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52006200 Families and Social Policy September 7 2006

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Thousands of residents from New Orleans gather at an evacuation staging area ... 275k homes destroyed in LA and 650k people displaced most went to other places ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 52006200 Families and Social Policy September 7 2006


1
5200/6200Families and Social
PolicySeptember 7 2006
2
This week.
  • Policy Evaluation and Politics
  • Ellwood, D.  1988.  "Values the Helping
    Conundrums." Poor Support, C 2. New York Basic
    Books, Pp. 14-44. WEBSITE
  • Urban Institute, Federalism after Katrina how
    social programs respond http//www.urban.org/Uplo
    adedPDF/311344_after_katrina.pdf Internet
  • Galster, G.  1996.  "The Challenges for Policy
    Research in a Changing Environment." The Future
    of the Public Sector Series No. 7. Urban
    Institute.
  • http//www.urban.org/UploadedPDF/pub_07.pdf
  • Dye, Thomas R. (2005) Policy Evaluation
    Finding Out What Happens After A Law Is Passed.
    READER
  • Book Reportspassing list around
  • Case for marriage, linda waite
  • Promises to keep, kathryn Edin
  • Would be week 11
  • Today
  • Politics, values, and why and how we should we
    help

3
WHAT IS AMERICAN FEDERALISM?
  • sharing of power between the states and the
    national governmenthas been a major issue
    throughout U.S. history.

4
WHY IS AMERICAN FEDERALISM IMPORTANT?
  • Protection against oppression
  • Diversity in policy ideas
  • Spreads the power around
  • Policies are more responsive to local conditions

5
Values underpinning Federalism
  • Individual autonomy vs. dependence.
  • Work as Virtue workfare vs. welfare.
  • Primacy of the family promote marriage.
  • Sense of community sympathy for others.
  • Two dominant ideals
  • democracy freedom and equality
  • capitalism freedom and private property
  • Creates a tension that defines the American
    political culture
  • Leads to sharp ideological divisions with
    American society

6
Applying these values to Social Policy leads to
three helping conundrums (a problem without a
visible solution)
7
The Security-Work Conundrum
  • how to provide a safety-net with undermining the
    incentive to work.
  • Research supports the disincentivehow to
    reverse?

8
The Assistance Family Structure Conundrum
  • Welfare should not encourage FHH, but they do
    need more help
  • Research a very tenuous/weak rship between
    assistance family structure, but still we
    worrywhy?

9
The Targeting vs. Isolation Conundrum
  • targeting the poor should not lead to social
    isolation and immobility. (food stamp cards)
  • Geographic and economic reintegration are key
    ideaswhat are the impediments? (mixed housing)
  • When we target the failuresare we ignoring the
    successes?

10
Applying the Conundrums..
  • What about aid to the poorwhat should we do?
    How do we navigate these conundrums?
  • What about an example.

11
KatrinaExtent of Damage
12
Landfall

13
The Water is Rising
14
Flooding the French Quarter
A city built below sea level is sustained by a
complex system of dams serving as a buffer
against storm surges and the wetlands of the
Mississippi Delta.
15
Boats travel flooded streets
16
New Orleans Superdome
17
Camping on I-10
Oil slicks in the water
18
Leaving the Superdome
Walking out on I-10
19
Is this the USA?
Thousands of residents from New Orleans gather at
an evacuation staging area along Interstate-10 in
Metarie, La., on Thursday, Sept. 1, 2005. AP
Photo/Dave Martin
20
School buses flooded in New Orleans
21
Boat Jam on the road
22
Stranded on Rooftops
23
Louisiana State Troops
24
Evacuation
25
To the helicopters
26
U. S. N. S. Comfort
27
Rooftop Rescues Continue
28
Searching for survivors
29
Foreign Aid to U.S.
Members of the Mexican Navy help distribute water
U.S. Navy sailors assigned to the amphibious
assault ship USS Bataan and Mexican marines carry
a log as they remove debris
30
Applying the Conundrums..
  • Work Security conundrum
  • The Targeting vs. Isolation Conundrum

31
  • What will be the impact of the largest
    displacement of people in U.S. since the Civil
    War?

32
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34
Why was the impact of Katrina SO BAD
  • Concentrated Poverty
  • Nearly 50k poor new orleanians lived in nhoods
    where the poverty rate exceeded 40 percent
  • NOLA ranked 2nd among large U.S. cities in
    concentrated poverty
  • Racial Issues
  • Flooded area contained 80 of city minority
    population vs 54 of white population
  • The MHH income of AA in the city was just half
    that of whites21,461 versus 40,390
  • Neighborhood Issues
  • Nhoods didnt appear by accident (clustering
    public housing, subsidized metro sprawl, lack of
    affordable housing)
  • Economic Health of Gulf States
  • States have to contribute to federal-state
    program. LA ranked very low before Katrina in
    raising revenue. So especially hard hit by a
    crisis
  • States cannot operate in a budget deficit but fed
    can

35
What the Gov didfed allocations equal 109
billion
  • Housing
  • 275k homes destroyed in LA and 650k people
    displacedmost went to other places in LA, and
    then TX
  • FEMA and HUD helped for 18 months (what about
    people who needed services pre katrina?)
  • Income Replacement
  • 19k businesses destroyed over 500k filed claims
    for UI
  • State should pay UI but didnt have
    capacityother states helped
  • 500 mil appropriated from federal unemployment
    fund
  • Health Care
  • New needs on top of existing needs/charity
    hospitals destroyed. Medicaid filled important
    gaps
  • Medicaid waivers in host states compensated by
    feds not states
  • Cash Assistance
  • New TANF needs within affected states and
    increased coverage by host states/TANF is block
    granted so amounts are fixed.
  • Gov released contingency funds to affected and
    host states without penalty (70 million)

36
Why the Government Response was Problematic
  • Cross jurisdictional complexity
  • Evacuees move across state lines-states not set
    up to accommodate. Complex fed/state sharing
    challenged
  • Short term solutions to long term problem
  • FEMA V HUD use suggest perception of short term
    needsnot true. Medicaid waivers for 5 months
    for full fed funding not enough
  • Lack of clarity
  • Slow to define federal responsemade uncertainty
    worse. Lots of blaming
  • What is the appropriate fed role?
  • Not just the feds job but fed important part of
    smooth response. Need better vision about
    federal response to disaster

37
Future?
  • How to rebuild?

38
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41
What have we Learned?
  • We need to clearly define what is a sig scale
    disaster to trigger fed support.
  • We need to have a plan for delivering aid prior
    to disaster
  • Problems in delivering services even when we all
    agree on the need and deservedness
  • Is there a limit to our prosocial behaviors?
  • Ounce of prevention beats a pound of cure
  • Invest in infrastructure
  • Invest in communities in harms way
  • Dont be complacent about concentrated poverty
  • Race and class continue to be important factors
    in shaping families response to need

42
Discuss.
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