• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Digital News Updates
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business

Pilot program to focus on ‘personal responibility’ in welfare programs

July 7, 2025

(The Center Square) – The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is taking new applications to conduct pilot programs in five different states focused on reducing federal assistance.

The Administration for Children and Families is spearheading the program with a focus on reducing state’s reliance on federally funded programs like Medicaid, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families.

“ACF is returning to the original intent of welfare reform to ensure our programs are laser-focused on delivering outcomes for families and results for taxpayers,” said Andrew Gradison, acting assistant secretary for ACF.

The pilot will focus on programs that encourage employment and “personal responsibility.”

“The pilot can play a pivotal role in the design of modern approaches to moving work-eligible individuals into the labor force, while providing critical ways to operationalize personal responsibility,” the request reads.

The Biden administration previously selected California, Maine, Kentucky, Minnesota and Ohio to test the pilot program.

In March, the Trump administration revoked agreements between the five states and is now rolling out applications for new states to apply. The administration left the option open for states that were already enrolled in the program to reapply.

“The Trump Administration determined the Biden TANF pilot did not reflect this administration’s goals and priorities as its metrics did not evaluate employment outcomes or dependency reduction rather than unverifiable and subjective metrics,” the announcement read.

The new program will run over the course of six years, with the first year dedicated to data collection and negotiating performance standards.

States will work in collaboration with the ACF to determine employment rates, median earnings, education rates, health status, insurance coverage, and prevalence of two-parent families in order to track goal progression.

The deadline for states to apply to the new program is August 15.

 

By Andrew Rice | The Center Square

Filed Under: Featured, News

Related Articles:

  • Bozeman-Based Texbase Launches Advisory Board,
  • Gianforte’s 56 County Tour Highlights Rural Investments, Jobs, and Public Safety
  • Grand Forks Celebrates Opening of $30.5 Million Career Impact Academy
  • Black Hills Corp. and NorthWestern Energy Announce All-Stock Merger
  • Lee Enterprises to Pay $9.5 Million in Privacy Case, Faces New Employee Class-Action Lawsuits
  • Federal Judge Blocks Use of Washington Medicaid Data for Immigration Enforcement

Primary Sidebar

Digital News Updates Logo

Recent News Posts

  • Montana Commerce Department Launches New Loan Program for Rural Businesses
  • Montana DEQ Seeks Public Comment on Draft Coal Mine Bonding Guidance
  • New business-focused hospitality degree to help Montana tourism industry
  • CNBC Ranks North Dakota Most Business-Friendly State for Fourth Straight Year

Recent Politics Posts

  • Montana Delegation Urges President Trump to Impose Tariffs on Russian Palladium
  • Montana AG Leads 22-State Coalition Asking Supreme Court to Hear Parental Rights Case
  • Governor Little Signs Executive Order to Streamline State Government
  • Montana GOP Executive Director Tyler Newcombe Steps Down; Party Names New Communications Director

Recent Business Posts

  • Montana Commerce Department Launches New Loan Program for Rural Businesses
  • CNBC Ranks North Dakota Most Business-Friendly State for Fourth Straight Year
  • Bozeman-Based Texbase Launches Advisory Board,
  • Black Hills Corp. and NorthWestern Energy Announce All-Stock Merger

Copyright © 2025 Digital News Updates, All Rights Reserved.