In 1996, the nation’s welfare program was reorganized
into the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA).
PRWORA now requires a welfare to work program, and assumes that jobs are available
provided that improved transportation and job search assistance opportunities
are available to participants (Chapple, 2001). A number of factors impact
the success of the welfare-to-work program including the extent of racial
segregation, location of entry-level jobs and the existing transportation
infrastructure in a region. John Kain’s theory of spatial mismatch includes
these factors and explains the condition of spatial separation between homes
and workplaces (Pugh, 1998). Welfare participants experience spatial mismatch
in that they disproportionately live in the inner city and face long commutes
to entry-level jobs often located in the suburbs (Blumenberg & Ong, 2001).
Lack of efficient public transportation and access to affordable private cars
exacerbates this condition of spatial mismatch.
There is no one single solution that will adequately address transportation
needs for welfare to work participants. The type of neighborhood in which
a participant lives dictates the mode of transportation that most efficiently
gives individuals access to jobs. In job rich neighborhoods, participants
can easily reach jobs by car or transit. Therefore, it makes sense to promote
accessing jobs by transit in these neighborhoods (Blumenberg and Ong 2001).
In a job rich neighborhood, improvements in transit that would improve accessibility
to jobs in several ways including: adding additional bus lines, increasing
the number of vehicles serving the area, increasing off-peak service to appeal
to shift workers, and using distance based fares. Instituting distance-based
fares will benefit recipients, as welfare to work participants on average
travel shorter distances than higher income individuals (Blumenberg and Ong
2001). On the other hand, for residents in job-poor areas improvements in
pubic transportation is unlikely to greatly enhance their access to jobs.
Instead of focusing on public transportation to improve access to jobs in
job poor areas, Blumenberg and Ong suggest programs aimed at increasing auto
ownership (Blumenberg and Ong 2001). Programs could include low-cost auto
loans, car sharing, car-pooling programs, reduced rate auto insurance, auto
maintenance services, employer-sponsored vanpools, shuttles and paratransit
(Blumenberg and Ong 2001). Guaranteed ride home programs would also benefit
welfare to work participants who travel far distances to work, as they would
know they have a way home in case of an emergency.
Los Angeles has chosen to deal with their spatial mismatch between residences
of welfare to work participants and employment opportunities by distributing
free bus passes or reimbursing auto travel in an attempt to decrease the transportation
burden on these individuals. In addition to direct subsidies, the city has
also established an outreach program that automatically gives bus route information
to participants (Blumenberg and Ong 2001). However, for Los Angeles to fully
accommodate the needs of those on welfare, a more targeted approach may be
needed.
The Federal Government offers transportation assistance to metropolitan areas
with welfare to work programs. Margaret Pugh argues that the federal Access
to Jobs program administered by the U.S. Department of Transportation can
be most efficient if the grants are focused on metropolitan areas that experience
high levels of spatial mismatch. She also believes that priority should be
given to projects that maximize the existing transportation system and reflect
the transportation and job location patterns of the metropolitan area (Pugh
1998). Pugh further argues that long term federal solutions should focus on
decreasing the distance between housing and jobs through controlling sprawl,
increasing suburban affordable housing and strengthening the urban economy,
with a sub-focus on increasing car ownership among low income individuals
(Pugh 1998).
A significant number of welfare recipients are women with children. This situation
creates a group of recipients with specific needs including childcare and
access to schools. As Karen Chapple explains, the needs of women with children
are not being met by current welfare to work programs that focus on transporting
welfare recipients to workplaces. Low-income women with children often rely
on personal contacts and networks because of their need for employment near
their residences. It has been shown that a third of women on welfare with
children and without access to a car walk to work (O’Regan and Quigley
1999). Due to their lifestyle choices, women with children will be better
supported by policy that focuses on community economic development instead
of transportation (Chapple 2001).
As previously discussed, there are several approaches to improving transportation
alternatives for welfare recipients. A study by Bruce and Richards at the
University of Tennessee confirms many of the previous findings on car access
and its impact on assistance program participants (Bruce and Richards 2003).
The study uses survey data from the Family Assistance Longitudinal Study,
which includes a large number of individuals from Tennessee’s Families
First, a low-income assistance program. This study draws data from urban as
well as rural participants, which is important in analyzing its conclusions.
One important conclusion that can be drawn from the study is that car access
is essential in maximizing the effectiveness of welfare to work programs.
Car access increases the probability of becoming employed and staying employed,
and also increases the number of hours worked. Results of the Tennessee study
reinforce previous research done on access to cars and indicate that that
among forms of transportation, private and public, private mobility is most
effective in moving participants from welfare to work (Cervero, Sandoval and
Landis, 2000 in Bruce and Richards 2003).
To those living in a society so dependent on the automobile as a mode of travel,
the results of these studies on access to autos might seem quite obvious.
Individual not on welfare typically drive to work and job interviews: why
should it be any different for those who need financial assistance? When attempting
to move people back into the labor market that has physically relocated, policy
makers are confronted with the true costs of certain development strategies
and the consequences of living in an automobile-based society. The success
of welfare as a philosophy will continue to be attacked and defended by opposing
political forces. There seems to be little debate, however, about the dominant
current mode of transportation that Americans use to go to work. Without addressing
this fundamental issue, or the certainly related issue of how and where American
workplaces develop in relation to residences, programs that attempt to move
people from welfare to work will only be addressing a symptom, rather than
the problem.
While many are quick to shun the idea of increased government intervention
in the planning and development process, the reinvigoration of the inner city,
the protection of the suburbs, and a true solution to the problem of job relocation
all seem to depend on governmental action. As William Wilson asserts, “Perhaps
at no other time in the nation’s history has it been more important
to talk about the need to promote city and suburban cooperation, not separation.
The political fragmentation of many metropolitan areas in the United States
has contributed to the problems of joblessness and related social dislocations
of the inner-city poor” (Wilson 1997). Indeed, the cooperation between
cities and suburbs seems increasingly important as one examines the necessity
for car travel among those receiving welfare. While increasing the availability
of cars for those on welfare would seem to be a quick fix, the long-term costs,
including congestion, the true cost of automobile ownership, and increased
environmental impact, may be great. A strong policy of urban revitalization,
combined with commitment to an equitable public transit system, seems to hold
greater hope for those on assistance.
1. How can the most effective strategy for combating spatial mismatch be found for each location?
2. Is spatial mismatch simply a consequence of economic development, or are issues of "social capital" and "human capital" important parts of the equation?
3. Is "Smart Growth" a viable solution to problems of spatial mismatch? In what terms?
4. How can decisions affecting development and jobs be made and implimented more effectively at the regional level?
5. What are consequences of the proposed strategies for dealing with spatial mismatch as related to welfare participants?
Blumenberg, Evelyn and Ong, Paul. 2001. Cars, Buses and Jobs: Welfare Participants and Employment Acces in Los Angeles. Transportation Research Board. http://www.uctc.net/papers/544.pdf
Bruce, Donald and Richards, Tami. 2003. “Car Access and Employment Outcomes for Tennessee Welfare Recipients.” Center for Business and Economic Research and Department of Economics, University of Tennessee. Submitted to the Transportation Research Board.
Chapple, Karen. 2001. Time to Work: Job Search Strategies and Commute Time for Women on Welfare in San Francisco. Journal of Urban Affairs. 23(2), 155-173.
O’Regan, Katherine and Quigley, John. 1999. Spacial Isolation and Welfare Recipients: What Do We Know? Berkeley Program on Housing and Urban Policy. http://repositories.cdlib.org/cgi/viewpdf.cgi?article=1008&context=iber/bphup&preview_mode=
Pugh, Margaret. 1998. Barriers to Work: The Spatial Divide Between Jobs and Welfare Recipients in Metropolitan Areas. Brookings Institution.
Wilson, William J. 1997. When Work Disappears: The World of the New Urban
Poor. Vintage: New York. Retrieved on January 28, 2004 from http://repositories.cdlib.org/iber/bphup/working-papers/W99-003