Connecticut 2022 2022 Regular Session

Connecticut Senate Bill SB00197 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 04/26/2022

                     
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OLR Bill Analysis 
sSB 197  
 
AN ACT CONCERNING TEMPORARY FAMILY ASSISTANCE.  
 
SUMMARY 
This bill extends the maximum lifetime duration of cash assistance 
under the Temporary Family Assistance (TFA) program to 60 months, 
which is generally the maximum allowed under federal law. Under 
current law, the program has a 21-month time limit, with up to two six-
month extensions.  
The bill correspondingly eliminates provisions that allow the 
Department of Social Services (DSS) commissioner to grant up to two 
six-month extensions for families who have made a good faith effort to 
comply with TFA requirements but continue to have low incomes or 
encounter circumstances preventing employment (e.g., domestic 
violence). It also eliminates other provisions on (1) eligibility for six-
month extensions and a family’s right to petition for them and (2) 
penalties for noncompliance with program requirements during a six-
month extension. It makes other conforming changes. 
The bill allows, rather than requires, the DSS commissioner to exempt 
families from the program’s time limit under certain circumstances. It 
additionally allows DSS to exempt families that have encountered 
circumstances preventing employment.   
The bill requires the DSS commissioner to post her notice of intent to 
adopt regulations on the eRegulations system and the department’s 
website, rather than in the Connecticut Law Journal. By law, she must 
do so within 20 days of implementing policies and procedures related 
to TFA.  
By law, the Labor Department administers employment services for 
TFA recipients who are subject to work requirements (CGS § 17b-688i).  2022SB-00197-R000644-BA.DOCX 
 
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These TFA recipients are also eligible for subsidized child care under 
the Care 4 Kids program (CGS § 17b-749).  
EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2022 
EXEMPTIONS FROM TIME LIMIT 
Current law requires DSS to exempt families from the program’s time 
limits under certain circumstances. The bill instead allows DSS to 
exempt a family under the same circumstances. This applies to families 
with:  
1. a needy caretaker relative who is incapacitated or of an advanced 
age, as defined by the DSS commissioner, if there is no other 
nonexempt caretaker relative in the household; 
2. a needy caretaker relative who is needed in the home because of 
another household member’s incapacitation, if there is no other 
nonexempt caretaker relative in the household; 
3. a caretaker relative who is not legally responsible for the 
dependent children in the household, if his or her needs are not 
considered when DSS calculates the TFA benefit and there is no 
other nonexempt caretaker relative in the household; 
4. a caretaker relative caring for a child under the age of one, if there 
is no other nonexempt caretaker relative in the household; 
5. a pregnant or postpartum caretaker relative, if a physician has 
indicated that she cannot work and there is no other nonexempt 
caretaker relative in the household;  
6. a caretaker relative determined by the DSS commissioner to be 
unemployable and there is no other nonexempt caretaker relative 
in the household; and 
7. minor parents attending and satisfactorily completing high 
school or high school equivalency programs. 
The bill additionally allows the DSS commissioner to exempt from  2022SB-00197-R000644-BA.DOCX 
 
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the time limits families that have encountered circumstances preventing 
employment, including domestic violence, physical harm to the family’s 
children, or other circumstances beyond the family’s control. Under 
current law, the commissioner may grant up to two six-month 
extensions for families encountering these circumstances. 
BACKGROUND 
Federal Requirements for TANF-Funded Cash Assistance 
TFA is Connecticut’s cash assistance program for families. TFA is 
funded through the federal Temporary Assistance for Needy Families 
(TANF) block grant. For TANF-funded cash assistance programs, the 
state must describe the program in a state plan that is subject to approval 
by the Administration of Children and Families within the U.S. 
Department of Health and Human Services. TANF-funded cash 
assistance programs must meet certain federal requirements, including 
work participation rates and a 60-month lifetime limit on program 
benefits. In certain cases, the state may provide more than 60 months of 
benefits under this program (e.g., to a limited number of families 
experiencing hardships or by providing benefits with state funds rather 
than federal funds).    
Related Bills 
SB 192 (File 215), favorably reported by the Human Services 
Committee, changes the way DSS calculates penalties for a TFA 
participant’s failure to comply with work requirements, in some cases 
requiring DSS to reduce benefits rather than temporarily terminating 
them.  
SB 285 (File 220, as amended by Senate Amendment “A”) excludes 
from the time limit months of benefits received during any state public 
health emergency, rather than only excluding months during a public 
health emergency declared by Governor Ned Lamont. 
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Human Services Committee 
Joint Favorable Substitute Change of Reference - APP  2022SB-00197-R000644-BA.DOCX 
 
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Yea 13 Nay 7 (03/08/2022) 
 
Appropriations Committee 
Joint Favorable 
Yea 36 Nay 12 (04/07/2022)