summary
Introduced
05/22/2014
05/22/2014
In Committee
11/17/2014
11/17/2014
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
01/03/2015
01/03/2015
Introduced Session
113th Congress
Bill Summary
Welfare Reform Act of 2014 - Amends the Food and Nutrition Act of 2008 to declare that it should be the purpose of the supplemental nutrition assistance program (SNAP, formerly the food stamp program) to increase employment, encourage healthy marriage, and promote prosperous self-sufficiency, which means the ability of households to maintain an income above the poverty level without services and benefits from the federal government. Declares that food or a food product shall be considered a food under such Act only if it is a bare essential (as determined by the Secretary of Agriculture [USDA]). Defines "able-bodied, work capable adult" and "physically or mentally incapable of work." Prescribes additional conditions of participation, denying SNAP eligibility, for instance, to any able-bodied, work-capable adult who: (1) refuses to register for employment or without good cause accept an offer of employment at a certain wage, (2) refuses without good cause to give a state agency sufficient information of his or her employment status or job availability, (3) voluntarily quits a job or reduces work effort below 30 hours a week unless another adult in the same family unit increases employment to make up the difference, or (4) is on strike because of a labor dispute other than a lockout. Revises SNAP eligibility requirements for students with dependent children. Denies SNAP eligibility to members of a program-eligible family required by the state agency to participate in work activation unless the relevant one or more adults in such family comply with the work activation standards. Terminates benefits for all family members for failure to participate in work activation during a given month. Prescribes work activation standards for a family unit with adult members required to participate in work activation. Gives states the option to require greater amounts of work activations for work capable family units. Requires each state participating in SNAP to carry out a work activation program whose goals are to: (1) encourage and assist able-bodied, work-capable adult SNAP recipients to obtain paid employment; (2) reduce dependence on government assistance; and (3) ensure that able-bodied, work-capable adult SNAP recipients make a contribution to society and the taxpayers in exchange for assistance received. Sets forth mandatory state work activation participation rates. Prescribes requirements for: (1) funding reductions as a penalty for inadequate state performance, (2) restoration in funding resulting from improved state performance, and (3) rewards to states for reducing government dependence. Amends the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 to terminate its temporary increase in SNAP benefits. Requires the President's budget to include the total level of means-tested welfare spending by the federal government as well as the total by all states, local governments, and the federal government for the most recent year for which such data is available, and estimated levels for the fiscal year during which the budget submission is made. Amends the Congressional Budget Act of 1974 to define "means-tested welfare spending" and specifies the federal programs on which welfare spending shall be means-tested, and which federal programs shall not be. Requires reports to congressional budget committees and the concurrent resolution on the budget to include specified information with respect to means-tested welfare spending, and requires a point of order in both chambers of Congress if the means-tested welfare spending limit is to be exceeded. Amends the Social Security Act (SSA) to authorize the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) to make grants to states to reward reductions in poverty and government dependence and increases in self-sufficiency. Restricts funding for health benefits coverage that includes abortion.
AI Summary
This bill, the Welfare Reform Act of 2014, aims to reform welfare programs by focusing on self-sufficiency and accountability. A key provision revises the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), formerly known as the food stamp program, to emphasize increasing employment, encouraging healthy marriage, and promoting prosperous self-sufficiency, defined as households earning enough to live above the poverty level without federal aid. It introduces stricter work requirements for "able-bodied, work-capable adults," who are defined as individuals between 18 and 63 years old who are not physically or mentally incapable of work and are not full-time caretakers of a disabled adult dependent. These adults could lose SNAP benefits if they refuse to register for work, accept suitable employment, provide employment information, or voluntarily quit a job or reduce work hours below 30 per week without a family member compensating for the lost hours. The bill also terminates temporary increases in SNAP benefits and requires states to implement work activation programs with specific participation rates for recipients, with penalties for states that fail to meet these goals and rewards for those that reduce dependence on government assistance. Furthermore, it mandates that the President's budget include total spending on "means-tested welfare programs," which are defined as programs specifically designed to assist low-income individuals, with certain exceptions like programs for veterans or those based on earned eligibility. The bill also establishes an aggregate spending limit for these means-tested programs and allows states to receive grants for reducing poverty and government dependence. Finally, it prohibits federal funding for abortions, with exceptions for cases of rape, incest, or when the mother's life is in danger.
Committee Categories
Agriculture and Natural Resources, Education, Government Affairs, Health and Social Services
Sponsors (14)
Jim Jordan (R)*,
Michele Bachmann (R),
Marsha Blackburn (R),
Ron DeSantis (R),
Jeff Duncan (R),
Tim Huelskamp (R),
Cynthia Lummis (R),
Mick Mulvaney (R),
Pete Olson (R),
Tom Price (R),
Matt Salmon (R),
Austin Scott (R),
Jason Smith (R),
Randy Weber (R),
Last Action
Referred to the Subcommittee on Higher Education and Workforce Training. (on 11/17/2014)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://www.congress.gov/bill/113th-congress/house-bill/4731/all-info |
| BillText | http://gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/BILLS-113hr4731ih/pdf/BILLS-113hr4731ih.pdf |
| Bill | http://gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/BILLS-113hr4731ih/pdf/BILLS-113hr4731ih.pdf.pdf |
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