Posted on 12/03/2014 10:20:45 AM PST by afraidfortherepublic
MADISON, Wis. Some of the boldest reforms to public assistance in the nation may arise from the Wisconsin Legislature in coming months.
Armed with the largest Assembly majority in 57 years and comfortable control of the state Senate, Republican leadership appears to be putting together the kind of ambitious reform agenda that could rival 2011, when the Republican-led majority introduced and passed a spate of conservative and controversial initiatives.
On Tuesday, Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, R-Rochester, announced the creation of the Public Benefit Reform Committee. While the new committees chair or its members have yet to be announced, Vos said the committee is a reflection of the Assemblys priorities this session.
Assembly Republicans also have a large number of entitlement reforms that wed like to consider this session, Vos said in a statement. We need to weed out fraud, waste and abuse to ensure that people who really need temporary assistance are getting it.
The reform ideas being floated by the GOP have the left anxious about whats to come in the new session, which begins next month.
Robert Kraig, executive director of the Milwaukee-based Citizen Action of Wisconsin, said he doesnt want to jump to conclusions before he sees legislation, but he is concerned the reform train could turn into a Trojan horse for the poor.
We do far too much stigmatizing and scapegoating of people in poverty without thinking about creating a situation where anyone who wants a job can get a job, said Kraig, liberally borrowing from Republican Gov. Scott Walkers mantra.
Citizen Action of Wisconsin bills itself as a coalition committed to advance progressive values and shape the public and political debate around health care, economic development and consumer protection.
But Republican lawmakers say Wisconsins public benefits system, from food stamps to taxpayer-subsidized health care, is in need of some fixes to discourage dependency and fraudulent use while maintaining the flexibility to meet individual needs, according to the newly released Assembly agenda.
FoodShare, Wisconsins food stamp program, BadgerCare, the states health care program for income-qualifying residents, and aid to social service organizations account for nearly a quarter of the states $70 billion, two-year budget, the agenda notes.
Next session, Assembly Republicans will continue our work to ensure that all public assistance programs are being used in the way they were intended, the document states.
Among the ideas:
The junk food prohibition: Republicans appear ready to bring back a bill that would curtail purchases of chips, sodas and other such snack foods. The idea is to ensure those receiving food assistance are using it to buy nutritious food.
Statement of benefits: One proposal includes sending all public assistance recipients an annual statement of benefits. Vos and state Rep. John Nygren, R-Marinette, assert the accountability measure would let beneficiaries know just how much taxpayer help they have received, itemizing costs and programs. Kraig called the idea interesting, aimed at the proposition that people are unaware of how many benefits theyre getting. The Problem is, people (from all income levels) get benefits all the time that they are not really aware of, the progressive activist said. He said such statements of benefits could equally go to homeowners writing off their mortgage taxes or companies pocketing taxpayer subsidies.There should be some evenhandedness, not simply focusing on low-income folks, Kraig said.
One-stop benefit card: Another proposal would encourage all public benefit programs to be administered through one Electronic Benefits Transfer, or EBT, card system. Cards, according to the concept, could be programmed to automatically be declined at prohibited places, such as casinos, liquor stores or strip clubs. GOP lawmakers also are looking at putting a reasonable limit on the number of replacement cards someone can receive. A state audit two years ago tracked at least $324,000 in FoodShare purchases outside of Wisconsin. Its a small portion of the $1.1 billion FoodShare program, but it appears there remains much more fraud and abuse that has gone undetected, officials say. The same audit noted that about 23 percent, or 107,000, of those who received FoodShare benefits were issued a replacement card in fiscal year 2010-11. Nearly 1,100 were issued more than four replacement cards in the year. Based on the experience Ive had with sheriffs and police officers who tell me the benefit card is sometimes being used as a trading commodity in exchange for drugs, said Nygren, co-chair of the Legislatures powerful Joint Finance Committee. They sell the EBT card for cash and buy things they cant buy with the card. Multiple media reports have shown recipients benefit trafficking on social networks.
Nygren also would like to see a bill calling for mandatory photo IDs on EBT public benefit cards.
While some on the left have described such a proposal as marking the poor with a scarlet letter of shame, Nygren and fellow conservatives say identification is necessary to increase integrity in the program.
Perhaps the most talked-about proposal involves drug testing for public assistance beneficiaries, an idea found in Walkers job creation plan unveiled earlier this year.
Kraig and other liberals see such ideas as being driven by politics more than the quest for good public policy, proposals that tend to scapegoat low-income people for an immoral purpose.
Nygren, who has witnessed the ravages of drug addiction first-hand, as his adult daughter continues to struggle with the demons of heroin and prescription drug abuse, said drug-testing beneficiaries is about accountability and responsibility.
When someone fails a (drug) test we need to connect them with the (treatment) programs that will get their life back on track, the lawmaker said. The ultimate goal is to make these people a taxpayer rather than a drain on taxpayers.
GOP organizing to make changes in government benefits for the poor.
FReep Mail me if you want on, or off, this Wisconsin interest ping list.
“[Taxpayer Funded Freebies] account for nearly a quarter of the states $70 billion, two-year budget, the agenda notes.”
$17.5 BILLION spent on Social Services each and every year in Wisconsin.
PLENTY of fraud, waste and abuse to cut out of THAT, I’m certain.
Love My Gov! :)
It's almost hard to say it these days but the whole Republican Party in Wisconsin seems to be deserving of some love.
What a remarkable thing, actually trying to roll back the size and waste of government!
‘Tis a Thing of Beauty. God Bless and Keep Safe our Governor. He (and WE!) have been put through HELL by the radical leftists in our beautiful state.
I sure hope he doesn’t leave us - but if he does, he’ll do America a world of good. But - he’d better be grooming someone just like him to come up behind, or all will be lost, again.
And that would be quite tragic, considering the strides we’ve made in Wisconsin!
Able-bodied people who sit and home and collect food stamps need to be marked and shamed. Otherwise they need to get out of the house and clean up some inner city trash, plant some flowers and streets, scrub the sidewalks, and polish the sheriff’s shoes. People who enable able-bodied people to sit at home and collect food stamps should be jailed and forced to pedal beer-brewing bicycles.
Hear! Hear!
While not a packer fan {Stillers} I do appreciate your Gov. I've donated to Walker and he is like vanilla ice cream, but vanilla makes a great base ice cream for some outstanding sundaes.
Our governor is already well on the way to welfare reform - even against libTard state senate and house.
He just got reelected (3-way race, got more votes than any other gov/ in state history) and got a strong majority in the Senate coming up - 20-15.
Watch his steam in the next 4 years.
That grinding of teeth sound coming from the northern most state is the libTards, made up of ‘flatlanders’ that have moved into our state in the past few decades. We got ‘em on the run.
read a few of these - We LOVE our Gov. (He’s everything folks THOUGHT Chris Christy was - but isn’t.)
https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=laPage+maine+welfare
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