Kto streści? w skrócie pisząc wiem że PLn Karolica wstrzymała socjal
(Reuters) - North
Carolina has become the first state to cut off welfare benefits to poor
residents in the wake of the partial federal government shutdown,
ordering a halt to processing November applications until a deal is
reached to end the federal standstill.
More than 20,000 people - most
of them children - receive monthly benefits aimed at helping them buy
food and other basic supplies through North Carolina's welfare program,
called Work First, which is fully funded by the federal government.
Recipients must reapply each month.
The
state's Department of Health and Human Services told its local offices
in a letter dated October 10 not to process applications for November
benefits until the federal government reaches a deal to restore normal
operations.
"We are heavily
dependent on federal dollars," said Julie Henry, spokeswoman for the
state HHS department. "When these kinds of things happen at the federal
level, it has an immediate impact."
Other
North Carolina programs funded through the federal Temporary Assistance
for Needy Families (TANF) grant also will be affected. That list
includes childcare subsidies that cover more than 70,000 children and
have already ceased being distributed in some parts of the state.
The
federal agency that oversees TANF, the Office of the Administration for
Children and Families, urged states to continue funding the program,
saying in a letter that the states would be reimbursed unless Congress
specifies otherwise.
Critics note
that a state "rainy day fund" has $650 million for emergency use and say
it's politics, not finances, that drives North Carolina's position on
federal programs. The Work First program cost about $4.8 million for
September in North Carolina.
"I
would say this is an emergency," says Alexandra Sirota, director of the
North Carolina Budget and Tax Center, which advocates for low-income
citizens. "They're cutting off a lifeline for thousands of North
Carolina families who have experienced significant hardships."
Last week, the same state department briefly planned to suspend WIC benefits, which supply baby formula and other staples
to poor women with young children. That decision, also unique
nationwide, was reversed a day later after the state budget director
intervened to provide funds to keep it going.
Workers
have been told to continue accepting the applications for November
benefits but not to process them until the federal government shutdown
ends.
The benefits are applied for
and received on a rolling basis. There is no deadline for applying and
no single day in which people receive the benefits. That said, anyone
who applied for October before this week will receive their benefits.
The
state of Arizona said earlier in October it would suspend TANF
benefits, but reversed that decision. Governor Jan Brewer ordered that
state funds be used to continue the program through October 31.
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