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- <text id=91TT1827>
- <title>
- Aug. 19, 1991: Social Programs:Learn, Work and Wed
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 19, 1991 Hostages:Why Now? Who's Next?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 18
- SOCIAL PROGRAMS
- Learn, Work and Wed
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Wisconsin's Governor Tommy Thompson offers an imaginative--but
- controversial--solution to the problems of poverty and welfare
- dependency
- </p>
- <p>By Alex Prud'Homme--Reported by Elizabeth Taylor/Milwaukee
- </p>
- <p> Keyola Lackey got pregnant in the 10th grade and dropped
- out of school. A year after her baby was born, she got pregnant
- again. With no husband and no job, she was living on welfare.
- Her mother begged her to go back to school, but Lackey wouldn't
- listen. Then, three years ago, Wisconsin state officials
- delivered a blunt message. "They told me I had to go to school
- to keep getting benefits," she recalls. "It was a big push."
- Last year she graduated from high school, and she is now
- studying to be an accountant at Milwaukee Area Technical
- College.
- </p>
- <p> Lackey, 20, is one of the 1,000 Milwaukee County welfare
- recipients who have been sent back to school since Republican
- Governor Tommy Thompson launched his Learnfare program in 1988.
- Learnfare is one of a spate of carrot-and-stick reforms intended
- to break long-term dependency on state and federal handouts. It
- is a bold behaviorist experiment seeking to prove that, given
- the right rewards and punishments, even the most
- underprivileged can become productive, self-reliant citizens.
- And if it works in Wisconsin, argues Thompson, 49, who is in his
- second four-year term, his plan can be the model for a radical
- recasting of welfare programs nationwide. Says he: "Our
- welfare-reform initiatives are geared to help individuals help
- themselves. Some people think they're very harsh, and some are.
- They're toughlove."
- </p>
- <p> Thompson's attempt at social engineering has touched off
- a debate over the virtues of economic carrots and sticks. "It's
- been demonstrated that incentives work," says University of
- Chicago economics professor Gary Becker. "The controversy is
- over magnitude." But some critics charge that Thompson's
- policies--which basically seek to force welfare recipients to
- learn, work and wed--smack of Big Brotherism. They also accuse
- the Governor of oversimplifying poverty and human motivation.
- Changing behavior, notes Theodore Marmor, a political science
- professor at Yale, "is a lot more complex than simpleminded
- microeconomics." Some even sense a veiled racism. "It's no
- longer permissible to make direct appeals based on race," says
- Mark Greenberg, senior staff attorney of the Center for Law and
- Social Policy, but "making the attack on welfare recipients has
- the same effect."
- </p>
- <p> Wisconsin seems an unlikely laboratory for welfare reform.
- After all, the state offers some of the country's highest
- benefits and lowest poverty levels. But the ideologically driven
- Governor has aggressively pushed to get people "off welfare, and
- onto the elevator of opportunity." And he claims that his
- toughlove works: while 40 states showed a 10% increase in the
- number of families receiving Aid to Families with Dependent
- Children between July 1989 and April 1991, Wisconsin's case load
- increased only 2.8%.
- </p>
- <p> Learnfare is Thompson's flagship incentive program.
- Designed to keep poor kids in the classroom and off the streets,
- it has proved extremely controversial. In the 1988-89 school
- year, Wisconsin sanctioned some 6,600 truant teens, saving the
- state an estimated $3.3 million in AFDC benefits. Says Thompson:
- "The state of Wisconsin is watching them and saying, `If your
- mother and father don't require you to go to school, the state
- is going to be there to make sure you [do].'"
- </p>
- <p> For some, the program seems an unqualified success.
- Hugging her three-year-old son and two-year-old daughter, Lackey
- praises the harsh medicine that put her back in the classroom.
- Learnfare "should be put in all the states," she says. "The
- people who criticize it want the money free and do nothing for
- it. But nothing comes free."
- </p>
- <p> Others are less sanguine. A 1990 audit by the state
- legislature found that 84% of the appeals made by truant teens
- were overturned because of errors in records kept by the schools
- or the welfare agency. Furthermore, the Employment and Training
- Institute of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee found that
- in Milwaukee County less than 30% of the kids whose families had
- welfare payments docked for poor attendance were actually in
- school two months after being sanctioned. Last summer U.S.
- District Court Judge Terence Evans ordered that Learnfare be
- suspended in Milwaukee. "Recipients," he wrote, "should not be
- made homeless and hungry in the name of social experimentation."
- In October, however, the judge reinstated Learnfare, after the
- city improved its record keeping and hired social workers to
- help truant teens.
- </p>
- <p> The program's final report card won't be available until
- a federally ordered evaluation is completed later this year.
- Thompson declares that Learnfare "is encouraging teens to return
- to school and to attend regularly." But the evidence suggests
- otherwise. Whereas the dropout rate in Milwaukee was 10.5% in
- 1988, the year before Learnfare started, it skyrocketed to 14.7%
- in the 1989-90 academic year.
- </p>
- <p> Thompson has also run into trouble with his proposed
- Parental and Family Responsibility Initiative, dubbed
- "Bridefare" by critics. The Governor prefers to call it "Make
- Room for Daddy" and insists that the program will make fathers
- more responsible for their children. Says Republican state
- representative Susan Vergeront: "The concept of trying to
- promote two-parent families makes good sense." But Democratic
- state representative Barbara Notestein brands it "a
- state-sponsored shotgun wedding," and adds, "No one objects to
- bringing fathers in, but should the government do something that
- encourages teenagers to get married and limit their options?"
- </p>
- <p> The Governor gripes that his state has become a "welfare
- magnet" for out-of-state poor because Wisconsin--despite a
- reduction of AFDC outlays of 6% to fund Thompson's reforms--has some of the highest benefits in the nation. In 1989 he
- proposed a two-tier system that would peg newcomers' benefits
- to those in their home states during their first six months of
- Wisconsin residency. Advocates for the poor challenge the
- legality of the double-barreled scheme, pointing out that the
- Supreme Court banned residency requirements for welfare benefits
- in 1969.
- </p>
- <p> Thompson's most radical proposals have not yet got off the
- ground. Last month the Democratic-controlled state legislature
- rejected the Governor's bid to expand Learnfare by applying it
- to children as young as six. Wisconsin lawmakers have similarly
- voted down the two-tier benefits system and weakened the
- Bridefare plan. Undeterred, Thompson announced last week that
- he would push for a Federal Government waiver that would allow
- for a modified version of Bridefare.
- </p>
- <p> Though the practical results of Thompson's experiment are
- meager so far, other states--like Ohio, Arkansas and Kansas--are experimenting with economic incentives of their own. And
- under the influence of a Republican Administration that prefers
- self-help to government assistance, such ideas are likely to
- gain momentum.
- </p>
- <p> Republican House whip Newt Gingrich has praised Thompson
- as an "activist conservative," and some tout the Governor as a
- rising G.O.P. star. There are even those Wisconsinites who,
- having watched ex-second baseman Thompson (he played for the
- Royall High School Hilltoppers) standing next to ex-first
- baseman George Bush at last month's major league All-Star game
- in Toronto, see their Governor as a possible future President.
- That may seem farfetched. But to many of those who elected
- Reagan and Bush, a man who tells welfare recipients to get off
- their rear ends and work for a living could have strong appeal.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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