From Academia to Activism
At Day on the Hill this past March, a delegation of students from the University of Minnesota, Rochester...
My Vikings Headache
I grew up in Chicago. I don't like the Vikings. And though it's heresy, and Minnesota is my home, I root for...
Thinking Outside the Box
Each year during the month of April, we ask our members to think about, discuss, and reflect on the issue of...
Amber's Day at the Capitol
On a Tuesday last March at 6:15 in the morning, thirty-six folks from the St. Cloud area loaded a bus going to...
Housing vigils abound
In the past few weeks, JRLC has been coordinating interfaith vigils across the state in support of affordable...
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From Academia to Activism
Monday, 14 May 2012 09:56 -
My Vikings Headache
Wednesday, 09 May 2012 09:36 -
Thinking Outside the Box
Monday, 30 April 2012 14:00 -
Amber's Day at the Capitol
Friday, 27 April 2012 14:11 -
Housing vigils abound
Monday, 23 April 2012 11:20
JRLC Constituent Poll
When do you want Day on the Hill 2013 to be?
(16 votes)
Facts about MFIP
Stripping survival level assistance to families that have a parent or child who is disabledWhat is the Governor proposing? To end welfare-to-work assistance to at least 5,000 families and to cut child care assistance to 900 families that have a parent or child with disabilities.
What sort of disabilities are involved? The parents often have serious and persistent mental illness, low IQs due to developmental disability or traumatic brain injuries, and debilitating chronic illnesses. The children’s disabilities are across the board – severe physical disabilities, mental illness and developmental disabilities.
Who determines an individual is disabled? The federal government, through a process that can take up to two years, and results in a determination that the individual is unable to sustain on-going and full-time work.
What will these families live on? A mother with a disability and with two children would go from having about $1,100 a month to pay for rent, food, clothes, transportation, etc. to having $674 a month, the maximum disability assistance available to an individual through the federal Supplemental Security Income program. That is $8,000 a year, a level the Census Bureau recognizes as extreme poverty.
What will happen to the families? Many of these families will lose their housing and those who have struggled with unstable housing already are likely to join many others in those counted among the long-term homeless.
What will happen to the children? Homeless children with other risk factors miss more school, score the lowest on standardized test scores and fail to show advancement in school compared to all other students, including other very low income students.
With the state’s budget crisis, don’t we have to focus on costs that are growing more expensive every year? The forecast anticipates a slight decline (a $4.2 million decrease) in spending for grants to people on the state welfare-to-work program, the Minnesota Family Investment Program – without these cuts.. This decrease is a continuation of a trend that started in 2009. (p.15 Minnesota Department of Human Services Forecast, Feb. 2010 )
Minnesota has not increased the amount of cash assistance it provides families since 1986. A family of three still receives $532 a month at maximum.
Minnesota has federal welfare-to-work money still available from the stimulus bill that is intended to prevent just this sort of cut. Instead the Governor proposes moving it around through the tax budget to pay for a $28 million general fund cut.
This cut will save the state $20 million in 2011 and about $32 million a year in subsequent years.
Click here for a PDF one-pager with this information.












