Welfare Reform in Georgia 2006 Senate Bill 104 DIVISION OF FAMILY AND CHILDREN SERVICES WELFARE REFORM IN GEORGIA ANNUAL REPORT 2006 TABLE OF CONTENTS SENATE BILL 104 REPORTING REQUIREMENTS ii WELFARE REFORM IN GEORGIA, 2006 iii SECTION A The Total TANF Caseload Count 2 SECTION B Quarterly and Annual TANF Reports ACF-196 Temporary Assistance to Needy Families-Financial Report 7 SECTION C Percentage and Number of TANF Caseload Given Hardship Exemption from Lifetime Limit 23 SECTION D TANF Recipient Transportation Assistance 30 SECTION E Diversionary Assistance to Prevent TANF Receipt 35 SECTION F Number of Individuals Denied Assistance Due to a Serious Violent Felony Conviction 46 SECTION G Number of Mothers Under 19 Who Received TANF Assistance 48 SECTION H TANF Subsidized Child Care 53 SECTION I Data on Teen Pregnancy Prevention 62 SECTION J Number of TANF Sanctions 76 SECTION K Number of Legal Immigrants Receiving TANF Benefits by Category of Immigration Status 91 SECTION L Number of Families No Longer Eligible Because of Time Limits 96 SECTION M Follow-up Information on Job Retention and Earnings 98 SECTION N Evaluation of the Effect of Code Section 49-4-186 On the Number of Births to TANF Recipients Families 103 REPORTING REQUIREMENTS THE DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN RESOURCES IS SUPPLYING REPORTS AND STATISTICS ON WELFARE REFORM TO FULFILL THE REQUIREMENTS OF SENATE BILL 104. FROM SENATE BILL 104: "[The department shall] publish an annual report and such interim reports as may be necessary. The annual report and such interim reports shall be provided to the Governor and members of the General Assembly and contain the following: A. The total TANF caseload count; B. Quarterly and annual TANF reports, in full, prepared for submission to the federal government; C. The percentage of the TANF caseload and the number of individuals given a hardship exemption from the lifetime limit on cash assistance and a categorization for such exemption; D. The number of individuals who received transportation assistance and the cost of such assistance; E. The number of individuals who received diversionary assistance in order to prevent their requiring TANF assistance and the categories of such diversionary assistance, and job acceptance and retention statistics; F. The number of individuals denied assistance due to a serious violent felony conviction; G. The number of mothers under 19 years of age who received assistance and their percentage of the total TANF caseload; H. Number of children receiving subsidized child care and the total and average per recipient cost per child; I. Data on teen pregnancy prevention; J. The number of families sanctioned; K. The number of legal immigrants receiving TANF benefits by category of immigration status; L. The number of families no longer eligible because of time limits; M. Follow-up information on job retention and earnings; and N. An evaluation of the effect of Code Section 49-4-186 on the number of births to TANF recipient families. The information required under this paragraph shall be provided on a county-by-county basis where feasible. ii WELFARE REFORM IN GEORGIA: 1997 - 2006 Georgia has long been a recognized leader in welfare reform. In the early 1990's when Georgia's welfare rolls were approaching 150,000, the Governor and the state legislature took the necessary steps to connect the receipt of welfare benefits, Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC), to personal responsibility and work. At the same time, the Georgia Department of Human Resources (GDHR), Division of Family and Children Services (DFCS) county offices were undergoing dramatic changes. County DFCS offices became employment centers and local partnerships were formed with businesses, non-profit agencies, and the Georgia Department of Labor (GDOL) to promote work and self-sufficiency among welfare recipients. In past years, the most important aspect of a caseworker's job was issuing welfare benefits. With the 1996 introduction of WorkFirst! the emphasis shifted to helping recipients find work. During SFY 2005 and 2006, Georgia has focused on training the case managers (formerly called case workers) to assist TANF recipients in maintaining employment as well as seeking career advancement. Customers are not just expected to get a job but to keep the job, seek advancement and earn enough money to leave the welfare rolls. As a result, our TANF caseloads are greatly reduced. The Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act In August 1996, the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA) was enacted. PRWORA eliminated the Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) cash entitlement program, and replaced it with the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) block grant. PRWORA effectively ended welfare entitlement, replacing the AFDC program with the time-limited benefits of Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF). The purposes of this legislation were to: Provide assistance to needy families so that children could be cared for in their own homes; Reduce welfare dependency by promoting job preparation, work and marriage; Prevent teen pregnancies; and Encourage the formation and maintenance of two-parent families. PRWORA established mandatory work and job training participation rates for recipients and enacted time limits for the receipt of TANF benefits. Moreover, PRWORA afforded states greater flexibility in the design and implementation of the TANF program and provided each state a block grant to fund its TANF program. State Maintenance of Effort (MOE) spending levels were mandated so that states would maintain levels of spending consistent with previous spending for AFDC. iii In the fall of 1996, Georgia submitted a state plan for administering the TANF program. Following a 45-day federal review period and a series of public hearings, the plan was accepted by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and Georgia was approved to receive its share of the TANF block grant. The first TANF checks were issued on January 1, 1997. Senate Bill 104 The enabling legislation for the TANF program in Georgia was Senate Bill 104, now known as Act 389. The major provisions of the bill included: Most recipients are limited to 48 months of TANF assistance. All adult TANF recipients and all eligible parents are mandated to participate in approved work activities. All adult TANF recipients were required to sign a personal responsibility plan that emphasized the fact that they must take personal responsibility to better their lives. Some of the required actions included: - ensuring that minor children attend school - attending school conferences - attending family planning counseling - participating in substance abuse treatment, if needed - having children immunized - obtaining prenatal care. Teen parents are required to continue to live with a parent or responsible relative, and must remain in school to obtain their GED or High School diploma. Family cap measures were strengthened, so that TANF cash assistance was not increased for recipients who had another child after receiving TANF for ten months. Families who did not meet work or personal responsibility requirements could be sanctioned, with a reduction or permanent termination of benefits. New Developments In October 2004, Georgia initiated a new service delivery strategy for TANF called TANF = WORK NOW. This strategy focuses on 3 elements: (1) Education-TANF Clients are educated at the point of application on all the goals and requirements of the TANF program. (2) Engagement-TANF clients with a work requirement are engaged in work activities within 7 days of the approval of their application. (3) Monitoring-TANF clients are monitored consistently and frequently to ensure adherence to program requirements. This concept yielded a significant decrease in the number of Total TANF iv Cases, in particular the number of Adult Cases on TANF. In SFY06, the monthly average of adult cases was 10,432. In April 2006, Georgia took TANF = Work Now a step further by focusing on values and beliefs that under gird our work and assist in strengthening Georgia's families. New policies were implemented and case manages were trained on the principles of case management. The values and beliefs that we espouse are: Welfare is not good enough for any family. Government cannot and should not take the place of family. Children are better off when responsible caretakers are able to provide for their families. There is dignity in work, whether with the hand or the head. Georgia urges responsible adult behavior and economic self-sufficiency to end dependency on government assistance. With proper preparation, support and supervision, we can help our customers create a more secure employment future for themselves. Collaborative Efforts To achieve Georgia's commitment to assisting TANF recipients to fulfill the requirements of Act 389 and to attain self-sufficiency, it was critical to collaborate with other public service agencies, and with entities in the education and business world. Partnerships were formed with the Georgia Department of Labor (GDOL) and with the Georgia Department of Technical and Adult Education (GDTAE) to develop a job-ready workforce. Each agency committed to providing specific services to TANF recipients, with DHR providing case management and support services. GDTAE is the primary source for job training, and GDOL focuses on job development and placement. The services provided through these partnerships have contributed greatly to the decline in the number of families receiving TANF since the implementation of welfare reform. TANF customers utilized the job training, job development and job placement resources from our partners to gain or refresh their skills; thus, becoming more marketable, which enabled them to find better jobs and leave the TANF program. v TANF CASELOADS From SFY 1995 to 2006 140,000 120,000 100,000 80,000 60,000 40,000 20,000 0 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 In SFY 1997 Georgia had 114,154 cases on its TANF rolls. We are happy to report that the current total number of cases on TANF in Georgia for SFY 2006 is just over 34,000. We have reduced our rolls by 70% in nine years. As of June 2006, Georgia had 29,237 total TANF cases. Work Supports In addition to partnerships with other agencies, the availability of work supports was critical to the success of TANF self-sufficiency efforts. In order to secure and maintain employment, many families required assistance with transportation, childcare, and medical expenses, as well as assistance in obtaining child support. During SFY 2006, Georgia implemented new policies, which provided its TANF recipients with two new work support services. They are Employment Intervention Services (EIS) and Transitional Support Services (TSS). EIS is available to an applicant if s/he: has a full time job but is temporarily on unpaid leave due to a temporary illness and is scheduled to return to work within 4 months, and the AU meets the gross income ceiling (GIC) test, vi is employed at the time of application and is potentially eligible for less than the maximum amount of cash assistance for the AU size, and so declines TANF cash assistance to preserve months of TANF eligibility, obtains employment during Applicant Job Search that reduces his/her potential benefits and s/he decides to withdraw his/her application to stop the TANF clock. Note: If an applicant is determined ineligible to receive TANF benefits on-going, s/he will not be considered eligible to receive EIS. EIS is non-recurrent, short-term assistance that is equivalent to four times the maximum grant amount for the AU size. The availability of the EIS must be discussed with all clients at application. EIS is available only once in a client's lifetime. TSS is available to an applicant whose employment obtained during applicant job search causes the AU to become ineligible for cash assistance, an applicant who voluntarily withdraws his/her TANF application because employment obtained during applicant job search has significantly reduced his/her potential TANF grant amount and the client wishes to stop the TANF clock and preserve months of potential TANF eligibility, a recipient whose employment causes the AU to become ineligible for cash assistance, a recipient whose on-going TANF case is closed due to loss of earned income disregards, or a recipient who voluntarily closes the TANF case because employment has significantly reduced the TANF grant amount and the client wishes to stop the TANF clock and preserve months of potential TANF eligibility. TSS is available for a period of six months beginning with the first month of ineligibility for cash benefits or the month in which the TANF case closes due to employment. TSS payments for Transportation and Incidental expenses should be made directly to the provider of a service. If an applicant's job begins in the month in which the TANF application is denied, receipt of the TSS will not count toward the applicant's TANF lifetime limit. vii Transportation Transportation expenditures greatly increased with the implementation of TANF and subsequently decreased as the number of TANF cases declined. GDHR/DFCS offers two transportation work supports options: direct payment to applicants and clients and transportation services through GDHR's Consolidated Transportation System. Although funds were available for transportation expenses, transportation services were not readily available, particularly in rural areas. In SFY 2000, GDHR/DFCS collaborated with the Georgia Office of Facilities and Support Services to expand the Consolidated Transportation System. TANF funds invested in this initiative have increased from $345,000 in SFY 00 to $10,313,112 in SFY 2006. TANF funds paid directly to applicants and clients totaled $2,240,217 in SFY 2006. Childcare Affordable, quality childcare was also essential to the success of individuals going to work. The number of payments for children in subsidized childcare increased from approximately 58,099 per month in SFY 1997 to 113,189 per month in SFY 2006. In addition, expenditures in the program increased from $115,999,169 in SFY 97 to $218,743,248 in SFY 2006. Childcare continues to be one of the largest programs managed by caseworkers at the county level. viii Payments for Children in CHILDCARE Fiscal Year 1990 to 2006 120,000 100,000 80,000 60,000 40,000 20,000 0 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 Comparison of Cash Assistance and Child Care Expenditures From SFY 1995 to 2006 in Millions of Dollars $450 $417 $400 $393 $350 $332 $300 $250 $200 $150 $100 $242 $219 $116 $139$177$121$144$1$41533 $160 $146 $179 $156 $182 $161 $154 $161 $118 $75 $86 $86 $50 $0 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 TANF Cash Assistance Child Care Subsidies ix Medicaid Many TANF recipients beginning first-time employment were either unable to afford the medical insurance made available to them by their employers or found that few employers offered the option of medical insurance. The combination of Low Income Medicaid (LIM), Transitional Medical Assistance (TMA), and Right from the Start Medicaid (RSM) or PeachCare for Kids (PCK) provided and continues to provide this necessary coverage. The 12-month continuation of Medicaid in the form of Transitional Medical Assistance (TMA) provides necessary medical coverage for families who become ineligible for LIM as a result of new or increased earned income. Once TMA ends, the children of most families are eligible for additional coverage through RSM or PCK. Currently 587,810 Georgia families receive Medicaid through LIM, TMA, and RSM. This was in July of 2006. Child Support Insufficient child support prevented many single parents from attaining economic selfsufficiency. Increased collections by the Child Support Enforcement (CSE) program are helping families receive more of the child support owed to them. Increasing Success in Collecting Child Support $800 (Collections in Millions) $700 $600 $524 $554 $596 $628 $500 $400 $300 $253 $256 $368 $338 $303 $314 $403 $464 $430 $200 $100 $0 SFY1994 SFY1996 SFY1998 SFY2000 SFY2002 SFY2004 SFY2006 Additionally, Georgia's Fatherhood Initiative has been expanded throughout the state. The Department of Technical and Adult Education (DTAE) has taken the lead in this x project. Job training is provided to assist fathers in securing employment that will enable them to pay child support and provide for their children. This initiative teaches young men how to be more responsible parents. Other Work Supports The future of welfare reform in Georgia will include a continuing focus on moving families to economic independence through stable employment. Most recipients remaining on TANF eight years following Welfare Reform fall into two main categories. The first is comprised of children who receive TANF in "child-only" cases in which a non-parent relative is caring for the children and is not included in the TANF grant. These families are not subject to time limits or work requirements. The second category consists of recipients with multiple barriers to self-sufficiency. Some of these barriers include substance abuse, illiteracy, disabilities, and domestic violence issues. The following initiatives continue to assist these recipients in attaining self-sufficiency: The GDHR Division of Mental Health, Developmental Disabilities and Addictive Diseases (GMHDDAD) provide substance abuse counseling and treatment through outpatient and residential facilities. Treatment for clients who have been diagnosed with mental impairment and mental retardation is also provided. The GDOL Vocational Rehabilitation (VR) Program provides disability assessments for recipients who allege a disability that impedes their ability to work. VR also places recipients in appropriate VR programs based on assessment outcomes and makes recommendations that assist DFCS in planning services to help recipients overcome barriers to employment. GDTAE provides expanded adult literacy services. Domestic violence issues have been emphasized through various measures. Contracts have been signed with local shelters to provide assessments for individuals claiming domestic violence as a barrier to becoming self-sufficient. Waivers from certain program requirements may be granted based on assessment outcomes. Training is provided for DFCS staff. Brochures and posters are distributed throughout local areas to increase awareness of available services. Lifetime Limits In Georgia, the receipt of TANF is limited to 48 months in a lifetime for an assistance unit. Beginning in January 1997, each month in which an assistance unit receives TANF, counts toward the 48-month lifetime limit. The Federal lifetime limit is 60 months. An assistance unit that is subject to the lifetime limit may have the limit waived if it is determined that the assistance unit meets certain hardship criteria. xi Hardship Waivers Some families will require additional time to prepare for work and some may never be fully self-sufficient. For these families, Georgia has established a hardship waiver policy that is approved on a case-by-case basis. The waiver of the lifetime limit allows for temporary extensions of TANF to families experiencing additional barriers. The hardship waiver policy was revised in April 2006. There are now three hardship criteria for case managers to use to evaluate each family's situation. 1. A family member is a victim of domestic violence or has been threatened. 2. The family has an open child protective services case. 3. The disability of the grantee relative, other eligible adult or a household member is a barrier to employment for the grantee relative or other eligible adults. Other forms of work supports, including Food Stamps, Medicaid, shelter and utility assistance, are available to families that do not meet any of the hardship criteria. Georgia's TANF caseload totaled 50,996 cases in December 2000 when the first 1,446 families reached the 48-month time limit. Of those families, 1,094 met a hardship criterion and were eligible for extended TANF benefits through hardship waivers. Since December 2000, the number of families reaching the 48-month time limit has decreased. In December 2001 yet another milestone in the TANF program was reached when 311 Georgia TANF recipients reached the federally imposed 60-month TANF lifetime limit. Of these 311 recipients, 280 continued to be eligible under a hardship extension. As with the 48-month time limit, the number of families reaching the 60-month federal lifetime limit has decreased. In June 2004, there were 1,102 families receiving a hardship extension, but in June 2005 there were only 230 families receiving extensions. Currently in June 2006, Georgia has only 49 families who have been granted a hardship waiver. xii 2,000 1,500 1,566 1,000 TANF Hardship Extensions June of the Year from 2002 to 2006 1,528 1,102 500 0 2002 2003 2004 230 2005 49 2006 Pregnancy Prevention In addition to the work requirements contained in PRWORA, states were required to address the problem of rising teen pregnancy. In collaboration with DFCS, the Georgia Division of Public Health (GDPH), developed teen pregnancy prevention measures and instituted comprehensive Adolescent Health Centers located in Georgia's eighteen health districts. The goals of this initiative are to promote: health and wellness, encourage abstinence and contraception and to reduce risk-taking behavior among adolescents. There are 31 Teen Centers statewide that participate in this initiative. These centers provide family planning services, treatment of sexually transmitted diseases, and youth development opportunities to build on the strengths of youth that are at high risk of teen pregnancy. In SFY 2006, these centers provided health, education, preventive and support services to 40,361 youth and their families. The ages of the youth served were: 10-14 (17,605), 15- 17 (15,064), and 18-19 (7,692). The services provided were: 36, 162 Comprehensive health services 18,091 Individual health screenings 1,136 Well Child check-ups and 8,957 Health and Community referrals xiii The youth-development activities promote academic achievement, healthy self-esteem, and life skills training. They target teens parents, and partner with other community organizations who serve on teen center advisory councils, serve as volunteers, and provide training and quality assurance to programs to ensure a best practice approach. DHR Youth Initiative In November 2005 the Department launched the Youth Initiative in order to expand outof-school services available to school age youth. They recognized that youth development practices delivered in after school and summer program settings can play a critical role in motivating youth to achieve success not only in schools, but also in their personal lives. These out of school services also contribute to our efforts in reducing teen pregnancy. In SFY '06 over $13 million dollars in TANF and state funding were used to expand summer and afterschool programs for children ages 6-19. Funds were distributed to community-based organizations and public schools. The awards ranged from $28,000 to $800,000 to over $6 million for the GA Alliance of Boys and Girls Clubs, Inc. statewide. Through a pilot program with the Department's Division of Mental Health, 5,300 youth people with severe emotional difficulty and behavior disorders took part in summer recreation programs. $3.5 million was provided for these programs. In total, the DHR Youth Initiative funds have impacted over 200 program sites and over 19,000 youth have benefited from these programs across the state. As TANF cases in Georgia continue to decline the Department of Human Resources is able to devote additional resources to support working families, while leveraging other funds using a $1 to $1 match to DHR funding. This funding formula allows for greater expansion of these programs. THE RESULTS OF GEORGIA'S PRWORA INITIATIVE Georgia has successfully achieved and in some instances exceeded the goals and requirements of the TANF program as mandated by the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996, including participation rates, maintenance of effort spending, and reduction of teen pregnancy rates. This effort has enabled thousands of Georgia's citizens to achieve an improved way of life through welfare reform. Children of TANF families observe first-hand the benefits of work, as their parents provide for them a higher standard of living than was possible on welfare. These positive role models will, undoubtedly reduce the likelihood of children becoming future adult TANF recipients. Georgia will continue to demonstrate the successes that have been achieved for its families. xiv A. The Total TANF Caseload Count TOTAL TANF CASELOAD COUNT State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY APPLING ATKINSON BACON BAKER BALDWIN BANKS BARROW BARTOW BEN HILL BERRIEN BIBB BLECKLEY BRANTLEY BROOKS BRYAN BULLOCH BURKE BUTTS CALHOUN CAMDEN CANDLER CARROLL CATOOSA CHARLTON CHATHAM CHATTAHOOCHEE CHATTOOGA CHEROKEE CLARKE CLAY CLAYTON CLINCH COBB COFFEE COLQUITT COLUMBIA COOK COWETA CRAWFORD CRISP DADE DAWSON DECATUR DEKALB DODGE DOOLY AVERAGE MONTHLY ADULTS 2 1 2 5 66 9 9 9 7 2 484 29 8 2 6 51 73 12 9 22 9 67 7 3 161 7 9 24 145 27 552 0 409 3 40 13 15 32 6 28 0 6 17 1,119 34 22 AVERAGE MONTHLY CHILDREN 108 57 73 36 336 56 219 401 167 101 2,249 114 85 93 70 398 330 92 63 151 114 638 158 62 1,199 37 137 218 663 93 2,619 66 2,140 225 364 196 137 469 82 228 29 48 272 5,091 222 107 AVERAGE MONTHLY CASES 67 33 52 25 202 36 131 239 103 62 1,214 71 59 54 43 255 197 60 41 89 67 397 105 39 719 24 83 136 385 56 1,471 39 1,206 149 225 127 91 283 52 130 19 30 164 2,877 130 58 2 COUNTY DOUGHERTY DOUGLAS EARLY ECHOLS EFFINGHAM ELBERT EMANUEL EVANS FANNIN FAYETTE FLOYD FORSYTH FRANKLIN FULTON GILMER GLASCOCK GLYNN GORDON GRADY GREENE GWINNETT HABERSHAM HALL HANCOCK HARALSON HARRIS HART HEARD HENRY HOUSTON IRWIN JACKSON JASPER JEFF DAVIS JEFFERSON JENKINS JOHNSON JONES LAMAR LANIER LAURENS LEE LIBERTY LINCOLN LONG LOWNDES TOTAL TANF CASELOAD COUNT State Fiscal Year 2006 AVERAGE MONTHLY ADULTS 381 80 36 0 25 21 36 15 3 23 98 16 13 2,229 3 5 40 16 18 12 274 16 81 6 6 19 52 2 97 253 5 10 15 7 39 28 12 42 6 1 87 3 115 8 12 54 AVERAGE MONTHLY CHILDREN 1,655 556 195 6 182 158 236 90 50 197 672 125 106 9,287 61 23 447 235 172 98 1,857 112 592 77 159 105 203 85 660 967 56 178 117 79 230 137 90 175 88 53 441 58 429 54 76 604 AVERAGE MONTHLY CASES 976 334 113 3 108 98 152 59 29 127 407 77 69 5,070 37 13 276 143 109 60 1,045 67 342 46 102 62 120 55 406 580 38 111 74 53 133 81 58 108 53 31 276 38 244 37 50 358 3 TOTAL TANF CASELOAD COUNT State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY LUMPKIN MACON MADISON MARION MCDUFFIE MCINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN MURRAY MUSCOGEE NEWTON OCONEE OGLETHORPE PAULDING PEACH PICKENS PIERCE PIKE POLK PULASKI PUTNAM QUITMAN RABUN RANDOLPH RICHMOND ROCKDALE SCHLEY SCREVEN SEMINOLE SPALDING STEPHENS STEWART SUMTER TALBOT TALIAFERRO TATTNALL TAYLOR TELFAIR TERRELL THOMAS TIFT TOOMBS AVERAGE MONTHLY ADULTS 13 5 8 4 24 5 28 9 31 14 17 12 3 640 107 5 3 12 78 4 5 6 12 31 24 6 3 38 437 43 2 11 11 61 41 17 181 21 2 16 11 11 25 42 13 20 AVERAGE MONTHLY CHILDREN 86 77 124 78 210 79 232 63 237 127 71 144 147 2,300 671 53 69 248 295 65 79 84 221 103 132 37 39 161 2,234 449 16 171 105 555 197 78 630 94 18 174 98 134 160 300 243 243 AVERAGE MONTHLY CASES 49 55 79 45 131 51 141 43 151 76 50 90 89 1,369 379 30 43 151 182 46 54 51 135 63 88 22 22 89 1,321 269 13 109 67 335 127 52 373 61 14 102 59 80 103 197 151 149 4 TOTAL TANF CASELOAD COUNT State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY TOWNS TREUTLEN TROUP TURNER TWIGGS UNION UPSON WALKER WALTON WARE WARREN WASHINGTON WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH STATE AVERAGE MONTHLY ADULTS 2 18 97 1 11 4 29 23 50 20 13 34 33 7 2 13 1 19 17 25 21 10,432 AVERAGE MONTHLY CHILDREN 21 74 598 49 82 36 188 295 362 334 76 195 216 20 39 87 271 85 95 109 163 58,561 AVERAGE MONTHLY CASES 14 42 352 29 55 24 119 186 217 197 48 121 126 15 26 54 168 58 69 71 108 34,373 5 B. Quarterly and Annual TANF Reports, in Full, Prepared for Submission for the Federal Government Reports submitted to the federal government during the State Fiscal Year include: ACF-196 Temporary Assistance to Needy Families- Financial Report ACF-199 TANF Data Report TANF-ACF-DI-97-6 dated September 30, 1997 requires a computerized database containing disaggregated case and client record information, as specified in Section 411(a) of Public Law 104-193, "The Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act at 1996." No Aggregate paper reports are required. C. The Percentage of the TANF Caseload and the Number of Individuals Given a Hardship Exemption From the Lifetime Limit TANF FAMILIES WITH HARDSHIP EXTENSIONS As Of June 30, 2006 EXTENSION REASON County APPLING ATKINSON BACON BAKER BALDWIN BANKS BARROW BARTOW BEN HILL BERRIEN BIBB BLECKLEY BRANTLEY BROOKS BRYAN BULLOCH BURKE BUTTS CALHOUN CAMDEN CANDLER CARROLL CATOOSA CHARLTON CHATHAM CHATTAHOOCHEE CHATTOOGA Total TANF Families 66 36 47 19 171 36 127 229 97 57 894 58 48 52 39 226 153 52 31 83 60 380 104 32 627 21 79 Families Percent of with Families with Extensions Extensions 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 4 0.4% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 1 0.2% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% Domestic Violence 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Active CPS Case 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Substance Abuse Program 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Disabled (not SSI) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Caring for Disabled Household Member 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Incomplete Work Plan 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 Limited Employment Opportunities 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 23 County CHEROKEE CLARKE CLAY CLAYTON CLINCH COBB COFFEE COLQUITT COLUMBIA COOK COWETA CRAWFORD CRISP DADE DAWSON DECATUR DEKALB DODGE DOOLY DOUGHERTY DOUGLAS EARLY ECHOLS EFFINGHAM ELBERT EMANUEL EVANS TANF FAMILIES WITH HARDSHIP EXTENSIONS As Of June 30, 2006 EXTENSION REASON Total TANF Families 121 318 38 1,250 36 1,009 142 173 119 76 257 49 93 15 31 146 2,592 108 53 736 311 85 3 97 83 131 50 Families Percent of with Families with Extensions Extensions 0 0.0% 1 0.3% 0 0.0% 1 0.1% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 3 0.1% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 1 0.1% 1 0.3% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% Domestic Violence 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Active CPS Case 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Substance Abuse Program 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Disabled (not SSI) 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Caring for Disabled Household Member 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Incomplete Work Plan 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Limited Employment Opportunities 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 24 County FANNIN FAYETTE FLOYD FORSYTH FRANKLIN FULTON GILMER GLASCOCK GLYNN GORDON GRADY GREENE GWINNETT HABERSHAM HALL HANCOCK HARALSON HARRIS HART HEARD HENRY HOUSTON IRWIN JACKSON JASPER JEFF DAVIS JEFFERSON TANF FAMILIES WITH HARDSHIP EXTENSIONS As Of June 30, 2006 EXTENSION REASON Total TANF Families 27 118 350 67 60 4,148 34 8 246 131 87 48 802 55 309 41 88 58 95 46 383 454 32 102 59 55 101 Families Percent of with Families with Extensions Extensions 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 2 0.6% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 16 0.4% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 1 0.4% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 5 1.6% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 2 2.1% 0 0.0% 1 0.3% 6 1.3% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% Domestic Violence 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Active CPS Case 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Substance Abuse Program 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Disabled (not SSI) 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 2 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 Caring for Disabled Household Member 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Incomplete Work Plan 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Limited Employment Opportunities 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 25 County JENKINS JOHNSON JONES LAMAR LANIER LAURENS LEE LIBERTY LINCOLN LONG LOWNDES LUMPKIN MACON MADISON MARION MCDUFFIE MCINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN MURRAY MUSCOGEE NEWTON OCONEE TANF FAMILIES WITH HARDSHIP EXTENSIONS As Of June 30, 2006 EXTENSION REASON Total TANF Families 68 49 102 43 30 238 33 193 28 38 308 51 50 86 42 114 48 128 33 120 74 46 87 88 1,144 310 27 Families Percent of with Families with Extensions Extensions 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 1 0.4% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% Domestic Violence 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Active CPS Case 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Substance Abuse Program 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Disabled (not SSI) 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Caring for Disabled Household Member 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Incomplete Work Plan 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Limited Employment Opportunities 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 26 County OGLETHORPE PAULDING PEACH PICKENS PIERCE PIKE POLK PULASKI PUTNAM QUITMAN RABUN RANDOLPH RICHMOND ROCKDALE SCHLEY SCREVEN SEMINOLE SPALDING STEPHENS STEWART SUMTER TALBOT TALIAFERRO TATTNALL TAYLOR TELFAIR TERRELL TANF FAMILIES WITH HARDSHIP EXTENSIONS As Of June 30, 2006 EXTENSION REASON Total TANF Families 41 149 162 40 45 46 128 53 83 20 24 71 1,085 225 9 93 55 297 98 36 283 54 10 104 57 79 71 Families Percent of with Families with Extensions Extensions 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 1 0.6% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% Domestic Violence 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Active CPS Case 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Substance Abuse Program 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Disabled (not SSI) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Caring for Disabled Household Member 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Incomplete Work Plan 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Limited Employment Opportunities 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 27 County THOMAS TIFT TOOMBS TOWNS TREUTLEN TROUP TURNER TWIGGS UNION UPSON WALKER WALTON WARE WARREN WASHINGTON WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH State Total TANF FAMILIES WITH HARDSHIP EXTENSIONS As Of June 30, 2006 EXTENSION REASON Total TANF Families 150 125 138 11 40 367 28 50 21 106 185 176 171 36 98 101 13 24 51 154 51 49 57 89 Families Percent of with Families with Extensions Extensions 0 0.0% 1 0.8% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 1 1.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 29,237 49 0.2% Domestic Violence 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Active CPS Case 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Substance Abuse Program 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 Disabled (not SSI) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Caring for Disabled Household Member 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Incomplete Work Plan 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Limited Employment Opportunities 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 29 8 9 0 28 D. Number of Individuals Who Received Transportation Assistance and the Cost of Such Assistance Transportation received by individuals participating in Application Job Search is shown in (E) Diversionary Assistance. TANF RECIPIENT TRANSPORTATION ASSISTANCE State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY APPLING ATKINSON BACON BAKER BALDWIN BANKS BARROW BARTOW BEN HILL BERRIEN BIBB BLECKLEY BRANTLEY BROOKS BRYAN BULLOCH BURKE BUTTS CALHOUN CAMDEN CANDLER CARROLL CATOOSA CHARLTON CHATHAM CHATTAHOOCHEE CHATTOOGA CHEROKEE CLARKE CLAY CLAYTON CLINCH COBB COFFEE COLQUITT COLUMBIA COOK COWETA CRAWFORD CRISP DADE DAWSON DECATUR DEKALB DODGE DOOLY DOUGHERTY ANNUAL CLIENTS 5 0 0 3 119 16 4 17 5 2 1,658 144 12 7 1 26 97 22 13 0 9 50 37 0 82 13 10 60 222 12 5,072 0 1,533 6 73 32 40 9 11 64 0 8 37 389 113 30 1,195 ANNUAL FUNDS $252.00 $0.00 $0.00 $58.25 $5,944.00 $2,010.00 $288.00 $1,049.00 $276.00 $90.00 $92,339.00 $6,509.00 $1,340.00 $204.00 $9.00 $4,969.00 $5,635.00 $1,171.00 $467.00 $0.00 $444.00 $3,420.00 $601.85 $0.00 $9,911.00 $285.00 $162.00 $3,007.00 $8,918.00 $822.00 $132,116.31 $0.00 $53,250.12 $288.00 $3,717.00 $2,350.00 $3,840.11 $487.00 $462.00 $2,952.00 $0.00 $309.00 $972.00 $37,063.00 $7,972.40 $1,641.00 $62,034.57 COST PER CLIENT $50.40 $0 $0 $19.42 $49.95 $125.63 $72.00 $61.71 $55.20 $45.00 $55.69 $45.20 $111.67 $29.14 $9.00 $191.12 $58.09 $53.23 $35.92 $0 $49.33 $68.40 $16.27 $0 $120.87 $21.92 $16.20 $50.12 $40.17 $68.50 $26.05 $0 $34.74 $48.00 $50.92 $73.44 $96.00 $54.11 $42.00 $46.13 $0 $38.63 $26.27 $95.28 $70.55 $54.70 $51.91 30 TANF RECIPIENT TRANSPORTATION ASSISTANCE State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY DOUGLAS EARLY ECHOLS EFFINGHAM ELBERT EMANUEL EVANS FANNIN FAYETTE FLOYD FORSYTH FRANKLIN FULTON GILMER GLASCOCK GLYNN GORDON GRADY GREENE GWINNETT HABERSHAM HALL HANCOCK HARALSON HARRIS HART HEARD HENRY HOUSTON IRWIN JACKSON JASPER JEFF DAVIS JEFFERSON JENKINS JOHNSON JONES LAMAR LANIER LAURENS LEE LIBERTY LINCOLN LONG LOWNDES LUMPKIN MACON ANNUAL CLIENTS 135 107 0 14 44 146 39 4 20 326 80 56 16,477 0 21 50 114 35 7 510 43 41 2 0 6 123 0 18 770 7 16 16 13 36 63 16 35 8 0 102 1 82 11 25 23 28 0 ANNUAL FUNDS $8,723.79 $4,618.00 $0.00 $1,541.64 $1,400.99 $6,755.97 $1,291.00 $30.00 $2,921.00 $14,866.00 $6,179.70 $3,063.00 $718,508.14 $0.00 $2,077.00 $2,583.00 $2,309.00 $2,067.00 $913.35 $43,905.00 $5,095.00 $21,208.38 $123.00 $0.00 $287.00 $7,886.00 $0.00 $10,050.00 $54,672.00 $318.00 $2,613.56 $951.00 $553.19 $1,260.00 $3,279.00 $762.00 $10,421.00 $271.00 $0.00 $5,479.00 $60.00 $4,440.00 $1,685.00 $1,284.00 $6,112.00 $1,095.00 $0.00 COST PER CLIENT $64.62 $43.16 $0 $110.12 $31.84 $46.27 $33.10 $7.50 $146.05 $45.60 $77.25 $54.70 $43.61 $0 $98.90 $51.66 $20.25 $59.06 $130.48 $86.08 $118.49 $517.28 $61.50 $0 $47.83 $64.11 $0 $558.33 $71.00 $45.43 $163.35 $59.44 $42.55 $35.00 $52.05 $47.63 $297.74 $33.88 $0 $53.72 $60.00 $54.15 $153.18 $51.36 $265.74 $39.11 $0 31 TANF RECIPIENT TRANSPORTATION ASSISTANCE State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY MADISON MARION MCDUFFIE MCINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN MURRAY MUSCOGEE NEWTON OCONEE OGLETHORPE PAULDING PEACH PICKENS PIERCE PIKE POLK PULASKI PUTNAM QUITMAN RABUN RANDOLPH RICHMOND ROCKDALE SCHLEY SCREVEN SEMINOLE SPALDING STEPHENS STEWART SUMTER TALBOT TALIAFERRO TATTNALL TAYLOR TELFAIR TERRELL THOMAS TIFT TOOMBS TOWNS TREUTLEN TROUP ANNUAL CLIENTS 12 0 40 0 24 37 12 13 59 51 0 1,901 266 13 0 28 120 3 14 20 22 11 97 7 7 27 1,551 60 8 15 2 85 196 13 461 24 4 9 20 2 75 40 25 8 3 49 105 ANNUAL FUNDS $276.39 $0.00 $2,097.50 $0.00 $4,099.35 $2,231.00 $458.00 $551.87 $2,959.00 $1,999.25 $0.00 $109,802.51 $14,997.05 $636.00 $0.00 $8,126.20 $7,267.00 $124.00 $384.00 $878.00 $997.00 $1,312.00 $4,857.08 $450.00 $235.00 $1,270.00 $76,263.00 $1,846.48 $465.00 $918.00 $141.00 $3,607.00 $13,560.41 $1,014.00 $24,976.00 $1,331.00 $225.00 $867.00 $857.00 $114.00 $3,450.00 $1,764.00 $1,450.00 $846.00 $123.00 $2,709.00 $4,453.63 COST PER CLIENT $23.03 $0 $52.44 $0 $170.81 $60.30 $38.17 $42.45 $50.15 $39.20 $0 $57.76 $56.38 $48.92 $0 $290.22 $60.56 $41.33 $27.43 $43.90 $45.32 $119.27 $50.07 $64.29 $33.57 $47.04 $49.17 $30.77 $58.13 $61.20 $70.50 $42.44 $69.19 $78.00 $54.18 $55.46 $56.25 $96.33 $42.85 $57.00 $46.00 $44.10 $58.00 $105.75 $41.00 $55.29 $42.42 32 TANF RECIPIENT TRANSPORTATION ASSISTANCE State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY TURNER TWIGGS UNION UPSON WALKER WALTON WARE WARREN WASHINGTON WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH STATE ANNUAL CLIENTS 0 4 10 32 35 93 6 38 74 13 27 3 49 0 41 24 20 36 36,972 ANNUAL FUNDS $0.00 $261.00 $301.00 $1,367.00 $826.00 $4,437.00 $206.00 $2,127.00 $2,906.00 $3,858.00 $1,447.00 $220.00 $2,474.00 $0.00 $2,790.80 $1,048.00 $1,085.33 $1,896.90 $1,757,534.07 COST PER CLIENT $0 $65.25 $30.10 $42.72 $23.60 $47.71 $34.33 $55.97 $39.27 $296.77 $53.59 $73.33 $50.49 $0 $68.07 $43.67 $54.27 $52.69 $47.54 33 E. The Number of Individuals Who Received Diversionary Assistance in Order to Prevent Their Requiring TANF Assistance And the Categories and Cost of Such Diversionary Assistance and Job Acceptance and Retention Statistics Note: A diverted individual is defined as one who participates in Application Job Search and whose application for cash assistance is denied because the person either accepts a job or withdraws his or her application. No additional information is gathered on these individuals since they are no longer included in the TANF database. DIVERSIONARY ASSISTANCE TO PREVENT TANF RECEIPT State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY APPLING ATKINSON BACON BAKER BALDWIN BANKS BARROW BARTOW BEN HILL BERRIEN BIBB BLECKLEY BRANTLEY BROOKS BRYAN BULLOCH TYPE OF ASSISTANCE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE ANNUAL CLIENTS 0 1 4 0 0 0 4 0 7 2 1 0 57 1 58 4 0 0 79 6 60 9 0 52 1 3 13 0 0 6 149 139 1,343 11 0 3 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 15 7 43 AVERAGE COST PER ANNUAL FUNDS CLIENT $0.00 $0 $39.99 $39.99 $484.00 $121.00 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $84.00 $21.00 $0.00 $0 $409.00 $58.43 $36.00 $18.00 $6.00 $6.00 $0.00 $0 $1,782.00 $31.26 $810.02 $810.02 $12,530.00 $216.03 $90.00 $22.50 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $1,568.00 $19.85 $1,333.89 $222.32 $8,750.00 $145.83 $295.40 $32.82 $0.00 $0 $9,699.00 $186.52 $45.00 $45.00 $2,833.60 $944.53 $1,285.00 $98.85 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $578.00 $96.33 $4,100.00 $27.52 $123,460.00 $888.20 $181,045.00 $134.81 $198.00 $18.00 $0.00 $0 $783.00 $261.00 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $33.00 $6.60 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $351.00 $23.40 $978.75 $139.82 $7,138.00 $166.00 35 DIVERSIONARY ASSISTANCE TO PREVENT TANF RECEIPT State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY BURKE BUTTS CALHOUN CAMDEN CANDLER CARROLL CATOOSA CHARLTON CHATHAM CHATTAHOOCHEE CHATTOOGA CHEROKEE CLARKE CLAY CLAYTON CLINCH TYPE OF ASSISTANCE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE ANNUAL CLIENTS 3 0 2 28 2 12 2 0 0 0 0 47 0 0 2 40 3 177 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 81 244 0 0 0 90 17 0 85 0 20 72 0 186 18 0 0 0 0 5,228 0 0 0 AVERAGE COST PER ANNUAL FUNDS CLIENT $69.00 $23.00 $0.00 $0 $276.00 $138.00 $1,335.00 $47.68 $90.00 $45.00 $917.50 $76.46 $27.00 $13.50 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $13,949.00 $296.79 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $414.00 $207.00 $1,285.18 $32.13 $539.07 $179.69 $16,763.00 $94.71 $30.00 $30.00 $176.02 $88.01 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $13,490.00 $13,490.00 $26,638.00 $109.17 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $1,944.36 $21.60 $2,861.49 $168.32 $0.00 $0 $1,370.93 $16.13 $0.00 $0 $2,526.00 $126.30 $1,844.00 $25.61 $0.00 $0 $21,175.00 $113.84 $810.00 $45.00 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $928,543.00 $177.61 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 36 DIVERSIONARY ASSISTANCE TO PREVENT TANF RECEIPT State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY COBB COFFEE COLQUITT COLUMBIA COOK COWETA CRAWFORD CRISP DADE DAWSON DECATUR DEKALB DODGE DOOLY DOUGHERTY DOUGLAS TYPE OF ASSISTANCE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE ANNUAL CLIENTS 1,079 0 1,740 0 0 0 1 5 33 8 0 26 24 9 26 7 3 81 5 3 1 13 2 0 2 0 0 3 0 2 7 0 7 13,893 0 5,663 0 0 2 11 1 10 427 1 675 350 8 1,384 AVERAGE COST PER ANNUAL FUNDS CLIENT $16,994.75 $15.75 $0.00 $0 $439,209.00 $252.42 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $18.00 $18.00 $575.40 $115.08 $6,378.00 $193.27 $183.00 $22.88 $0.00 $0 $4,898.00 $188.38 $560.00 $23.33 $1,154.01 $128.22 $2,851.00 $109.65 $234.00 $33.43 $760.44 $253.48 $13,505.00 $166.73 $72.00 $14.40 $1,351.00 $450.33 $85.00 $85.00 $153.00 $11.77 $160.46 $80.23 $0.00 $0 $40.00 $20.00 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $210.00 $70.00 $0.00 $0 $340.00 $170.00 $460.00 $65.71 $0.00 $0 $891.00 $127.29 $276,751.95 $19.92 $0.00 $0 $1,000,578.50 $176.69 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $339.00 $169.50 $186.00 $16.91 $159.76 $159.76 $1,208.00 $120.80 $18,760.00 $43.93 $940.00 $940.00 $85,710.00 $126.98 $17,200.00 $49.14 $2,072.09 $259.01 $246,501.00 $178.11 37 DIVERSIONARY ASSISTANCE TO PREVENT TANF RECEIPT State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY EARLY ECHOLS EFFINGHAM ELBERT EMANUEL EVANS FANNIN FAYETTE FLOYD FORSYTH FRANKLIN FULTON GILMER GLASCOCK GLYNN GORDON TYPE OF ASSISTANCE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE ANNUAL CLIENTS 14 4 0 0 0 0 0 1 48 3 2 23 17 1 101 17 3 17 43 0 16 14 1 86 56 97 513 45 0 55 18 1 2 0 1 6,644 3 8 1 1 0 0 35 4 207 161 12 44 AVERAGE COST PER ANNUAL FUNDS CLIENT $797.84 $56.99 $372.24 $93.06 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $179.07 $179.07 $10,943.00 $227.98 $130.88 $43.63 $320.25 $160.13 $3,398.00 $147.74 $282.00 $16.59 $44.84 $44.84 $11,745.00 $116.29 $483.00 $28.41 $236.36 $78.79 $2,152.00 $126.59 $766.07 $17.82 $0.00 $0 $2,402.00 $150.13 $1,865.00 $133.21 $425.05 $425.05 $17,529.00 $203.83 $1,889.00 $33.73 $9,262.68 $95.49 $102,418.00 $199.65 $1,310.00 $29.11 $0.00 $0 $16,328.00 $296.87 $200.00 $11.11 $96.73 $96.73 $254.00 $127.00 $0.00 $0 $124.56 $124.56 $1,248,619.00 $187.93 $276.01 $92.00 $2,540.32 $317.54 $216.00 $216.00 $9.00 $9.00 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $2,700.00 $77.14 $537.71 $134.43 $28,991.00 $140.05 $3,497.14 $21.72 $1,283.69 $106.97 $9,893.00 $224.84 38 DIVERSIONARY ASSISTANCE TO PREVENT TANF RECEIPT State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY GRADY GREENE GWINNETT HABERSHAM HALL HANCOCK HARALSON HARRIS HART HEARD HENRY HOUSTON IRWIN JACKSON JASPER JEFF DAVIS TYPE OF ASSISTANCE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE ANNUAL CLIENTS 23 0 1 0 0 9 824 1,001 1,927 32 1 13 23 2 318 0 1 4 0 0 6 23 0 4 162 0 0 0 0 0 129 4 227 372 0 708 2 10 4 33 1 3 0 0 7 5 0 0 AVERAGE COST PER ANNUAL FUNDS CLIENT $435.00 $18.91 $0.00 $0 $136.00 $136.00 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $1,683.00 $187.00 $12,360.00 $15.00 $30,051.86 $30.02 $347,674.00 $180.42 $550.00 $17.19 $500.00 $500.00 $2,357.00 $181.31 $5,624.88 $244.56 $556.24 $278.12 $56,912.00 $178.97 $0.00 $0 $56.76 $56.76 $160.00 $40.00 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $813.00 $135.50 $745.00 $32.39 $0.00 $0 $1,431.00 $357.75 $2,585.00 $15.96 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $8,805.00 $68.26 $880.00 $220.00 $48,035.00 $211.61 $10,446.00 $28.08 $0.00 $0 $100,225.00 $141.56 $39.00 $19.50 $3,078.00 $307.80 $474.00 $118.50 $595.00 $18.03 $150.00 $150.00 $462.00 $154.00 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $1,042.00 $148.86 $102.00 $20.40 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 39 DIVERSIONARY ASSISTANCE TO PREVENT TANF RECEIPT State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY JEFFERSON JENKINS JOHNSON JONES LAMAR LANIER LAURENS LEE LIBERTY LINCOLN LONG LOWNDES LUMPKIN MACON MADISON MARION TYPE OF ASSISTANCE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE ANNUAL CLIENTS 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 9 15 11 0 0 7 0 15 2 11 0 32 0 0 0 0 0 4 31 174 1 0 1 3 28 0 10 1 254 0 1 3 0 0 0 2 0 3 0 0 0 AVERAGE COST PER ANNUAL FUNDS CLIENT $5.00 $5.00 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $66.00 $33.00 $880.46 $97.83 $2,348.00 $156.53 $770.00 $70.00 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $210.00 $30.00 $0.00 $0 $2,309.00 $153.93 $78.00 $39.00 $4,568.88 $415.35 $0.00 $0 $805.00 $25.16 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $108.00 $27.00 $6,248.08 $201.55 $28,432.00 $163.40 $18.00 $18.00 $0.00 $0 $60.00 $60.00 $195.00 $65.00 $3,849.16 $137.47 $0.00 $0 $436.00 $43.60 $36.00 $36.00 $42,636.19 $167.86 $0.00 $0 $311.60 $311.60 $793.00 $264.33 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $51.00 $25.50 $0.00 $0 $742.00 $247.33 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 40 DIVERSIONARY ASSISTANCE TO PREVENT TANF RECEIPT State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY MCDUFFIE MCINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN MURRAY MUSCOGEE NEWTON OCONEE OGLETHORPE PAULDING PEACH PICKENS TYPE OF ASSISTANCE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE ANNUAL CLIENTS 0 0 1 0 5 0 3 0 18 0 0 1 4 0 0 0 0 14 15 6 7 0 4 26 39 5 2 879 0 888 50 0 287 0 0 16 4 3 3 97 0 100 0 0 16 8 0 4 AVERAGE COST PER ANNUAL FUNDS CLIENT $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $154.00 $154.00 $0.00 $0 $1,162.00 $232.40 $0.00 $0 $180.00 $60.00 $0.00 $0 $2,122.00 $117.89 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $156.00 $156.00 $211.00 $52.75 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $2,454.50 $175.32 $222.00 $14.80 $1,511.72 $251.95 $821.00 $117.29 $0.00 $0 $277.57 $69.39 $3,830.00 $147.31 $387.00 $9.92 $760.43 $152.09 $381.00 $190.50 $26,370.00 $30.00 $0.00 $0 $123,318.00 $138.87 $2,364.00 $47.28 $0.00 $0 $41,636.00 $145.07 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $2,367.00 $147.94 $72.00 $18.00 $490.29 $163.43 $389.00 $129.67 $1,454.05 $14.99 $0.00 $0 $20,341.00 $203.41 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $2,494.00 $155.88 $325.00 $40.63 $0.00 $0 $1,142.00 $285.50 41 DIVERSIONARY ASSISTANCE TO PREVENT TANF RECEIPT State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY PIERCE PIKE POLK PULASKI PUTNAM QUITMAN RABUN RANDOLPH RICHMOND ROCKDALE SCHLEY SCREVEN SEMINOLE SPALDING STEPHENS STEWART TYPE OF ASSISTANCE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE ANNUAL CLIENTS 0 0 0 10 0 1 0 0 0 1 5 0 63 0 2 23 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 2 108 0 552 53 1 703 0 0 0 3 1 20 0 2 0 120 0 132 29 3 19 2 0 0 AVERAGE COST PER ANNUAL FUNDS CLIENT $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $150.00 $15.00 $0.00 $0 $85.00 $85.00 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $45.00 $45.00 $1,548.54 $309.71 $0.00 $0 $1,115.00 $17.70 $0.00 $0 $242.00 $121.00 $1,035.00 $45.00 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $115.00 $38.33 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $236.00 $118.00 $3,244.00 $30.04 $0.00 $0 $70,073.00 $126.94 $9,359.57 $3,119.86 $235.01 $235.01 $152,652.00 $217.14 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $74.00 $24.67 $253.00 $253.00 $1,587.00 $79.35 $0.00 $0 $440.50 $220.25 $0.00 $0 $2,940.00 $24.50 $0.00 $0 $16,040.00 $121.52 $613.50 $21.16 $413.97 $137.99 $3,666.00 $192.95 $45.00 $22.50 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 42 DIVERSIONARY ASSISTANCE TO PREVENT TANF RECEIPT State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY SUMTER TALBOT TALIAFERRO TATTNALL TAYLOR TELFAIR TERRELL THOMAS TIFT TOOMBS TOWNS TREUTLEN TROUP TURNER TWIGGS UNION TYPE OF ASSISTANCE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE ANNUAL CLIENTS 129 1 0 3 0 4 0 0 0 3 1 25 0 0 3 0 1 0 5 0 0 75 12 32 22 1 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 18 2 4 32 10 312 0 0 12 1 1 1 3 1 2 AVERAGE COST PER ANNUAL FUNDS CLIENT $3,553.00 $27.54 $139.88 $139.88 $0.00 $0 $33.00 $11.00 $0.00 $0 $910.00 $227.50 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $174.00 $58.00 $86.05 $86.05 $5,297.00 $211.88 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $466.00 $155.33 $0.00 $0 $15.00 $15.00 $0.00 $0 $225.00 $45.00 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $1,175.12 $15.67 $2,597.96 $216.50 $4,243.00 $132.59 $315.00 $14.32 $110.42 $110.42 $0.00 $0 $12.00 $12.00 $0.00 $0 $60.00 $30.00 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $802.15 $44.56 $580.40 $290.20 $960.00 $240.00 $976.00 $30.50 $1,352.02 $135.20 $41,204.00 $132.06 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $1,751.00 $145.92 $30.00 $30.00 $482.63 $482.63 $50.00 $50.00 $72.00 $24.00 $125.00 $125.00 $303.00 $151.50 43 DIVERSIONARY ASSISTANCE TO PREVENT TANF RECEIPT State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY UPSON WALKER WALTON WARE WARREN WASHINGTON WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH STATE TOTALS TYPE OF ASSISTANCE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE TRANSPORTATION INCIDENTALS CHILD CARE ANNUAL CLIENTS 2 0 17 78 14 13 13 5 92 3 11 0 2 0 0 0 1 7 3 0 10 0 0 0 0 1 3 14 1 31 2 3 4 8 0 0 0 0 0 20 1 0 1 0 12 20,617 1,553 32,010 AVERAGE COST PER ANNUAL FUNDS CLIENT $60.00 $30.00 $0.00 $0 $2,339.00 $137.59 $1,425.50 $18.28 $2,229.35 $159.24 $2,469.00 $189.92 $345.00 $26.54 $338.69 $67.74 $22,680.00 $246.52 $60.00 $20.00 $2,781.23 $252.84 $0.00 $0 $24.00 $12.00 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $101.78 $101.78 $576.00 $82.29 $106.00 $35.33 $0.00 $0 $2,214.00 $221.40 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $19.50 $19.50 $194.00 $64.67 $420.00 $30.00 $33.00 $33.00 $5,302.00 $171.03 $27.00 $13.50 $370.39 $123.46 $413.00 $103.25 $285.00 $35.63 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $0.00 $0 $600.00 $30.00 $295.53 $295.53 $0.00 $0 $39.00 $39.00 $0.00 $0 $1,805.00 $150.42 $469,435.28 $22.77 $239,134.39 $153.98 $5,669,430.69 $177.11 44 F. The Number of Individuals Denied Assistance Due to a Serious Felony Conviction INDIVIDUALS DENIED ASSISTANCE DUE TO A VIOLENT FELONY CONVICTION State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY BARROW BARTOW BULLOCH CARROLL CATOOSA CHATHAM CLARKE CLAYTON COBB DEKALB DOUGHERTY DOUGLAS ELBERT FLOYD FULTON GLYNN HENRY HOUSTON JOHNSON LANIER LOWNDES MADISON OGLETHORPE RANDOLPH RICHMOND SCHLEY TOOMBS TROUP UPSON WALTON WAYNE WHITFIELD WILKES NUMBER DENIED/CLOSED 2 1 3 1 1 2 1 2 2 2 4 2 1 1 6 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 TOTAL 53 Note: Counties not listed did not have any individuals to report. 46 G. The Number of Mothers Under 19 Years of Age Who Received Assistance and Their Percentage of the Total TANF Caseload THE NUMBER OF MOTHERS UNDER 19 YEARS OF AGE WHO RECEIVED ASSISTANCE AND THEIR PERCENTAGE OF THE TOTAL TANF CASELOAD State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY APPLING ATKINSON BACON BAKER BALDWIN BANKS BARROW BARTOW BEN HILL BERRIEN BIBB BLECKLEY BRANTLEY BROOKS BRYAN BULLOCH BURKE BUTTS CALHOUN CAMDEN CANDLER CARROLL CATOOSA CHARLTON CHATHAM CHATTAHOOCHEE CHATTOOGA CHEROKEE CLARKE CLAY CLAYTON CLINCH COBB COFFEE COLQUITT COLUMBIA COOK COWETA CRAWFORD CRISP DADE NUMBER OF TEEN MOMS 1 1 1 1 12 1 1 1 1 1 53 2 3 2 1 7 14 3 1 3 1 13 1 1 21 1 2 1 23 6 59 1 42 1 7 3 1 3 1 6 1 AVERAGE MONTHLY CASES 67 33 52 25 202 36 131 239 103 62 1,214 71 59 54 43 255 197 60 41 89 67 397 105 39 719 24 83 136 385 56 1,471 39 1,206 149 225 127 91 283 52 130 19 48 PERCENTAGE OF TOTAL TANF CASELOAD 1.5% 3.0% 1.9% 4.0% 5.9% 2.8% 0.8% 0.4% 1.0% 1.6% 4.4% 2.8% 5.1% 3.7% 2.3% 2.7% 7.1% 5.0% 2.4% 3.4% 1.5% 3.3% 1.0% 2.6% 2.9% 4.2% 2.4% 0.7% 6.0% 10.7% 4.0% 2.6% 3.5% 0.7% 3.1% 2.4% 1.1% 1.1% 1.9% 4.6% 5.3% THE NUMBER OF MOTHERS UNDER 19 YEARS OF AGE WHO RECEIVED ASSISTANCE AND THEIR PERCENTAGE OF THE TOTAL TANF CASELOAD State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY DAWSON DECATUR DEKALB DODGE DOOLY DOUGHERTY DOUGLAS EARLY ECHOLS EFFINGHAM ELBERT EMANUEL EVANS FANNIN FAYETTE FLOYD FORSYTH FRANKLIN FULTON GILMER GLASCOCK GLYNN GORDON GRADY GREENE GWINNETT HABERSHAM HALL HANCOCK HARALSON HARRIS HART HEARD HENRY HOUSTON IRWIN JACKSON JASPER JEFF DAVIS JEFFERSON NUMBER OF TEEN MOMS 1 3 109 4 5 85 8 10 1 2 3 4 1 2 2 10 2 1 227 1 1 2 4 1 1 12 2 8 1 1 1 2 1 11 22 1 1 4 1 7 AVERAGE MONTHLY CASES 30 164 2,877 130 58 976 334 113 3 108 98 152 59 29 127 407 77 69 5,070 37 13 276 143 109 60 1,045 67 342 46 102 62 120 55 406 580 38 111 74 53 133 PERCENTAGE OF TOTAL TANF CASELOAD 3.3% 1.8% 3.8% 3.1% 8.6% 8.7% 2.4% 8.8% 33.3% 1.9% 3.1% 2.6% 1.7% 6.9% 1.6% 2.5% 2.6% 1.4% 4.5% 2.7% 7.7% 0.7% 2.8% 0.9% 1.7% 1.1% 3.0% 2.3% 2.2% 1.0% 1.6% 1.7% 1.8% 2.7% 3.8% 2.6% 0.9% 5.4% 1.9% 5.3% 49 THE NUMBER OF MOTHERS UNDER 19 YEARS OF AGE WHO RECEIVED ASSISTANCE AND THEIR PERCENTAGE OF THE TOTAL TANF CASELOAD State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY JENKINS JOHNSON JONES LAMAR LANIER LAURENS LEE LIBERTY LINCOLN LONG LOWNDES LUMPKIN MACON MADISON MARION MCDUFFIE MCINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN MURRAY MUSCOGEE NEWTON OCONEE OGLETHORPE PAULDING PEACH PICKENS PIERCE PIKE POLK PULASKI PUTNAM QUITMAN RABUN RANDOLPH RICHMOND NUMBER OF TEEN MOMS 4 3 3 1 1 10 2 11 1 1 11 2 3 1 3 6 1 1 2 5 2 3 1 1 79 9 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 4 1 5 1 1 8 60 AVERAGE MONTHLY CASES 81 58 108 53 31 276 38 244 37 50 358 49 55 79 45 131 51 141 43 151 76 50 90 89 1,369 379 30 43 151 182 46 54 51 135 63 88 22 22 89 1,321 PERCENTAGE OF TOTAL TANF CASELOAD 4.9% 5.2% 2.8% 1.9% 3.2% 3.6% 5.3% 4.5% 2.7% 2.0% 3.1% 4.1% 5.5% 1.3% 6.7% 4.6% 2.0% 0.7% 4.7% 3.3% 2.6% 6.0% 1.1% 1.1% 5.8% 2.4% 3.3% 2.3% 0.7% 0.5% 2.2% 3.7% 2.0% 3.0% 1.6% 5.7% 4.5% 4.5% 9.0% 4.5% 50 THE NUMBER OF MOTHERS UNDER 19 YEARS OF AGE WHO RECEIVED ASSISTANCE AND THEIR PERCENTAGE OF THE TOTAL TANF CASELOAD State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY ROCKDALE SCHLEY SCREVEN SEMINOLE SPALDING STEPHENS STEWART SUMTER TALBOT TALIAFERRO TATTNALL TAYLOR TELFAIR TERRELL THOMAS TIFT TOOMBS TOWNS TREUTLEN TROUP TURNER TWIGGS UNION UPSON WALKER WALTON WARE WARREN WASHINGTON WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH STATE NUMBER OF TEEN MOMS 7 1 4 3 11 3 7 34 1 1 3 1 1 6 5 5 1 1 3 19 1 3 2 5 7 1 5 2 12 5 1 1 1 1 3 1 4 9 1,306 AVERAGE MONTHLY CASES 269 13 109 67 335 127 52 373 61 14 102 59 80 103 197 151 149 14 42 352 29 55 24 119 186 217 197 48 121 126 15 26 54 168 58 69 71 108 34,373 PERCENTAGE OF TOTAL TANF CASELOAD 2.6% 7.7% 3.7% 4.5% 3.3% 2.4% 13.5% 9.1% 1.6% 7.1% 2.9% 1.7% 1.3% 5.8% 2.5% 3.3% 0.7% 7.1% 7.1% 5.4% 3.4% 5.5% 8.3% 4.2% 3.8% 0.5% 2.5% 4.2% 9.9% 4.0% 6.7% 3.8% 1.9% 0.6% 5.2% 1.4% 5.6% 8.3% 3.8% 51 H. The Number of Children Receiving Subsidized Child Care and the Total Average Recipient Cost of Child Care Provided to TANF Recipients SUBSIDIZED CHILD CARE BY CATEGORY State Fiscal Year 2006 Annual Expenditures APPLICANT SERVICES TANF Transitional PRE-K Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures COUNTY APPLING ATKINSON BACON BAKER BALDWIN BANKS BARROW BARTOW BEN HILL BERRIEN BIBB BLECKLEY BRANTLEY BROOKS BRYAN BULLOCH BURKE BUTTS CALHOUN CAMDEN CANDLER 4 7 58 60 52 13 6 1,343 3 $484 $409 $12,530 $8,750 $9,699 $1,285 $578 $181,045 $783 27 3 33 544 1 16 57 18 10,394 117 78 43 $7,138 231 2 $276 425 12 $918 142 44 47 $13,949 121 2 $414 50 $3,167 $515 $6,300 $133,838 $220 $2,259 $15,030 $3,426 $1,546,611 $20,935 $16,058 $61,604 $78,398 $28,405 $7,840 $40,547 $9,886 202 58 1 43 944 10 289 126 38 25 9,027 187 72 139 14 457 493 197 24 397 10 $18,333 $8,057 $204 $6,493 $226,155 $2,370 $43,636 $25,964 $5,984 $3,593 $1,163,875 $29,489 $13,488 $19,932 $3,788 $98,417 $69,554 $29,189 $4,284 $116,450 $1,140 8 1 3 1 182 3 281 205 64 21 1,441 79 0 39 15 210 423 22 0 327 20 $828 $20 $132 $160 $33,398 $440 $27,266 $41,748 $7,314 $1,330 $116,925 $8,457 $0 $3,789 $1,751 $28,826 $46,831 $2,946 $0 $54,043 $1,239 TOTAL Annual Expenditures $22,812 $8,592 $745 $12,953 $405,921 $3,030 $81,911 $92,441 $18,009 $5,501 $3,008,456 $59,664 $29,546 $23,721 $5,539 $195,985 $195,059 $61,457 $12,124 $224,989 $12,679 Average Cost Per Child $1,136 $1,663 $813 $2,019 $2,819 $2,597 $1,522 $2,521 $1,625 $1,269 $1,626 $1,855 $2,364 $1,599 $2,292 $2,499 $1,743 $1,977 $2,140 $3,027 $1,855 53 SUBSIDIZED CHILD CARE BY CATEGORY State Fiscal Year 2006 Annual Expenditures APPLICANT SERVICES TANF Transitional PRE-K Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures COUNTY CARROLL CATOOSA CHARLTON CHATHAM CHATTAHOOCHEE CHATTOOGA CHEROKEE CLARKE CLAY CLAYTON CLINCH COBB COFFEE COLQUITT COLUMBIA COOK COWETA CRAWFORD CRISP DADE DAWSON 177 244 20 186 5,228 1,740 33 26 26 81 1 2 $16,763 $26,638 $2,526 $21,175 $928,543 $439,209 $6,378 $4,898 $2,851 $13,505 $85 $340 266 12 8 2,773 29 126 1,840 155 10,221 3,859 14 238 46 227 99 23 137 25 $33,224 $2,947 $1,900 $438,805 $4,772 $33,628 $286,440 $24,554 $1,969,238 $1,261,945 $1,733 $49,795 $9,860 $26,226 $19,722 $5,157 $25,101 $8,127 669 30 7 7,728 23 26 553 1,162 129 16,427 9,203 33 536 521 477 849 59 343 20 $77,532 $6,549 $1,268 $1,026,035 $2,982 $3,932 $133,822 $146,575 $17,494 $2,764,592 $2,574,989 $3,285 $102,381 $85,382 $48,700 $153,658 $9,526 $60,210 $7,689 429 98 0 2,296 12 24 141 834 29 601 0 981 20 182 309 0 523 0 30 0 15 $29,591 $17,709 $0 $189,503 $1,605 $2,502 $18,720 $78,625 $3,778 $61,124 $0 $203,709 $1,358 $24,132 $31,073 $0 $62,339 $0 $2,970 $0 $2,727 TOTAL Annual Expenditures $157,110 $27,205 $3,168 $1,680,981 $9,359 $6,434 $188,696 $532,815 $45,826 $5,723,497 $0 $4,479,852 $6,376 $182,686 $131,213 $77,777 $249,224 $14,768 $88,281 $0 $18,883 Average Cost Per Child $1,223 $2,332 $2,534 $1,547 $1,755 $1,544 $2,696 $1,590 $1,757 $2,115 $0 $3,406 $1,142 $2,217 $1,746 $1,279 $1,927 $2,135 $2,077 $0 $3,655 54 SUBSIDIZED CHILD CARE BY CATEGORY State Fiscal Year 2006 Annual Expenditures APPLICANT SERVICES TANF Transitional PRE-K Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures COUNTY DECATUR DEKALB DODGE DOOLY DOUGHERTY DOUGLAS EARLY ECHOLS EFFINGHAM ELBERT EMANUEL EVANS FANNIN FAYETTE FLOYD FORSYTH FRANKLIN FULTON GILMER GLASCOCK GLYNN 7 5,663 2 10 675 1,384 $891 $1,000,579 $339 $1,208 $85,710 $246,501 105 16,235 158 72 5,879 1,150 284 48 23 101 17 16 86 513 55 2 6,644 1 207 $10,943 $3,398 $11,745 $2,152 $2,402 $17,529 $102,418 $16,328 $254 $1,248,619 $216 $28,991 116 25 430 37 2 214 669 115 8 38,222 42 528 $17,574 $3,154,960 $35,649 $11,088 $869,980 $206,917 $73,552 $27,561 $4,408 $68,137 $4,610 $399 $43,403 $164,918 $39,309 $937 $7,952,644 $5,440 $73,003 276 20,138 240 55 5,094 4,671 416 14 311 236 437 184 46 362 1,197 165 33 34,517 25 46 1,558 $52,900 $3,528,540 $40,887 $8,902 $633,920 $761,065 $96,591 $3,418 $70,986 $37,685 $51,272 $17,802 $7,967 $81,384 $237,781 $49,557 $3,456 $6,426,863 $4,939 $4,073 $189,484 281 1,457 119 0 960 375 33 0 16 0 214 93 55 17 167 12 0 3,430 42 0 273 $40,883 $158,399 $16,508 $0 $83,435 $35,241 $5,538 $0 $2,902 $0 $18,539 $7,994 $8,047 $2,273 $17,960 $1,925 $0 $390,897 $5,608 $0 $17,590 TOTAL Annual Expenditures $112,248 $7,842,478 $93,383 $21,198 $1,673,045 $1,249,724 $175,681 $3,418 $112,392 $45,491 $149,693 $32,558 $18,815 $144,589 $523,077 $107,118 $4,647 $16,019,023 $10,763 $9,513 $309,068 Average Cost Per Child $2,013 $2,164 $2,159 $1,857 $1,592 $1,978 $2,876 $2,930 $2,747 $1,922 $1,520 $1,180 $1,897 $2,555 $2,465 $3,704 $1,297 $2,321 $1,899 $1,297 $1,445 55 SUBSIDIZED CHILD CARE BY CATEGORY State Fiscal Year 2006 Annual Expenditures APPLICANT SERVICES TANF Transitional PRE-K Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures COUNTY GORDON GRADY GREENE GWINNETT HABERSHAM HALL HANCOCK HARALSON HARRIS HART HEARD HENRY HOUSTON IRWIN JACKSON JASPER JEFF DAVIS JEFFERSON JENKINS JOHNSON JONES 44 1 9 1,927 13 318 4 6 4 $9,893 $136 $1,683 $347,674 $2,357 $56,912 $160 $813 $1,431 227 $48,035 708 $100,225 4 $474 3 $462 7 $1,042 15 $2,348 110 68 17 4,420 36 887 75 147 66 167 2 844 3,539 9 30 63 8 186 193 96 180 $30,430 $13,147 $3,273 $856,293 $9,030 $158,983 $11,644 $15,850 $17,210 $33,487 $432 $229,820 $546,692 $1,282 $3,816 $14,044 $1,260 $24,848 $31,882 $16,686 $45,181 208 202 107 7,245 66 784 85 45 89 176 2 1,956 4,037 48 45 115 16 235 158 204 75 $55,358 $37,852 $16,700 $1,233,857 $10,216 $137,072 $11,227 $3,115 $25,383 $32,265 $146 $450,989 $518,756 $6,824 $8,681 $17,682 $2,470 $22,202 $20,924 $31,112 $18,883 206 163 102 2,665 15 1,203 0 26 12 11 56 886 1,187 47 128 12 23 64 2 35 17 $25,627 $22,724 $10,521 $288,666 $2,288 $115,114 $0 $1,087 $965 $2,345 $3,091 $114,739 $115,647 $2,961 $14,004 $1,973 $3,223 $5,133 $210 $2,743 $2,429 TOTAL Annual Expenditures $121,307 $73,859 $32,177 $2,726,489 $23,891 $468,081 $23,031 $20,865 $44,989 $68,097 $3,669 $843,583 $1,281,320 $11,541 $26,963 $34,741 $6,953 $52,183 $53,016 $52,889 $66,493 Average Cost Per Child $2,563 $2,042 $1,643 $2,013 $2,205 $1,760 $1,685 $1,118 $3,157 $2,308 $734 $2,587 $1,623 $1,282 $1,571 $2,116 $1,775 $1,291 $1,802 $1,813 $2,934 56 SUBSIDIZED CHILD CARE BY CATEGORY State Fiscal Year 2006 Annual Expenditures APPLICANT SERVICES TANF Transitional PRE-K Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures COUNTY LAMAR LANIER LAURENS LEE LIBERTY LINCOLN LONG LOWNDES LUMPKIN MACON MADISON MARION MCDUFFIE MCINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN MURRAY 15 $2,309 63 9 420 17 174 $28,432 724 1 $60 46 36 254 $42,636 781 3 $793 24 3 3 $742 41 19 1 $154 167 1 18 $2,122 97 1 $156 75 215 14 $2,455 77 7 $821 42 26 $3,830 49 2 $381 Average TOTAL Annual Cost Per Expenditures Child $12,854 166 $26,517 0 $0 $41,680 $2,050 $1,984 40 $4,796 0 $0 $6,780 $1,660 $78,342 555 $99,035 250 $29,963 $207,340 $2,031 $4,489 15 $2,967 34 $6,053 $13,509 $2,456 $162,729 699 $142,521 32 $3,897 $337,579 $2,487 $5,994 75 $10,599 73 $6,748 $23,401 $1,440 $5,136 33 $6,345 13 $2,030 $13,511 $1,977 $170,158 1,800 $345,797 164 $17,430 $576,020 $2,305 $7,035 27 $7,141 3 $369 $15,338 $3,229 $585 47 $8,085 1 $170 $8,840 $2,080 $5,813 19 $3,534 140 $20,204 $30,293 $1,791 $3,844 5 $810 15 $2,452 $7,106 $2,186 $36,349 226 $38,626 532 $64,605 $139,734 $1,811 $396 38 $8,879 18 $2,521 $11,796 $2,483 $18,273 68 $8,473 25 $2,627 $31,495 $1,817 $14,835 140 $25,585 11 $1,741 $42,317 $2,237 $43,045 177 $29,458 169 $23,030 $95,533 $2,043 $13,646 34 $5,259 51 $5,957 $27,316 $1,862 $9,367 42 $8,214 30 $2,488 $20,890 $2,072 $9,272 139 $23,474 155 $17,431 $54,007 $1,756 6 $470 $851 $1,277 57 SUBSIDIZED CHILD CARE BY CATEGORY State Fiscal Year 2006 Annual Expenditures APPLICANT SERVICES TANF Transitional PRE-K Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures COUNTY MUSCOGEE NEWTON OCONEE OGLETHORPE PAULDING PEACH PICKENS PIERCE PIKE POLK PULASKI PUTNAM QUITMAN RABUN RANDOLPH RICHMOND ROCKDALE SCHLEY SCREVEN SEMINOLE SPALDING Average TOTAL Annual Cost Per Expenditures Child 888 $123,318 9,898 $1,540,696 5,679 $733,711 1,749 $175,010 $2,572,735 $1,695 287 $41,636 1,226 $263,344 1,596 $303,776 19 $2,620 $611,376 $2,345 16 $2,367 17 $4,614 96 $14,936 23 $2,848 $24,765 $1,955 3 $389 6 $1,150 44 $9,949 124 $11,234 $22,722 $1,540 100 $20,341 67 $22,567 363 $121,234 111 $18,659 $182,801 $3,422 16 $2,494 403 $101,052 236 $52,505 121 $20,443 $176,494 $2,729 4 $1,142 8 $2,860 9 $1,704 54 $7,041 $12,747 $2,040 18 $2,352 41 $5,726 65 $4,957 $13,035 $1,261 1 $85 36 $7,908 342 $52,477 63 $7,441 $67,911 $1,844 52 $10,892 2 $664 4 $1,045 $12,601 $2,607 306 $67,011 229 $45,550 8 $1,638 $114,199 $2,524 2 $242 188 $44,670 641 $119,355 5 $690 $164,957 $2,368 12 $1,581 0 $0 $1,581 $1,581 1 $180 0 $0 $180 $2,160 2 $236 241 $36,326 64 $8,293 0 $0 $44,855 $1,753 552 $70,073 9,879 $1,456,566 3,272 $415,819 470 $41,298 $1,983,756 $1,680 703 $152,652 254 $77,248 3,073 $744,009 668 $95,986 $1,069,895 $2,733 8 $1,354 19 $3,808 0 $0 $5,162 $2,294 20 $1,587 240 $28,061 317 $32,302 105 $6,418 $68,368 $1,203 93 $21,280 480 $90,523 72 $14,285 $126,088 $2,346 132 $16,040 633 $89,141 812 $102,882 17 $983 $209,046 $1,574 58 SUBSIDIZED CHILD CARE BY CATEGORY State Fiscal Year 2006 Annual Expenditures APPLICANT SERVICES TANF Transitional PRE-K Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures COUNTY STEPHENS STEWART SUMTER TALBOT TALIAFERRO TATTNALL TAYLOR TELFAIR TERRELL THOMAS TIFT TOOMBS TOWNS TREUTLEN TROUP TURNER TWIGGS UNION UPSON WALKER WALTON Average TOTAL Annual Cost Per Expenditures Child 19 $3,666 79 $16,103 89 $13,519 80 $9,826 $43,114 $1,938 12 $3,011 40 $6,825 1 $225 $10,061 $2,278 1,139 $263,395 204 $41,427 0 $0 $304,822 $2,724 4 $910 113 $25,498 89 $17,643 0 $0 $44,051 $2,566 4 $486 0 $0 $486 $1,458 25 $5,297 216 $14,466 65 $6,030 66 $8,376 $34,169 $1,102 3 $466 61 $11,082 37 $4,961 0 $0 $16,509 $1,961 57 $9,804 165 $26,618 41 $6,215 $42,637 $1,945 135 $29,487 235 $42,347 4 $468 $72,302 $2,320 32 $4,243 122 $20,562 293 $52,311 143 $20,530 $97,646 $1,986 110 $28,273 303 $59,869 227 $26,872 $115,014 $2,157 2 $60 24 $4,024 186 $37,553 68 $5,373 $47,010 $2,015 4 $952 10 $2,042 0 $0 $2,994 $2,566 4 $960 82 $13,651 30 $2,946 44 $3,258 $20,815 $1,561 312 $41,204 1,144 $155,395 1,893 $244,205 382 $31,401 $472,205 $1,519 12 $1,751 7 $384 $2,135 $1,348 1 $50 6 $1,058 28 $6,199 6 $506 $7,813 $2,287 2 $303 8 $1,771 5 $1,030 7 $444 $3,548 $1,935 17 $2,339 171 $28,120 260 $31,473 104 $7,676 $69,608 $1,513 13 $2,469 17 $3,310 86 $13,397 85 $12,143 $31,319 $1,870 92 $22,680 338 $75,445 304 $60,018 325 $50,983 $209,126 $2,370 59 SUBSIDIZED CHILD CARE BY CATEGORY State Fiscal Year 2006 Annual Expenditures APPLICANT SERVICES TANF Transitional PRE-K Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures Annual Clients Annual Expenditures COUNTY WARE WARREN WASHINGTON WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH STATE TOTALS 86 115 7 $576 379 10 $2,214 220 30 3 $194 12 31 $5,302 35 4 $413 3 98 87 53 12 $1,805 118 32,010 $5,669,431 139,387 $17,704 $17,533 $59,363 $45,541 $4,724 $1,598 $7,665 $410 $16,957 $14,900 $7,938 $25,341 $26,306,487 176 $25,856 78 $12,289 413 $50,804 71 $13,066 59 $9,203 11 $1,692 24 $4,611 37 $6,904 89 $14,389 126 $17,266 159 $27,596 218 $33,952 164,926 $28,643,623 47 75 233 42 3 0 0 22 11 72 47 66 31,881 $3,417 $8,997 $25,601 $5,096 $505 $0 $0 $1,355 $652 $9,072 $5,004 $8,017 TOTAL Annual Expenditures $46,977 $38,819 $136,344 $65,917 $14,432 $3,484 $17,578 $9,082 $31,998 $41,238 $40,538 $69,115 $3,533,314 $64,152,856 Average Cost Per Child $1,824 $1,738 $1,585 $2,306 $1,882 $1,608 $2,344 $1,651 $1,939 $1,736 $1,878 $2,003 $2,091 60 I. Data On Teen Pregnancy Prevention TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Appling Atkinson Bacon Baker Baldwin Banks Barrow Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 71 671 105.8 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 55 271 203.0 Total Pregnancies 38 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 415 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 91.6 Total Pregnancies 12 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 158 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 75.9 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 130 1,544 84.2 Total Pregnancies 32 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 432 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 74.1 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 136 1,299 104.7 1998 58 670 86.6 36 280 128.6 37 425 87.1 12 154 77.9 133 1,502 88.5 29 452 64.2 122 1,393 87.6 1999 56 673 83.2 2000 79 688 114.8 2001 51 678 75.2 45 287 156.8 42 313 134.2 30 272 110.3 31 42 31 425 372 348 72.9 112.9 89.1 8 11 12 154 158 163 51.9 69.6 73.6 142 1,504 94.4 124 1,878 66 106 1,726 61.4 35 35 38 462 470 460 75.8 74.5 82.6 128 1,442 88.8 138 1,432 96.4 137 1,503 91.2 2002 56 663 84.5 2003 55 641 85.8 2004 45 614 73.3 45 270 166.7 23 31 269 274 85.5 113.1 25 20 33 328 323 303 76.2 61.9 108.9 10 4 5 157 157 163 63.7 25.5 30.7 89 1,683 52.9 123 1,722 71.4 140 1,771 79.1 31 39 40 450 453 452 68.9 86.1 88.5 134 1,581 84.8 115 1,673 68.7 130 1,775 73.2 62 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Bartow Ben Hill Berrien Bibb Bleckley Brantley Brooks Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 263 2,343 112.2 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 96 686 139.9 Total Pregnancies 38 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 563 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 67.5 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 614 6,125 100.2 Total Pregnancies 40 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 480 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 83.3 Total Pregnancies 19 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 515 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 36.9 Total Pregnancies 50 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 660 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 75.8 1998 258 2,478 104.1 82 704 116.5 67 595 112.6 545 6,146 88.7 49 482 101.7 19 523 36.3 45 644 69.9 1999 291 2,568 113.3 2000 252 2,396 105.2 2001 254 2,517 100.9 81 700 115.7 69 660 104.5 75 648 115.7 44 47 44 600 540 535 73.3 87 82.2 493 6,082 81.1 529 6,223 85 490 6,096 80.4 32 39 33 485 518 491 66.0 75.3 67.2 30 31 15 533 523 538 56.3 59.3 27.9 48 53 54 651 620 601 73.7 85.5 89.9 2002 226 2,648 85.3 2003 235 2,761 85.1 2004 248 2,884 86.0 68 655 103.8 55 72 649 634 84.7 113.6 49 42 53 541 555 542 90.6 75.7 97.8 478 6,079 78.6 461 6,274 73.5 459 6,355 72.2 26 27 25 485 485 517 53.6 55.7 48.4 41 33 44 548 592 558 74.8 55.7 78.9 35 41 39 583 560 563 60.0 73.2 69.3 63 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Bryan Bulloch Burke Butts Calhoun Camden Candler Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 80 868 92.2 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 161 3,311 48.6 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 102 867 117.6 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 67 571 117.3 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 22 206 106.8 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 92 1,557 59.1 Total Pregnancies 31 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 369 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 84.0 1998 82 900 91.1 174 3,410 51.0 102 887 115.0 58 599 96.8 25 203 123.2 107 1,659 64.5 43 386 111.4 1999 78 933 83.6 2000 62 928 66.8 2001 56 978 57.3 174 3,428 50.8 161 3,745 43 178 2,988 59.6 115 896 128.3 122 942 129.5 115 965 119.2 75 621 120.8 65 78 625 638 104 122.3 22 199 110.6 18 29 207 198 87 146.5 96 1,646 58.3 100 1,624 61.6 119 1,685 70.6 28 30 32 376 289 285 74.5 103.8 112.3 2002 45 1,067 42.2 2003 67 1,079 62.1 2004 47 1,114 42.2 173 2,698 64.1 146 2,710 53.9 183 2,990 61.2 93 97 78 911 918 889 102.1 105.7 87.7 61 59 57 656 658 670 93.0 89.7 85.1 18 19 28 195 187 183 92.3 101.6 153.0 106 1,765 60.1 112 1,771 63.2 85 1,847 46.0 40 316 126.6 44 332 132.5 48 340 141.2 64 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Carroll Catoosa Charlton Chatham Chattahoochee Chattooga Cherokee Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 310 3,524 88.0 1998 296 3,710 79.8 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 125 1,726 72.4 117 1,789 65.4 Total Pregnancies 32 34 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 379 389 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 84.4 87.4 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 805 7,781 103.5 773 7,821 98.8 Total Pregnancies 33 23 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 466 476 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 70.8 48.3 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 83 784 105.9 95 788 120.6 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 262 3,782 69.3 259 4,061 63.8 1999 309 3,772 81.9 2000 281 3,902 72 2001 290 3,788 76.6 2002 285 3,803 74.9 2003 255 3,857 66.1 2004 255 3,909 65.2 111 1,831 60.6 107 1,682 63.6 111 1,714 64.8 110 1,783 61.7 100 1,838 54.4 109 1,932 56.4 31 31 25 24 21 25 392 391 402 402 423 448 79.1 79.3 62.2 59.7 49.6 55.8 764 7,777 98.2 683 8,074 84.6 725 7,711 94.0 665 7,711 86.2 630 7,988 78.9 678 8,198 82.7 36 35 30 35 23 24 482 401 438 502 601 551 74.7 87.3 68.5 69.7 38.3 43.6 72 82 88 53 82 46 788 740 729 724 749 746 91.4 110.8 120.7 73.2 109.5 61.7 272 4,281 63.5 284 4,278 66.4 262 4,607 56.9 249 4,991 49.9 225 5,323 42.3 260 5,736 45.3 65 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Clarke Clay Clayton Clinch Cobb Coffee Colquitt Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 260 5,441 47.8 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 22 123 178.9 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 816 7,271 112.2 Total Pregnancies 28 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 285 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 98.2 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1215 16,378 74.2 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 182 1,362 133.6 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 155 1,436 107.9 1998 236 5,439 43.4 20 123 162.6 771 7,496 102.9 20 293 68.3 1166 16,884 69.1 151 1,409 107.2 146 1,479 98.7 1999 267 5,444 49.0 2000 248 6,026 41.2 2001 249 5,015 49.7 23 124 185.5 14 133 105.3 18 125 144.0 782 7,645 102.3 787 8,338 94.4 785 8,665 90.6 26 31 36 290 264 250 89.7 117.4 144.0 1166 17,371 67.1 1163 18,742 62.1 1101 19,857 55.4 183 1,433 127.7 140 1,428 98 150 1,400 107.1 164 1,496 109.6 169 1,582 106.8 149 1,514 98.4 2002 207 4,845 42.7 2003 223 4,427 50.4 2004 216 4,705 45.9 15 8 7 126 122 125 119.0 65.6 56.0 770 8,978 85.8 751 9,145 82.1 798 9,430 84.6 26 244 106.6 29 244 118.9 25 246 101.6 1140 20,468 55.7 1035 20,426 50.7 1131 20,640 54.8 149 1,391 107.1 124 1,359 91.2 138 1,346 102.5 154 1,522 101.2 138 1,485 92.9 149 1,477 100.9 66 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Columbia Cook Coweta Crawford Crisp Dade Dawson Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 166 3,122 53.2 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 69 550 125.5 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 244 2,872 85.0 Total Pregnancies 19 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 399 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 47.6 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 109 820 132.9 Total Pregnancies 31 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 593 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 52.3 Total Pregnancies 38 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 433 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 87.8 1998 152 3,163 48.1 50 578 86.5 212 3,116 68.0 30 388 77.3 112 826 135.6 35 604 57.9 50 467 107.1 1999 171 3,217 53.2 2000 170 3,408 49.9 2001 166 3,581 46.4 61 53 43 584 539 556 104.5 98.3 77.3 198 3,262 60.7 205 2,831 72.4 185 2,987 61.9 35 18 26 377 421 437 92.8 42.8 59.5 99 815 121.5 90 848 106.1 92 846 108.7 28 30 32 612 674 669 45.8 44.5 47.8 40 36 37 502 421 470 79.7 85.5 78.7 2002 150 3,754 40.0 2003 146 3,843 38.0 2004 152 3,900 39.0 56 42 41 577 637 620 97.1 65.9 66.1 175 3,203 54.6 181 3,353 54.0 197 3,502 56.3 25 28 29 457 468 475 54.7 59.8 61.1 90 832 108.2 66 90 805 754 82.0 119.4 30 26 17 693 703 706 43.3 37.0 24.1 30 31 39 484 520 562 62.0 59.6 69.4 67 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Decatur Dekalb Dodge Dooly Dougherty Douglas Early Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 116 1,101 105.4 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 2070 19,775 104.7 Total Pregnancies 63 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 695 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 90.6 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 62 397 156.2 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 481 4,187 114.9 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 235 3,020 77.8 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 59 469 125.8 1998 129 1,133 113.9 1860 20,237 91.9 45 702 64.1 50 406 123.2 413 4,159 99.3 236 3,159 74.7 60 482 124.5 1999 114 1,127 101.2 2000 106 1,054 100.6 2001 91 1,036 87.8 1991 20,281 98.2 1,833 21,163 86.6 1763 20,743 85.0 46 57 57 700 639 618 65.7 89.2 92.2 58 406 142.9 55 429 128.2 53 412 128.6 427 4,077 104.7 364 4,212 86.4 364 4,022 90.5 226 3,191 70.8 246 3,245 75.8 236 3,310 71.3 43 27 42 477 472 486 90.1 57.2 86.4 2002 78 1,056 73.9 2003 69 1,057 65.3 2004 93 1,051 88.5 1626 20,459 79.5 1640 20,758 79.0 1622 21,145 76.7 58 56 43 615 606 610 94.3 92.4 70.5 54 35 30 412 366 344 131.1 95.6 87.2 303 3,898 77.7 345 3,873 89.1 320 3,889 82.3 216 3,404 63.5 229 3,548 64.5 239 3,752 63.7 47 44 42 487 488 477 96.5 90.2 88.1 68 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Echols Effingham Elbert Emanuel Evans Fannin Fayette Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 4 69 NA Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 100 1,266 79.0 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 67 621 107.9 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 100 778 128.5 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 40 346 115.6 Total Pregnancies 50 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 540 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 92.6 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 107 2,944 36.3 1998 4 70 NA 100 1,322 75.6 59 636 92.8 92 790 116.5 35 358 97.8 50 555 90.1 109 3,044 35.8 1999 1 77 13.0 2000 10 156 64.1 2001 12 164 73.2 83 1,391 59.7 107 1,448 73.9 90 1,525 59.0 58 51 42 629 718 742 92.2 71 56.6 103 88 87 782 1,006 983 131.7 87.5 88.5 36 44 37 358 418 406 100.6 105.3 91.1 46 42 51 564 543 574 81.6 77.3 88.9 107 3,157 33.9 99 3,510 28.2 83 3,941 21.1 2002 9 146 61.6 2003 15 142 105.6 2004 15 138 108.7 105 1,568 67.0 81 1,631 49.7 104 1,634 63.6 57 41 53 749 749 699 76.1 54.7 75.8 85 92 86 974 977 929 87.3 94.2 92.6 36 45 50 418 431 406 86.1 104.4 123.2 36 36 40 597 611 638 60.3 58.9 62.7 103 4,226 24.4 100 4,223 23.7 107 4,309 24.8 69 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Floyd Forsyth Franklin Fulton Gilmer Glascock Glynn Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 260 3,103 83.8 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 122 2,386 51.1 Total Pregnancies 63 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 677 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 93.1 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 2960 25,325 116.9 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 73 566 129.0 Total Pregnancies 5 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 78 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 NA Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 168 2,242 74.9 1998 252 3,148 80.1 132 2,791 47.3 45 698 64.5 2827 26,162 108.1 82 585 140.2 6 80 NA 206 2,279 90.4 1999 260 3,146 82.6 2000 284 3,267 86.9 2001 281 3,232 86.9 144 3,145 45.8 148 2,405 61.5 123 2,784 44.2 58 48 53 702 755 748 82.6 63.6 70.9 2833 26,204 108.1 2604 26,847 97 2338 26,369 88.7 61 74 59 619 690 727 98.5 107.2 81.2 4 3 10 84 87 82 47.6 34.5 122.0 206 2,289 90.0 165 2,364 69.8 163 2,377 68.6 2002 249 3,223 77.3 2003 261 3,246 80.4 2004 257 3,319 77.4 116 3,075 37.7 156 3,393 46.0 143 3,747 38.2 47 44 50 753 733 713 62.4 60.0 70.1 2242 26,308 85.2 2028 26,135 77.6 1800 26,535 67.8 78 78 72 767 741 754 101.7 105.3 95.5 2 4 3 83 78 80 24.1 51.3 LNE 156 2,386 65.4 175 2,472 70.8 164 2,490 65.9 70 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Gordon Grady Greene Gwinnett Habersham Hall Hancock Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 153 1,401 109.2 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 86 826 104.1 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 54 518 104.2 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 869 15,107 57.5 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 102 1,018 100.2 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 409 3,995 102.4 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 49 400 122.5 1998 149 1,445 103.1 61 842 72.4 57 532 107.1 905 15,821 57.2 100 1,036 96.5 411 4,191 98.1 40 396 101.0 1999 149 1,478 100.8 2000 156 1,464 106.6 2001 170 1,464 116.1 69 91 89 843 888 894 81.9 102.5 99.6 50 54 53 542 556 543 92.3 97.1 97.6 954 16,514 57.8 1060 18,887 56.1 1161 20,398 56.9 115 1,064 108.1 121 1,128 107.3 94 1,138 82.6 436 4,326 100.8 437 4,626 94.5 445 4,710 94.5 39 382 102.1 36 351 102.6 39 343 113.7 2002 150 1,468 102.2 2003 162 1,469 110.3 2004 154 1,534 100.4 80 93 98 910 901 918 87.9 103.2 106.8 44 37 33 564 542 530 78.0 68.3 62.3 1222 21,335 57.3 1265 22,081 57.3 1327 23,009 57.7 99 1,160 85.3 99 1,173 84.4 101 1,218 82.9 448 4,791 93.5 449 5,014 89.5 430 5,083 84.6 23 33 34 334 333 313 68.9 99.1 108.6 71 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Haralson Harris Hart Heard Henry Houston Irwin Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 79 818 96.6 Total Pregnancies 42 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 708 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 59.3 Total Pregnancies 47 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 707 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 66.5 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 46 391 117.6 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 227 3,168 71.7 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 290 3,536 82.0 Total Pregnancies 32 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 331 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 96.7 1998 98 850 115.3 48 723 66.4 46 724 63.5 43 402 107.0 278 3,446 80.7 301 3,588 83.9 30 339 88.5 1999 81 869 93.2 2000 81 848 95.5 2001 76 819 92.8 55 52 40 731 800 825 75.2 65 48.5 52 44 47 731 646 648 71.1 68.1 72.5 34 35 28 419 357 353 81.1 98 79.3 266 3,733 71.3 259 3,790 68.3 253 4,311 58.7 256 3,622 70.7 276 4,289 64.4 296 4,335 68.3 26 39 23 345 379 383 75.4 102.9 60.1 2002 81 847 95.6 2003 72 842 85.5 2004 73 872 83.7 32 49 35 830 882 892 38.6 55.6 39.2 41 61 44 677 714 704 60.6 85.4 62.5 25 25 19 387 375 413 64.6 66.7 46.0 265 4,730 56.0 311 5,181 60.0 299 5,576 53.6 301 4,529 66.5 276 4,705 58.7 283 4,777 59.2 26 33 27 381 364 350 68.2 90.7 77.1 72 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Jackson Jasper Jeff Davis Jefferson Jenkins Johnson Jones Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 115 1,135 101.3 Total Pregnancies 34 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 349 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 97.4 Total Pregnancies 41 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 491 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 83.5 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 77 767 100.4 Total Pregnancies 29 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 328 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 88.4 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 40 321 124.6 Total Pregnancies 60 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 828 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 72.5 1998 138 1,198 115.2 30 365 82.2 60 500 120.0 60 771 77.8 45 330 136.4 34 322 105.6 45 835 53.9 1999 114 1,246 91.5 2000 135 1,380 97.8 2001 117 1,348 86.8 31 42 37 377 402 404 82.2 104.5 91.6 74 499 148.3 57 468 121.8 52 453 114.8 69 50 75 767 659 665 90.0 75.9 112.8 44 328 134.1 27 35 350 329 77.1 106.4 29 28 34 317 312 301 91.5 89.7 113.0 59 49 49 843 873 876 70.0 56.1 55.9 2002 119 1,382 86.1 2003 131 1,425 91.9 2004 123 1,483 82.9 33 33 25 420 453 459 78.6 72.8 54.5 49 444 110.4 47 430 109.3 50 440 113.6 74 65 46 665 667 646 111.3 97.5 71.2 39 329 118.5 30 33 324 328 92.6 100.6 23 24 33 299 293 293 76.9 81.9 112.6 45 49 44 894 885 890 50.3 55.4 49.4 73 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Lamar Lanier Laurens Lee Liberty Lincoln Long Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 63 604 104.3 Total Pregnancies 19 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 242 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 78.5 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 167 1,533 108.9 Total Pregnancies 56 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 875 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 64.0 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 266 1,928 138.0 Total Pregnancies 15 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 278 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 54.0 Total Pregnancies 32 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 355 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 90.1 1998 65 627 103.7 18 254 70.9 159 1,566 101.5 63 919 68.6 239 1,906 125.4 15 286 52.4 37 374 98.9 1999 43 633 67.9 2000 41 719 57 2001 44 694 63.4 22 26 22 255 271 262 86.3 95.9 84.0 117 1,564 74.8 133 1,638 81.2 152 1,617 94.0 63 47 48 942 1,023 1,102 66.9 45.9 43.6 235 1,919 122.5 267 2,292 116.5 247 2,175 113.6 18 20 18 287 268 286 62.7 74.6 62.9 29 39 42 381 475 431 76.1 82.1 97.4 2002 29 682 42.5 2003 34 603 56.4 2004 47 624 75.3 21 18 22 270 263 266 77.8 68.4 82.7 135 1,620 83.3 121 1,632 74.1 114 1,619 70.4 36 1,120 32.1 36 1,166 30.9 40 1,202 33.3 221 2,209 100.0 198 2,140 92.5 210 2,326 90.3 18 19 20 287 289 299 62.7 65.7 66.9 30 20 34 411 389 372 73.0 51.4 91.4 74 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Lowndes Lumpkin Macon Madison Marion McDuffie McIntosh Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 249 3,707 67.2 Total Pregnancies 49 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 855 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 57.3 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 63 557 113.1 Total Pregnancies 77 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 793 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 97.1 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 24 217 110.6 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 86 758 113.5 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 43 383 112.3 1998 233 3,803 61.3 56 885 63.3 54 565 95.6 78 807 96.7 22 228 96.5 88 773 113.8 40 389 102.8 1999 278 3,793 73.3 2000 226 3,819 59.2 2001 237 3,598 65.9 47 65 41 909 1,107 1,077 51.7 58.7 38.1 55 62 79 549 530 817 100.2 117 96.7 68 70 30 833 835 350 81.6 83.8 85.7 32 22 44 229 244 521 139.7 90.2 84.5 95 82 58 766 779 848 124.0 105.3 68.4 30 40 28 387 338 250 77.5 118.3 112.0 2002 217 3,580 60.6 2003 252 3,563 70.7 2004 246 3,614 68.1 36 1,115 32.3 38 1,165 32.6 47 1,241 37.9 72 76 77 828 821 806 87.0 92.6 95.5 34 21 25 335 321 342 101.5 65.4 73.1 42 50 38 499 498 478 84.2 100.4 79.5 74 58 67 870 875 891 85.1 66.3 75.2 20 21 30 258 255 256 77.5 82.4 117.2 75 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Meriwether Miller Mitchell Monroe Montgomery Morgan Murray Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 90 902 99.8 Total Pregnancies 18 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 210 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 85.7 Total Pregnancies 89 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 908 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 98.0 Total Pregnancies 50 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 696 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 71.8 Total Pregnancies 24 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 366 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 65.6 Total Pregnancies 45 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 526 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 85.6 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 141 1,174 120.1 1998 84 909 92.4 18 217 82.9 90 916 98.3 65 716 90.8 19 380 50.0 53 557 95.2 145 1,212 119.6 1999 93 899 103.4 2000 80 803 99.6 2001 85 802 106.0 20 20 18 215 238 228 93.0 84 78.9 83 89 81 911 885 891 91.1 100.6 90.9 64 73 55 732 741 761 87.4 98.5 72.3 28 31 28 387 326 345 72.4 95.1 81.2 50 42 34 562 513 515 89.0 81.9 66.0 104 1,259 82.6 126 1,241 101.5 131 1,257 104.2 2002 79 792 99.7 2003 68 810 84.0 2004 65 850 76.5 14 19 5 249 235 233 56.2 80.9 21.5 67 54 68 848 836 809 79.0 64.6 84.1 54 50 49 806 844 804 67.0 59.2 60.9 19 26 22 336 364 382 56.5 71.4 57.6 30 30 39 512 536 545 58.6 56.0 71.6 129 1,264 102.1 131 1,257 104.2 131 1,295 101.2 76 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Muscogee Newton Oconee Oglethorpe Paulding Peach Pickens Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 750 6,350 118.1 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 187 2,275 82.2 Total Pregnancies 42 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 723 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 58.1 Total Pregnancies 25 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 400 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 62.5 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 131 2,264 57.9 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 91 1,161 78.4 Total Pregnancies 46 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 578 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 79.6 1998 759 6,319 120.1 191 2,413 79.2 34 751 45.3 31 416 74.5 144 2,502 57.6 99 1,186 83.5 48 625 76.8 1999 768 6,253 122.8 2000 731 6,753 108.2 2001 697 6,594 105.7 171 2,508 68.2 170 2,108 80.6 195 2,267 86.0 29 34 24 775 958 1,029 37.4 35.5 23.3 33 30 38 420 400 416 78.6 75 91.3 138 2,709 50.9 155 2,397 64.7 162 2,642 61.3 88 88 94 1,194 1,017 993 73.7 86.5 94.7 67 63 64 666 725 733 100.6 86.9 87.3 2002 637 6,399 99.5 2003 633 6,450 98.1 2004 620 6,452 96.1 190 2,450 77.6 195 2,655 73.4 213 2,916 73.0 27 1,072 25.2 42 1,132 37.1 22 1,209 18.2 27 23 28 415 426 434 65.1 54.0 64.5 171 2,892 59.1 170 3,170 53.6 158 3,441 45.9 81 76 58 985 978 966 82.2 77.7 60.0 52 57 55 749 788 813 69.4 72.3 67.7 77 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Pierce Pike Polk Pulaski Putnam Quitman Rabun Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 44 617 71.3 Total Pregnancies 38 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 420 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 90.5 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 147 1,244 118.2 Total Pregnancies 17 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 309 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 55.0 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 63 576 109.4 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 10 84 119.0 Total Pregnancies 36 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 430 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 83.7 1998 54 640 84.4 37 436 84.9 138 1,264 109.2 36 316 113.9 63 592 106.4 9 83 NA 25 435 57.5 1999 51 635 80.3 2000 54 556 97.1 2001 51 568 89.8 37 30 31 454 455 464 81.5 65.9 66.8 155 1,270 122.0 153 1,334 114.7 146 1,328 109.9 32 314 101.9 24 30 321 299 74.8 100.3 63 63 49 610 622 651 103.3 101.3 75.3 8 10 3 80 89 85 100.0 112.4 35.3 26 33 29 447 428 436 58.2 77.1 66.5 2002 50 577 86.7 2003 44 572 76.9 2004 59 575 102.6 36 25 30 503 533 567 71.6 46.9 52.9 150 1,294 115.9 134 1,281 104.6 123 1,313 93.7 26 18 15 312 313 302 83.3 57.5 49.7 31 51 53 639 655 635 48.5 77.9 83.5 10 11 8 85 81 81 117.6 135.8 98.8 34 35 36 479 489 483 71.0 71.6 74.5 78 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Randolph Richmond Rockdale Schley Screven Seminole Spalding Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 44 362 121.5 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 776 7,104 109.2 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 154 2,396 64.3 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 23 153 150.3 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 67 513 130.6 Total Pregnancies 32 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 387 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 82.7 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 241 2,069 116.5 1998 41 364 112.6 753 7,002 107.5 159 2,439 65.2 18 163 110.4 62 521 119.0 36 384 93.8 271 2,112 128.3 1999 35 368 95.1 2000 27 380 71.1 2001 34 357 95.2 755 6,933 108.9 734 7,491 98 750 7,227 103.8 187 2,449 76.4 175 2,666 65.6 182 2,789 65.3 13 12 7 161 124 135 80.7 96.8 51.9 41 38 43 515 544 540 79.6 69.9 79.6 32 40 22 382 339 328 83.8 118 67.1 235 2,107 111.5 223 2,073 107.6 238 2,029 117.3 2002 21 321 65.4 2003 17 351 48.4 2004 19 329 57.8 684 7,174 95.3 704 7,175 98.1 708 7,240 97.8 181 2,878 62.9 187 2,921 64.0 161 2,976 54.1 12 14 9 132 127 141 90.9 110.2 63.8 40 54 45 547 579 623 73.1 93.3 72.2 23 31 17 334 322 319 68.9 96.3 53.3 194 1,999 97.0 230 2,009 114.5 212 2,047 103.6 79 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Stephens Stewart Sumter Talbot Taliaferro Tattnall Taylor Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 78 885 88.1 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 22 190 115.8 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 138 1,383 99.8 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 28 251 111.6 Total Pregnancies 7 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 71 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 NA Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 83 627 132.4 Total Pregnancies 31 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 357 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 86.8 1998 66 896 73.7 17 193 88.1 137 1,381 99.2 20 253 79.1 6 74 NA 92 635 144.9 35 367 95.4 1999 72 888 81.1 2000 54 915 59 2001 75 878 85.4 25 10 11 186 155 162 134.4 64.5 67.9 139 1,374 101.2 100 1,345 74.3 134 1,285 104.3 19 27 25 249 215 200 76.3 125.6 125.0 7 3 4 72 62 66 97.2 48.4 60.6 70 641 109.2 65 68 652 669 99.7 101.6 32 29 15 367 306 288 87.2 94.8 52.1 2002 57 855 66.7 2003 58 838 69.2 2004 44 832 52.9 19 12 11 150 144 145 126.7 83.3 75.9 120 1,257 95.5 87 1,300 66.9 114 1,247 91.4 21 13 15 191 180 205 109.9 72.2 73.2 6 2 11 63 65 69 95.2 30.8 159.4 67 76 72 673 672 694 99.6 113.1 103.7 25 15 21 298 318 326 83.9 47.2 64.4 80 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Telfair Terrell Thomas Tift Toombs Towns Treutlen Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 47 373 126.0 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 67 431 155.5 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 160 1,595 100.3 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 159 1,536 103.5 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 131 939 139.5 Total Pregnancies 10 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 329 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 30.4 Total Pregnancies 25 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 253 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 98.8 1998 35 390 89.7 59 437 135.0 168 1,633 102.9 162 1,558 104.0 99 964 102.7 13 330 39.4 22 259 84.9 1999 29 384 75.5 2000 52 373 139.4 2001 24 353 68.0 51 434 117.5 50 439 113.9 57 420 135.7 135 1,614 83.6 139 1,591 87.4 128 1,615 79.3 142 1,555 91.3 141 1,512 93.3 118 1,439 82.0 103 963 107.0 118 981 120.3 103 1,005 102.5 18 10 16 336 365 380 53.6 27.4 42.1 29 25 23 257 258 231 112.8 96.9 99.6 2002 33 353 93.5 2003 30 332 90.4 2004 36 317 113.6 36 34 38 397 395 379 90.7 86.1 100.3 92 1,639 56.1 123 1,629 75.5 123 1,610 76.4 115 1,423 80.8 105 1,440 72.9 116 1,462 79.3 99 89 82 1,010 998 999 98.0 89.2 82.1 12 5 14 393 383 387 30.5 13.1 36.2 19 22 10 227 214 206 83.7 102.8 48.5 81 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Troup Turner Twiggs Union Upson Walker Walton Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 216 2,142 100.8 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 41 362 113.3 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 39 360 108.3 Total Pregnancies 30 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 435 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 69.0 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 112 904 123.9 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 202 1,995 101.3 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 166 1,827 90.9 1998 234 2,191 106.8 30 365 82.2 31 360 86.1 29 453 64.0 94 915 102.7 191 2,050 93.2 149 1,968 75.7 1999 246 2,186 112.5 2000 207 2,130 97.2 2001 217 2,177 99.7 36 50 42 368 394 391 97.8 126.9 107.4 41 31 33 361 416 420 113.6 74.5 78.6 32 29 32 473 474 492 67.7 61.2 65.0 85 97 95 916 861 892 92.8 112.7 106.5 178 2,047 87.0 164 1,979 82.9 157 1,973 79.6 170 2,120 80.2 150 2,087 71.9 150 2,131 70.4 2002 194 2,205 88.0 2003 183 2,208 82.9 2004 193 2,236 86.3 37 31 33 380 380 370 97.4 81.6 89.2 26 23 27 407 407 399 63.9 56.5 67.7 20 21 27 495 508 528 40.4 41.3 51.1 86 66 64 897 889 924 95.9 74.2 69.3 167 1,953 85.5 145 1,989 72.9 136 1,995 68.2 149 2,206 67.5 148 2,315 63.9 161 2,458 65.5 82 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Ware Warren Washington Wayne Webster Wheeler White Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 155 1,277 121.4 Total Pregnancies 17 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 193 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 88.1 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 85 742 114.6 Total Pregnancies 69 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 937 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 73.6 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 10 88 113.6 Total Pregnancies 18.0 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 212 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 84.9 Total Pregnancies 40 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 626 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 63.9 1998 134 1,273 105.3 20 194 103.1 66 756 87.3 87 955 91.1 9 83 NA 24.0 216 111.1 57 642 88.8 1999 112 1,258 89.0 2000 105 1,195 87.9 2001 91 1,131 80.5 21 26 15 191 237 232 109.9 109.7 64.7 65 64 61 756 822 801 86.0 77.9 76.2 79 80 69 954 980 997 82.8 81.6 69.2 4 2 6 82 83 80 48.8 24.1 75.0 17 15 214 196 201 60.7 86.7 74.6 50 47 39 664 634 644 75.3 74.1 60.6 2002 112 1,102 101.6 2003 89 1,146 77.7 2004 101 1,130 89.4 21 14 17 232 222 213 90.5 63.1 79.8 50 49 40 785 759 763 63.7 64.6 52.4 86 82 70 986 968 946 87.2 84.7 74.0 10 5 4 71 68 76 140.8 73.5 LNE 14 16 18 199 202 186 70.4 79.2 96.8 55 52 43 689 715 744 79.8 72.7 57.8 83 TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA'S DECLINING PREGNANCY RATES FOR 15 - 19 YEAR OLDS 1997 through 2004 Trends COUNTY Whitfield Wilcox Wilkes Wilkinson Worth Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 1997 313 2,917 107.3 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 33 248 133.1 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 40 334 119.8 Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 43 411 104.6 Total Pregnancies 65 Female Population (age 15 to 19) 903 Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 72.0 1998 321 2,983 107.6 29 246 117.9 44 332 132.5 36 413 87.2 64 919 69.6 1999 351 3,015 116.4 2000 335 2,820 118.8 2001 362 2,811 128.8 20 14 35 248 261 265 80.6 53.6 132.1 40 29 31 329 396 376 121.6 73.2 82.4 38 31 38 410 422 421 92.7 73.5 90.3 69 71 61 916 887 858 75.3 80 71.1 2002 314 2,850 110.2 2003 309 2,844 108.6 2004 315 2,853 110.4 15 24 16 257 269 251 58.4 89.2 63.7 19 28 35 375 367 347 50.7 76.3 100.9 25 35 21 389 382 370 64.3 91.6 56.8 53 59 65 837 828 835 63.3 71.3 77.8 Georgia Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000 24,549 265,581 92.4 23,831 273,179 87.2 23,856 277,032 86.1 NOTE: Data for 2005 not available at this time. 23,150 286,463 80.8 22,586 287,916 78.4 21,437 292,120 73.4 21,040 21,098 296,639 303,451 70.9 69.5 84 J. Sanctions Applied to TANF Recipients COUNTY APPLING ATKINSON BACON BAKER BALDWIN BANKS BARROW BARTOW BEN HILL BERRIEN BIBB BLECKLEY BRANTLEY BROOKS BRYAN BULLOCH BURKE BUTTS CALHOUN CAMDEN CANDLER CARROLL CATOOSA CHARLTON CHATHAM CHATTAHOOCHEE CHATTOOGA CHEROKEE CLARKE CLAY CLAYTON CLINCH COBB COFFEE COLQUITT COLUMBIA COOK COWETA CRAWFORD CRISP DADE TANF SANCTIONS State Fiscal Year 2006 CLIENTS WITH REDUCTIONS APPLIED in SFY2006 0 1 1 1 15 0 0 0 4 0 45 4 1 2 0 2 20 3 3 2 1 5 1 0 28 2 1 5 6 6 12 0 50 0 10 4 1 1 0 11 0 CLIENTS WITH CLOSURES SFY2006 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 84 19 0 2 0 23 12 1 5 0 2 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 23 7 6 0 8 0 1 2 0 3 0 16 0 86 COUNTY DAWSON DECATUR DEKALB DODGE DOOLY DOUGHERTY DOUGLAS EARLY ECHOLS EFFINGHAM ELBERT EMANUEL EVANS FANNIN FAYETTE FLOYD FORSYTH FRANKLIN FULTON GILMER GLASCOCK GLYNN GORDON GRADY GREENE GWINNETT HABERSHAM HALL HANCOCK HARALSON HARRIS HART HEARD HENRY HOUSTON IRWIN JACKSON JASPER JEFF DAVIS JEFFERSON JENKINS TANF SANCTIONS State Fiscal Year 2006 CLIENTS WITH REDUCTIONS APPLIED in SFY2006 1 10 136 5 3 16 6 9 0 2 1 2 1 1 2 25 3 0 209 0 0 3 0 3 3 16 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 6 24 5 2 0 0 11 0 CLIENTS WITH CLOSURES SFY2006 3 15 15 0 1 80 3 2 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 12 0 4 75 0 6 2 0 1 2 1 0 4 0 0 3 1 0 1 33 1 0 0 0 9 1 87 COUNTY JOHNSON JONES LAMAR LANIER LAURENS LEE LIBERTY LINCOLN LONG LOWNDES LUMPKIN MACON MADISON MARION MCDUFFIE MCINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN MURRAY MUSCOGEE NEWTON OCONEE OGLETHORPE PAULDING PEACH PICKENS PIERCE PIKE POLK PULASKI PUTNAM QUITMAN RABUN RANDOLPH RICHMOND ROCKDALE SCHLEY TANF SANCTIONS State Fiscal Year 2006 CLIENTS WITH REDUCTIONS APPLIED in SFY2006 1 5 0 0 3 0 1 0 1 8 0 1 1 1 2 0 14 1 12 2 1 1 0 91 6 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 3 4 0 0 5 14 1 0 CLIENTS WITH CLOSURES SFY2006 2 16 0 0 36 0 17 3 0 5 0 0 0 0 4 0 10 0 10 2 0 0 0 93 28 1 0 1 13 0 1 0 0 3 3 1 0 8 7 2 0 88 TANF SANCTIONS State Fiscal Year 2006 COUNTY SCREVEN SEMINOLE SPALDING STEPHENS STEWART SUMTER TALBOT TALIAFERRO TATTNALL TAYLOR TELFAIR TERRELL THOMAS TIFT TOOMBS TOWNS TREUTLEN TROUP TURNER TWIGGS UNION UPSON WALKER WALTON WARE WARREN WASHINGTON WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH STATE CLIENTS WITH REDUCTIONS APPLIED in SFY2006 3 0 5 3 0 21 4 3 0 3 3 1 1 2 0 0 1 12 0 1 0 6 1 6 5 2 3 3 0 0 0 0 1 5 0 4 1,038 CLIENTS WITH CLOSURES SFY2006 0 4 10 12 0 19 3 0 3 2 0 17 3 2 7 0 3 13 2 0 0 6 0 13 1 3 6 0 0 0 5 0 7 2 2 10 920 Policy change in SFY2006. Clients with reduction represents first and third sanctions, the client loses 25% of benefits. Clients with closures represents second and fourth sanctions, the client loses benefits (3 months for second sanction, 12 months for fourth sanction). 89 K. The Number of Legal Immigrants Receiving TANF Benefits by Category of Immigration Status LEGAL IMMIGRANTS RECEIVING TANF BY IMMIGRATION STATUS State Fiscal Year 2006 Name APPLING ATKINSON BACON BAKER BALDWIN BANKS BARROW BARTOW BEN HILL BERRIEN BIBB BLECKLEY BRANTLEY BROOKS BRYAN BULLOCH BURKE BUTTS CALHOUN CAMDEN CANDLER CARROLL CATOOSA CHARLTON CHATHAM CHATTAHOOCHEE CHATTOOGA CHEROKEE CLARKE CLAY CLAYTON CLINCH COBB COFFEE COLQUITT COLUMBIA COOK COWETA CRAWFORD CRISP ELIGIBLE ALIEN 1 1 13 5 1 REFUGEE 1 9 3 ENTRANT AFTER 8/22/96 1 PAROLEE AFTER 8/22/96 3 PERMANENT RESIDENT 1 1 1 5 16 27 3 1 TOTAL NONCITIZEN 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 5 0 38 0 36 0 7 0 1 0 0 0 91 LEGAL IMMIGRANTS RECEIVING TANF BY IMMIGRATION STATUS State Fiscal Year 2006 Name DADE DAWSON DECATUR DEKALB DODGE DOOLY DOUGHERTY DOUGLAS EARLY ECHOLS EFFINGHAM ELBERT EMANUEL EVANS FANNIN FAYETTE FLOYD FORSYTH FRANKLIN FULTON GILMER GLASCOCK GLYNN GORDON GRADY GREENE GWINNETT HABERSHAM HALL HANCOCK HARALSON HARRIS HART HEARD HENRY HOUSTON IRWIN JACKSON JASPER JEFF DAVIS ELIGIBLE ALIEN 21 1 1 5 13 5 1 1 REFUGEE 251 217 1 41 1 ENTRANT AFTER 8/22/96 PAROLEE AFTER 8/22/96 PERMANENT RESIDENT 28 2 4 26 35 1 1 3 5 TOTAL NONCITIZEN 0 0 0 300 0 0 2 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 248 0 0 1 0 0 0 89 1 6 0 0 0 0 0 5 6 0 0 0 0 92 LEGAL IMMIGRANTS RECEIVING TANF BY IMMIGRATION STATUS State Fiscal Year 2006 Name JEFFERSON JENKINS JOHNSON JONES LAMAR LANIER LAURENS LEE LIBERTY LINCOLN LONG LOWNDES LUMPKIN MACON MADISON MARION MCDUFFIE MCINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN MURRAY MUSCOGEE NEWTON OCONEE OGLETHORPE PAULDING PEACH PICKENS PIERCE PIKE POLK PULASKI PUTNAM QUITMAN RABUN RANDOLPH ELIGIBLE ALIEN 1 1 5 1 REFUGEE 3 17 ENTRANT AFTER 8/22/96 PAROLEE AFTER 8/22/96 PERMANENT RESIDENT 2 3 1 1 TOTAL NONCITIZEN 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 25 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 93 LEGAL IMMIGRANTS RECEIVING TANF BY IMMIGRATION STATUS State Fiscal Year 2006 Name RICHMOND ROCKDALE SCHLEY SCREVEN SEMINOLE SPALDING STEPHENS STEWART SUMTER TALBOT TALIAFERRO TATTNALL TAYLOR TELFAIR TERRELL THOMAS TIFT TOOMBS TOWNS TREUTLEN TROUP TURNER TWIGGS UNION UPSON WALKER WALTON WARE WARREN WASHINGTON WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH STATE ELIGIBLE ALIEN 2 1 1 81 REFUGEE 3 547 ENTRANT AFTER 8/22/96 1 94 PAROLEE AFTER 8/22/96 3 PERMANENT RESIDENT 4 2 1 1 TOTAL NONCITIZEN 2 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 175 807 L. Number of Families No Longer Eligible Because of Time Limits ` TANF FAMILIES NO LONGER ELIGIBLE BECAUSE OF TIME LIMITS As of January 01, 2001 thru June 30, 2006 COUNTY APPLING ATKINSON BACON BAKER BALDWIN BANKS BARROW BARTOW BEN HILL BERRIEN BIBB BLECKLEY BRANTLEY BROOKS BRYAN BULLOCH BURKE BUTTS CALHOUN CAMDEN CANDLER CARROLL CATOOSA CHARLTON CHATHAM CHATTAHOOCHEE CHATTOOGA CHEROKEE CLARKE CLAY CLAYTON CLINCH COBB COFFEE COLQUITT COLUMBIA COOK COWETA CRAWFORD CRISP DADE DAWSON DECATUR DEKALB Number Of Families 0 2 1 2 39 3 0 4 19 8 267 9 2 9 1 15 27 3 9 2 1 8 0 0 88 1 1 1 56 5 94 3 72 7 44 12 35 11 1 34 0 1 24 237 COUNTY DODGE DOOLY DOUGHERTY DOUGLAS EARLY ECHOLS EFFINGHAM ELBERT EMANUEL EVANS FANNIN FAYETTE FLOYD FORSYTH FRANKLIN FULTON GILMER GLASCOCK GLYNN GORDON GRADY GREENE GWINNETT HABERSHAM HALL HANCOCK HARALSON HARRIS HART HEARD HENRY HOUSTON IRWIN JACKSON JASPER JEFF DAVIS JEFFERSON JENKINS JOHNSON JONES LAMAR LANIER LAURENS LEE Number Of Families COUNTY 15 7 210 16 36 1 7 5 29 2 0 8 13 2 1 1225 0 0 19 1 9 5 38 2 25 20 4 2 LIBERTY LINCOLN LONG LOWNDES LUMPKIN MACON MADISON MARION MCDUFFIE MCINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN MURRAY MUSCOGEE NEWTON OCONEE OGLETHORPE PAULDING PEACH PICKENS PIERCE PIKE POLK PULASKI 11 PUTNAM 0 QUITMAN 16 RABUN 71 RANDOLPH 5 RICHMOND 0 ROCKDALE 5 SCHLEY 3 SCREVEN 18 SEMINOLE 12 SPALDING 10 STEPHENS 2 STEWART 1 SUMTER 6 TALBOT 39 TALIAFERRO 2 TATTNALL Number Of Families COUNTY 20 TAYLOR 2 TELFAIR 9 TERRELL 48 THOMAS 0 TIFT 11 TOOMBS 8 TOWNS 4 TREUTLEN 39 TROUP 0 TURNER 7 TWIGGS 2 UNION 55 UPSON 3 WALKER 3 WALTON 2 WARE 1 WARREN 217 WASHINGTON 21 WAYNE 1 WEBSTER 6 WHEELER 0 WHITE 55 WHITFIELD 0 WILCOX 9 WILKES 0 WILKINSON 0 WORTH 15 7 STATE 2 1 11 308 9 0 26 18 6 11 14 109 12 3 10 Number Of Families 7 14 82 50 39 11 0 4 23 3 11 0 10 3 20 23 14 30 9 1 1 6 2 1 9 10 45 4,574 96 M. Follow-up Information on Job Retention and Earnings FOLLOW-UP INFORMATION ON JOB RETENTION AND EARNINGS Adult Recipients Exited from July 2004 through June 2005 County APPLING ATKINSON BACON BAKER BALDWIN BANKS BARROW BARTOW BEN HILL BERRIEN BIBB BLECKLEY BRANTLEY BROOKS BRYAN BULLOCH BURKE BUTTS CALHOUN CAMDEN CANDLER CARROLL CATOOSA CHARLTON CHATHAM CHATTAHOOCHEE CHATTOOGA CHEROKEE CLARKE CLAY CLAYTON CLINCH COBB COFFEE COLQUITT COLUMBIA COOK COWETA CRAWFORD CRISP DADE Adult Leavers 31 25 23 13 249 13 63 46 78 46 1,193 73 78 89 15 227 226 49 36 53 32 187 33 15 939 27 30 206 459 68 1,081 29 1,356 39 349 81 122 121 19 166 7 Employed at Exit Number 16 14 13 7 134 9 36 19 35 17 647 39 34 44 6 103 103 25 10 26 12 98 7 4 602 9 11 99 278 23 630 12 812 19 198 39 79 66 10 90 4 Percent 51.6% 56.0% 56.5% 53.8% 53.8% 69.2% 57.1% 41.3% 44.9% 37.0% 54.2% 53.4% 43.6% 49.4% 40.0% 45.4% 45.6% 51.0% 27.8% 49.1% 37.5% 52.4% 21.2% 26.7% 64.1% 33.3% 36.7% 48.1% 60.6% 33.8% 58.3% 41.4% 59.9% 48.7% 56.7% 48.1% 64.8% 54.5% 52.6% 54.2% 57.1% Employed at 6 Months Quarterly Wages, 6 Months Number Percent Average Total 18 58.1% $2,318 $41,721 16 64.0% $2,564 $41,017 11 47.8% $2,493 $27,427 8 61.5% $1,522 $12,177 139 55.8% $2,547 $354,017 8 61.5% $1,612 $12,899 36 57.1% $2,444 $87,967 21 45.7% $2,230 $46,839 33 42.3% $2,069 $68,263 14 30.4% $2,377 $33,277 678 56.8% $2,032 $1,377,912 41 56.2% $2,199 $90,177 33 42.3% $2,892 $95,430 48 53.9% $2,055 $98,658 7 46.7% $2,319 $16,232 106 46.7% $2,043 $216,518 109 48.2% $2,402 $261,827 27 55.1% $2,409 $65,047 13 36.1% $1,461 $18,997 30 56.6% $2,167 $65,023 13 40.6% $2,504 $32,553 108 57.8% $2,565 $277,018 8 24.2% $1,666 $13,326 6 40.0% $1,167 $6,999 606 64.5% $2,314 $1,402,032 12 44.4% $2,068 $24,810 16 53.3% $2,188 $35,015 100 48.5% $2,518 $251,768 281 61.2% $2,265 $636,494 26 38.2% $2,110 $54,854 637 58.9% $2,968 $1,890,357 15 51.7% $2,320 $34,806 826 60.9% $3,221 $2,660,895 21 53.8% $2,440 $51,245 214 61.3% $2,171 $464,568 46 56.8% $2,396 $110,198 74 60.7% $2,360 $174,604 76 62.8% $2,388 $181,492 10 52.6% $2,111 $21,106 100 60.2% $2,112 $211,180 3 42.9% $3,128 $9,383 98 FOLLOW-UP INFORMATION ON JOB RETENTION AND EARNINGS Adult Recipients Exited from July 2004 through June 2005 County DAWSON DECATUR DEKALB DODGE DOOLY DOUGHERTY DOUGLAS EARLY ECHOLS EFFINGHAM ELBERT EMANUEL EVANS FANNIN FAYETTE FLOYD FORSYTH FRANKLIN FULTON GILMER GLASCOCK GLYNN GORDON GRADY GREENE GWINNETT HABERSHAM HALL HANCOCK HARALSON HARRIS HART HEARD HENRY HOUSTON IRWIN JACKSON JASPER JEFF DAVIS JEFFERSON Adult Leavers 19 219 3,215 93 127 1,171 289 147 7 118 75 109 61 16 100 376 74 72 6,058 8 8 216 70 129 63 1,013 47 339 56 56 57 113 10 376 664 46 39 84 28 117 Employed at Exit Number 7 95 1,743 48 66 591 148 55 3 61 44 67 36 2 48 212 42 29 3,085 2 5 134 27 67 35 592 26 199 26 22 26 55 3 192 365 23 16 34 18 55 Percent 36.8% 43.4% 54.2% 51.6% 52.0% 50.5% 51.2% 37.4% 42.9% 51.7% 58.7% 61.5% 59.0% 12.5% 48.0% 56.4% 56.8% 40.3% 50.9% 25.0% 62.5% 62.0% 38.6% 51.9% 55.6% 58.4% 55.3% 58.7% 46.4% 39.3% 45.6% 48.7% 30.0% 51.1% 55.0% 50.0% 41.0% 40.5% 64.3% 47.0% Employed at 6 Months Quarterly Wages, 6 Months Number Percent Average Total 4 21.1% $1,395 $5,581 99 45.2% $1,995 $197,474 1,711 53.2% $2,963 $5,069,633 51 54.8% $2,478 $126,380 61 48.0% $2,402 $146,496 619 52.9% $2,157 $1,335,243 142 49.1% $3,109 $441,469 53 36.1% $1,966 $104,180 3 42.9% $2,311 $6,933 59 50.0% $2,547 $150,260 40 53.3% $2,494 $99,768 66 60.6% $2,167 $143,050 35 57.4% $2,248 $78,674 5 31.3% $2,135 $10,676 45 45.0% $3,085 $138,835 217 57.7% $2,280 $494,669 36 48.6% $3,079 $110,858 38 52.8% $2,227 $84,613 3,099 51.2% $2,621 $8,123,601 1 12.5% $3,550 $3,550 5 62.5% $1,617 $8,085 128 59.3% $2,243 $287,074 34 48.6% $2,423 $82,398 71 55.0% $2,223 $157,868 36 57.1% $2,333 $83,988 561 55.4% $3,522 $1,975,798 23 48.9% $2,787 $64,099 188 55.5% $2,670 $501,925 25 44.6% $1,913 $47,832 21 37.5% $2,555 $53,647 32 56.1% $2,362 $75,587 45 39.8% $2,327 $104,708 2 20.0% $2,716 $5,432 182 48.4% $2,931 $533,487 356 53.6% $2,257 $803,456 23 50.0% $2,417 $55,586 14 35.9% $2,582 $36,151 35 41.7% $2,771 $96,991 15 53.6% $1,761 $26,413 69 59.0% $1,788 $123,340 99 FOLLOW-UP INFORMATION ON JOB RETENTION AND EARNINGS Adult Recipients Exited from July 2004 through June 2005 County JENKINS JOHNSON JONES LAMAR LANIER LAURENS LEE LIBERTY LINCOLN LONG LOWNDES LUMPKIN MACON MADISON MARION MCDUFFIE MCINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN MURRAY MUSCOGEE NEWTON OCONEE OGLETHORPE PAULDING PEACH PICKENS PIERCE PIKE POLK PULASKI PUTNAM QUITMAN RABUN RANDOLPH RICHMOND Adult Leavers 72 93 59 14 29 320 31 306 25 72 437 27 51 38 44 118 18 82 40 195 40 41 57 41 1,994 374 24 23 74 166 16 39 41 45 64 79 34 11 94 1,723 Employed at Exit Number 35 39 29 7 16 172 17 182 11 37 268 13 28 19 15 64 9 51 13 104 15 21 39 17 970 205 13 11 31 87 5 18 21 16 30 52 6 3 28 921 Percent 48.6% 41.9% 49.2% 50.0% 55.2% 53.8% 54.8% 59.5% 44.0% 51.4% 61.3% 48.1% 54.9% 50.0% 34.1% 54.2% 50.0% 62.2% 32.5% 53.3% 37.5% 51.2% 68.4% 41.5% 48.6% 54.8% 54.2% 47.8% 41.9% 52.4% 31.3% 46.2% 51.2% 35.6% 46.9% 65.8% 17.6% 27.3% 29.8% 53.5% Employed at 6 Months Quarterly Wages, 6 Months Number Percent Average Total 38 52.8% $2,262 $85,959 45 48.4% $2,285 $102,829 29 49.2% $2,133 $61,852 9 64.3% $2,363 $21,264 17 58.6% $2,227 $37,854 185 57.8% $2,288 $423,326 19 61.3% $1,515 $28,788 175 57.2% $2,277 $398,404 12 48.0% $2,729 $32,743 40 55.6% $2,144 $85,777 284 65.0% $2,062 $585,499 11 40.7% $3,184 $35,021 28 54.9% $2,366 $66,255 17 44.7% $1,866 $31,726 17 38.6% $1,694 $28,800 61 51.7% $2,127 $129,731 9 50.0% $2,452 $22,065 43 52.4% $2,334 $100,370 20 50.0% $2,304 $46,088 117 60.0% $2,640 $308,872 23 57.5% $1,909 $43,915 20 48.8% $2,545 $50,903 40 70.2% $2,670 $106,795 16 39.0% $3,018 $48,289 975 48.9% $2,203 $2,147,771 195 52.1% $2,468 $481,211 14 58.3% $2,591 $36,281 13 56.5% $1,321 $17,175 29 39.2% $2,999 $86,980 82 49.4% $1,969 $161,488 7 43.8% $3,746 $26,221 28 71.8% $1,832 $51,288 24 58.5% $2,790 $66,962 18 40.0% $2,035 $36,637 27 42.2% $1,985 $53,604 55 69.6% $2,597 $142,835 7 20.6% $2,677 $18,736 6 54.5% $1,752 $10,514 25 26.6% $2,385 $59,632 954 55.4% $2,214 $2,111,759 100 FOLLOW-UP INFORMATION ON JOB RETENTION AND EARNINGS Adult Recipients Exited from July 2004 through June 2005 County ROCKDALE SCHLEY SCREVEN SEMINOLE SPALDING STEPHENS STEWART SUMTER TALBOT TALIAFERRO TATTNALL TAYLOR TELFAIR TERRELL THOMAS TIFT TOOMBS TOWNS TREUTLEN TROUP TURNER TWIGGS UNION UPSON WALKER WALTON WARE WARREN WASHINGTON WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH STATE TOTALS Adult Leavers 246 8 142 62 220 68 38 385 69 7 79 54 55 105 189 169 136 5 51 468 17 65 20 176 104 127 189 51 135 111 21 25 67 38 53 55 98 149 34,985 Employed at Exit Employed at 6 Months Quarterly Wages, 6 Months Number Percent Number Percent Average Total 118 48.0% 126 51.2% $2,553 3 37.5% 4 50.0% $527 66 46.5% 65 45.8% $2,398 30 48.4% 34 54.8% $1,971 101 45.9% 122 55.5% $2,099 32 47.1% 28 41.2% $2,515 14 36.8% 16 42.1% $2,531 187 48.6% 203 52.7% $2,209 27 39.1% 35 50.7% $2,415 3 42.9% 3 42.9% $2,542 40 50.6% 39 49.4% $2,420 20 37.0% 19 35.2% $2,590 32 58.2% 32 58.2% $2,417 53 50.5% 54 51.4% $1,911 111 58.7% 110 58.2% $1,845 99 58.6% 105 62.1% $1,815 65 47.8% 66 48.5% $2,024 1 20.0% 4 80.0% $2,335 24 47.1% 28 54.9% $2,466 236 50.4% 258 55.1% $2,211 9 52.9% 12 70.6% $2,196 26 40.0% 29 44.6% $2,774 3 15.0% 4 20.0% $1,082 90 51.1% 89 50.6% $2,633 36 34.6% 45 43.3% $2,150 57 44.9% 59 46.5% $2,768 91 48.1% 92 48.7% $1,672 29 56.9% 27 52.9% $2,888 71 52.6% 77 57.0% $2,413 51 45.9% 58 52.3% $2,194 10 47.6% 12 57.1% $2,447 8 32.0% 15 60.0% $1,603 32 47.8% 33 49.3% $2,700 17 44.7% 17 44.7% $3,064 25 47.2% 24 45.3% $2,276 27 49.1% 31 56.4% $1,693 49 50.0% 49 50.0% $2,939 93 62.4% 97 65.1% $2,262 $321,730 $2,107 $155,882 $66,999 $256,051 $70,406 $40,491 $448,396 $84,528 $7,625 $94,389 $49,201 $77,329 $103,176 $202,901 $190,540 $133,570 $9,339 $69,061 $570,322 $26,347 $80,433 $4,328 $234,361 $96,739 $163,297 $153,864 $77,983 $185,826 $127,259 $29,362 $24,047 $89,110 $52,082 $54,622 $52,475 $144,000 $219,446 18,367 52.5% 18,698 53.4% $2,499 $46,733,776 101 N. An Evaluation of the Effect of Code Section 49-4-186 On the Number of Births to TANF Recipients FAMILY CAP CASES AND CHILDREN State Fiscal Year 2006 County APPLING ATKINSON BACON BAKER BALDWIN BANKS BARROW BARTOW BEN HILL BERRIEN BIBB BLECKLEY BRANTLEY BROOKS BRYAN BULLOCH BURKE BUTTS CALHOUN CAMDEN CANDLER CARROLL CATOOSA CHARLTON CHATHAM CHATTAHOCHEE CHATTOOGA FAMILY CAP CASES Number Total Family Family Average Cap Cap Monthly Cases as Total Cases TANF of Added Served in Caseload 7/1/05 in SFY06 SFY06 SFY 2006 1 0 1 67 6 2 8 33 2 2 4 52 2 4 6 25 21 21 42 202 0 0 0 36 4 0 4 131 7 3 10 239 6 4 10 103 2 3 5 62 208 270 478 1,214 6 3 9 71 1 1 2 59 2 0 2 54 2 0 2 43 12 11 23 255 30 25 55 197 1 0 1 60 4 8 12 41 5 2 7 89 2 1 3 67 14 13 27 397 0 1 1 105 1 0 1 39 64 62 126 719 0 1 1 24 0 0 0 83 Percent of TANF Caseload 1.5% 24.2% 7.7% 24.0% 20.8% 0.0% 3.1% 4.2% 9.7% 8.1% 39.4% 12.7% 3.4% 3.7% 4.7% 9.0% 27.9% 1.7% 29.3% 7.9% 4.5% 6.8% 1.0% 2.6% 17.5% 4.2% 0.0% FAMILY CAP CHILDREN Number Total Family Family Average Cap Cap Monthly Children Total Children TANF as of Added Served in Children 7/1/05 in SFY06 SFY06 SFY 2006 2 0 2 108 7 2 9 57 2 4 6 73 2 6 8 36 29 23 52 336 0 0 0 56 4 0 4 219 7 3 10 401 7 8 15 167 2 3 5 101 284 366 650 2,249 6 4 10 114 1 1 2 85 2 0 2 93 3 0 3 70 13 14 27 398 36 31 67 330 2 0 2 92 6 10 16 63 6 2 8 151 3 2 5 114 21 20 41 638 0 1 1 158 1 0 1 62 85 88 173 1,199 0 1 1 37 0 0 0 137 Percent of TANF Child Recipients 1.9% 15.8% 8.2% 22.2% 15.5% 0.0% 1.8% 2.5% 9.0% 5.0% 28.9% 8.8% 2.4% 2.2% 4.3% 6.8% 20.3% 2.2% 25.4% 5.3% 4.4% 6.4% 0.6% 1.6% 14.4% 2.7% 0.0% 103 County CHEROKEE CLARKE CLAY CLAYTON CLINCH COBB COFFEE COLQUITT COLUMBIA COOK COWETA CRAWFORD CRISP DADE DAWSON DECATUR DEKALB DODGE DOOLY DOUGHERTY DOUGLAS EARLY ECHOLS EFFINGHAM ELBERT EMANUEL EVANS FAMILY CAP CASES AND CHILDREN State Fiscal Year 2006 FAMILY CAP CASES Number Total Family Family Average Cap Cap Monthly Cases as Total Cases TANF of Added Served in Caseload 7/1/05 in SFY06 SFY06 SFY 2006 0 1 1 136 41 43 84 385 9 10 19 56 59 55 114 1,471 7 2 9 39 37 57 94 1,206 6 5 11 149 28 14 42 225 6 7 13 127 6 5 11 91 11 4 15 283 2 2 4 52 20 11 31 130 0 0 0 19 0 0 0 30 23 5 28 164 205 274 479 2,877 8 12 20 130 10 9 19 58 137 103 240 976 11 12 23 334 20 11 31 113 0 0 0 3 3 3 6 108 8 10 18 98 9 19 28 152 1 5 6 59 Percent of TANF Caseload 0.7% 21.8% 33.9% 7.7% 23.1% 7.8% 7.4% 18.7% 10.2% 12.1% 5.3% 7.7% 23.8% 0.0% 0.0% 17.1% 16.6% 15.4% 32.8% 24.6% 6.9% 27.4% 0.0% 5.6% 18.4% 18.4% 10.2% FAMILY CAP CHILDREN Number Total Family Family Average Cap Cap Monthly Children Total Children TANF as of Added Served in Children 7/1/05 in SFY06 SFY06 SFY 2006 0 1 1 218 54 60 114 663 11 13 24 93 75 67 142 2,619 13 2 15 66 48 70 118 2,140 6 5 11 225 30 16 46 364 9 9 18 196 6 6 12 137 15 4 19 469 4 4 8 82 30 16 46 228 0 0 0 29 0 0 0 48 26 6 32 272 247 348 595 5,091 8 13 21 222 12 9 21 107 175 135 310 1,655 15 18 33 556 24 13 37 195 0 0 0 6 3 3 6 182 12 12 24 158 10 21 31 236 1 8 9 90 Percent of TANF Child Recipients 0.5% 17.2% 25.8% 5.4% 22.7% 5.5% 4.9% 12.6% 9.2% 8.8% 4.1% 9.8% 20.2% 0.0% 0.0% 11.8% 11.7% 9.5% 19.6% 18.7% 5.9% 19.0% 0.0% 3.3% 15.2% 13.1% 10.0% 104 County FANNIN FAYETTE FLOYD FORSYTH FRANKLIN FULTON GILMER GLASCOCK GLYNN GORDON GRADY GREENE GWINNETT HABERSHAM HALL HANCOCK HARALSON HARRIS HART HEARD HENRY HOUSTON IRWIN JACKSON JASPER JEFF DAVIS JEFFERSON FAMILY CAP CASES AND CHILDREN State Fiscal Year 2006 FAMILY CAP CASES Number Total Family Family Average Cap Cap Monthly Cases as Total Cases TANF of Added Served in Caseload 7/1/05 in SFY06 SFY06 SFY 2006 0 0 0 29 3 2 5 127 26 22 48 407 1 3 4 77 2 0 2 69 588 609 1,197 5,070 2 0 2 37 2 1 3 13 14 17 31 276 2 2 4 143 11 9 20 109 5 0 5 60 19 31 50 1,045 2 0 2 67 21 20 41 342 7 2 9 46 1 0 1 102 1 5 6 62 7 11 18 120 0 1 1 55 18 9 27 406 54 56 110 580 3 1 4 38 3 1 4 111 1 3 4 74 2 3 5 53 13 13 26 133 Percent of TANF Caseload 0.0% 3.9% 11.8% 5.2% 2.9% 23.6% 5.4% 23.1% 11.2% 2.8% 18.3% 8.3% 4.8% 3.0% 12.0% 19.6% 1.0% 9.7% 15.0% 1.8% 6.7% 19.0% 10.5% 3.6% 5.4% 9.4% 19.5% FAMILY CAP CHILDREN Number Total Family Family Average Cap Cap Monthly Children Total Children TANF as of Added Served in Children 7/1/05 in SFY06 SFY06 SFY 2006 0 0 0 50 3 2 5 197 28 26 54 672 1 3 4 125 2 0 2 106 734 747 1,481 9,287 2 0 2 61 2 1 3 23 17 18 35 447 2 3 5 235 13 11 24 172 6 0 6 98 22 40 62 1,857 2 0 2 112 23 24 47 592 9 2 11 77 1 0 1 159 2 5 7 105 8 12 20 203 0 1 1 85 22 12 34 660 69 67 136 967 3 1 4 56 3 1 4 178 1 3 4 117 4 4 8 79 19 18 37 230 Percent of TANF Child Recipients 0.0% 2.5% 8.0% 3.2% 1.9% 15.9% 3.3% 13.0% 7.8% 2.1% 14.0% 6.1% 3.3% 1.8% 7.9% 14.3% 0.6% 6.7% 9.9% 1.2% 5.2% 14.1% 7.1% 2.2% 3.4% 10.1% 16.1% 105 County JENKINS JOHNSON JONES LAMAR LANIER LAURENS LEE LIBERTY LINCOLN LONG LOWNDES LUMPKIN MACON MADISON MARION MCDUFFIE MCINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN MURRAY MUSCOGEE NEWTON OCONEE FAMILY CAP CASES AND CHILDREN State Fiscal Year 2006 FAMILY CAP CASES Number Total Family Family Average Cap Cap Monthly Cases as Total Cases TANF of Added Served in Caseload 7/1/05 in SFY06 SFY06 SFY 2006 4 10 14 81 5 1 6 58 2 8 10 108 5 4 9 53 1 1 2 31 27 29 56 276 1 0 1 38 13 27 40 244 2 2 4 37 4 4 8 50 38 27 65 358 0 0 0 49 3 3 6 55 0 1 1 79 5 2 7 45 16 11 27 131 3 1 4 51 4 8 12 141 4 3 7 43 15 2 17 151 3 1 4 76 2 2 4 50 3 4 7 90 1 1 2 89 146 188 334 1,369 38 34 72 379 0 1 1 30 Percent of TANF Caseload 17.3% 10.3% 9.3% 17.0% 6.5% 20.3% 2.6% 16.4% 10.8% 16.0% 18.2% 0.0% 10.9% 1.3% 15.6% 20.6% 7.8% 8.5% 16.3% 11.3% 5.3% 8.0% 7.8% 2.2% 24.4% 19.0% 3.3% FAMILY CAP CHILDREN Number Total Family Family Average Cap Cap Monthly Children Total Children TANF as of Added Served in Children 7/1/05 in SFY06 SFY06 SFY 2006 7 10 17 137 5 1 6 90 2 8 10 175 5 5 10 88 1 1 2 53 34 40 74 441 1 0 1 58 16 32 48 429 2 2 4 54 5 4 9 76 42 33 75 604 0 0 0 86 3 3 6 77 0 1 1 124 6 2 8 78 17 13 30 210 4 1 5 79 6 8 14 232 4 3 7 63 18 3 21 237 3 2 5 127 2 2 4 71 4 7 11 144 1 1 2 147 184 239 423 2,300 56 51 107 671 0 1 1 53 Percent of TANF Child Recipients 12.4% 6.7% 5.7% 11.4% 3.8% 16.8% 1.7% 11.2% 7.4% 11.8% 12.4% 0.0% 7.8% 0.8% 10.3% 14.3% 6.3% 6.0% 11.1% 8.9% 3.9% 5.6% 7.6% 1.4% 18.4% 15.9% 1.9% 106 County OGLETHORPE PAULDING PEACH PICKENS PIERCE PIKE POLK PULASKI PUTNAM QUITMAN RABUN RANDOLPH RICHMOND ROCKDALE SCHLEY SCREVEN SEMINOLE SPALDING STEPHENS STEWART SUMTER TALBOT TALIAFERRO TATTNALL TAYLOR TELFAIR TERRELL FAMILY CAP CASES AND CHILDREN State Fiscal Year 2006 FAMILY CAP CASES Number Total Family Family Average Cap Cap Monthly Cases as Total Cases TANF of Added Served in Caseload 7/1/05 in SFY06 SFY06 SFY 2006 2 0 2 43 0 4 4 151 19 36 55 182 0 0 0 46 1 1 2 54 2 1 3 51 3 4 7 135 8 6 14 63 4 9 13 88 2 8 10 22 1 0 1 22 7 21 28 89 160 150 310 1,321 10 13 23 269 1 1 2 13 8 15 23 109 7 1 8 67 20 25 45 335 2 4 6 127 2 1 3 52 55 46 101 373 4 6 10 61 0 0 0 14 13 8 21 102 9 6 15 59 5 1 6 80 20 7 27 103 Percent of TANF Caseload 4.7% 2.6% 30.2% 0.0% 3.7% 5.9% 5.2% 22.2% 14.8% 45.5% 4.5% 31.5% 23.5% 8.6% 15.4% 21.1% 11.9% 13.4% 4.7% 5.8% 27.1% 16.4% 0.0% 20.6% 25.4% 7.5% 26.2% FAMILY CAP CHILDREN Number Total Family Family Average Cap Cap Monthly Children Total Children TANF as of Added Served in Children 7/1/05 in SFY06 SFY06 SFY 2006 2 0 2 69 0 4 4 248 24 48 72 295 0 0 0 65 1 1 2 79 3 1 4 84 6 8 14 221 8 8 16 103 6 9 15 132 3 10 13 37 2 0 2 39 11 22 33 161 207 209 416 2,234 13 14 27 449 1 1 2 16 10 16 26 171 9 2 11 105 23 29 52 555 3 4 7 197 2 1 3 78 69 55 124 630 5 7 12 94 0 0 0 18 14 10 24 174 10 6 16 98 5 1 6 134 27 10 37 160 Percent of TANF Child Recipients 2.9% 1.6% 24.4% 0.0% 2.5% 4.8% 6.3% 15.5% 11.4% 35.1% 5.1% 20.5% 18.6% 6.0% 12.5% 15.2% 10.5% 9.4% 3.6% 3.8% 19.7% 12.8% 0.0% 13.8% 16.3% 4.5% 23.1% 107 County THOMAS TIFT TOOMBS TOWNS TREUTLEN TROUP TURNER TWIGGS UNION UPSON WALKER WALTON WARE WARREN WASHINGTON WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH STATE FAMILY CAP CASES AND CHILDREN State Fiscal Year 2006 FAMILY CAP CASES Number Total Family Family Average Cap Cap Monthly Cases as Total Cases TANF of Added Served in Caseload 7/1/05 in SFY06 SFY06 SFY 2006 25 13 38 197 8 15 23 151 12 2 14 149 0 0 0 14 5 16 21 42 21 43 64 352 2 2 4 29 2 0 2 55 0 1 1 24 11 11 22 119 2 3 5 186 19 9 28 217 21 6 27 197 7 4 11 48 10 10 20 121 8 8 16 126 2 0 2 15 0 1 1 26 1 1 2 54 2 1 3 168 1 5 6 58 7 4 11 69 8 8 16 71 5 6 11 108 Percent of TANF Caseload 19.3% 15.2% 9.4% 0.0% 50.0% 18.2% 13.8% 3.6% 4.2% 18.5% 2.7% 12.9% 13.7% 22.9% 16.5% 12.7% 13.3% 3.8% 3.7% 1.8% 10.3% 15.9% 22.5% 10.2% 2,767 2,855 5,622 34,373 16.4% FAMILY CAP CHILDREN Number Total Family Family Average Cap Cap Monthly Children Total Children TANF as of Added Served in Children 7/1/05 in SFY06 SFY06 SFY 2006 33 17 50 300 9 16 25 243 16 2 18 243 0 0 0 21 8 22 30 74 26 47 73 598 2 3 5 49 2 0 2 82 0 1 1 36 14 16 30 188 3 5 8 295 22 11 33 362 28 8 36 334 9 4 13 76 11 10 21 195 9 8 17 216 2 0 2 20 0 1 1 39 1 1 2 87 2 1 3 271 2 5 7 85 9 4 13 95 9 12 21 109 7 6 13 163 3,479 3,598 7,077 58,561 Percent of TANF Child Recipients 16.7% 10.3% 7.4% 0.0% 40.5% 12.2% 10.2% 2.4% 2.8% 16.0% 2.7% 9.1% 10.8% 17.1% 10.8% 7.9% 10.0% 2.6% 2.3% 1.1% 8.2% 13.7% 19.3% 8.0% 12.1% 108