If you looked at that headline and thought, “What is the maximum family grant?” you’re probably not alone.
Twenty years ago this week, in the midst of the Clinton-era welfare reforms, California became one of 16 states to pass a limit on assistance to new children born into families that had been receiving welfare benefits in the 10 months before the child was born. In California, the welfare program is called CalWORKs.
The idea was to prevent people receiving aid from having more children.
That law is still on the books and today, according to a brief from the Western Center on Law and Poverty (WCLP), 13.4 percent of children in CalWORKs households — that’s 143,300 children — are “currently impacted by the (maximum family grant) rule.”
CalWORKs provides needy families with basic-needs cash grants, and it’s not much. According to WCLP, the average grant is $464 per month. That puts a family of three at roughly 29 percent of the federal poverty level. The maximum grant would push families up to 41 percent of the poverty level.