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entitled 'Workforce Investment Act: States and Localities Increasingly 
Coordinate Services for TANF Clients, but Better Information Needed on 
Effective Approaches' which was released on July 3, 2002. 

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United States General Accounting Office: 
GAO: 

Report to Congressional Requesters 

July 2002: 

Workforce Investment Act: 

States and Localities Increasingly Coordinate Services for TANF 
Clients, but Better Information Needed on Effective Approaches: 

GAO-02-696: 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

Most States and Localities Coordinated TANF and WIA Services and Some 
Coordination Efforts Increased between 2000 and 2001: 

A Variety of Conditions Influence State and Local Coordination Efforts, 
but Little Is Known about the Effectiveness of Coordinated Service 
Delivery on TANF Clients’ Outcomes: 

Challenges Inhibit State and Local Coordination Efforts: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments: 

Appendix I: Annotated Bibliography of Reviewed Studies: 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Labor: 

Appendix III: Comments from the Department of Health and Human 
Services: 

Appendix IV: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contacts: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

Related GAO Products: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Methods of State Coordination Occurring to a Great Extent, 
2000 and 2001: 

Figure 2: Coordination Methods that States Reported Most of Their One-
Stop Centers Were Using, 2000 and 2001: 

Figure 3: Number of States with Services Colocated in at Least Some One-
Stops, 2000 and 2001: 

Figure 4: Forms of Coordination that States Reported the Majority of 
Their Local One-Stops Used, 2001: 

Abbreviations: 

AFDC: Aid to Families with Dependent Children: 

HHS: Department of Health and Human Services: 

JTPA: Job Training Partnership Act: 

MOU: Memorandum of Understanding: 

OSOS: One-Stop Operating System: 

PRWORA: Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation 
Act: 

TANF: Temporary Assistance for Needy Families: 

WIA: Workforce Investment Act: 

WIN: Work Incentive: 

WtW: Welfare-to-Work: 

[End of section] 

United States General Accounting Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

July 3, 2002: 

The Honorable John Boehner: 
Chairman, Committee on Education and the Workforce: 
House of Representatives: 

The Honorable Howard P. (Buck) McKeon: 
Chairman, Subcommittee on 21st Century Competitiveness: 
Committee on Education and the Workforce: 
House of Representatives: 

The Honorable Wally Herger: 
Chairman, Subcommittee on Human Resources: 
Committee on Ways and Means: 
House of Representatives: 

In 1998, the Congress passed the Workforce Investment Act [Footnote 1] 
(WIA) to unify a fragmented employment and training system, requiring 
states to provide most federally funded employment-related services 
through one-stop centers. Two years earlier, welfare reform legislation 
created the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families [Footnote 2] (TANF) 
block grant which provided flexibility to states to focus on helping 
needy adults with children find and maintain employment. Despite the 
similar focus, TANF was not required to be part of WIA’s new workforce 
investment system; however, as we have previously testified, [Footnote 
3] many states and localities are working to bring together their TANF 
and WIA services. With the reauthorization of TANF this year and WIA 
next year, and the emphasis on work intensifying, the ability of states 
and localities to coordinate their TANF and WIA services is of 
increasing interest. 

In an effort to assess the extent of current efforts to coordinate TANF 
and WIA services and to understand the role that the federal government 
could play in assisting these efforts, you asked us to examine (1) the 
extent to which states and localities are currently coordinating TANF 
and WIA services for TANF clients, and how this had changed since 
2000—when many states first implemented WIA; (2) what is known about the
conditions that influence how states and localities coordinate TANF 
services with one-stop centers and the effectiveness of service 
coordination through one-stops on TANF client outcomes; and (3) what
challenges hinder state and local coordination efforts. 

To respond to your request, we analyzed a survey that we conducted from
September through December 2001 of WIA agency officials in all 50 states
and the results of a similar survey that we conducted in the spring of 
2000. In addition, we visited 9 localities in 4 states from October 
2001 to January 2002. [Footnote 4] To further understand these issues, 
we conducted telephone interviews with state TANF and workforce 
officials in 12 states; conducted telephone interviews with Department 
of Health and Human Services (HHS) regional officials in 9 of the 10 
regions; [Footnote 5] and reviewed relevant research. We performed our 
work between September 2001 and April 2002 in accordance with generally 
accepted government auditing standards. 

Results in Brief: 

Nearly all states reported some coordination of their TANF and WIA
services at the state or local level, and the use of some of these
coordination methods increased between 2000 and 2001. At the state 
level, coordination between TANF and WIA agencies increased slightly 
and was accomplished through a variety of methods, ranging from formal, 
such as memorandums of understanding, to informal, such as information 
sharing. In addition to these coordination methods, the majority of 
states used TANF funds to support the operations or the infrastructure 
of the one-stop system— 36 states used TANF funds to support the one-
stop system in 2001, up from 33 in 2000. Some of the largest gains in 
coordination were seen at the local level. For example, in 2001 the 
majority of local one-stops in 44 states had established informal 
linkages with their TANF programs, compared with 35 states in 2000. 
Additionally, TANF-related services were provided through local one-
stops in a greater number of states in 2001 than in 2000, either by 
providing services on site (colocation) or through electronic linkages 
and client referrals. In 2001, for example, TANF work programs were 
colocated in at least some of the one-stops in 39 states, up from 32 
states in 2000. Although many states and localities coordinate TANF 
services with one-stop centers to some extent, some continue to provide 
services for TANF clients outside of one-stop centers. In 2001, 4 
states reported that they do not provide TANF work services through any
one-stop center. This number has declined since 2000, when 12 states 
were not providing services through any of their one-stop centers. 

A variety of conditions—including historical relationships, geographic
considerations, adequacy of facilities, and different perspectives on 
how best to serve TANF clients—influence how states and localities 
choose to coordinate services with one-stop centers. States are 
affected differently by these conditions. For example, in some states, 
welfare and workforce agencies faced with facility limitations used 
creative means, such as outstationing workforce staff in welfare 
agencies, to coordinate services for TANF clients. In other states, 
however, welfare and workforce agencies faced with similar space 
constraints were unable to find ways to coordinate services. Currently, 
there is no clear way for states and localities to easily access 
information on successful approaches to overcome obstacles in 
coordinating services. Although research has shown that a variety of 
conditions influence coordination efforts, it has not clearly examined 
how coordinated service delivery through one-stops affects TANF 
clients’ outcomes. 

Several challenges, including program differences between TANF and WIA
and different information systems [Footnote 6] used by welfare and 
workforce agencies, inhibit state and local coordination efforts. 
[Footnote 7] For example, different program definitions, such as what 
constitutes work, as well as complex reporting requirements under TANF 
and WIA hamper state and local coordination efforts. Though some states 
and localities have found creative ways to work around these issues, 
the differences remain barriers to coordination for many others. For 
example, antiquated welfare and workforce information systems are often 
not equipped to share data with each other, and as a result, sometimes 
one-stop center staff members have to enter the same client data into 
two separate systems. Although HHS and the Department of Labor (Labor) 
have each provided some assistance to the states on how to coordinate 
services, available guidance has not specifically addressed the 
challenges that many continue to face. Moreover, HHS and Labor have not 
addressed differences in program definitions and reporting requirements 
under TANF and WIA. 

To address some of these obstacles to coordination, we are recommending
that HHS and Labor work together to develop ways to jointly disseminate
information on how some states and localities have taken advantage of 
the flexibility afforded to them under TANF and WIA to pursue 
coordination strategies. We are also recommending that HHS and Labor, 
either individually or jointly, promote research that would examine the 
role of coordinated service delivery on outcomes of TANF clients. 

Background: 

In recent years, the Congress passed two pieces of legislation 
intended, in part, to foster greater coordination between education, 
welfare, and employment and training programs. The Workforce Investment 
Act was passed in 1998 to consolidate services of many employment and 
training programs, mandating that states and localities use a 
centralized service delivery structure—the one-stop center system—to 
provide most federally funded employment and training assistance. The 
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families block grant, which was created 
2 years earlier by the 1996 Personal Responsibility and Work 
Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA) and replaced the Aid to 
Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) Program, gave states greater 
flexibility to design employment and training services for clients 
receiving cash assistance. [Footnote 8] While TANF is not one of the 
federal programs mandated to provide services through the one-stop 
system, states and localities have the option to include TANF as a 
partner. 

For over 30 years prior to TANF and WIA implementation, states’ welfare
and workforce development systems collaborated at some level to provide
employment and training services to welfare clients. These efforts began
in 1967 with the Work Incentive (WIN) Program’s requirement that states
administer employment and training programs for their welfare clients.
WIN’s successes were limited, according to critics, largely because the
program lacked coordination between welfare agencies and local 
employment and training agencies. WIN was replaced in 1988 when the
Family Support Act created the Job Opportunities and Basic Skills (JOBS)
Program to provide welfare clients with a broad range of services, 
including education and training services. Unlike WIN, which had a clear
and formal role for the workforce development system, JOBS was to be
administered or supervised by the welfare agency, but could be 
coordinated with existing employment, training, and education programs
within each state. Our previous work shows that workforce development
programs like the one created by the Job Training Partnership Act (JTPA)
played a key role in providing services to welfare recipients. 
[Footnote 9] In fact, welfare agencies could contract with these 
existing programs to provide JOBS services, which some state welfare 
agencies did. Collaboration efforts continued between 1987 and 1996, a 
period during which states were allowed to further experiment with 
their AFDC and JOBS programs as HHS began allowing waivers to provide 
states with more flexibility. States often used these waivers to 
strengthen work requirements for welfare clients and to try new ways of 
delivering services to welfare clients, sometimes using the workforce 
development system. 

With the enactment of PRWORA and the creation of the TANF block grant
in 1996, states were given more flexibility than they had under 
predecessor programs to determine the nature of financial assistance, 
the structure of their cash assistance programs, the types of client 
services provided, and how services are delivered. TANF also 
established new accountability measures for states—focused in part on 
meeting work requirements[Footnote 10]— and a 5-year lifetime limit on 
federally funded TANF cash assistance. These measures heighten the 
importance of helping TANF clients find work quickly and retain 
employment. As states have focused more on this goal of helping TANF 
clients obtain employment, the importance of coordinating services has 
received increased attention. To help clients get and retain jobs, 
states need to address clients’ work-related needs through services 
such as job search and job readiness, as well as child care and 
transportation assistance. Frequently, addressing these issues requires
those who work directly with welfare clients to draw on other programs 
to provide a wide array of services. While local welfare agencies 
administer cash assistance and sometimes Food Stamps and Medicaid, 
housing authorities, education agencies, and state Employment Services 
offices often administer other programs that provide key services to 
TANF clients. In addition, PRWORA broadened both the types of TANF 
services that could be contracted and the types of organizations that 
could serve as TANF contractors, and therefore nongovernmental agencies 
are often involved in the provision of services to TANF clients. 
[Footnote 11] 

During welfare reform, states were also experimenting with better ways 
to coordinate employment and training services, often using one-stop
centers. Labor’s efforts to coordinate service delivery began in fiscal 
year 1994, when they awarded One-Stop Planning and Implementation 
grants to some states. These grants required that most Labor-funded 
programs be included in one-stop centers, which were intended to 
integrate services in order to create a customer-driven system that was 
accountable for outcomes and available to all job seekers. When WIA was 
enacted, all local areas nationwide were required to use the one-stop 
system to provide the majority of federally funded employment and 
training services. [Footnote 12] WIA extended the one-stop concept 
beyond Labor programs, requiring states and localities to form 
partnerships with other agencies offering employment and training 
services. Seventeen categories of programs, funded through four federal 
agencies—the Departments of Labor, Education, Health and Human 
Services, and Housing and Urban Development—must provide services 
through the one-stop center system under WIA. While TANF is not one of 
17 federal programs mandated to provide services through the one-stop 
system, states and localities have the option to include TANF as a 
partner. WIA emphasizes state and local flexibility and does not 
require that all program services be provided on site, as they may be 
provided through electronic linkages with partner agencies or by 
referral, but WIA does require that the relationships and services be 
spelled out in a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU). 

Other recent legislation has also attempted to strengthen the 
relationship between welfare and workforce development agencies. For 
example, in the Balanced Budget Act of 1997, the Congress authorized 
welfare-to-work (WtW) grants [Footnote 13] to be administered through 
the workforce development system. These grants were awarded by Labor to 
states and were intended to help hard-to-employ persons receiving TANF 
cash assistance and noncustodial parents of minor children in families 
receiving TANF cash assistance obtain employment. Forty-four states 
have received formula grants and 191 competitive grants have been 
awarded to 189 entities. States have until fiscal year 2004 to spend 
these funds. WtW’s inclusion as one of the mandatory partners in one-
stop centers under WIA encourages welfare and workforce agencies to 
coordinate. 

Most States and Localities Coordinated TANF and WIA Services and Some 
Coordination Efforts Increased between 2000 and 2001: 

Nearly all states reported coordinating TANF and WIA services at the 
state or local level, and some of these coordination efforts increased 
between 2000 and 2001. Coordination between state TANF and WIA agencies
increased slightly in 2001 and ranged from formal methods, such as MOUs,
to informal methods, such as information sharing. In addition to these
methods, states increasingly used TANF funds to support the operations
or the infrastructure of their one-stop systems. Some of the largest 
gains in coordination occurred at the local level, particularly in the 
use of informal linkages, such as periodic program referrals. Other 
methods used by local areas included both formal linkages, such as 
financial agreements between a local TANF agency and the one-stop 
center, and coordinated planning. In addition, many localities 
coordinated the provision of services for TANF clients through one-stop 
centers, either by colocation or electronic linkages and client 
referrals, and these efforts increased in 2001. Although many states 
and localities coordinate TANF services with one-stop centers to some 
extent, some still provide services for TANF clients outside of one-
stop centers. 

Coordination between State TANF and WIA Agencies Occurred in Most 
States and Increased Slightly in 2001: 

Most states reported some level of coordination between state agencies
administering TANF and WIA, and coordination efforts increased slightly
between 2000 and 2001. Coordination methods used by the states ranged
from formal linkages, such as MOUs, to informal methods, such as
information sharing. Twenty-eight states reported that they made
extensive use of formal linkages, such as MOUs and state-level formal
agreements, between the agencies administering TANF and WIA in 2001,
compared with 27 states in 2000. Similarly, there was a slight increase 
in the states’ use of coordinated planning in 2001, with 19 states 
reporting that they used it to a great extent, compared with 18 states 
in 2000 (see fig. 1). In addition, 17 states reported using more 
coordination methods to a great extent in 2001. Moreover, 9 states used 
all five of the coordination methods that we analyzed—up from 7 states 
in 2000. [Footnote 14] 

Figure 1: Methods of State Coordination Occurring to a Great Extent, 
2000 and 2001: 

[See PDF for image] 

This figure is a vertical bar graph depicting the following data: 

Coordination methods: Formal linkages; 
Number of states, 2000: 27; 
Number of states, 2001: 28. 

Coordination methods: Informal linkages; 
Number of states, 2000: 29; 
Number of states, 2001: 27; 

Coordination methods: Interagency/intra-agency workgroups; 
Number of states, 2000: 22; 
Number of states, 2001: 23. 

Coordination methods: Coordinated planning; 
Number of states, 2000: 18; 
Number of states, 2001: 19. 

Coordination methods: Shared performance measures; 
Number of states, 2000: 7; 
Number of states, 2001: 9. 

Source: GAO survey data. 

[End of figure] 

Increased coordination between TANF and WIA programs was also seen
in the use of TANF funds to support one-stop center infrastructure or
operations. The number of states using TANF funds to support one-stop
centers increased to 36 in 2001 from 33 in 2000. In addition, the 
number of states ranking TANF as one of the three largest funding 
sources for their one-stop centers rose to 15 in 2001 from 12 in 2000. 
Sometimes TANF employment and training funds were completely 
transferred to the state workforce agency to provide all employment and 
training services to TANF clients in the state. For example, in both 
Michigan and Connecticut, all TANF employment and training funds were 
allocated to the state workforce agencies, which took responsibility 
for providing all employment and training services to TANF clients 
through the one-stops. In other states, the state TANF agency retained 
responsibility for TANF employment and training funds, transferring 
only a portion to the workforce agency, sometimes on a contractual 
basis. For example, in New Jersey, the state TANF and WIA agencies 
established a contract that directed a portion of TANF funds to the 
state Department of Labor to be used for providing employment-related 
services to TANF clients at the one-stops; the remaining funds were 
retained by the TANF agency and distributed to local areas at the TANF 
agency’s discretion. 

In addition, states sometimes established other formal or informal
relationships to further strengthen the coordination between TANF and
WIA agencies. For example, in Texas, the Texas Workforce Commission
and the Health and Human Services Commission are required to jointly
develop and adopt a formal MOU, providing for coordinated case 
management of hardest-to-serve TANF clients. In California, the 
relationship between the two agencies often took more informal forms,
with TANF and WIA agencies participating in joint planning efforts,
workgroups that focused on service duplication, and policy groups that
addressed pertinent operational issues affecting both agencies. 

Localities Increasingly Coordinated TANF Services with One-Stop 
Centers: 

Local-level coordination of TANF-related services with one-stop centers
also increased between 2000 and 2001, with some of the most dramatic
changes occurring in the use of informal linkages between local TANF
agencies and one-stop centers. In addition to these methods, local one-
stops were increasingly providing services to TANF clients by 
colocation or electronic linkages and referrals. Besides TANF- and WIA- 
funded services, many local areas also provided WtW services to TANF 
clients through the one-stop system. 

Program Coordination between TANF and WIA Agencies Increased at the 
Local Level: 

Some of the largest gains in program coordination between 2000 and 2001
were seen at the local level, with the most dramatic changes occurring
between local TANF agencies and one-stop centers in informal linkages,
such as periodic program referrals or information services. [Footnote 
15] Forty-four states reported that most of their one-stop centers had 
informal linkages with their TANF programs in 2001, compared with 35 
states in 2000 (see fig. 2). Similarly, 16 states reported that most of 
their one-stop centers had shared intake or enrollment systems in 
2001—up from 13 in 2000, and 15 states reported in 2001 that they used 
an integrated case management system in most of their one-stop 
centers—an increase of 1 state from our 2000 results. Also, more 
coordination methods were in use at local one-stops. The number of 
states that reported that most of their one-stop centers used all seven 
methods of local-level coordination increased to 10 states in 2001 from 
7 in 2000. 

Figure 2: Coordination Methods that States Reported Most of Their One-
Stop Centers Were Using, 2000 and 2001: 

[See PDF for image] 

This figure is a vertical bar graph depicting the following data: 

Coordination method: Informal linkages; 
Number of states, 2000: 35; 
Number of states, 2001: 44. 

Coordination method: Formal linkages; 
Number of states, 2000: 26; 
Number of states, 2001: 28. 

Coordination method: Coordinated planning; 
Number of states, 2000: 22; 
Number of states, 2001: 21. 

Coordination method: Shared intake, enrollment; 
Number of states, 2000: 13; 
Number of states, 2001: 16. 

Coordination method: Integrated case management; 
Number of states, 2000: 14; 
Number of states, 2001: 15. 

Coordination method: Shared client tracking; 
Number of states, 2000: 13; 
Number of states, 2001: 14. 

Coordination method: Shared performance measurement; 
Number of states, 2000: 11; 
Number of states, 2001: 12. 

Source: GAO survey data. 

[End of figure] 

Local One-Stops Increasingly Provided Services to TANF Clients: 

Increases in coordination between TANF services and one-stop centers
were also seen in the use of the one-stop system to provide services to
TANF clients. Localities increasingly coordinated the provision of 
services to TANF clients through local one-stop centers—either through 
colocation of services at the one-stop or through electronic linkages 
and client referrals to providers outside the one-stop. Moreover, the 
number of states with services colocated in at least some of their 
local one-stop centers increased between 2000 and 2001 (see fig. 3). 
For example, the number of states with TANF work services colocated in 
at least some of their one-stops increased to 39 in 2001 up from 32 in 
2000. Moreover, of the 18 states in 2000 that did not have TANF work 
services colocated in any of their one-stops, 8 had colocated TANF work 
services at some or all of their one[stops by 2001. While the same 
number of states—24—reported in both 2000 and 2001 that TANF work 
services were colocated at the majority of their one-stops, the use of 
electronic linkages or referrals increased. Fifteen states reported in 
2001 that work-related services for TANF clients were either 
electronically linked to the majority of their one-stop centers or 
provided by referring clients from the one-stop to services located
outside the one-stop, while 11 states reported these types of linkages 
in 2000. 

A variety of TANF work services were available at the one-stops. These
services included job search and registration, skills enhancement,
vocational training, assistance in developing individual employability
plans, and case management geared toward addressing barriers to
employment. For example, in local areas that we visited in New Jersey,
clients came to the one-stop to participate in job readiness courses and
self-paced adult education curricula, or to receive assistance with 
résumé writing and job interviewing skills. A local area in Connecticut 
provided TANF clients at the one-stops with an opportunity to take part 
in on-site recruitment by local employers. 

Sometimes states instituted policies to further strengthen the 
relationships between the programs and ensure that clients were 
connected to work services at the one-stop centers. In Michigan and 
Texas, for example, TANF clients were required to attend an orientation 
session at the one-stop before they could receive cash assistance. 
Similarly, in Connecticut, because of low participation rates for TANF 
clients at one-stop centers, the legislature enacted a law requiring 
TANF clients to use one-stop centers as a condition of receiving cash 
assistance. 

In addition to TANF work services, states also increasingly coordinated
TANF cash assistance, Food Stamps, and Medicaid programs with the one-
stop centers. Colocation of cash assistance increased in 2001—16 states
reported that they provided cash assistance services at least part time 
at the majority of their one-stop centers, compared with 9 states in 
2000. Colocation of Food Stamps and Medicaid also increased. For 
example, although 7 states in both years reported that they conducted 
Medicaid eligibility at the majority of their one-stops, the number of 
states reporting that Medicaid eligibility was conducted in at least 
some of their one-stops increased to 20 in 2001 from 14 in 2000. For 
Food Stamp eligibility, 10 states reported providing this service at 
the majority of their one-stops in 2001, up from 7 states in 2000. 
Moreover, the number of states with Food Stamp eligibility conducted in 
at least some of their one-stops was 26 in 2001, up from 16 states in 
2000. 

When states did not colocate services, they sometimes coordinated them
by using electronic linkages or by referral. About half of the states
coordinated their TANF cash assistance or Food Stamps or Medicaid
programs with the one-stop centers, electronically or by referral, in 
2000 and 2001. In 2001, Food Stamp eligibility was available 
electronically or by referral at the majority of one-stops in 29 
states, and Medicaid eligibility was available in the same manner at 
the majority of one-stops in 27 states—up from 26 and 24 states, 
respectively, in 2000. For example, state officials in both Connecticut 
and New Jersey reported that even though one-stop staff did not 
determine eligibility for Medicaid and Food Stamps at the one-stops, 
the staff were expected to refer clients to appropriate support 
services outside of one-stop centers. 

Figure 3: Number of States with Services Colocated in at Least Some One-
Stops, 2000 and 2001: 

[See PDF for image] 

This figure is a vertical bar graph depicting the following data: 

Service provided: TANF work; 
Number of states, 2000: 32; 
Number of states, 2001: 39. 

Service provided: TANF cash; 
Number of states, 2000: 21; 
Number of states, 2001: 33. 

Service provided: Food stamps; 
Number of states, 2000: 16; 
Number of states, 2001: 26. 

Service provided: Medicaid; 
Number of states, 2000: 14; 
Number of states, 2001: 20. 

Source: GAO survey data. 

[End of figure] 

Although colocation, electronic linkages, and referrals were all used to
serve TANF clients through the one-stops, in general, the form of
coordination between TANF programs and one-stop centers varied
depending on particular services provided. For example, when TANF work
services were coordinated through the one-stop centers, they were more
likely to be colocated. TANF cash assistance and the Food Stamps and
Medicaid programs were more likely to be connected with one-stop
centers electronically or by referral (see fig. 4). 

Figure 4: Forms of Coordination that States Reported the Majority of 
Their Local One-Stops Used, 2001: 

[See PDF for image] 

This figure is a stacked vertical bar graph depicting the following 
data: 

Service provided: TANF work; 
Number of states, electronic linkage/referrals: 15; 
Number of states, colocation: 25. 

Service provided: TANF cash; 
Number of states, electronic linkage/referrals: 26; 
Number of states, colocation: 16. 

Service provided: Food stamps; 
Number of states, electronic linkage/referrals: 30; 
Number of states, colocation: 10. 

Service provided: Medicaid; 
Number of states, electronic linkage/referrals: 27; 
Number of states, colocation: 7. 

Source: GAO survey data. 

[End of figure] 

We also saw wide variation in the degree to which other support 
services, such as child care and transportation, were provided through 
the one-stop system. For child care assistance, the forms of 
coordination included colocation of child care programs at the one-stop 
as well as the provision of information on child care services 
available elsewhere. In New Jersey, for example, representatives from 
child care assistance programs were colocated at some of the one-stop 
centers, whereas in Arizona, coordination was limited to childcare 
information brochures on display at one-stop centers. Officials 
reported that in one county in New York, WIA funds were used to provide 
daycare vouchers to TANF clients. Many of the one-stops that we visited 
provided some kind of transportation assistance, although the nature of 
the services and whether or not the services were reserved for TANF 
clients varied from locality to locality. For example, in one location 
in New Jersey that we visited, the one-stop center reimbursed any low-
income client attending training for transportation expenses, whether 
or not the client was covered under TANF. Another New Jersey one-stop 
provided van services to transport former TANF clients to and from job 
interviews and, once clients were employed, to and from their jobs, 
even during evening and night shifts. Similarly, in a one-stop in 
Connecticut, current and former TANF clients could receive mileage 
reimbursement for their expenses associated with going to and from their
jobs. And in Louisiana, a one-stop we visited contracted with a 
nonprofit agency to provide van services to transport TANF clients to 
and from work-related activities. 

Other support services were sometimes provided through the one-stop as
well. For example, under an agreement between human service and WIA
officials in one local area of Tennessee, TANF clients are referred to 
the workforce agency where caseworkers work with them to identify needed
support services, such as dental care and auto repair, and connect the
TANF clients with providers of those services. 

Welfare-to-Work Services Were Available to TANF Clients at the One-
Stops: 

In some states, TANF clients were served at the one-stops through the 
use of Labor’s WtW grant program—a mandatory partner at the one-stops
under WIA. Some state and local officials said that the WtW program
helped promote local-level coordination between welfare and workforce
agencies, a finding that we reported in our earlier work. [Footnote 16] 
Although work-related services for TANF clients were available both 
through the one-stop centers and outside of them—sometimes using a 
variety of funding streams—the hardest-to-employ TANF clients were 
increasingly accessing services at the one-stops through the WtW 
program. In 2001, 42 states had WtW services colocated in at least some 
of their local one-stops, compared with 34 states in 2000. In addition, 
states reported that WtW services were physically located at the 
majority of one-stop centers in 31 states in 2001, up from 27 states in 
2000. Some WtW services included assistance given to clients in 
developing Personal Responsibility Plans, helping the hardest-to-serve 
clients prepare for job interviews, or following up with TANF clients 
who recently entered the workforce. Through the WtW program, local 
areas in Louisiana placed state Labor staff administering the program 
in social services offices across the state to assess TANF clients’ 
eligibility for WtW and refer eligible clients to the one-stops for 
appropriate services. 

Sometimes WtW grants were also used to provide support services to
current or former TANF clients at the one-stops, including child care,
transportation, and other assistance. For example, a local one-stop 
that we visited in Arizona used the WtW grants for a Sick Child Care 
Program, an initiative that, under a contract with a local nonprofit 
organization, provides for nurses to be sent to the homes of TANF 
clients with sick children, thus enabling them to participate in work-
related or training activities. A local one-stop that we visited in New 
Jersey used WtW funds to establish an Individual Development Account 
Program whereby clients transitioning into the workforce could save 
money matched by the one-stop for a work-related purpose, such as 
purchasing a car to get to the workplace. The same one-stop also used 
WtW funds in employing an outside financial services company to help 
those who recently left TANF for employment apply for their Earned 
Income Tax Credit. [Footnote 17] 

Some officials expressed concerns about the ability of local one-stops 
to continue providing work-related services to TANF clients once all 
states’ WtW funds expire. For example, officials reported that in one 
state, where local TANF offices previously referred TANF clients to the 
one-stops as part of the state’s WtW program, few referrals have been 
done since the depletion of WtW funds. In California, where WtW funds 
are sometimes the only funding source available to serve TANF clients 
at the one-stops, one county is currently developing a formal 
transition plan to provide services to TANF clients at the one-stops 
using WIA funds after WtW funds expire. A California state official 
told us, however, that the expectation in other areas is that no other 
funding sources will be available to serve this population and that 
clients will have to be sent back to be served by separate TANF 
agencies. 

TANF-Related Services Are Also Provided Outside of the One-Stop 
Centers: 

Despite increased coordination of TANF work services through the one-
stops, many states and localities still provided services to TANF 
clients outside of one-stop centers at separate TANF offices. However, 
the number of states not coordinating any work services to TANF clients
through the one-stops—either by colocation or electronic linkages and
referrals—declined between 2000 and 2001. While 12 states in 2000
reported that they were not providing TANF work services through any of
their one-stop centers, the number had declined to only 4 states in 
2001. 

Some states— Indiana, Maryland, and Mississippi, for example—offered a
full range of employment and training services to clients through their
local TANF agencies, which were located in every local area. In other
states, separate TANF agencies were maintained even though some work
services were still coordinated through the one-stops. For example, in
Alabama, where work services were available through the one-stops by
means of electronic linkages or referrals, clients received all 
employment and training programs at county welfare offices where they 
could also access all needed support services. Similarly in Louisiana, 
each parish had an Office of Family Support where TANF clients received 
employment and training assessments, counseling, and referrals. 

A Variety of Conditions Influence State and Local Coordination Efforts, 
but Little Is Known about the Effectiveness of Coordinated Service 
Delivery on TANF Clients’ Outcomes: 

A variety of conditions—including historical relationships, geographic
considerations, adequate facilities, and different perspectives on how 
best to serve TANF clients—influence how states and localities choose to
coordinate services with one-stop centers. States are affected 
differently by these conditions. While these conditions sometimes 
facilitated states’ coordination efforts, other states faced with 
similar conditions found coordination difficult. Although research has 
shown that a variety of conditions influence coordination efforts, it 
has not clearly examined how coordinated service delivery through one-
stops affects TANF clients’ outcomes. 

A Variety of Conditions Influence How States and Localities Coordinate
TANF Services with One-Stop Centers: 

A variety of conditions continue to affect how states and localities
coordinate TANF services with one-stop centers. The nature of historical
relationships between welfare and workforce agencies at the state and
local level, specifically agencies’ experience in working with each 
other in the past, often sets the stage for the level of present 
coordination. Geographic considerations, such as variations in layout 
of agency service districts, physical distance between one-stop centers 
and welfare offices, and the number of TANF clients in a given area, 
can also affect how states and localities coordinate services. The 
availability of adequate facilities can also influence state and local 
coordination efforts. In addition, welfare and workforce agencies often 
have different perspectives on how to best serve TANF clients. While 
some states and localities have had success in using the flexibility 
afforded them under WIA and TANF to coordinate in spite of these 
conditions, others lack information on the coordination efforts of 
other states and localities. Although there is some “promising
practices” information currently available on selected websites, it is 
not generally organized in a way that allows readers to readily obtain
information on coordinating services. 

Historical Relationships: 

The existing level of coordination between TANF services and one-stop
centers is often a reflection of how state and local agencies have 
worked with each other in the past. Some officials said that their 
efforts to coordinate TANF services with one-stop centers have been 
complicated by state and local agencies’ lack of experience working 
together, which sometimes resulted in a lack of trust between agencies. 
For example, some officials reported that coordination was difficult 
because, historically, there has been little cooperation between 
workforce and welfare agencies in their state. 

Some states that had previously coordinated other employment and 
training programs among multiple agencies, noted that this experience
made coordination of TANF services with one-stop centers easier. For
example, in Idaho, the state Department of Labor invited the state’s
welfare agency to join a focus group on coordination as early as 1992, 
and a TANF representative has served on the state management team for
workforce development since their earliest one-stop implementation
efforts. Also, officials in Illinois reported that TANF staff regularly
attended JTPA meetings in the past and have been involved with WIA
since it was implemented, laying the framework for coordinating TANF
services with one-stop centers. 

Local areas sometimes have found ways to creatively coordinate services
even in states where state agencies had little experience working 
together. For example, although TANF clients in Louisiana access TANF 
services outside of one-stop centers, staff at a local one-stop we 
visited reported that they work closely with parish welfare staff to 
ensure that TANF clients were aware of the full range of services 
available at the one-stop. According to local officials, the mutual 
commitment between welfare and workforce officials enabled them to work 
together to meet the needs of all clients. In Arizona, where state 
welfare and workforce agencies operate services for TANF clients 
outside the one-stops, a local one-stop has regularly organized job 
fairs in conjunction with welfare staff since the implementation of 
WIA. 

Geographical Considerations: 

Various geographical considerations can affect how TANF services are
coordinated with one-stop centers. In some states, the layout of agency
service districts, physical distance between one-stop centers and 
welfare offices, and the number of TANF clients in a given area have 
affected the extent of coordination. For example, HHS regional office 
personnel reported that West Virginia social service agencies were 
reluctant to coordinate with one-stop centers because service districts 
for TANF and WIA were not the same, and TANF officials did not always 
know what local workforce investment areas encompassed their agency. 

Other states’ efforts to coordinate services were limited by the lack 
of one-stop centers within the state. For example, officials in Alabama 
reported that, although welfare agencies were located in every county, 
one-stop centers were not. For this reason, they believed that the 
existing one-stops could not accommodate all TANF clients in the state. 
In addition, other state efforts to coordinate services were limited 
due to the decline of the TANF population that resulted in a small 
number of TANF clients in some areas. For example, in Illinois, where 
caseload declines had left few TANF recipients in some areas, state 
officials stressed the importance of allowing local areas the 
flexibility to determine when and how to coordinate TANF-related 
services with one-stop centers. 

These geographic considerations can also encourage state and local
coordination efforts. HHS regional office personnel reported that 
smaller states with only one local workforce investment area believed 
that the small size of the state encouraged the coordination of 
services. Existing research has confirmed that locating one-stop 
centers near facilities where other TANF services are offered to 
clients facilitated coordination. In addition, officials at a local one-
stop in Connecticut reported that having a social service office and 
the one-stop center located on different floors in the same facility 
made it easier for agencies to communicate with each other and for 
clients to get services. Other states have located one-stop centers in 
areas that are more accessible to TANF clients in order to make 
coordination beneficial for them. Both New Jersey and Louisiana have
established plans to create satellite one-stop centers in public housing
areas. The New Jersey Department of Labor has a contract with a local
housing authority to establish an on-site employment center for serving
WtW-eligible TANF clients residing on the premises of the housing
authority. The New Orleans workforce investment board is also in the
process of locating seven satellite one-stop centers in housing projects
within the city limits. Both efforts were undertaken to improve TANF
clients’ access to one-stop centers, which in turn encourages greater
coordination between the local workforce and welfare agencies. 

Availability of Adequate Facilities: 

Availability of adequate facilities can shape how states and localities
coordinate TANF services with one-stop centers. Officials in several 
states reported that coordination efforts were hampered because 
available space at one-stop centers was limited and the centers could 
not house additional programs or service providers. For example, in a 
local Louisiana one-stop, staff were unable to colocate more partners 
because they did not have space to accommodate additional providers. In 
addition, state officials explained that long-term leases often 
prevented relocation of TANF services to one-stop centers because 
agencies administering those services could not afford to incur the 
cost of breaking those leases in order to move to one-stops. Other 
states facing similar limitations in facilities have developed 
alternatives, such as rotating welfare staff to one-stop centers or 
locating workforce staff in welfare offices. For example, in order to
help TANF clients access employment and training and to link them to 
one-stop centers, the Louisiana Department of Labor located a WtW 
representative in most local welfare offices. WtW staff provided key
information to TANF clients about services available at one-stop 
centers. 

Different Perspectives on How to Best Serve TANF Clients: 

Officials’ perspectives on how best to serve TANF clients can affect
whether TANF services will be offered in one-stop centers. While some
believe TANF clients are best served in separate social service 
facilities, others consider that coordination through the one-stop is 
more beneficial. Some officials argued that TANF clients who have 
multiple barriers to employment [Footnote 18] might not receive 
priority of service in a one-stop center environment. As a result 
officials in some states were hesitant to coordinate services for TANF 
clients with one-stop centers because they believe that the needs of 
TANF clients were better served in social service facilities by staff 
trained to meet their specific needs. For example, HHS regional 
representatives reported that Rhode Island social service officials 
believe TANF clients often need exposure to pre-employment experiences 
such as English language services—not always available at one-stop 
centers—before they can fully benefit from the work-related programs at 
the one-stops. Also, state officials in Washington reported that TANF 
clients need a higher level of supervision and more structured 
assistance than they believe one-stops can provide in order to help 
clients maintain participation in the program and achieve desired 
outcomes. According to several HHS regional officials, some states are 
concerned that it may be difficult for TANF clients to access all 
support services (especially child care, substance abuse counseling, 
and transportation) through the one-stops. Other states told the HHS 
regional officials that they were hesitant to coordinate TANF services 
with one-stop centers as long as other needed support services 
continued to be provided outside that structure. 

HHS regional officials said that in other states, state officials 
reported that coordinating TANF services with one-stop centers was 
beneficial to TANF clients, and services were structured accordingly. 
HHS regional officials reported that some state officials believe that, 
because workforce staff have more experience in getting people into 
jobs, exposing TANF clients to one-stops would better prepare them for 
work. For example, welfare officials in Georgia supported the 
coordination of TANF services with one-stop centers because they 
believed that TANF clients would benefit from the workforce expertise 
of one-stop staff. HHS officials said that other states also agree that 
TANF clients have access to a greater array of employment and training 
services at one-stop centers and that early contact with these services 
can help ensure continued access to services once TANF clients no 
longer receive cash assistance. Other officials reported that provision 
of services for TANF clients through one-stop centers encourages 
program staff to be more aware of other services available in both 
welfare and workforce systems. 

Research Shows a Variety of Conditions Influence Coordination Efforts, 
but Little is Known about the Effectiveness of Coordinated Service
Delivery on TANF Clients’ Outcomes: 

While research shows that a variety of conditions influence if, and how,
states and localities choose to coordinate TANF services, limited 
research is available on the effectiveness of coordinated service 
delivery on TANF clients’ outcomes. In our analysis of the literature, 
[Footnote 19] we did not find a national study that compared the 
effectiveness of coordinated service delivery to that of other service 
delivery methods in supporting successful outcomes for welfare clients. 
Without research on the effectiveness of coordinated service delivery, 
states and localities must make decisions without the benefit of 
thorough evaluation and analysis. 

In general, we found few recent research studies on the coordination of
welfare and workforce development services. Although the research is
limited, findings from existing research address conditions that 
promote or inhibit coordination between agencies. Some of the conditions
identified in the research as promoting coordination included a history 
of working together and good working relationships between agency
officials. Conditions identified as inhibiting coordination included 
agency space limitations and different geographic boundaries. All of 
these conditions are similar to those we found and previously mentioned 
in this report. Research has not shown that there is any one method or 
model of coordination that works best or that could be consistently 
applied in all settings. (See appendix I for a listing of reviewed 
research studies and their relevant findings.) 

Although limited research focused on welfare and workforce coordination
efforts, no study compared the effectiveness of coordinated service
delivery to that of other service delivery structures for welfare 
clients. [Footnote 20] One study examined outcomes for welfare clients 
who received services at five one-stop centers in five states, but the 
study did not compare outcomes of welfare clients receiving services in 
one-stop centers to those who received them through different delivery 
structures. [Footnote 21] 

Both HHS and Labor have research authority and, since the enactment of
TANF and WIA, both have used this authority to encourage various
evaluations of policy changes influenced by the legislation. However,
federal research efforts on the effectiveness of coordinated service
delivery on welfare recipients’ outcomes have been limited. [Footnote 
22] To examine the effectiveness of various employment and training 
strategies, HHS and Labor are currently co-sponsoring a 5-year 
experimental study on employment retention and advancement to identify 
how to best provide post-employment services to the welfare population 
and which interventions work best in promoting retention and 
advancement of welfare recipients. [Footnote 23] Though this study will 
focus on local areas where services are delivered through one-stops and 
local areas where services are delivered through other structures, the 
current study design does not focus on how the different service 
delivery structures—one-stop centers and welfare agencies—affect the 
outcomes of welfare recipients. [Footnote 24] In addition, little 
evaluation of the effects of different service delivery structures on 
welfare clients’ outcomes has occurred, although Labor’s 2000-2005 
research plan identifies research on interventions to assist welfare 
clients as a high-priority research area. [Footnote 25] 

Challenges Inhibit State and Local Coordination Efforts: 

Several challenges— including different program definitions, complex
reporting requirements between TANF and WIA, and different information
systems that do not share data [Footnote 26]—inhibit state and local 
coordination efforts. [Footnote 27] Although HHS and Labor have each 
provided some assistance to the states on how to coordinate services, 
the available guidance has not specifically addressed the challenges 
that many continue to face. Moreover, HHS and Labor have not addressed 
differences in program definitions and reporting requirements under 
TANF and WIA. However, a recent legislative proposal has called for 
Labor and HHS to jointly address the commonalities or differences in 
data elements, definitions, performance measures, and reporting 
requirements between TANF and WIA. [Footnote 28] 

Different Program Definitions and Reporting Requirements Complicate
Coordination: 

Different program definitions and reporting requirements in TANF and
WIA constrain the flexibility that states and localities have to 
coordinate TANF services through one-stop centers. The overall 
difference in how the success of TANF and WIA is measured, as defined 
by program definitions and reporting requirements challenges states and 
localities in their efforts to coordinate services. 

As states and localities attempt to coordinate services for TANF clients
with one-stop centers, they encounter challenges to harmonizing 
different program definitions within TANF and WIA. Although both TANF 
and WIA focus on work, different program definitions—such as what 
constitutes work or what income level constitutes self-sufficiency—make
coordination between the programs difficult. While many definitions are
established by legislation and cannot be readily changed, a few can be
locally determined, and two states we contacted found ways to harmonize
their locally determined definitions. For example, Connecticut developed
a self-sufficiency standard [Footnote 29] that could be uniformly 
applied across TANF and WIA so that both programs could place clients 
in jobs with similar wage levels. Having one self-sufficiency standard 
enables welfare and workforce staff to use one process to determine 
suitable job training programs and identify appropriate jobs. 
Similarly, one local one-stop center we visited in Arizona worked to 
accommodate what qualifies as a work activity for TANF clients. At this 
center, welfare and one-stop officials worked together to develop 
training for both programs that enabled TANF clients to meet the 
requirement of a TANF work activity. However, officials in other states 
reported that definition differences between TANF and WIA programs, 
including dissimilar self-sufficiency standards, made coordination 
efforts more difficult. 

In addition, differences in reporting requirements, resulting from how 
the success of each program is measured, also hinder coordination 
efforts. Each program has its own separate measures of success that 
subsequently drive program design and use of funds. While WIA’s 
performance measures focus on participant outcomes, such as increases 
in average earnings change and employment retention rate, TANF measures 
focus on the overall caseload, such as work participation rates and 
caseload reductions. States can also measure the success of TANF 
through the use of indicators required for high performance bonus 
reporting, similar to WIA’s performance measures. But data for the 
measures are not tracked uniformly across states, the measures are not 
defined in the same way, and participation in the TANF high performance 
bonus is voluntary. Because the mandatory federal measures for both 
programs evaluate very different things, officials found that tracking 
performance for the TANF and WIA programs together was difficult. 
Subsequently, these differences lead to different program designs and 
hamper state and local ability to coordinate TANF services with one-
stop centers. In addition, similar to a finding in our prior report on 
WIA performance measures, [Footnote 30] several state officials 
expressed concern that, when WIA funds were used to serve TANF clients, 
the reporting requirements could lead one-stop staff to only serve 
those TANF clients they believed stood a better chance of meeting WIA’s 
outcome-based performance measures. 

Different Information Systems Used by Welfare and Workforce Agencies
Complicate Coordination: 

Welfare and workforce agencies often use different information systems,
complicating efforts to coordinate TANF services with one-stop centers.
Efforts to increase coordination require greater data sharing across
organizations. However, as we reported in the past, some of the systems
used by agencies providing services to TANF clients do not readily share
data with other systems, hampering the case manager’s ability to deliver
services to the client in a timely manner. [Footnote 31] In some cases, 
this may mean that data needed to determine what services should be 
provided to a client are not readily available to the case manager. In 
other cases, having multiple systems may mean that agency workers have 
to enter the same data multiple times. In addition, antiquated 
information systems of both welfare and workforce agencies have made it 
difficult for agencies to take advantage of new technologies, such as 
Web-based systems. During our site visits and telephone interviews, 
some local officials said that they could not merge or share data and 
were not equipped to collect information on clients in different 
programs. TANF clients are often tracked separately from clients of 
other programs, and even the One-Stop Operating System (OSOS), funded 
by Labor, does not allow one-stop centers to include TANF programs. In 
addition, other officials expressed concerns that sharing data across 
programs would violate client confidentiality protections. 

Some states have been able to overcome this challenge to coordination by
developing ways to merge data across multiple information systems. As
reported in our previous work, we found that many states are extracting
and consolidating data from multiple systems in data warehouses 
[Footnote 32] and other specialized databases. [Footnote 33] For 
example, the agency that administers TANF in Kansas developed a data 
warehouse to allow one-stop partners to access the data they needed on 
TANF clients without having to breach clients’ confidentiality. Other 
localities have created their own information management systems. To 
compensate for the limitations of OSOS, a New Jersey one-stop opted to 
use its own system, which allows the center’s staff to manually input 
all information on any client that is served through any 
program—including dates, work activities, and outcomes. Though some 
states have been able to merge information systems, the issues of 
incompatible computer systems are not easily resolved. Officials from 
two states we visited said that their states’ TANF and WIA agencies were
exploring the development of a shared information system but that cost
estimates were too high for it to be implemented at this time. 

Conclusions: 

Although TANF is not a mandatory partner in the one-stops under WIA, it
is clear that TANF and WIA coordination is increasing, especially at the
point of service delivery—the local level. It appears that, as the 
systems have matured and their shared purposes and goals have become 
evident, many states and localities have found it advantageous to 
coordinate their TANF and WIA services—linking TANF clients with one-
stop centers that are positioned to help them throughout their 
lifetime, long after they leave time-limited, cash assistance. This 
move toward service coordination is not happening everywhere—it has 
been left to state and local discretion. Many officials use the 
flexibility in the programs to coordinate services for TANF clients, 
but their efforts continue to be hampered by lack of accessible 
information on state and local coordination efforts and lack of clear 
research on the effectiveness of coordinated service delivery on TANF 
clients’ outcomes. 

Labor and HHS have made efforts to work together to address some of the
obstacles that states and localities have faced, but their efforts have 
not produced clear information on ways to improve coordination for 
states wishing to do so. And, while some states have been successful at
developing strategies to overcome obstacles to coordination, others have
not been. Without a mechanism to share successful approaches, states and
localities that have met with success in their coordination efforts will
remain an untapped resource. The information they could share may help
other states and localities struggling in their efforts to design more
coordinated service delivery approaches. 

In addition, though many states and localities have chosen to coordinate
welfare and workforce services, research has yet to help state and local
decision makers determine whether and how coordinated service delivery
can be an effective method for improving TANF clients’ employment
success. It is unknown whether promoting coordinated service delivery
will result in improved outcomes for TANF clients because limited
research exists on this topic. Clear research findings would help guide
federal, state, and local officials in developing service delivery 
approaches that work best for TANF clients and make the best use of 
available resources. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To help states more effectively address some of the obstacles to
coordination, we recommend that Labor and HHS work together to jointly
develop and distribute information on promising approaches for 
coordinating services for TANF clients through one-stops. 

To enable states and localities to determine whether coordinated service
delivery is the most effective method for improving TANF clients’
employment success, we recommend that Labor and HHS promote research 
that would examine the role of coordinated service delivery on outcomes 
of TANF clients. 

Agency Comments: 

We provided a draft of this report to Labor and HHS for their review and
comment. Formal comments from Labor and HHS appear in appendix II
and III respectively. In addition to the comments discussed below, HHS
provided technical comments that we incorporated where appropriate. 

Labor and HHS generally agreed with our findings and recommendations 
and Labor noted that the report, in their opinion, contained an accurate
portrayal of the extent of current collaboration between TANF and WIA
services. Labor and HHS stated that they support efforts to share 
promising practices. Labor noted that they have awarded a contract to
develop a comprehensive website for this purpose. We are hopeful that
once fully developed it will be a ready source of information on many
promising practices including the coordination of TANF and WIA services.
HHS noted that ongoing research, in which they have both informal and
formal linkages with Labor, would likely provide information on
successful service delivery models. 

HHS commented that our recommendation to promote research that would 
examine the role of coordinated service delivery on outcomes of TANF 
clients could require an experimental research design, which is not 
compatible with the delivery of human service programs in the real 
world. We recognize the difficulty in setting up a rigorous comparison, 
and do not suggest that experimental research design is the only type 
of research that would fulfill our recommendation. Our recommendation 
is to have Labor and HHS encourage and support research that focuses a 
portion of the analysis on how the service delivery structure of 
services affects outcomes for TANF clients. HHS studies have provided 
some information on the success of different service models in serving 
TANF clients and we are hopeful that future research will focus on how 
service delivery structures affect outcomes for TANF clients. 

We are sending copies of this report to the Secretaries of HHS and 
Labor, relevant congressional committees, and others who are 
interested. Copies will also be made available to others upon request. 
This report is also available at no charge on GAO’s Web site at 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

Please contact me on (202) 512-7215 if you or your staff have any
questions about this report. Other major contributors to this report are
listed in appendix IV. 

Signed by: 

Sigurd R. Nilsen: 
Director, Education, Workforce, and Income Security Issues: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Annotated Bibliography of Reviewed Studies: 

Grubb, W. Norton, et al. Toward Order from Chaos: State Efforts to 
Reform Workforce Development Systems. Berkeley, CA: National Center
for Research in Vocational Education, 1999. 

This study began in 1997 and analyzed data obtained from officials
interviewed in 10 states and in 2 localities within each of the states.
Though findings from this study primarily focused on workforce
development reform efforts, the study also addressed factors that 
promote service coordination and challenges to service coordination. 
Researchers found that good personal relationships among administrators 
and consistency of efforts over time promoted workforce development 
reform and service coordination, and conflicts between the welfare work 
first philosophy and the workforce development education and training
philosophy presented a challenge to service coordination. 

Martinson, Karin. Literature Review on Service Coordination and 
Integration in the Welfare and Workforce Development Systems. 
Washington, D.C.: Urban Institute, 1999. 

This literature review, written by the Urban Institute and released by 
the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of the 
Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, summarized 16 studies 
released between 1989 and 1998 that addressed service coordination 
between welfare and workforce systems. The review summarized both 
barriers to coordination and factors that promoted coordination efforts 
between welfare and workforce agencies. Barriers to coordination 
included incompatible management information systems and different 
program performance measures; factors that promoted coordination 
included the federal strategy of providing information on successful 
examples of coordination and the local strategy of documenting and 
evaluating coordination efforts. The review concluded that studies do 
not suggest that one method of coordination was consistently successful 
in bringing together welfare and workforce systems. 

McIntire, James L. and Amy F. Robins. Fixing to Change: A Best Practices
Assessment of One-Stop Job Centers Working With Welfare Recipients. 
Washington: Fiscal Policy Center, University of Washington, 1999. 

This study, released by HHS’s Office of the Assistant Secretary for
Planning and Evaluation, examined outcomes for TANF clients who
received services at five one-stop centers in five states. Data 
collection occurred in 1997, and data analyzed included administrative 
data and focus group discussions with one-stop management and staff, 
employers of welfare clients, and both current and former welfare 
clients. Welfare clients examined were both AFDC clients and TANF 
clients—depending on the one-stop examined—because data collection 
occurred during the period of initial TANF implementation. This study 
found that these five one-stop centers produced partially successful 
outcomes for welfare clients, as evidenced by employment rates, wage 
rates, and hours worked. This study did not compare outcomes of welfare 
clients receiving services at the one-stop centers to outcomes of 
welfare clients receiving services provided through different delivery 
structures, such as local welfare agencies or other service providers. 

Pindus, Nancy, et al. Coordination and Integration of Welfare and 
Workforce Development Systems. Washington, D.C.: Urban Institute, 2000. 

This study, released by HHS’s Office of the Assistant Secretary for
Planning and Evaluation in 2000 and written by the Urban Institute,
examined recent state and local coordination efforts of welfare and
workforce agencies. Data analyzed included interviews with officials 
from TANF and workforce agencies in 12 localities within 6 states that 
occurred in the summer of 1999. Findings included factors that 
generally promoted coordination between welfare and workforce agencies 
and those that created barriers to coordination. In the study, a prior 
history of coordination between agencies, the availability of flexible 
funding sources, and other factors were found to promote coordination 
between welfare and workforce agencies. In contrast, agency space 
limitations that hindered collocation and different program goals were 
identified as some of the challenges to coordination. This study 
concluded that there is not one ideal model, schedule, or set of 
guidelines that will result in successful service delivery 
coordination. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Comments from the Department of Labor: 

U.S. Department of Labor: 
A Proud Member of America's Workforce Network: 
Employment and Training Administration: 
200 Constitution Avenue, N.W. 
Washington, D.C. 20210: 

June 21, 2002: 

Mr. Sigurd R. Nilsen: 
Director, Education, Workforce, And Income Security Issues: 
U.S. General Accounting Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Mr. Nilsen: 

Thank you for the opportunity to provide comments on the draft GAO 
report, Workforce Investment Act: States and Localities Increasingly 
Coordinate Services for TANF Clients, but Better Information Needed on 
Effective Coordination Approaches (GAO-02-696). We appreciate the 
extent to which GAO coordinated with Department of Labor (DOL) staff 
throughout the development of the report. It is our opinion that the 
report contains a very accurate portrayal of the extent of current 
collaboration between the two systems. 

We believe that strong linkages between the Workforce Investment Act 
(WIA) and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) programs are 
vitally important, and better coordination is a core principle upon 
which we are making recommendations for changes to both pieces of 
legislation during their respective reauthorizations. It is our belief 
that stronger linkages, especially the provision of TANF services in 
One-Stop Career Centers, will result in benefits for program 
participants in terms of access to a wider array of services as well as 
for program operators who would see reduced burden and duplication of 
effort at the state and local levels. 

Currently, approximately 50 percent of the states (examples include 
Wisconsin, Utah, and Michigan) have exercised the option to include 
TANF as a partner in their One-Stop system statewide. While this is 
notable progress, there are still a number of states in which the TANF 
employment and WIA programs are administered through parallel and 
duplicative systems. 

As a One-Stop partner, TANF core services are available at a minimum of 
one comprehensive One-Stop Career Center in each local workforce 
investment area, thus expanding access to services for low-income 
families. Core services include such activities as outreach, intake, 
initial assessment, and job search and placement assistance.
In addition, continued integration also means that existing local 
welfare offices are part of a state's One-Stop system as partners in a 
network of affiliated sites. 

WIA does not require that partners provide core services exclusively at 
a One-Stop Career Center, and partners are not required to route all of 
their participants through a comprehensive One-Stop Career Center. 
However, this advanced level of communication and coordination furthers 
the ideal of good governance, less duplication and better service to 
customers. 

An important incentive to furthering linkages is developing a common 
performance system upon which programs can be evaluated and for which 
reporting burdens are reduced. There should be a common core of 
performance measures (such as entered employment and earnings gain) 
across all federal workforce programs. We have begun policy-level 
discussions with the Department of Health and Human Services' 
Administration for Children and Families (ACF), as well as Department 
of Education officials, on this key issue. 

We also agree that the sharing of promising practices is an area in 
which our system needs to improve. To that end, we have awarded a grant 
to the State of Illinois to develop a comprehensive website [hyperlink, 
http://promising-practices.org]. It will be designed as a comprehensive 
internet-based digital library of promising practices in workforce 
development from throughout the nation. When fully developed, it will 
be a powerful research and reference tool for public and private sector 
workforce professionals who want to improve organizational performance 
and enhance their ability to meet customer needs. In addition, we will 
work with our partners at ACF to identify additional ways to 
disseminate this information. 

I would like to clarify the reference made to the America's One-Stop 
Operating System (AOSOS) on page 27 of the draft report. It is 
incorrect to characterize this system as "Labor's" system. While 
developed with DOL funds, the system was designed by states for states. 
And, it was developed with multi-agency functionality, which allows 
numerous partner agencies to use the system. The fact that AOSOS is 
browser-based and can be accessed over the Internet further enhances 
this feature, as it allows partners who are not co-located to still be 
able to use the system. While it may be true that the TANF program is 
not using AOSOS in any of the states that have implemented the system, 
we do not believe it is a system limitation issue. 

We will provide a formal response to GAO's recommendations for 
executive action when the report is final. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Emily Stover DeRocco: 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: Comments from the Department of Health and Human 
Services: 

Department Of Health & Human Services: 
Office of Inspector General: 
Washington, D.C. 20201: 

June 24, 2002: 

Mr. Sigurd R. Nilsen: 
Director, Education, Workforce, and Income Security Issues: 
United States General Accounting Office: 
Washington, D.C. 20548: 

Dear Mr. Nilsen: 

Enclosed are the Department's comments on your draft report entitled, 
"Workforce Investment Act: States and Localities Increasingly 
Coordinate Services for TANF Clients, but Better Information Needed on 
Effective Coordination Approaches." The comments represent the 
tentative position of the Department and are subject to reevaluation 
when the final version of this report is received. 

The Department also provided several technical comments directly to 
your staff. 

The Department appreciates the opportunity to comment on this draft 
report before its publication. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Janet Rehnquist: 
Inspector General: 

The Office of Inspector General (01G) is transmitting the Department's 
response to this draft report in our capacity as the Department's 
designated focal point and coordinator for General Accounting Office 
reports. The OIG has not conducted an independent assessment of these 
comments and therefore expresses no opinion on them. 

Enclosure: 

Comments Of The Department Of Health And Human Services On The General 
Accounting Office's Draft Report, "Workforce Investment Act: States And 
Localities Increasingly Coordinate Services For TANF Clients, But 
Better Information Needed On Effective Coordination Approaches" (GAO-02-
696): 

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) appreciates the 
opportunity to comment on this draft report, which provides useful 
information about the coordination of services between the Temporary 
Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) and Workforce Investment Act (WIA) 
programs. 

General Comments: 

As your report chronicles, the link between State welfare agencies and 
State workforce development agencies stretches back to 1967 when the 
welfare program was Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) and 
the relevant employment program was the Work Incentive program (WIN). 
Succeeding legislation has caused both agencies to evolve and grow. The 
welfare reform legislation of 1996, the Personal Responsibility and 
Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA), abolished the AFDC 
program, created the TANF program and changed the paradigm in welfare 
offices from income maintenance to moving families to work and self-
sufficiency. Another dramatic change occurred in the workforce 
development system in 1998 when the Workforce Investment Act (WIA) 
required States to bring together an array of Federally funded, 
employment-related services and offer those services through one-stop 
centers. The WIA statute delineated a list of mandatory partners for 
each one-stop center, but TANF was listed among the optional partners. 

From the beginning, both HHS and the Department of Labor (DOL) strongly 
encouraged State TANF and WIA agencies to partner and coordinate 
services. The TANF's strong work requirements and time-limited 
assistance coupled with recipients' need for tailored, often multiple 
services, strengthen the importance of coordinating TANF and WIA 
services to maximize their shared purpose of moving individuals to 
work. 

Within HHS, the Administration for Children and Families (ACF) and the 
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) 
are working cooperatively with Federal partners, including the DOL, to 
identify strategies to help low-income families succeed in the labor 
market while blending work with family responsibilities. The ACF and 
its partners have begun a multi-phased initiative to increase capacity 
at the State and local levels to support work among low-income 
families. Of necessity, this effort involves a consideration of how the 
two Departments' various programs interface in the delivery of 
services. A contract was awarded to the National Governors Association 
to identify promising practices and convene senior State officials to 
stimulate information exchange, focus attention on supports for working 
families, and develop plans for improving their capacity to provide 
supports for working, low-income families. Future work may include the 
provision of technical assistance and evaluation of varied approaches. 
In the course of gathering data for this project, it will become more 
apparent what sorts of strategies, in combination and across 
departments, contribute to the well-being of the working poor. 

GAO Recommendation: 

To help States more effectively address some of the obstacles to 
coordination, GAO recommends that the Departments of Labor and HHS work 
together to jointly develop and distribute information on promising 
approaches for coordinating services for TANF clients through one-
stops. 

Department Comment: 

We concur that providing information on promising approaches to 
improved coordination could help; however, administrative and program 
differences between TANF and WIA will continue to substantially limit 
the ability of States to use these programs to their full potential. 
Because of this, the Administration has proposed waiver authority, 
under the President's welfare reform reauthorization proposal, that 
would enable State TANF programs and WIA partners to propose reforms 
enabling them to coordinate, even integrate, various aspects of their 
workforce and public assistance efforts in order to provide better 
service for clients. 

In addition, as part of its research agenda, ASPE plans to study TANF 
and WIA coordination issues. This project likely will include the 
identification of promising approaches to service coordination, in-
depth examination of some of those approaches, and the sharing of that 
information with TANF offices and one-stop agencies nationally. This 
project will build on the work already done by GAO and others on 
service coordination issues and ASPE will keep GAO informed of study 
progress. Other ongoing HHS studies (see below) will also likely be a 
source of information on successful service delivery models. The HHS 
has both formal and informal partnerships with DOL on most of these 
studies and we will continue to work with our DOL colleagues to 
formulate a strategy for the identification of "best practices" and the 
sharing of information. 

GAO Recommendation: 

To enable States and localities to determine whether coordinated 
service delivery is the most effective method for improving TANF 
clients' employment success, we recommend that the Departments of Labor 
and HHS promote research that would examine the role of coordinated 
service delivery on outcomes of TANF clients. 

Department Comment: 

Understanding the effect of coordinated service delivery on client 
outcomes would require an experimental comparison of integrated versus 
separate service-delivery mechanisms. We are concerned that this would 
be very difficult to do in a rigorous manner. Localities are likely to 
be very reluctant to operate different systems side-by-side to allow 
for a direct comparison of outcomes. There are several HHS studies, 
such as the Enhanced Services for the Hard-to-Employ Demonstration and 
Evaluation, Employment Retention and Advancement Study and Supports for 
Working Families, underway that will provide some information on the 
success of different service models in serving TANF clients. While 
these projects will not provide experimental data on randomized 
treatment and control groups receiving services under different service-
delivery approaches, they will be a source of useful information on 
successful program designs. 

Human service programs take place in the real world, and therefore, 
present obstacles to clean evaluation. The ACF is committed to 
evaluating programs as rigorously as possible given the state of the 
current evaluation methodology. We have learned some useful 
methodological and strategic information from our experience with the 
Employment Retention and Advancement Project that has already proved 
valuable for the formation of other projects currently being planned. 

Other Department Comments: 

There should be a statement at the beginning of this document that TANF 
is HHS-funded and generally part of a State's social service structure 
and that WIA is Labor-funded and traditionally in a State's Department 
of Labor or workforce structure. The U.S. Departments of HHS and Labor 
are not mentioned until page 4. The report also should acknowledge the 
differences between the welfare and workforce investment systems, as 
reflected by the States' flexibility in TANF design and cross-program 
coordination issues. 

The report seems to presume that coordination between TANF and 
workforce systems through one-stop centers is the preferred approach to 
the delivery of services to the TANF population. It would be helpful if 
the report clearly articulated the rationale for this position. In 
addition, we suggest the report state the advantages for State TANF 
agencies and the TANF population to link with the one-stop system as 
well as the drawbacks to participation. 

In addition, the summary of the Welfare to Work (WtW) grant history is 
incomplete. We suggest additional language that explains the current 
status of the WtW grants program, i.e., explain that Congress has not 
taken action to reauthorize this program and provide information on the 
number of States and competitive grantees that participated. 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contacts: 

Dianne Blank (202) 512-5654: 
Mikki Holmes (202) 512-3283: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

Suzanne Lofhjelm, Natalya Bolshun, Kara Finnegan Irving, and Rachel
Weber made significant contributions to this report. In addition, 
Jessica Botsford and Richard Burkard provided legal support and Corinna
Nicolaou provided writing assistance. 

[End of section] 

Related GAO Products: 

Workforce Investment Act: Youth Provisions Promote New Service 
Strategies, but Additional Guidance Would Enhance Program Development. 
GAO-02-413. Washington, D.C.: April 5, 2002. 

Workforce Investment Act: Coordination between TANF Programs and One-
Stop Centers Is Increasing, but Challenges Remain. GAO-02-500T. 
Washington, D.C.: March 12, 2002. 

Workforce Investment Act: Coordination between TANF Services Through 
One-Stops Has Increased Despite Challenges. GAO-02-739T. Washington, 
D.C.: May 16, 2002. 

Workforce Investment Act: Better Guidance and Revised Funding Formula 
Would Enhance Dislocated Worker Program. GAO-02-274. Washington, D.C.: 
February 11, 2002. 

Workforce Investment Act: Improvements Needed in Performance Measures 
to Provide a More Accurate Picture of WIA’s Effectiveness. GAO-02-275. 
Washington, D.C.: February 1, 2002. 

Human Services Integration: Results of a GAO Cosponsored Conference on 
Modernizing Information Systems. GAO-02-121. Washington, D.C.: January 
31, 2002. 

Means-Tested Programs: Determining Financial Eligibility Is Cumbersome 
and Can Be Simplified. GAO-02-58. Washington, D.C.: November 2, 2001. 

Workforce Investment Act: New Requirements Create Need for More 
Guidance. GAO-02-94T. Washington, D.C.: October 4, 2001. 

Workforce Investment Act: Better Guidance Needed to Address Concerns 
Over New Requirements. GAO-02-72. Washington, D.C.: October 4, 2001. 

Welfare Reform: Moving Hard-to-Employ Recipients Into the Workforce.
GAO-01-368. Washington, D.C.: March 15, 2001. 

Multiple Employment Training Programs: Overlapping Programs Indicate 
Need for Closer Examination of Structure. GAO-01-71. Washington, D.C.: 
October 13, 2000. 

Welfare Reform: Work-Site Based Activities Can Play an Important Role 
in TANF Programs. GAO/HEHS-00-122. Washington, D.C.: July 28, 2000. 

Workforce Investment Act: Implementation Status and the Integration of 
TANF Services. GAO/T-HEHS-00-145. Washington, D.C.: June 29, 2000. 

Welfare Reform: States’ Experiences in Providing Employment Assistance 
to TANF Clients. GAO/HEHS-99-22. Washington, D.C.: February 26, 1999). 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] WIA is administered and funded at the federal level through the 
Department of Labor and traditionally administered through a state’s 
workforce structure. 

[2] TANF is administered and funded at the federal level through the 
Department of Health and Human Services and generally part of a state’s 
social service structure. 

[3] U.S. General Accounting Office, Workforce Investment Act: 
Implementation Status and the Integration of TANF Services, GAO/T-HEHS-
00-145 (Washington, D.C.: June 29, 2000) and Workforce Investment Act: 
Coordination between TANF Programs and One-Stop Centers Is Increasing, 
but Challenges Remain, GAO-02-500T (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 12, 2002. 

[4] We conducted fieldwork in Arizona, Connecticut, Louisiana, and New 
Jersey. These states were chosen based on a range of factors, including 
the structure of states’ TANF and WIA programs and geographic location. 

[5] One regional office said that it would not be able to provide us 
with information on coordination. 

[6] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Human Services Integration: 
Results of a GAO Cosponsored Conference on Modernizing Information 
Systems, GAO-02-121 (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 2002). 

[7] These findings are similar to those we reported in, Means Tested 
Programs: Determining Financial Eligibility Is Cumbersome and Can Be 
Simplified, GAO-02-58 (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 2001). 

[8] TANF also gave states more flexibility in determining the nature of 
financial assistance, the types of client services, the structure of 
the program, and the ways in which services are provided. 

[9] See for example, U.S. General Accounting Office, Welfare to Work: 
Participants’ Characteristics and Services Provided in JOBS, GAO/HEHS-
95-93 (Washington, D.C.: May 1995) and Welfare to Work: Most AFDC 
Training Programs not Emphasizing Job Placement, GAO/HEHS-95-113 
(Washington, D.C.: May 1995). 

[10] Work requirements under PRWORA include countable work activities 
as well as work participation requirements. PRWORA’s work participation 
rates require that a specified proportion of the state’s TANF 
assistance caseload be engaged in countable work activities each month. 
The required work participation rate for all families was 25 percent 
for fiscal year 1997 and 50 percent for fiscal year 2002 and 
thereafter. Work activities include unsubsidized employment; subsidized 
private or public sector employment; work experience; on-the-job 
training; job search and job readiness assistance; community service
programs; vocational educational training and job skills training 
directly related to employment; education directly related to 
employment; satisfactory attendance at a secondary school or a course 
of study leading to a certificate of general equivalence; or the 
provision of child care services to an individual who is participating 
in a community service program. For more information on work activities 
that states and localities are using as part of their TANF programs, 
see U.S. General Accounting Office, Welfare Reform: Work-Site-Based 
Activities Can Play an Important Role in TANF Programs, GAO/HEHS-00-122
(Washington, D.C.: July 28, 2000). 

[11] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Welfare Reform: Interim Report 
on Potential Ways to Strengthen Federal Oversight of State and Local 
Contracting, GAO-02-245 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 2002). 

[12] WIA provided for more local control than JTPA. Under WIA states 
were required to establish local workforce investment areas with their 
own local workforce investment boards to oversee the new system. 

[13] The WtW grants total $3 billion—about 75 percent of the funds were 
for formula grants to states and nearly 25 percent were for competitive 
grants to local organizations for innovative approaches in moving 
welfare recipients into permanent work. 

[14] Our survey asked states to report the extent to which different 
types of coordination were occurring at the state level between WIA and 
TANF programs. We analyzed five types of state-level coordination: 
formal linkages (such as memorandum of understanding, state-level 
agreements, or mutual referral agreements); informal linkages and 
interagency communication (such as sharing information about programs 
or changes in programs as they occur); interagency and intra-agency 
workgroups and consolidated advisory boards; coordinated planning; and 
shared performance measurement and reporting. 

[15] Our survey asked states whether most of the centers coordinated 
TANF and WIA programs. We analyzed seven methods of local level 
coordination: informal linkages (such as periodic program referrals or 
information services) and interagency communication (such as telephone 
calls, memorandums, or flyers announcing program services); formal 
linkages (such as memoranda of understanding or mutual referral 
agreements); coordinated planning; shared intake and enrollment; 
integrated case management; shared client tracking; and shared 
performance measures. 

[16] U.S. General Accounting Office, Welfare Reform: Status of Awards 
and Selected States’ Use of Welfare-to-Work Grants, GAO/HEHS-99-40 
(Washington, D.C.: Feb. 1999). 

[17] The Earned Income Tax Credit is a refundable tax credit available 
to low-income working taxpayers. 

[18] For example, some TANF clients have characteristics such as poor 
health or disability, limited work experience, no high school diploma, 
exposure to domestic violence, and substance abuse issues that make 
finding and keeping a job more difficult. See, U.S. General Accounting 
Office, Welfare Reform: Moving Hard-to-Employ Recipients Into the 
Workforce, GAO-01-368 (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 2001). 

[19] We focused our review on large-scale studies that examined welfare 
and workforce coordination efforts. See appendix I for a bibliography 
of reviewed studies. 

[20] Other service delivery structures include local welfare agencies 
and other employment and training service providers. 

[21] See James L. McIntire and Amy F. Robins, Fixing to Change: A Best 
Practices Assessment of One-Stop Job Centers Working With Welfare 
Recipients (Washington: Fiscal Policy Center, University of Washington, 
1999). 

[22] Most of the literature on welfare and workforce coordination 
efforts examined in this review was funded in part by HHS. 

[23] HHS and Labor are also working together on a project whose main 
goal is to enhance employment outcome for current and former TANF 
recipients and other low-income parents who face serious obstacles to 
steady work. 

[24] To the extent that clients are involved in one-stops, their 
outcomes will be investigated through program records and interviews. 

[25] WIA mandates that the Secretary of Labor prepare a 5-year research 
plan that is updated every 2 years to address areas in need of future 
research. The 2000-2005 research plan included interventions to assist 
the hardest-to-serve clients, including welfare clients, as a high-
priority research area. Additionally, Labor issued a Federal Register 
notice on February 28, 2002, to solicit comments on the reauthorization 
of WIA and linkages with TANF that included a request for comments on 
the enhancement of service delivery through the one-stops to improve 
welfare recipients’ outcomes. 

[26] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Human Services Integration: 
Results of a GAO Cosponsored Conference on Modernizing Information 
Systems, GAO-02-121 (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 2002). 

[27] These findings are similar to those we reported in, Means Tested 
Programs: Determining Financial Eligibility Is Cumbersome and Can Be 
Simplified, GAO-02-58 (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 2001). 

[28] HR 4737 (which passed the House on May 16, 2002) requires that, 
not later than 6 months after the date of enactment, the Secretary of 
Health and Human Services and the Secretary of Labor jointly submit a 
report to the Congress describing common or conflicting data elements, 
definitions, performance measures, and reporting requirements in WIA of 
1998 and part A of Title IV of the Social Security Act, and, to the 
degree each Secretary deems appropriate, at the discretion of either 
Secretary, any other program administered by the respective Secretary, 
to allow greater coordination between the welfare and workforce 
development systems. 

[29] Connecticut’s self-sufficiency standard is calculated by 
considering income and local costs of living. 

[30] In our report Workforce Investment Act: Improvements Needed in 
Performance Measures to Provide a More Accurate Picture of WIA’s 
Effectiveness, GAO-01-275 (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 2002) states reported 
that performance levels may determine who receives WIA-funded services. 

[31] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Human Services Integration: 
Results of a GAO Cosponsored Conference on Modernizing Information 
Systems, GAO-02-121 (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 2002). 

[32] A data warehouse is a massive database that integrates information 
collected from disparate sources. 

[33] See U.S. General Accounting Office, Welfare Reform: Improving 
State Automated Systems Requires Coordinated Federal Effort, GAO/HEHS-
00-48 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 2000). 

[End of section] 

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