the Older Americans Act |
22 | of 1965 as amended, and the value of food stamps; |
23 | (v) Value of certain assistance provided to undergraduate students, including any grant or |
24 | loan for an undergraduate student for educational purposes made or insured under any loan program |
25 | administered by the United States Commissioner of Education (or the Rhode Island council on |
26 | postsecondary education or the Rhode Island division of higher education assistance); |
27 | (vi) Foster care payments; |
28 | (vii) Home energy assistance funded by state or federal government or by a nonprofit |
29 | organization; |
30 | (viii) Payments for supportive services or reimbursement of out-of-pocket expenses made |
31 | to foster grandparents, senior health aides, or senior companions and to persons serving in SCORE |
32 | and ACE and any other program under Title II and Title III of the Domestic Volunteer Service Act |
33 | of 1973, 42 U.S.C. § 5000 et seq.; |
34 | (ix) Payments to volunteers under AmeriCorps VISTA as defined in the department’s rules |
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1 | and regulations; |
2 | (x) Certain payments to native Americans; payments distributed per capita to, or held in |
3 | trust for, members of any Indian Tribe under P.L. 92-254, 25 U.S.C. § 1261 et seq., P.L. 93-134, |
4 | 25 U.S.C. § 1401 et seq., or P.L. 94-540; receipts distributed to members of certain Indian tribes |
5 | which are referred to in § 5 of P.L. 94-114, 25 U.S.C. § 459d, that became effective October 17, |
6 | 1975; |
7 | (xi) Refund from the federal and state earned income tax credit and any federal or state |
8 | child tax credits or rebates; |
9 | (xii) The value of any state, local, or federal government rent or housing subsidy, provided |
10 | that this exclusion shall not limit the reduction in benefits provided for in the payment standard |
11 | section of this chapter; |
12 | (xiii) The earned income of any adult family member who gains employment while an |
13 | active RI Works household member. This income is excluded for the first six (6) months of |
14 | employment in which the income is earned, or until the household’s total gross income exceeds |
15 | one hundred eighty-five percent (185%) of the federal poverty level, unless the household reaches |
16 | its sixty-month (60) time limit first; |
17 | (xiv) Any veteran’s disability pension benefits received as a result of any disability |
18 | sustained by the veteran while in the military service. |
19 | (4) The receipt of a lump sum of income shall affect participants for cash assistance in |
20 | accordance with rules and regulations promulgated by the department. |
21 | (h) Time limit on the receipt of cash assistance. |
22 | (1) On or after January 1, 2020, no cash assistance shall be provided, pursuant to this |
23 | chapter, to a family or assistance unit that includes an adult member who has received cash |
24 | assistance for a total of sixty (60) months (whether or not consecutive), to include any time |
25 | receiving any type of cash assistance in any other state or territory of the United States of America |
26 | as defined herein. Provided further, in no circumstances other than provided for in subsection (h)(3) |
27 | with respect to certain minor children, shall cash assistance be provided pursuant to this chapter to |
28 | a family or assistance unit that includes an adult member who has received cash assistance for a |
29 | total of a lifetime limit of sixty (60) months. |
30 | (2) Cash benefits received by a minor dependent child shall not be counted toward their |
31 | lifetime time limit for receiving benefits under this chapter should that minor child apply for cash |
32 | benefits as an adult. |
33 | (3) Certain minor children not subject to time limit. This section regarding the lifetime time |
34 | limit for the receipt of cash assistance, shall not apply only in the instances of a minor child(ren) |
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1 | living with a parent who receives SSI benefits and a minor child(ren) living with a responsible adult |
2 | non-parent caretaker relative who is not in the cash assistance payment. |
3 | (4) Receipt of family cash assistance in any other state or territory of the United States of |
4 | America shall be determined by the department of human services and shall include family cash |
5 | assistance funded in whole or in part by Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) funds |
6 | [Title IV-A of the federal Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 601 et seq.] and/or family cash assistance |
7 | provided under a program similar to the Rhode Island families work and opportunity program or |
8 | the federal TANF program. |
9 | (5)(i) The department of human services shall mail a notice to each assistance unit when |
10 | the assistance unit has six (6) months of cash assistance remaining and each month thereafter until |
11 | the time limit has expired. The notice must be developed by the department of human services and |
12 | must contain information about the lifetime time limit, the number of months the participant has |
13 | remaining, the hardship extension policy, the availability of a post-employment-and-closure bonus; |
14 | and any other information pertinent to a family or an assistance unit nearing the sixty-month (60) |
15 | lifetime time limit. |
16 | (ii) For applicants who have less than six (6) months remaining in the sixty-month (60) |
17 | lifetime time limit because the family or assistance unit previously received cash assistance in |
18 | Rhode Island or in another state, the department shall notify the applicant of the number of months |
19 | remaining when the application is approved and begin the process required in subsection (h)(5)(i). |
20 | (6) If a cash assistance recipient family was closed pursuant to Rhode Island’s Temporary |
21 | Assistance for Needy Families Program (federal TANF described in Title IV-A of the Federal |
22 | Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 601 et seq.), formerly entitled the Rhode Island family |
23 | independence program, more specifically under § 40-5.1-9(2)(c) [repealed], due to sanction |
24 | because of failure to comply with the cash assistance program requirements; and that recipient |
25 | family received sixty (60) months of cash benefits in accordance with the family independence |
26 | program, then that recipient family is not able to receive further cash assistance for his/her family, |
27 | under this chapter, except under hardship exceptions. |
28 | (7) The months of state or federally funded cash assistance received by a recipient family |
29 | since May 1, 1997, under Rhode Island’s Temporary Assistance for Needy Families Program |
30 | (federal TANF described in Title IV-A of the Federal Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 601 et seq.), |
31 | formerly entitled the Rhode Island family independence program, shall be countable toward the |
32 | time-limited cash assistance described in this chapter. |
33 | (i) Time limit on the receipt of cash assistance. |
34 | (1) No cash assistance shall be provided, pursuant to this chapter, to a family assistance |
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1 | unit in which an adult member has received cash assistance for a total of sixty (60) months (whether |
2 | or not consecutive) to include any time receiving any type of cash assistance in any other state or |
3 | territory of the United States as defined herein effective August 1, 2008. Provided further, that no |
4 | cash assistance shall be provided to a family in which an adult member has received assistance for |
5 | twenty-four (24) consecutive months unless the adult member has a rehabilitation employment plan |
6 | as provided in § 40-5.2-12(g)(5). |
7 | (2) Effective August 1, 2008, no cash assistance shall be provided pursuant to this chapter |
8 | to a family in which a child has received cash assistance for a total of sixty (60) months (whether |
9 | or not consecutive) if the parent is ineligible for assistance under this chapter pursuant to subsection |
10 | (a)(2) to include any time they received any type of cash assistance in any other state or territory |
11 | of the United States as defined herein. |
12 | (j) Hardship exceptions. |
13 | (1) The department may extend an assistance unit’s or family’s cash assistance beyond the |
14 | time limit, by reason of hardship; provided, however, that the number of families to be exempted |
15 | by the department with respect to their time limit under this subsection shall not exceed twenty |
16 | percent (20%) of the average monthly number of families to which assistance is provided for under |
17 | this chapter in a fiscal year; provided, however, that to the extent now or hereafter permitted by |
18 | federal law, any waiver granted under § 40-5.2-34, for domestic violence, shall not be counted in |
19 | determining the twenty percent (20%) maximum under this section. |
20 | (2) Parents who receive extensions to the time limit due to hardship must have and comply |
21 | with employment plans designed to remove or ameliorate the conditions that warranted the |
22 | extension. |
23 | (k) Parents under eighteen (18) years of age. |
24 | (1) A family consisting of a parent who is under the age of eighteen (18), and who has |
25 | never been married, and who has a child; or a family consisting of a person under the age of eighteen |
26 | (18) from onset of pregnancy shall be eligible for cash assistance only if the family resides in the |
27 | home of an adult parent, legal guardian, or other adult relative. The assistance shall be provided to |
28 | the adult parent, legal guardian, or other adult relative on behalf of the individual and child unless |
29 | otherwise authorized by the department. |
30 | (2) This subsection shall not apply if the minor parent or pregnant minor has no parent, |
31 | legal guardian, or other adult relative who is living and/or whose whereabouts are unknown; or the |
32 | department determines that the physical or emotional health or safety of the minor parent, or his or |
33 | her child, or the pregnant minor, would be jeopardized if he or she was required to live in the same |
34 | residence as his or her parent, legal guardian, or other adult relative (refusal of a parent, legal |
| LC004820/SUB A - Page 8 of 16 |
1 | guardian, or other adult relative to allow the minor parent or his or her child, or a pregnant minor, |
2 | to live in his or her home shall constitute a presumption that the health or safety would be so |
3 | jeopardized); or the minor parent or pregnant minor has lived apart from his or her own parent or |
4 | legal guardian for a period of at least one year before either the birth of any child to a minor parent |
5 | or the onset of the pregnant minor’s pregnancy; or there is good cause, under departmental |
6 | regulations, for waiving the subsection; and the individual resides in a supervised supportive-living |
7 | arrangement to the extent available. |
8 | (3) For purposes of this section, “supervised supportive-living arrangement” means an |
9 | arrangement that requires minor parents to enroll and make satisfactory progress in a program |
10 | leading to a high school diploma or a general education development certificate, and requires minor |
11 | parents to participate in the adolescent parenting program designated by the department, to the |
12 | extent the program is available; and provides rules and regulations that ensure regular adult |
13 | supervision. |
14 | (l) Assignment and cooperation. As a condition of eligibility for cash and medical |
15 | assistance under this chapter, each adult member, parent, or caretaker relative of the |
16 | family/assistance unit must: |
17 | (1) Assign to the state any rights to support for children within the family from any person |
18 | that the family member has at the time the assignment is executed or may have while receiving |
19 | assistance under this chapter; |
20 | (2) Consent to and cooperate with the state in establishing the paternity and in establishing |
21 | and/or enforcing child support and medical support orders for all children in the family or assistance |
22 | unit in accordance with title 15 of the general laws, as amended, unless the parent or caretaker |
23 | relative is found to have good cause for refusing to comply with the requirements of this subsection. |
24 | (3) Absent good cause, as defined by the department of human services through the |
25 | rulemaking process, for refusing to comply with the requirements of subsections (l)(1) and (l)(2), |
26 | cash assistance to the family shall be reduced by twenty-five percent (25%) until the adult member |
27 | of the family who has refused to comply with the requirements of this subsection consents to and |
28 | cooperates with the state in accordance with the requirements of this subsection. |
29 | (4) As a condition of eligibility for cash and medical assistance under this chapter, each |
30 | adult member, parent, or caretaker relative of the family/assistance unit must consent to and |
31 | cooperate with the state in identifying and providing information to assist the state in pursuing any |
32 | third party who may be liable to pay for care and services under Title XIX of the Social Security |
33 | Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1396 et seq. |
34 | 40-5.2-11. Cash assistance. |
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1 | (a) A family or assistance unit found by the department to meet the eligibility criteria set |
2 | forth in this chapter shall be eligible to receive cash assistance as of the date a signed, written |
3 | application, signed under a penalty of perjury, is received by the department. |
4 | (b) The family members or assistance unit shall be eligible for cash assistance for so long |
5 | as they continue to meet the eligibility criteria outlined in accordance with this chapter. Parents and |
6 | adult non-parent caretaker relatives receiving cash assistance shall be eligible so long as they meet |
7 | the terms and conditions of the work requirements of § 40-5.2-12. An adult caretaker relative shall |
8 | be eligible for assistance as a member of the assistance unit so long as he or she meets all the |
9 | eligibility requirements of this chapter. |
10 | (c) The monthly amount of cash assistance shall be equal to the payment standard for the |
11 | family minus the countable income of the family in that month. The department is authorized to |
12 | reduce the amount of assistance in the month of application to reflect the number of the days |
13 | between the first day of the month and the effective date of the application. |
14 | (d) A decision on the application for assistance shall be made or rejected by the department |
15 | no later than thirty (30) days following the date submitted and shall be effective as of the date of |
16 | application. |
17 | (e) The payment standard is equal to the sum of the following: four hundred twenty-five |
18 | dollars ($425) five hundred ten dollars ($510) (three hundred sixty dollars ($360) (four hundred |
19 | forty-five dollars ($445) for a family residing in subsidized housing) for the first person; one |
20 | hundred fifty-nine dollars ($159) one hundred ninety-one dollars ($191) for the second person; one |
21 | hundred thirty-seven dollars ($137) one hundred sixty-four dollars ($164) for the third person; and |
22 | one hundred four dollars ($104) one hundred twenty-five dollars ($125) for each additional person. |
23 | 40-5.2-12. Work requirements for receipt of cash assistance. |
24 | (a) The department of human services and the department of labor and training shall assess |
25 | the applicant/parent or non-parent caretaker relative’s work experience, educational, and vocational |
26 | abilities, and the department, together with the parent, shall develop and enter into a mandatory, |
27 | individual employment plan in accordance with § 40-5.2-10(e). |
28 | (b) In the case of a family including two (2) parents, at least one of the parents shall be |
29 | required to participate in an employment plan leading to full-time employment. The department |
30 | may also require the second parent in a two-parent (2) household to develop an employment plan |
31 | if, and when, the youngest child reaches six (6) years of age or older. |
32 | (c) The written, individual employment plan shall specify, at minimum, the immediate |
33 | steps necessary to support a goal of long-term, economic independence. |
34 | (d) All applicants and participants in the Rhode Island works employment program must |
| LC004820/SUB A - Page 10 of 16 |
1 | attend and participate in required appointments, employment plan development, and employment- |
2 | related activities, unless temporarily exempt for reasons specified in this chapter. |
3 | (e) A recipient/participant temporarily exempted from the work requirements may |
4 | participate in an individual employment plan on a voluntary basis, however, the individual remains |
5 | subject to the same program compliance requirements as a participant without a temporary |
6 | exemption. |
7 | (f) The individual employment plan shall specify the participant’s work activity(ies) and |
8 | the supportive services that will be provided by the department to enable the participant to engage |
9 | in the work activity(ies). |
10 | (g) Work requirements for single-parent families. In single-parent households, the |
11 | participant parent or non-parent caretaker relative in the cash assistance payment, shall participate |
12 | as a condition of eligibility, for a minimum of twenty (20) hours per week if the youngest child in |
13 | the home is under the age of six (6), and for a minimum of thirty (30) hours per week if the youngest |
14 | child in the home is six (6) years of age or older, in one or more of their required work activities, |
15 | as appropriate, in order to help the parent obtain stable, full-time, paid employment, as determined |
16 | by the department of human services and the department of labor and training; provided, however, |
17 | that he or she shall begin with intensive employment services as the first step in the individual |
18 | employment plan. Required work activities are as follows: |
19 | (1) At least twenty (20) hours per week must come from participation in one or more of |
20 | the following ten (10) work activities: |
21 | (i) Unsubsidized employment; |
22 | (ii) Subsidized private-sector employment; |
23 | (iii) Subsidized public-sector employment; |
24 | (iv) Work experience; |
25 | (v) On-the-job training; |
26 | (vi) Job search and job readiness; |
27 | (vii) Community service programs; |
28 | (viii) Vocational educational training not to exceed twelve (12) months; provided, |
29 | however, that a participant who successfully completes their first year of education at the |
30 | community college of Rhode Island may participate in vocational education training for an |
31 | additional twelve (12) months; |
32 | (ix) Providing childcare services to another participant parent who is participating in an |
33 | approved community service program; and |
34 | (x) Adult education in an intensive work-readiness program. |
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1 | (2) Above twenty (20) hours per week, the parent may participate in one or more of the |
2 | following three (3) activities in order to satisfy a thirty-hour (30) requirement: |
3 | (i) Job skills training directly related to employment; |
4 | (ii) Education directly related to employment; and |
5 | (iii) Satisfactory attendance at a secondary school or in a course of study leading to a |
6 | certificate of general equivalence if it is a teen parent under the age of twenty (20) who is without |
7 | a high school diploma or General Equivalence Diploma (GED). |
8 | (3) In the case of a parent under the age of twenty (20), attendance at a secondary school |
9 | or the equivalent during the month, or twenty (20) hours per week on average for the month in |
10 | education directly related to employment, will be counted as engaged in work. |
11 | (4) A parent who participates in a work experience or community service program for the |
12 | maximum number of hours per week allowable by the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) is deemed |
13 | to have participated in his or her required minimum hours per week in core activities if actual |
14 | participation falls short of his or her required minimum hours per week. |
15 | (5) A parent who has been determined to have a physical or mental impairment affecting |
16 | employment, but who has not been found eligible for Social Security Disability benefits or |
17 | Supplemental Security Income must participate in his or her rehabilitation employment plan as |
18 | developed with the office of rehabilitation services that leads to employment and/or to receipt of |
19 | disability benefits through the Social Security Administration. |
20 | (6) A required work activity may be any other work activity permissible under federal |
21 | TANF provisions or state-defined Rhode Island works program activity, including up to ten (10) |
22 | hours of activities required by a parent’s department of children, youth and families service plan. |
23 | (h) Exemptions from work requirements for the single-parent family. Work requirements |
24 | outlined in subsection (g) shall not apply to a single parent if (and for so long as) the department |
25 | finds that he or she is: |
26 | (1) Caring for a child below the age of one; provided, however, that a parent may opt for |
27 | the deferral from an individual employment plan for a maximum of twelve (12) months during the |
28 | twenty-four (24) months of eligibility for cash assistance and provided, further, that a minor parent |
29 | without a high school diploma or the equivalent, and who is not married, shall not be exempt for |
30 | more than twelve (12) weeks from the birth of the child; |
31 | (2) Caring for a disabled family member who resides in the home and requires full-time |
32 | care; |
33 | (3) A recipient of Social Security Disability benefits or Supplemental Security Income or |
34 | other disability benefits that have the same standard of disability as defined by the Social Security |
| LC004820/SUB A - Page 12 of 16 |
1 | Administration; |
2 | (4) An individual receiving assistance who is a victim of domestic violence as determined |
3 | by the department in accordance with rules and regulations; |
4 | (5) An applicant for assistance in her third trimester or a pregnant woman in her third |
5 | trimester who is a recipient of assistance and has medical documentation that she cannot work; |
6 | (6) An individual otherwise exempt by the department as defined in rules and regulations |
7 | promulgated by the department. |
8 | (i) Work requirement for two-parent families. |
9 | (1) In families consisting of two (2) parents, one or both parents are required, and shall be |
10 | engaged in, work activities as defined below, for an individual or combined total of at least thirty- |
11 | five (35) hours per week during the month, not fewer than thirty (30) hours per week of which are |
12 | attributable to one or more of the following listed work activities; provided, however, that he or she |
13 | shall begin with intensive employment services as the first step in the individual employment plan. |
14 | Two-parent work requirements shall be defined as the following: |
15 | (i) Unsubsidized employment; |
16 | (ii) Subsidized private-sector employment; |
17 | (iii) Subsidized public-sector employment; |
18 | (iv) Work experience; |
19 | (v) On-the-job training; |
20 | (vi) Job search and job readiness; |
21 | (vii) Community service program; |
22 | (viii) Vocational educational training not to exceed twelve (12) months; provided, |
23 | however, that a participant who successfully completes their first year of education at the |
24 | community college of Rhode Island may participate in vocational education training for an |
25 | additional twelve (12) months; |
26 | (ix) The provision of childcare services to a participant individual who is participating in a |
27 | community service program; and |
28 | (x) Adult education in an intensive work-readiness program. |
29 | (2) Above thirty (30) hours per week, the following three (3) activities may also count for |
30 | participation: |
31 | (i) Job skills training directly related to employment; |
32 | (ii) Education directly related to employment; and |
33 | (iii) Satisfactory attendance at secondary school or in a course of study leading to a |
34 | certificate of general equivalence. |
| LC004820/SUB A - Page 13 of 16 |
1 | (3) A family with two (2) parents, in which one or both parents participate in a work |
2 | experience or community service program, shall be deemed to have participated in core work |
3 | activities for the maximum number of hours per week allowable by the Fair Labor Standards Act |
4 | (FLSA) if actual participation falls short of his or her required minimum hours per week. |
5 | (4) If the family receives childcare assistance and an adult in the family is not disabled or |
6 | caring for a severely disabled child, then the work-eligible individuals must be participating in work |
7 | activities for an average of at least fifty-five (55) hours per week to count as a two-parent family |
8 | engaged in work for the month. |
9 | (5) At least fifty (50) of the fifty-five (55) hours per week must come from participation in |
10 | the activities listed in subsection (i)(1). |
11 | Above fifty (50) hours per week, the three (3) activities listed in subsection (i)(2) may also |
12 | count as participation. |
13 | (6) A family with two (2) parents receiving child care in which one or both parents |
14 | participate in a work experience or community service program for the maximum number of hours |
15 | per week allowable by the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) will be considered to have met their |
16 | required core hours if actual participation falls short of the required minimum hours per week. For |
17 | families that need additional hours beyond the core activity requirement, these hours must be |
18 | satisfied in some other TANF work activity. |
19 | (j) Exemptions from work requirements for two-parent families. Work requirements |
20 | outlined in subsection (i) shall not apply to two-parent families if (and for so long as) the department |
21 | finds that: |
22 | (1) Both parents receive Supplemental Security Income (SSI); |
23 | (2) One parent receives SSI, and the other parent is caring for a disabled family member |
24 | who resides in the home and who requires full-time care; or |
25 | (3) The parents are otherwise exempt by the department as defined in rules and regulations. |
26 | (k) Failure to comply with work requirements — Sanctions and terminations. |
27 | (1) The cash assistance to which an otherwise eligible family/assistance unit is entitled |
28 | under this chapter shall be reduced for three (3) months, whether or not consecutive, in accordance |
29 | with rules and regulations promulgated by the department, whenever any participant, without good |
30 | cause as defined by the department in its rules and regulations, has failed to enter into an individual |
31 | employment plan; has failed to attend a required appointment; has refused or quit employment; or |
32 | has failed to comply with any other requirements for the receipt of cash assistance under this |
33 | chapter. The reduction in cash assistance shall not exceed the share of the payment made to the |
34 | participant, i.e., the amount paid in addition to the payment for the dependent children. If the |
| LC004820/SUB A - Page 14 of 16 |
1 | family’s benefit has been reduced, benefits shall be restored to the full amount beginning with the |
2 | initial payment made on the first of the month following the month in which the parent: (i) Enters |
3 | into an individual employment plan or rehabilitation plan and demonstrates compliance with the |
4 | terms thereof; or (ii) Demonstrates compliance with the terms of his or her existing individual |
5 | employment plan or rehabilitation plan, as such plan may be amended by agreement of the parent |
6 | and the department. |
7 | (2) In the case where appropriate child care has been made available in accordance with |
8 | this chapter, a participant’s failure, without good cause, to accept a bona fide offer of work, |
9 | including full-time, part-time, and/or temporary employment, or unpaid work experience or |
10 | community service, shall be deemed a failure to comply with the work requirements of this section |
11 | and shall result in reduction or termination of cash assistance, as defined by the department in rules |
12 | and regulations duly promulgated. |
13 | (3) If the family/assistance unit’s benefit has been reduced for a total of three (3) months, |
14 | whether or not consecutive in accordance with this section due to the failure by one or more parents |
15 | to enter into an individual employment plan, or failure to comply with the terms of his or her |
16 | individual employment plan, or the failure to comply with the requirements of this chapter, cash |
17 | assistance to the entire family shall end. The family/assistance unit may reapply for benefits, and |
18 | the benefits shall be restored to the family/assistance unit in the full amount the family/assistance |
19 | unit is otherwise eligible for under this chapter beginning on the first of the month following the |
20 | month in which all parents in the family/assistance unit who are subject to the employment or |
21 | rehabilitation plan requirements under this chapter: (i) Enter into an individual employment or |
22 | rehabilitation plan as applicable, and demonstrate compliance with the terms thereof, or (ii) |
23 | Demonstrate compliance with the terms of the parent’s individual employment or rehabilitation |
24 | employment plan in effect at the time of termination of benefits, as such plan may be amended by |
25 | agreement of the parent and the department. |
26 | (4)(3) Up to ten (10) days following a notice of adverse action to reduce or terminate |
27 | benefits under this subsection, the client may request the opportunity to meet with a social worker |
28 | to identify the reasons for non-compliance, establish good cause, and seek to resolve any issues |
29 | that have prevented the parent from complying with the employment plan requirements. |
30 | (5)(4) Participants whose cases had closed in sanction status pursuant to Rhode Island’s |
31 | prior Temporary Assistance for Needy Families Program (federal TANF described in Title IV-A |
32 | of the federal Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. § 601 et seq.), the family independence program, more |
33 | specifically, § 40-5.1-9(2)(c) [repealed], due to failure to comply with the cash assistance program |
34 | requirements, but who had received less than forty-eight (48) months of cash assistance at the time |
| LC004820/SUB A - Page 15 of 16 |
1 | of closure, and who reapply for cash assistance under the Rhode Island works program, must |
2 | demonstrate full compliance, as defined by the department in its rules and regulations, before they |
3 | shall be eligible for cash assistance pursuant to this chapter. |
4 | (l) Good cause. Good cause for failing to meet any program requirements including leaving |
5 | employment, and failure to fulfill documentation requirements, shall be outlined in rules and |
6 | regulations promulgated by the department of human services. |
7 | SECTION 2. This act shall take effect on July 1, 2024. |
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LC004820/SUB A | |
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| LC004820/SUB A - Page 16 of 16 |
EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO HUMAN SERVICES -- THE RHODE ISLAND WORKS PROGRAM | |
*** | |
1 | This act would provide amendments to the Rhode Island Works Program regarding |
2 | eligibility and cash assistance, and would repeal the termination of benefits to a family because of |
3 | failure of a family member to enter into or comply with an individual employment plan. |
4 | This act would take effect on July 1, 2024. |
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LC004820/SUB A | |
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