Updated budget cuts are forcing the state to shut down jobs programs that help welfare recipients get jobs.
The Department of Human Services spokeswoman Kayla Rosenfeld said today the state spends $5.4 million on those programs each year. The programs will be ended at the end of next month.
The cuts affect about 580 people across the state. The programs began in 2001 to help low-income working families get jobs.
They offered stipends to qualifying families who had finished receiving the maximum five years of welfare benefits. They also provided funds to people who left welfare after receiving benefits for two years.
The programs targeted families who received help under the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families and Temporary Assistance for Other Needy Families programs.
This is yet another hit to Hawaii and the welfare families of the state. Many of which counted on these programs to help them make a living.
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