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The Uncertain Hour

Chapter 6: The Welfare to Temp Work Pipeline

The Uncertain Hour

Marketplace

Government, News

4.82.2K Ratings

🗓️ 26 April 2023

⏱️ 57 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Since the 1990s, most cash welfare recipients have been required to get a job or do mandated “work activities” to receive their monthly check. These requirements are intended to help parents who are struggling financially into jobs that will help keep them out of poverty and off government benefits. But is the work requirement system meeting either of those goals?

According to our analysis of data from Wisconsin, an average of nearly 70% of employed welfare participants worked at temp companies. These companies put people to work in other companies, trying to fill temporary jobs where the work is often grueling and the pay low.

Welfare-to-work has been so good for temp agencies that some of them actively lobby for more work requirements for government benefits through campaign contributions and white papers. “It gives us a pool of more people we can help,” said the CEO of one temp company whose franchises have ranked among the top 10 employers of Wisconsin welfare participants. “A person loses self-esteem when they don’t go back to work. Whether it’s voluntary or involuntary work is very important for their psyche.”

On this episode, host Krissy Clark looks at the cozy relationship between for-profit welfare companies and temp companies desperate to put people to work in some of the country’s most precarious jobs. Plus, a frank discussion with an architect of our modern welfare-to-work system, former Wisconsin Gov. Tommy Thompson.

For a deeper dive into the numbers about how private welfare contractors make money and some other eye-popping data, check out the work of our colleagues at APM Research Lab.

Give today to help cover the costs of this rigorous reporting. Every donation makes a difference!

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey, it's Chrissy.

0:01.4

Before this episode starts, I want to thank you for listening to the uncertain hour.

0:05.5

This season is coming to an end, and I need to remind you that we are public media.

0:09.8

We rely on donations from you to continue doing this kind of rigorous, long-form journalism.

0:15.7

Please give generously today at Marketplace.org-give-tuh.

0:20.8

We've also got a link in the show notes now onto the episode.

0:24.7

Hey, it's Chrissy.

0:26.0

We want to know a little bit more about our listeners.

0:29.2

So we're asking you to complete a short anonymous survey.

0:32.4

It takes less than five minutes.

0:34.5

Go to Marketplace.org-survey to complete the survey.

0:38.8

You do all of us at the uncertain hour a huge favor by filling it out.

0:42.5

Thanks so much.

0:47.2

In all the reporting I've done on the privatized welfare to work system in Wisconsin,

0:52.2

there's something I kept noticing in the data.

0:55.6

About where a lot of people who go through the system end up.

1:00.8

The idea of welfare to work is, of course, to connect people on welfare to jobs

1:05.7

that hopefully allow them to support themselves.

1:08.8

But actually, in Wisconsin, in the last several years,

1:12.7

the most common type of job that people on cash welfare find is at

1:18.7

temp agencies.

1:22.0

Like this one.

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