The Problem: Breaking the Cycle of Welfare Dependency
Confronting the Barriers to Employment
The challenge of breaking the cycle of welfare dependency, particularly for the hardest-to-employ, has become of critical importance on a national and local level. The focus of this challenge is to help welfare-dependent individuals overcome the multiple barriers to employment that they face.
Several studies have indicated that a large
number of welfare dependent heads-of-household, particularly those
who are single and female, face two categories of barriers to
employment: personal/individual and systemic/structural. Many of
these barriers are interconnected and impact the individual as a
complex web of obstacles to self-sufficiency.
Systemic Barriers
Systemic barriers
to employment for many welfare dependent heads-of-household are well-documented and include lack of appropriate training or opportunities, a shortage of jobs that pay a livable wage, lack of child care, and transportation problems. For a mother receiving welfare, there is the reality of the costs associated with work
- adequate child care for her children, and the costs in time and money for transportation, either owning a car or having to rely on public transportation.
Psychological Barriers
Psychological
barriers are often more difficult to overcome than barriers such as child care and transportation. Single-parent welfare recipients often feel immobilized, disempowered, helpless, overwhelmed and anxious. Their living patterns are unstable, and they have histories of failure, low self-esteem, fear of the unknown,
poor education, joblessness or weak employment histories, and have lacked proper
role models. Many suffer from general depression. At Beyond Shelter, over 50
percent also have histories of domestic violence and/or drug or alcohol abuse. Many families may be considered
multiproblem families, living in chronic poverty. Often they experience periodic episodes of homelessness
or unstable housing situations. Their family dynamics are usually unstable or
stressful, with extended family support or other social support systems being weak or
nonexistent. Likewise, their money management and household management skills
are weak. Adults in drug abuse treatment programs must also deal with all of the above problems while addressing personal issues related to recovery.
Welfare-to-Work: Approaches & Tools
As a result of Beyond Shelter's extensive experience with welfare-dependent heads-of-household through its "Housing First" Program, the agency has developed and implemented a number of approaches and tools that assist in breaking the cycle of welfare dependency.
The Team Approach
Through trial and error
over the past 20 years, Beyond Shelter has developed an innovative,
individualized, client-centered, team approach to helping
multiproblem, welfare-dependent, primarily single female,
heads-of-household to successfully transition from welfare
dependency to employment. Living in crisis poverty, these women face
major barriers to employment, such as unstable living patterns, poor
coping skills, poor education, early parenthood, low self-esteem,
histories of homelessness and/or domestic violence, and little or no extended
family or other social support systems.
In the team approach, a case manager and employment counselor work closely together with each
participant over time, helping her to address each barrier, while
moving her slowly toward independence and self-sufficiency. While
the case manager addresses basic issues related to family stability
and resources, such as housing, child care, money management,
household management and transportation, the employment
counselor focuses on employment-related needs and addresses
psychological barriers that prevent women from participating in job
development
and job placement activities. Once the barriers have been overcome and the client is employed or in training, the
case manager and employment counselor continue to share responsibility to promote job retention, providing appropriate interventions and support for the new worker and her family for at least a
12-month time period. The team of case manager and employment counselor can provide a valuable resource to the employer willing to hire TANF recipients with little or no previous employment histories. The basic responsibilities of each are described below.
The Role of the Case Manager: