State panel votes for higher welfare benefits in Nevada
Tuesday, Nov. 16, 1999 | 10:01 a.m.
CARSON CITY - The Nevada Welfare Board, told of a big surplus in a fund for cash grants to the poor, called Monday for the state's first grant increase in nearly a decade.
The recommendation goes to the 2001 Legislature, which will have final say on the plan that would raise the state's basic welfare grant from $348 for a family of three to just under $500.
That would be accomplished by basing grants on 60 percent of the basic need level in 1999. The state now uses 1991 - the last year basic grant levels were raised in Nevada - as the "need" year.
"I'm ecstatic. This shows that the Welfare Board is as concerned about making the grant level a humane level as we are," Marci Wehry of the Nevada Empowered Women's Project said following the panel's meeting in Reno.
Wehry, Jan Gilbert of the Progressive Leadership Alliance of Nevada and Jon Sasser of Washoe Legal Services all urged the board to endorse the higher grants.
A surplus in federal welfare funds is increasing because the number of Nevadans getting assistance has dropped dramatically -from a high of more than 42,000 to less than 17,000.
Prior to 1996 congressional reforms, Nevada spent up to $50 million a year on welfare grants - and now it's just $27.6 million. The surplus is about $10 million, and that figure should climb to nearly $18 million by June and $25 million by mid-2002.
Raising the basic welfare grant to just under $500 a month would use up about $9 million of the surplus.
The push for a grant increase follows an Oct. 1 cutoff date for spending federal money left over from previous years on ancillary services - anything other than cash grants and other basic needs.
State Welfare Division officials say they want to hang onto enough money to provide basic grants to more people if there's an economic downturn that could boost the welfare rolls again.
They also say that while basic grants haven't gone up in years, Nevada has come a long way in using extra welfare funds to expand various ancillary services. That includes teen pregnancy and domestic violence prevention programs, transportation and child care assistance for the working poor, job training, and bonuses for staying on the job.
archive
- Most Read
- Discussed
- Most E-mailed
- Man, 26, dies in collision with truck traveling at 100 mph
- MGM Mirage: CityCenter not affected by debt woes
- Metro admits to improper release of criminal history data
- Locomotives win inaugural UFL championship
- Was a foiled bank heist a cry for help?
- If Palin’s book is so bad, then why is it a best-seller?
- Bargain hunters hit stores for Black Friday
- Wonder drug for men flops, suggestive ad campaign coming under scrutiny
- Q&A: MMA fighter and Playboy model Latasha Marzolla
- UNLV recalls last year’s close shave at Louisville
Blogs
The Kats Report
Could a savior of shuttered Las Vegas Art Museum be ... Peter Max? (6 Comments)
For Paul Stanley and KISS, rock and roll is not over (6 Comments)
Twenty years ago today, Human Nature took root on the farm (1 Comment)
Robin Leach's Las Vegas Celebrity Watch
Photo Gallery: Donny Osmond’s triumphant return to the Flamingo
The Kats Report
'DWTS' champ Donny Osmond still deft afoot in return to Flamingo (8 Comments)
Politics: The Early Line
Meeting of GOP governors draws challengers, not Gibbons (5 Comments)
Politics: Ralston's Flash
Oscar loves forcing developers to sign labor peace agreements, Culinary loves the city's downtown plans and all is forgiven (10 Comments)
Calendar »
- 29 Sun
- 30 Mon
- 1 Tue
- 2 Wed
- 3 Thu
-
Tahoe Takeover at The Bank
The Bank | 10 p.m. to 11:59 p.m.
-
Playboy Club model search
Playboy Club | 10 p.m. to 11:59 p.m.
-
Queen of Queens at Revolution Lounge
Beatles Revolution Lounge | 10 p.m. to 11:59 p.m.
-
Zowie Bowie's Vintage Vegas Show at Monte Carlo
Lance Burton Theater
The Sun
Locally owned and independent for more than 50 years.
Technorati









