Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Reveal: A Welfare Check

Allison McCartney for Reveal
Today, only a quarter of welfare dollars actually goes toward basic assistance for families in financial need. A lot of the money goes to other things entirely.

Twenty years ago, President Bill Clinton vowed to end welfare as we know it. 

And he did.

One of the biggest changes to come out of the 1996 welfare reform law was that that the federal government handed over control of $16.5 billion to the states, in the form of block grants, to spend as they see fit.

Today, only a quarter of welfare dollars actually goes toward basic assistance – housing, transportation or essential household items.

On this hour of Reveal, we take a road trip with Marketplace's new podcast "The Uncertain Hour" and find out the surprising ways different states use this money.

Reporter Krissy Clark’s first stop is Oklahoma, where until recently, welfare dollars paid for marriage and relationship classes – no matter the couples' income levels. This meant that the money didn’t go to help families in financial need.

At the second stop in Clark's cross-country trip, she finds welfare dollars going to scholarships for students at an expensive private college in Michigan. And in Indiana, she explores how the state uses welfare funds for clinics that steer women away from abortions.

Reveal is a weekly radio program produced by The Center for Investigative Reporting and PRX.

For more, check out our website and subscribe to our podcast.

Tags
Julia B. Chan is the digital editor for Reveal from the Center for Investigative Reporting.