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Reveal

The Welfare-to-Work Industrial Complex

Reveal

The Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX

News

4.78K Ratings

🗓️ 17 June 2023

⏱️ 51 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

“Get a job!” That sums up our current cash welfare system in a nutshell. Ever since so-called welfare reform in the 1990s, the system has been based on the idea that welfare recipients must be doing some kind of work or job-readiness activity to receive government assistance. It’s a system that plays on what Americans have long wanted to believe – that all it takes to move out of poverty is a can-do attitude and hard work.

Now, there is a growing chorus of politicians who argue that even more programs that help people in need should have more and tougher work requirements attached. Recently, Republicans successfully fought to create new work requirements for food assistance under the debt ceiling deal.

In this episode, Reveal partners with The Uncertain Hour podcast from Marketplace to explore the lucrative industry built on welfare-to-work policies. Critics say these for-profit welfare companies have cultivated their own cycle of dependency on the federal government. Krissy Clark from The Uncertain Hour takes listeners into America’s welfare-to-work system.

We meet a struggling mother of two in Milwaukee who hits hard times and turns to a local welfare office for help – a welfare office outsourced to a private for-profit company. Inside, staff preach the power of work, place people into unpaid “work experience” and enforce work requirements for welfare recipients, all in the name of teaching self-sufficiency. But who’s set to benefit most, that struggling mother or the for-profit company she turned to?

Then, Clark has a frank conversation with the founder of America Works, one of the first for-profit welfare-to-work companies in the country.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Lies, exploitation, and the American dream turned nightmare.

0:06.4

This is Big Sugar, a deep dive into the inner workings of the sugar industry.

0:11.8

I'm Celeste Headley, and in a new podcast, I'm investigating a true crime story like no

0:16.2

other about the men who risked their lives to cut sugar cane.

0:20.0

From I Heart Media, I'll unravel a decade-long fight to get justice.

0:24.6

Listen to Big Sugar on the I Heart Radio app Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.

0:30.6

From the Center for Investigative Reporting in PRX, this is Reveal.

0:37.2

I'm Al Letson.

0:39.0

Last month, when Congress was debating how to keep the country from defaulting on its debts,

0:43.8

one of the sticking points was over work requirements.

0:47.2

Should more people be put to work in order to receive government aid,

0:52.2

Republicans successfully fought to create new requirements under the debt ceiling deal.

0:57.6

But this idea of tying work to aid has bipartisan roots.

1:02.6

From now on, our nation's answer to this great social challenge will no longer be an ever-ending cycle of welfare.

1:09.2

It will be the dignity, the power, and the ethic of work.

1:12.2

I'm proposing that every state be required within five years to have 70% of welfare recipients working.

1:19.0

Work.

1:20.2

It's a pretty simple concept.

1:23.2

It's time for all Americans to get off of welfare and get back to work. You're going to love it.

1:31.2

It was President Clinton who first signed work requirements into federal law back in 1996 under so-called welfare reform.

1:39.2

Today we are ending welfare as we know it.

1:42.2

But I hope this day will be remembered not for what it ended, but for what it began.

...

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