Bundling Services to Boost the Financial Security of Low-Income Families

Record Description
This Annie E. Casey Foundation blogpost discusses a new Foundation report entitled The Center for Working Families (CWF) Framework. This CWF framework or approach strives to assist low-income families in achieving greater financial security by integrating workforce development and employment services, income, work supports, financial literacy education, and coaching. The report highlights CWF in various programmatic and institutional settings across the U.S., as well as how the Foundation has helped develop the framework and how organizations have applied this integrated service delivery approach.
Record Type
Combined Date
2020-01-25T19:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2020-01-26
Section/Feed Type
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Podcast Episode: Cash Matters

Record Description
This ASCEND podcast reviews the impact of the Magnolia Mother’s Trust, a Springboard to Opportunities program, which is a guaranteed income initiative for extremely low-income female-headed households. The program provides $1,000 in cash monthly for 1 year on a no-strings basis for participating families which, in effect, doubles annual income. The podcast also discusses how the program’s evaluation data can be used in future program and policy design. (Springboard to Opportunities is a Family Prosperity Partner within the Aspen Family Prosperity Innovation Community.)
Record Type
Combined Date
2020-01-09T19:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2020-01-10
Section/Feed Type
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Incorporating Two-Generation Approaches in Community Change

Record Description
This Urban Institute report is an evaluation of the Family-Centered Community Change (FCCC) approach, launched by the Annie E. Casey Foundation, at three pilot sites: Buffalo, New York; Columbus, Ohio; and San Antonio, Texas. The three FCCC sites adopted two-generation approaches in the areas of early childhood education and child care, partnerships with local elementary schools, after-school care, job-training opportunities for adults, financial education and literacy, and coaching to assist parents with goal setting. This five-year evaluation began in 2013 and concluded in 2018.
Record Type
Combined Date
2019-12-15T19:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2019-12-16
Section/Feed Type
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A Roadmap to Reducing Child Poverty: A Report from the National Academy of Sciences

Despite decreasing child poverty rates over the last 50 years, 9.7 million U.S. children live in families with incomes below the poverty line. The Center for Poverty Research, University of California-Davis, will host a live presentation on January 16, 2020 from 12 noon to 1:00 p.m. PT at the Center’s Sacramento location to discuss a report from the National Academy of Sciences on child poverty. During this presentation, a University of California-Irvine professor will highlight causal evidence on the consequences of poverty on children’s development and research on anti-poverty programs’ impact on children. He will also review poverty reduction and employment changes for various policy approaches aimed at reducing child poverty by half over the next decade.
Record Type
Posting Date
Combined Date
Sponsor
University of California-Davis, Center for Poverty Research
Location
UC Center-Sacramento
1130 K Street, Room LL22
Sacramento, California 95814
State
Section/Feed Type
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Event Date
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