For other versions of this document, see http://wikileaks.org/wiki/CRS-97-86 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Order Code 97-86 EPW Updated September 28, 2004 CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web Indian Tribes and Welfare Reform Vee Burke Domestic Social Policy Division Summary The 1996 welfare law (P.L. 104-193) gives federally recognized Indian tribes (defined to include certain Alaska Native organizations) the option to design and operate their own cash welfare programs for needy children with funds subtracted from their state's block grant for Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF). As of September 15, 2004, 45 tribal TANF plans were in operation in 16 states. Their annual rate of federal funding totaled $134.2 million. The 1996 law also appropriated $7.6 million annually for work and training activities to tribes in 24 states that operated a pre- TANF work and training program (now named Native Employment Works -- NEW), authorized direct federal funding to Indian tribes for operation of child support enforcement programs, and set aside a share of child care funds for them. The original TANF law was scheduled to expire September 30, 2002, but Congress extended funding through several laws, most recently through September 30, 2004. Pending are two major TANF reauthorization bills: H.R. 4, as passed by the House, and H.R. 4, as approved by the Senate Finance Committee. Both bills would renew tribal TANF grants through FY2008 and make tribal organizations eligible for new marriage promotion grants. In addition, the Senate Committee bill would authorize some new funding (tribal improvement fund). This report will be updated for significant developments. Background Before enactment of TANF, American Indians or Alaska Natives (Indians, Inuit [Eskimos], or Aleuts) received family cash welfare on the same terms as other families in their state, with benefits and income eligibility rules of the program of Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) set by the state and costs shared by the state. The law had no provision for administration of cash aid by tribes. However, some Wisconsin tribes subcontracted with the state to provide AFDC independently on their reservations. In FY1994, 1.3% of the national AFDC caseload (about 68,000 families) were American Indians and Alaska Natives. In addition, more than 65,000 needy Indians who were not in categories eligible for AFDC received cash aid based on their state's AFDC benefit standards, but paid by the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA). Under pre-TANF law, more than 80 tribes and tribal organizations exercised an option to run their own work and training programs, called Job Opportunities and Basic Skills Training (JOBS) programs, with 100% federal funds. Congressional Research Service ~ The Library of Congress CRS-2 Under TANF, which provides fixed annual state grants through FY2002, numerous Indian tribes and Alaska Native Villages in 16 states (see Table 1) are operating their own tribal family assistance programs. Tribes that operated their own JOBS program also receive annual appropriations under TANF law of $7.6 million (their FY1984 funding for JOBS) for work and training activities (renamed Native Employment Works -- NEW). Finally, $28.6 million in Welfare-to-Work (WtW) grants was awarded for FY1998 and 1999 by the Labor Department to Indian and Native American tribal governments (86 grantees in FY1998, 91 in FY1999). Standard TANF work participation rates and time limit rules do not apply to tribal assistance programs. Their rules are set by the Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary with tribal participation. Tribal Assistance Programs Eligible for tribal assistance grants are the more than 330 federally recognized tribes in the contiguous 48 states and 13 Alaska entities. As of September 15, 2004, 45 tribal TANF grants were approved for 230 tribes plus some non-reservation Indians in Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. Annual federal funding, deducted from the basic TANF grant of their state(s), totals $134.2 million (for funding by tribal plan, see Table 1). Grantees estimated their monthly caseload at 33,510 families. According to the fifth annual TANF report, the average number of Indian families served by state governments under regular TANF programs was about 35,000 in FY2000, down 50% from the corresponding FY1996 figure (a part of the decline represented persons who moved from the regular state program to a tribal program). Some features of tribal programs follow. ! Recognized tribes and tribal organizations may operate family assistance programs in their service areas. A tribe's TANF grant equals federal AFDC payments to the state for FY1994 attributable to Indians in its service area; the tribal grant is subtracted from the state's TANF grant. ! Tribal TANF plans are for three years (rather than 2, as for states) and contain many fewer required elements than state plans. However, regular TANF data collection and reporting rules apply to tribal plans. ! The HHS Secretary, with participation of the tribe, establishes work participation rules, time limits for benefits, and penalties for each tribal family assistance program. In general, Indian tribes in Alaska must operate plans in accordance with rules adopted by the state for TANF. (The National Congress of American Indians has asked for removal of this provision, and for the restrictive definition immediately below, saying that it wants Alaskan tribes to be treated like other tribes.) ! TANF law generally defines an Indian tribe as in Section 4 of the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act, but it specifies that an "eligible Indian tribe" in Alaska means one of 12 specified regional nonprofit corporations plus a reservation. ! Tribal TANF regulations permit 35% of a tribal grant to be used for administrative costs in the first year, 30% in the second year, and 25% thereafter. State TANF programs, however, generally may spent no more than 15% of their grants on administration. CRS-3 ! The state governor must certify equitable access from the TANF program to Indians not eligible for help from a tribal family assistance plan. ! The law gives explicit permission for state TANF programs to use money from the TANF loan fund for aid to Indian families that have moved out of the service area of a tribe with a tribal family assistance plan. ! A special rule exempts from the 60-month TANF benefit time limit any month in which the recipient lives in Indian country or an Alaskan native village with an adult unemployment rate of at least 50%. ! The law makes tribes eligible for TANF loans, but not for bonuses offered to states for high performance or for cutting non-marital births. ! HHS has ruled that state funds contributed to an approved tribal assistance plan may be counted toward the spending level (maintenance- of-effort) that a state must achieve to qualify for a full TANF grant. ! A 1999 amendment permits tribes, like states, to reserve TANF grants for assistance (ongoing needs and supportive services for the unemployed) in any future year. Since July 1, 2001, tribes also have been allowed to reserve unobligated NEW funds for assistance in any future year. Pending Legislation The House-passed TANF reauthorization bill (H.R. 4) and the Senate Finance Committee substitute version of H.R. 4 (PRIDE) renew tribal grants at their current level and make Indian tribal organizations eligible for proposed marriage promotion grants and the proposed employment achievement bonus. Both bills require tribal family assistance plans to provide assurance that tribes have consulted with their state(s) regarding the plan's design. The Senate Committee bill also authorizes appropriation of $100 million annually for five years for a tribal TANF improvement fund, which could be used to provide technical assistance to tribes, fund competitive grants, and conduct research. The American Indian Welfare Reform Act (S. 751 /H.R. 2770) proposes many changes. They include federal payments to states that contribute (with TANF MOE funds) to costs of Indian tribal assistance programs, increased tribal funding from the Child Care and Development Block Grant (CCDBG), authority for tribes to receive federal funds for foster care and adoption assistance, and (on a demonstration basis) to determine eligibility for food stamps, Medicaid, and SCHIP. Child Care and Child Support The 1996 law reserves between 1% and 2% of its child care funds for payments to Indian tribes and tribal organizations, to be subtracted from national totals. Previously no AFDC-related child care funds were earmarked for Indians. In FY2002, $96 million was allocated to tribes, 2% each of mandatory and discretionary funds. (Discretionary funds are provided under the Child Care and Development Block Grant [CCDBG].) The law also allows Indian tribes, subject to HHS approval, to use CCDBG funds for construction. The 1996 welfare law authorizes direct federal funding for child support operations to Indian tribes (and, again, Alaska Native organizations) with approved child support plans. By regulation, tribes receive 90% federal funding for the first three years, 80% for later years. As of March, 2004, 9 tribes received direct federal funding and handled more than 21,000 cases. Final regulations replaced interim rules in March. CRS-4 Characteristics of Tribal TANF Plans Data compiled by the Division of Tribal Services show that most tribal TANF plans have adopted the 60-month lifetime time limit for federally funded TANF to an adult. The two Oregon tribes (Klamath tribes and Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians) adopted a limit of 24 months within an 84-month period (similar to Oregon state plan limit). Work activities shown in most tribal plans are the same as those specified in TANF law, but several tribes make additions. Thus, two Washington tribes list as additional work activities: "teaching cultural activities" and "barrier removal, including counseling, and chemical dependency treatment." The Tanana Chiefs Conference, in Alaska, includes as work activities "approved subsistence hunting, fishing, gathering." Most two tribal plans limit the "service population" to Indians. However, the Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians in Wisconsin says it will serve all families, including non-Indians, on the reservation (and tribal member families in Bayfield County); and the White Mountain Apache Tribe in Arizona also says it will serve all families on the reservation. The Sisseton-Wahpeton Sioux Tribe serves only one-parent families with its tribal plan; its 2- parent families are aided by BIA's General Assistance program. Table 1 shows that most of the tribal TANF plans have set work participation rates below the all-family rate of 50% and the 2-parent family rate of 90% specified for state TANF programs in FY2002. The table also shows that 36 of the 45 tribal grantees (including the Navajo Nation in Arizona and Utah) receive state funds -- claimed as TANF MOE amounts -- to help pay for their programs. The tribes that do not receive state funding are located in Wisconsin (8 tribes), South Dakota (1 tribe) and New Mexico (part of the Navajo Nation). Table 1. TANF Grants for Tribal Family Assistance Programs (as of September 15, 2004) and Their Work Rules Work Rules State Start TANF Weekly funds Tribe date grant Participation rate hours ? 1. Forest County Potawatomi 7/1/97 $115,793 50% 30 No Community, Wisconsina 2. Klamath Tribe, Oregon 7/1/97 464,259 (all) 30%b (all) 20b Yes (2-parent) 50%b (2-parent) 25b 3. Confederated Tribe of Siletz 10/1/97 661,625 (all) 25%b 20b Yes Indians, Oregon (2-parent) 40%b 4. Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior 10/1/97 347,120 50% 30 No Chippewa Indians, Wisconsin 5. Sisseton-Wahpeton Sioux Tribe, 10/1/97 613,868 (1-parent) 25%b (1-parent) 25b No South Dakotaa 6. Sokaogon Chippewa Community, 10/1/97 77,195 50% 30 No Mole Lake Band, Wisconsina 7. Stockbridge-Munsee Band of 10/1/97 143,122 50% 30 No Mohican Indians, Wisconsin 8. Pascua Yaqui Tribe, Arizonaa 11/1/97 1,729,965 (1-parent) 30%c (1-parent) 25c Yes (2-parent) 60%c (2-parent) 35c 9. Southern California Tribal 3/1/98 (1-parent) 35%c (1-parent) 30c Chairmen's Association, Calif. -- 18 enlarged 3,653,904 (2-parent) 50%c (2-parent) 35c Yes tribe consortium 5/1/99 CRS-5 Work Rules State Start TANF Weekly funds Tribe date grant Participation rate hours ? 10. White Mountain Apache Tribe, Arizona 4/1/98 1,914,669 25% 16c Yes 11. Osage Tribe of Oklahoma 5/4/98 419,328 (all) 30%b (all) 20 No (2-parent) 65%b (2-parent) 35 12. Northern Arapaho Tribe, Wind 7/1/98 1,640,458 25%b 30b Yes River Reservation, Wyominga 13. Port Gamble S'Klallam Tribe, 10/1/98 516,580 25%c 20c Yes Washington 14. Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe, 10/1/98 501,343 25%c 20c Yes Washington 15. Tanana Chiefs' Conference, 10/1/98 2,443,973 35%c 30c Yes Alaska (37 village consortium)a 16. Nez Perce Tribe, Idahoa 1/1/99 504,990 30% 20 Yes (1-parent) 25 17. Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe 1/1/99 823,539 (1-parent) 40% (2-parent) 30 Yes Tribe, Minnesotaa (2-parent) 55% (50 in combined hours) 18. Confederated Salish and 1/1/ 99 1,599,224 20%c 30c Yes Kootenai Tribes, Montanaa 19. Salt River Pima -- Maricopa 6/1/99 710,340 (1-parent) 25%c (1-parent) 20c Yes Indian Community, Arizonaa (2-parent) 25%c (2-parent) 40c 20. Shoshone-Bannock Tribes of the 7/1/99 858,781 (1-parent) 30% 20 Yes Fort Hall Reservation, Idaho (2-parent) 45% 21. Lac du Flambeau Band of Lake 1/01/00 610,124 35% (1-parent) 30 No Superior Chippewa, Wisconsin (2-parent) 40 22. Central Council of Tlingit and 7/1/00 2,367,150 35% 25 Yes Haida Indians of Alaska, a 23. Coeur d'Alene Tribe, Idahoa 7/1/00 161,719 (all) 5% 20 No (2-parent) 40% 24. Eastern Shoshone Tribe of the 10/1/00 1,640,458 15% 15 No Wind River Reservation, Wyominga 25. Fort Belknap Community 10/1/00 958,012 15% 20 Yes Council, Montana 26. Association of Village Council 10/1/00 5,420,841 25% 25 Yes Presidents, Inc., Alaskaa 27. Navajo Nation, Arizona, New 10/1/00 Yes Mexico, and Utaha (1/1/01 31,174,026 15% 20 excep in NM) t NM 28. Hopi Tribe, Arizona 4/1/01 628,740 (all) 15% (All) 16 Yes (2-parent) 20% (2-parent) 25 29. Pueblo of Zuni, New Mexicoa 4/1/01 801,389 (1-parent) 5% 10 Yes (2-parent) 10% 30. Winnebago Tribe, Nebraskaa 4/1/01 259,197 (1-parent) 15% (1-parent) 20 Yes (2-parent) 20% (2-parent) 40 31. Quinalt Indian Nation (QIN), 4/1/01 1,695,135 20% 20 Yes Washington 32. Quileute Tribe, Washington 25% (1-parent) 25 (service population includes some 5/1/01 749,462 (2-parent) 30 for Yes members of the Hoh Tribe) first parent; 20 for second CRS-6 Work Rules State Start TANF Weekly funds Tribe date grant Participation rate hours ? 33. Torres Martinez Desert Cahuilla 5/1/01 Indians, California, enlarged -- 9 -- tribes and some non-reservation enlarged 21, 854,626 30% 30 Yes Indians 11/1/01 34. Owens Valley Career 6/1/01 Development Center, California, -- -- 25% 20 8 tribes plus some non-reservation enlarged 14,861,308 Yes Indians 12/l/01 35. Confederated Tribes of Colville Reservation, Washington 11/01/01 3,396,965 25% 20 Yes 36. Bad River Band of the Lake Superior Tribe of Chippewa Indians, 1/1/02 291,848 25% (1-parent) 20 No Wisconsin (2-parent) 35 37. Washoe Tribe of Nevada and California, 2 tribes plus some non- 1/1/03 4,420,544 20% 24 Yes reservation Indians 38. Spokane Tribe of Indians, (1-parent) 20 Washington 3/1/03 8,403,229 20% (2-parent) 30 Yes 25% (2004) 32 (2004) 39. Oneida Tribe of Wisconsin 3/1/03 835,924 30% (2005) 40 (2005) No 40. California tribal TANF Partnership (19 tribes plus non- 7/1/03 1,362,191 25% 24 (2004) Yes reservation Indians) 30 (2005). 15% (2004) 24 (2004) 41. North Fork, California 10/1/03 787,882 20% (2005). 26 (2005) Yes 20% (2004-05) 42. Menominee Indian Tribe of 4/1/04 1,212,239 22% (2006) (1-parent) 25 No Wisconsin 25% (2007) (2-Parent) 30 15% (2004-05) 43. South Puget Inter-tribal Planning 9/1/04 4,743,962 25% (2006) (1-parent) 20 Yes Agency, Washington (3 tribes) 30% (2007) (2-parent) 30 20% (2005) 44. Hoopa Valley Tribe, California 10/1/04 1,212,239 25% (2006) (1-parent) 18-24d Yes (some non-reservation Indians) 30% (2007) (2-parent) 20-28d 15% (2004-05) 45. Chippewa Cree Tribe of the Rocky Boy's Reservation (Montana) 9/1/04 1,292,289 25% (2006) (all) 20-24 Yes 30% (2007) Total TANF grants $134,156,751 a. These tribes also receive federal funds for the Native Employment Works (NEW) employment and training program. b. For FY2000 c. For FY2001 d. Increased progressively over the three years 2005-07. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ For other versions of this document, see http://wikileaks.org/wiki/CRS-97-86