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Increasing Work and Earnings Among Families in Social Housing James A. Riccio. Centre for Economic and Social Inclusion 2012 Welfare-to-Work Conference Birmingham, UK. MDRC. Not-for-profit social policy research organization Based in NYC
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Increasing Work and Earnings Among Families in Social HousingJames A. Riccio Centre for Economic and Social Inclusion2012 Welfare-to-Work Conference Birmingham, UK
MDRC • Not-for-profit social policy research organization • Based in NYC • Rigorously evaluates (and sometimes helps design) innovative social policies • Pioneered large-scale random assignment evaluations of social programs • Mission: Build evidence to improve the lives of low-income families
Topics • General theme: • Is social housing a good “platform” for intervention to improve work outcomes for low-income families? • Evidence from the US: • Jobs-Plus: A place-based employment intervention for residents of public housing (social housing) • Evidence from the UK: • ERA (Employment Retention and Advancement demonstration): Results for social housing residents • More evidence from the US: • NYC Work Rewards demonstration for “Housing Choice Voucher” recipients (like Housing Benefit) • Final reflections
National Jobs-Plus Demonstration • Target group: Residents of public housing (estates) • Place-based employment intervention • Multi-component, “saturation” strategy 4
Origins of Jobs-Plus—poverty and place Build mixed-income communities “from within” • Response to growing concentration of joblessness, underemployment, welfare receipt, and poverty in public housing and surrounding neighborhoods Public and private sponsors: • US Dept. of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) • The Rockefeller Foundation • Other public and private funders 5
Jobs-Plus sites Diverse housing developments in 6 cities: Baltimore Chattanooga Dayton Los Angeles St. Paul Seattle Randomly allocated developments within each city to program and control groups Local partnerships and collaboration: • Public housing authorities • Welfare agencies • Workforce agencies • Residents • Other service agencies Mandatory partners 6
Jobs-Plus model: Comprehensive approach 3 components: • Employment and training services Convenient on-site “job centers” • New rent rules to “make work pay” Rent rises less as earnings grow • Community support for work Neighbor-to-neighbor outreach (“Community coaches” share info about work) “Saturation-level” outreach and assistance • Aim to assistance all working-age residents 7
1. Employment and training component • Job assistance and service brokering on-site, where people live • Creates easier opportunities and many informal opportunities to meet with, advise, encourage, and assist residents: • Often on a “drop-in” basis at the Jobs-Plus office • In the neighborhood (e.g., on a corner; at events) • At residents’ homes • Staff closer to residents’ day-to-day lives • More holistic understanding of family problems, support networks, and neighborhood conditions 8
2. Rent reform • Making work “pay” for everyone through new rent rules • With traditional “30-percent-of-income” rule, earnings are implicitly “taxed” at 30% • New rent rules: “Flat/fixed” rents (with income-based rents as “safety net” if job loss) 9
3. Community support for work • Promote “neighbor-to-neighbor” support for work, with aid of resident outreach workers • “Building captains,” “community coaches… • share informationon job and training opportunities, other services, and financial incentives • encourage participationin Jobs-Plus and employment • add legitimacy to the program and open up further informal avenues of helping other residents 10
Community support for work (cont.) • Foster integration of housing services and employment assistance • Housing authorities promote employment from time new residents move in—message “comes with tenancy” • Housing authorities link employment assistance with efforts to head off evictions over nonpayment of rent • Housing authorities must transcend traditional, nearly exclusive focus on housing management 11
3 sites allowed “full test” of JP concept Dayton, Los Angeles, and St. Paul: Positive effects • Offered and sustained the full Jobs-Plus “package” • Strong housing authority commitment • ~ 3 of 4 working-age residents took advantage of services, rent incentives • Infused development with self-sufficiency message Seattle: Positive short-term positive effects • Early exit from demo because of reconstruction Baltimore and Chattanooga: No effects • Incomplete implementation 12
1998 cohort = focus of impact analysis • All nondisabledworking-age residents • Living in Jobs-Plus or comparison developments in October 1998 (random assignment of developments) • Includes recent arrivals and longer-termers in 1998 • Includes those who moved or stayed after 1998 • Long-term comparative interrupted-time series analysis, using Unemployment Insurance wage records • Sample size:ProgramComparisonTotal 2,123 2,651 4,774 13
Pooled average quarterly earnings for the 1998 cohort (full implementation sites) Post-program period
Pooled average quarterly earnings for the 1998 cohort (full implementation sites) Post-program period
Pooled average quarterly earnings for the 1998 cohort (full implementation sites) Post-program period
Earnings impacts through 7 years (full implementation sites) All results statistically significant 17
Replication efforts New York City • Now serving 3 large public housing developments • A key feature of Mayor Bloomberg’s new “Young Men’s Initiative”: Will include up to 8 new Jobs-Plus sites San Antonio, Texas • Operating on 1 large public housing development Obama administration (HUD) • Proposing federal expansion in new budget 20
UK ERAUK Employment Retention and Advancement Demonstration Impacts by housing status Focus today on ND25+ group (largest effects)
Transatlantic collaboration Evaluation sponsor • UK Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) US Research Partner • MDRC UK research partners • Policy Studies Institute (PSI) • Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) • National Institute for Economic & Social Research (NIESR) • Office for National Statistics (ONS) Lessons traveled in both directions!
UK ERA Target groups Unemployed and entering New Deal welfare-to-work program: (1) New Deal Lone Parents (NDLP) • New Deal 25-Plus (ND25+) Working part-time (lone parents): (3) Working Tax Credit (WTC) group
UK ERA model Operates within Jobcentre Plus centers • Separate staff • In some offices, separate post-employment teams 33-month program: • If unemployed at intake, get job placement through New Deal w-t-w program (~ 9 months) • Post-employmentfor all who work: 24+ months of “in-work” job coaching and support from “Advancement Support Advisors” 24 months of financial incentives
Financial incentives Retention bonus £ 400 3 times/yr for for sustained full-time work 2 yrs (£ 2,400 total) Tuition assistance if combine training + work£ 1,000 Tuition bonus if complete training up to £ 1,000 In-work emergency funds £ 300/worker
The pilot sites 6 districts (Total N = 16,000 people): • 4 districts in England • (E. Midlands, London, NE England, NW England) • 1 in Scotland • 1 in Wales Spread across 58 local offices (where random assignment took place)
ND25+: Long-term unemployed at baseline Random assignment PRE- employment POST-employment ERA New Deal Welfare-to-work + advancement focus In-work support + incentives ERA JOB New Deal intake Regular New Deal Welfare-to-work JOB Control Random assignment
Program group employment rates 61% WTC % Employed Months after Random Assignment
ND25+: Long-term unemployed Cumulative employment outcomes for ND25+ control group Ever worked in 5 years Months worked in 5 years ERA Control ERA Control 30
ND25+: Long-term unemployed Impacts on employment outcomes Ever worked In 5 years Months worked in 5 years + 2.2 pp* (+ 4%) + 1.1 months** (+ 8%) ERA Control ERA Control 31
ND25+: Long-term unemployed Impacts on earnings trends Earnings(£) Control group Tax Year
ND25+: Long-term unemployed Impacts on earnings trends 5-year cumulative impact: £1,814 ** (+ 11%) Earnings(£) ERA group ERA ended for all by October 2007 (earlier for some) Control group Tax Year
ND25+: Long-term unemployed Impacts on ever worked within 5 years after random assignment Family housing Social housing Private housing ERA Control ERA Control ERA Control
ND25+: Long-term unemployed Impacts on ever worked within 5 years after random assignment Family housing Social housing Private housing - 1.9 †† ERA Control ERA Control ERA Control 35
ND25+: Long-term unemployed Impacts on cumulative 5-year earnings,by housing status at baseline Family housing Social housing Private housing ERA Control ERA Control ERA Control 36
ND25+: Long-term unemployed Impacts on cumulative 5-year earnings,by housing status at baseline Family housing Social housing Private housing £703 ERA Control ERA Control ERA Control 37
New York City’sWork Rewards Demonstration • Target group: Low-income households with “Housing Choice Vouchers” • Alternative to public housing • Rent subsidies to help families pay rent in private housing market • Tenants pay 30% of their income for rent • Many don’t work, or are underemployed 38
Evaluation goals • Testing 2 interventions: • Do the interventions improve economic security? • Family Self Sufficiency Program (FSS) • Case management • “Escrow savings accounts” (asset-building) • 5-year program • FSS+ Workforce Incentives • Incentives adapted from UK ERA • Cash rewards for full-time work: $150/month • Cash rewards for education/training completion • Rewards available for 2 years
Evaluation design: 3-way random assignment • Recruited volunteers from housing roster • N = 1,455 households; 1,603 adults FSS-only Voucher-holders sign up Random Assignment FSS + incentives Control group 5 years of follow-up (ongoing)
Cumulative impacts on earnings within 2.5 years after entering program
Cumulative impacts on earnings within 2.5 years after entering program ††
Subgroup earnings trends Subgroup: Not working at baseline Control group Note: Earnings include $0 for non-workers
Subgroup earnings trends Subgroup: Not working at baseline Incentives end FSS + Incentives FSS-Only Control group Note: Earnings include $0 for non-workers
New federal study of FSS • MDRC launching test of national Family Self-Sufficiency Program (FSS) in 15+ cities • Opportunity to test whether subgroup patterns hold elsewhere. • But no special workforce incentives (unless we can raise other funding)
Earlier US welfare-to-work studies • Studies of mandatory welfare-to-work programs for lone parents in the US (from the 1990s, early 2000s) looked at housing subgroups • General pattern: Effects of welfare-to-work programs were larger for welfare recipients living in public housing or with rent vouchers than for other welfare recipients without housing subsidies.
Final reflections • Growing evidence: Employment interventions can work for public/social housing and other rent-assisted groups • Implement UK ERA for long-term unemployed in social housing? • Encouragement for linking housing and work policies—and, hence, for inter-agency collaboration • Strategies that combine services + incentives may work best • Place-based interventions, such as Jobs-Plus, offer multiple avenues for engaging families • However, strategies to promote work advancement remain elusive and call for more innovation and testing
Final reflections (continued) • Building further evidence for policy US: • Longer-term impact testing of services, incentives, and rent reform for subsidized tenants • Study replication of Jobs-Plus in public housing UK: • Confirm impact of ERA for long-term unemployed in social housing under new welfare reform; test a refined model? • Test a place-based work intervention (like Jobs-Plus)? Both: • Continue search for effective advancement strategies