Women’s Lived Experiences with Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF): How TANF Can Better Support Women’s Wellbeing and Reduce Intimate Partner Violence
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Provide assistance to needy families so that children can be cared for in their own homes; Reduce the dependency of needy parents by promoting job preparation, work and marriage; Prevent and reduce the incidence of out-of-wedlock pregnancies; Encourage the formation and maintenance of two-parent families [13].
1.1. TANF Structural Discrimination and IPV Survivors
1.2. Intersections of TANF Receipt, IPV Experience, and Race
1.3. TANF as an Intervention to Promote Wellbeing
- (1)
- How do women perceive that TANF policies influence women’s wellbeing (economic pressure and psychological wellbeing) and their relationships with intimate partners?
- (2)
- How are the relationships between TANF policies and women’s wellbeing and relationships with intimate partners influenced/impacted by structural discrimination?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Setting
2.2. Community Engagement
2.3. Participants
2.4. Field Methods
2.5. Measures
2.6. Data Analysis
3. Results
I feel good. I feel like, yeah, thank God. I feel relief!… I’m like yeah. It finally came. It means I can get this. I can get that. I can use this to get that with it now. You know. Almost like your paycheck. But it comes once a month on a card. And you be happy when you get it and then it be gone right afterwards, but hey.—African American/Black Participant, Missouri
I would immediately run down a list in my brain of what we were low on and what we needed. And then I kind of got a sense of relief of some of that stress being gone because I was gonna have some money coming in. But then also feeling like, what is this? Cause when you’re not working and that’s really the only income that you’re getting, it’s kind of also at the same time stressful, because you only have so much but you need so much.—Mixed Race, African American/Black and White/Caucasian Participant, Missouri
I think I only have four more months [of TANF] left. So I decided to go and get myself taken off [TANF]… because otherwise when the time comes that I really need it, I ain’t gonna be able to have it right there. Because say like, right now… I could uh, work, go back to work, I can go to school in the evenings part time. I can look into maybe. I really don’t know, like what I’m going to do with the kids as far as school yet. But I’m still trying to figure it out. Really don’t even know if it’s the best time to really get taken off, but to me, I know it’s either now or never… I don’t want to use it all up and then… I get pregnant and I need it again. And I can’t work.—African American/Black Participant, Missouri
I have had moments, to be honest, and I don’t have them anymore, but I’ve had moments in the past when I was like, shit I just should have stayed. I should have shut my mouth put up with it and should have stayed cause at least he was paying the rent. That’s how that made me feel. To actually look back at someone that was violent, chaos, and instability in every way, sense and form and to think I should have just stayed because at least I was secure.—Mixed Race, American Indian/Latina Participant, New York
With programs like that, you know, they want you to do the bare minimum and it’s kinda built to hold you in poverty or to keep you at your lowest. And it was kinda like finding out, you know, applying for certain programs or being in certain programs and learning that, you know, that’s the whole point of programs like that.—African American/Black Participant, Missouri
It was difficult, you know, [redacted] is my baby. So it’s just kind of hard to like, I mean, my parents, they’re fine with it, like, you know, her daycare was literally right around the corner. So it wasn’t like, you know, it was like something out of the way for them. But then it kind of got out of the way, cause you know, they would have to get her dressed, take her there. It was just a lot. So it was like it was kind of stressful that I couldn’t take her to school myself and, you know, just go to work after. It was stressful.—African American/Black Participant, New York
So once they give you the public assistance they automatically tried to put him [my child’s father] on child support… Um, basically they told me, like, if you want to keep getting public assistance, you have to give us the name or give us some sort of information so we can contact them. Or you can simply say you don’t know or you just don’t know who your child’s father is. But if they feel like they know who your child’s father is and you’re not giving them information like basically they threaten to cut you off of the public assistance.—African American/Black Participant, New York
In fact, the first time I ever had an issue with child support, actually coming and doing their job was the month before I was getting off of it and going into work with my new job. My daughter’s dad called me cussing and yelling… And he’s like, ‘Man, you got to talk to these people.’ I’m like, ‘What are you talking about,’ ‘They [TANF] just took my money.’ So we had a phone conference and they were trying to get help for child support for my TANF that I had been on for the past three years, but I was getting off of it. I had used up my lifetime, and I found a job that paid enough… And um yeah I basically had the vouch for him.—African American/Black Participant, Missouri
With the child support, you know, they [non-custodial dads] miss a payment that becomes, you know, they can get jail time or they lose things. And if they don’t pay it, then not only this child support not get paid, but I don’t receive anything either.—African American/Black Participant, Missouri
When the [COVID-19] pandemic first really hit hard, I was like, I’m thinking about applying to TANF… but I’m hesitant because I don’t want it to trigger any type of child support modification against my daughter’s dad, which in some cases, depending on the amount of TANF versus the child support, it can trigger a child support modification… Anytime they do anything… like the fact that now they’re taking 140 a month, rather than 117 a month, there tends to be some backlash.—Mixed Race, Caucasian/White and Pacific Islander Participant, Missouri
I was terrified. I mean I had like cried for like three days before this because I’m like oh my God this is going to give him rights and he’s gonna hurt my kid like I was just… You know, I was losing it. And um, when I went in, I explained to them, I was like, look, I’m this is the situation. And I was like, he’s already beat one of his girlfriends and she ended up losing her kid… They ended up giving me this paper and it said we are we are denying, or we’re closing the case due to harm to the mother of the child. So they ended up closing it and I haven’t heard anything about it.—Caucasian/White Participant, Kansas
Because he [the father of my child] is still having to come out of pocket when I need stuff for [my child] and I can’t do it… It makes, it always gets thrown back in my face. It causes a lot of arguments to an already tense relationship… He’ll be like, I don’t understand why I have to give you money and the state money. He’ll mention about how, he’s even said in the midst of like a heated argument, how he regrets having a child in the first place because of all of this.—Mixed Race, African American/Black and Caucasian/White Participant, Missouri
You are not assigned to the same person [caseworker] all the time. So you get, you get a different person when you go back… I would like someone who, she or he has seen me for years and they know me… But you know, not knowing these people, I have, I have no choice, but to not share myself with them.—African American/Black, New York
[My caseworker is] like my mom in the system. So it just, I felt comfortable enough [to tell her about my experiences of IPV] and I knew that if I opened up to her about what was going on, she would make sure that I got the resources and stuff that I needed and was in contact with the right people… every time we would meet or talk, just how much genuine care and love she would show for me and my kids… I had went through a situation where I didn’t have daycare for my child and I wanted to go to a job interview and she allowed me to bring my kids to her office long enough for me to go to my job interview. So she’s just gone above and beyond her role for me and it’s just been a lot. It’s been great because I don’t have family here.—Mixed Race, African American/Black and Caucasian/White Participant, Missouri
I felt like I was going to be kicked off of TANF because I, me and her [my caseworker] had got in the fight. So yeah, I thought that I was going to lose my TANF um but turns out I didn’t… I, I just was like, well, you can’t fight with the person that’s giving [TANF] to you and you know and then still receive it. But I if I’m not mistaken. I told her that I was worried about that. And she told me that if things between me and her wouldn’t have gotten better… I would have just switched you to another worker.—Caucasian/White Participant, Kansas
My benefits ran out in June, I believe. So my food stamps I would take half of them, fill up my house, and because I wasn’t at home all day, thanks to the daycare providing lunch and then the parent groups provided breakfast, I would eat there. And my kids are not at home. I was like, half my food stamps and I would do catering and sell dinners and that would be my extra income. And I did that straight for three months around schooling and around parent groups.—African American/Black Participant, Missouri
Luckily, I have Section Eight. So when [I stopped receiving TANF checks], my rent went to zero dollars. And then I was still able to receive my food stamps, though, and that’s scary too like if I don’t have Section Eight, sometimes I don’t know what I would do… But the thing, even with that is like when you start working, they, they take, take, take, and don’t let you get back ahead of things.—Caucasian/White Participant, Kansas
[Reaching time limits] just went from me like working maybe like two or three hours in the morning to me working an actual day and getting off at normal times. I will still able to get off in time for daycare. Even if I didn’t… I could still, you know, had people to call on and to assist me.—African American/Black Participant, Missouri
And then I was going through, I had ended up leaving him from a domestic [violence incident] and so, I… was living in a low income based apartment and I ended up losing that because of it [domestic violence]. In the midst of that they had also cut my TANF off, not because I wasn’t working, but because I had um. I didn’t turn in an annual review on time. When I had told them that I was bouncing from place to place and trying to get myself together, they wouldn’t renew my TANF until I had a valid mailing address… It was very overwhelming. Especially with me, like finally being able to flee a couple weeks later from that domestic and not having nothing.…cause if I could’ve used that money at any time, that probably would have been the most time that I needed it.—Mixed Race, African American/Black & Caucasian/White Participant, Missouri
Some people just aren’t with the father. That doesn’t mean the father doesn’t take care of their, you know, their portion of the responsibility. But you as a mother has to go on public assistance so you could take care of your part of the responsibility.—African American/Black Participant, New York
Um, I think when I first was with [my father’s child] and it happened, he was on drugs pretty bad. So sometimes he would, if that money hit, he would be like it’d be 12 in the morning and he want me go to the thing and get some cash out. And that’s another reason why, like I had to leave him…. I mean I was always I was always glad that [TANF money] was coming in because that’s what I had, you know, I could pay my rent and take care of my bills. But I can say that I didn’t have to worry about like not doing that stuff. I didn’t let him take it to where I couldn’t pay my stuff. I always budgeted out like what I needed first. So I always made sure that me and my daughter was taken care of through all that.—Caucasian/White Participant, Kansas
So there is a year where I didn’t have daycare for [my child] and he couldn’t get in until he was damn near one. So I had to… push him around the stroller while I did my volunteering… I was kind of irritated with it because I’m like, Wow, I can’t believe I have to do this with my son like and I got to clean and he’s right here.—Caucasian/White Participant, Kansas
I haven’t paid my rent in a while. But I’m still waiting… I would like to say that it hasn’t affected me at all, but I would be lying. I know that it’s not true. It has affected me mentally, physically, I just I’m a go getter. You know, I work hard because I believe in an honest day’s pay. I just now, not being able to send my son to school and not being able to work and COVID all these things. It has mental toll on me and you know, my body.—African American/Black Participant, New York
I mean, for me, it was just embarrassing. I mean, this whole situation is, um, embarrassing. I was working before like right before I got pregnant. During my pregnancy. I was working and it’s just like I couldn’t work because I had a lot of issues in my pregnancy. So, after a while, I couldn’t work. So that’s so, he [the father of my child] wasn’t helping me. I had no choice but to turn to public assistance.—African American/Black Participant, New York
His [my boyfriend’s] preconceived notion was always that people who remained on this [TANF] were either abusing it or lazy and never want it better for themselves.—African American/Black Participant, Missouri
That was one of the first time it was so evident that, despite you [TANF caseworker] working in this field, you don’t really believe in what you’re doing. And that this case worker might be experiencing some burnout from all the people who use it for whatever fraudulent reason. Which being African American, you know, the stigmas are tied to that. African American people really aren’t welfare queens.—African American/Black Participant, Missouri
Because we low, low income, like we modern day, this is like, this like modern day slavery. It’s it’s not like enslaved, but it’s like yeah cuz it’s like you forcing us, you you constrict us like again. Why do I have to be I’m running for money? There’s police reports, there’s court dates. It’s all that. It’s the legal. It’s a big thing. Why do I have, then to turn around and admit to the government, hey, hey, hey. You done whooped my ass and then took everything. Like I need the [housing] voucher, just so, you know, I could provide something different for us on that case, you know, I don’t have to keep putting [my child] in that environment. Because according to the government, if I keep putting her in that environment, you know, that is neglectful and that is a dangerous and that is a whole ACS [Administration for Children’s Services] case.—African American/Black Participant, New York
4. Discussion
Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Policy | Description | Year * | State | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
New York | Kansas | Missouri ** | |||
TANF to Poverty Ratio | The number of families on TANF for every 100 families in poverty per state | 2019 | 42 | 10 | 11 |
Cash Benefits | Amount of monetary benefits per state per month allocated to a family of three with no special circumstances living in the most populated area of the state | 2018 | 789 | 429 | 292 |
Lifetime Time Limits | The number of months in which an individual is eligible to receive TANF during his/her lifetime in that state | 2019 | 60 | 24 | 45 |
Work—Related Sanctions | The punitive financial measures taken against an individual or family for first failing to meet TANF work requirements | 2019 | Benefit is reduced by the pro rata share of the noncompliant adult until compliance | Entire unit is ineligible for benefits until compliance or 3 months, whichever is longer | Benefit is reduced by 50% for at least 10 weeks. Sanction ends when participant completes 4 consecutive weeks of participation in work activities for an average of 30 h per week in the 10-week period |
Child Support Sanctions | The punitive financial measures taken against an individual or family for first failing to cooperate with child support requirements | 2019 | The unit’s benefit is reduced by 25% until compliance | Entire unit loses benefits for 3 months | The unit’s benefit is reduced by 25% until compliance |
Family Violence Option Exemptions | Work requirements exemptions for individuals who meet TANF definitions of domestic violence victims | 2019 | Can be exempted from work exemption | No work exemptions exist | Temporary work exemption exists while the family undergoes intensive case management |
Length of time and type of time limits extended for period in which the unit is fleeing from or receiving treatment for domestic violence or abuse | 2019 | Lifetime limits can be waived for at least four months and are re-evaluated at least every six months | Lifetime limits can be extended for 6 months at a time. | Lifetime limits can be extended on a case-by-case basis |
Domain | Question Examples |
---|---|
Experience with TANF | Could you describe for me why you were sanctioned? Probe: Were you aware in advance that you would be sanctioned? Why or why not? How did you find out that you were sanctioned? |
Relationship between TANF and mood/stress level | How did receiving TANF cash benefits affect your mood or stress level? |
Relationship between TANF and intimate partner relationships | How did experiencing a sanction affect your relationship with your partner? Your interactions with your partner? |
Relationship between TANF and economic well-being | How did your experience of TANF ending affect your ability to buy items that you need like transportation or groceries? |
Total (n = 13) | New York (n = 5) | Missouri (n = 6) | Kansas (n = 2) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Age, mean (SD) | 33 (7.0) | 35 (9.2) | 30.7 (4.8) | 33.5 (9.2) |
Race, % (n) | ||||
Caucasian/White | 23 (3) | 0 (0) | 17 (1) | 100 (2) |
African American/Black | 54 (7) | 80 (4) | 50 (3) | 0 (0) |
Mixed Race | 23 (3) | 20 (1) | 33 (2) | 0 (0) |
Receiving TANF Cash Assistance at Time of Interview, % (n) | 69 (9) | 100 (5) | 67 (4) | 0 (0) |
Revealed IPV, % (n) | 77 (10) | 100 (5) | 50 (3) | 100 (2) |
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Spencer, R.A.; Lemon, E.D.; Komro, K.A.; Livingston, M.D.; Woods-Jaeger, B. Women’s Lived Experiences with Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF): How TANF Can Better Support Women’s Wellbeing and Reduce Intimate Partner Violence. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 1170. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19031170
Spencer RA, Lemon ED, Komro KA, Livingston MD, Woods-Jaeger B. Women’s Lived Experiences with Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF): How TANF Can Better Support Women’s Wellbeing and Reduce Intimate Partner Violence. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(3):1170. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19031170
Chicago/Turabian StyleSpencer, Rachael A., Emily D. Lemon, Kelli A. Komro, Melvin D. Livingston, and Briana Woods-Jaeger. 2022. "Women’s Lived Experiences with Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF): How TANF Can Better Support Women’s Wellbeing and Reduce Intimate Partner Violence" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 3: 1170. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19031170
APA StyleSpencer, R. A., Lemon, E. D., Komro, K. A., Livingston, M. D., & Woods-Jaeger, B. (2022). Women’s Lived Experiences with Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF): How TANF Can Better Support Women’s Wellbeing and Reduce Intimate Partner Violence. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(3), 1170. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19031170