Welfare Reform in Georgia
2009
Senate Bill 104
DIVISION OF FAMILY AND CHILDREN SERVICES WELFARE REFORM IN GEORGIA ANNUAL REPORT 2009
TABLE OF CONTENTS
SENATE BILL 104 REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
ii
WELFARE REFORM IN GEORGIA, 2007
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
3
SECTION C
Percentage and Number of TANF Caseload Given Hardship Exemption from Lifetime Limit
8
SECTION D
TANF Recipient Transportation Assistance
13
SECTION E
Diversionary Assistance to Prevent TANF Receipt
17
SECTION F
Number of Individuals Denied Assistance Due to a Serious Violent Felony Conviction
26
SECTION G
Number of Mothers Under 19 Who Received TANF Assistance
27
SECTION H
TANF Subsidized Child Care
31
SECTION I
Data on Teen Pregnancy Prevention
43
SECTION J
Number of TANF Sanctions
58
SECTION K
Number of Legal Immigrants Receiving TANF Benefits by Category of Immigration Status
59
SECTION L
Number of Families No Longer Eligible Because of Time Limits
63
SECTION M
Follow-up Information on Job Retention and Earnings
64
SECTION N
Evaluation of the Effect of Code Section 49-4-186 On the Number of Births to
TANF Recipients Families
67
WELFARE REFORM IN GEORGIA: 1999 - 2009
Senate Bill 104
The enabling legislation for the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (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 termination of benefits for three (3) months or 12 months, depending on the number of infractions.
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:
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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.
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.
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 declined.
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 Cases, in particular the number of Adult Cases on TANF. In SFY07, the monthly average of adult cases was 4,080.
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.
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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. In October 2006, Georgia recognized the need for additional transitional supports to assist customers with job retention and career advancement, thereby, launching the Work Support Program. Details of this program are contained in the Work Supports Section. In February 2008, the Final Rule for the Reauthorization of TANF was released by the Administration for Children and Families (ACF)/ the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). This rule was based on changes required by the Deficit Reduction Act (DRA) of 2005. According to the DRA final document (45 CFR, Parts 261, 262, 263, and 265. pg. 6772), "The DRA reauthorized the TANF program through fiscal year (FFY) 2010 with a renewed focus on work, program integrity, and strengthening families through healthy marriage promotion and responsible fatherhood." The Deficit Reduction Act retained most of the original welfare reform law. The key changes in the final rule were: (1) defined each of the 12 countable work activities, (2) defined the term "work eligible individual," (3) clarified that a State may count only actual hours of participation, (4) recalibrated the caseload reduction credit by updating the base year from FFY 1995 to FFY 2005, (5) required each State to establish and maintain work participation verification procedures through a Work Verification Plan, (6) established a new penalty for failure to comply with work verification procedures, and (7) allows additional pro-family expenditures to count toward a State's maintenance-ofeffort (MOE) requirement. Georgia has made the necessary changes to be compliant with the new guidelines stated in the final rule. The most significant changes were the new internal control guidelines which required major system changes. There was no other major impact on the way business is conducted in Georgia, or in the requirements for this report.
In FFY 2009, we began to see an increase in our TANF Adult caseload. We believe this to be as a result of the global economic downturn that became evident near the end of 2008. Staff in the field has reported that more applications are being approved as more people exhaust their resources and are turning to DHS for services.
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TANF Adult CASELOADS
SFY 1999 thru SFY 2009
50,000
45,000
40,000 35,000 30,000 25,000
31,887
32,595
30,219 27,886
26,311
27,192
20,000 15,000
13,703
10,000 5,000
5,901 3,392 2,273 2,952
0 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
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 the Georgia Department of Human Services (DHS) (formerly Department of Human Resources - 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.
Due to the significant decrease in the caseloads, we no longer have a contractual agreement with GDTAE. However, we still operate in partnership with them to serve the citizens of Georgia.
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TANF CASELOADS
SFY 1999 thru SFY 2009
140,000
120,000
100,000
80,000 60,000 40,000 20,000
65,198
57,823 54,091 50,904 54,682
57,389 45,325
34,373 26,110 21,318 20,803
0 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
In SFY 1999 Georgia had 65,198 cases on its TANF rolls. We are happy to report that the current total number of cases on TANF in Georgia for SFY 2009 is 20,803. Georgia has reduced its rolls by 68% in ten years.
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.
In SFY 2006, Georgia implemented new policies, which provided TANF recipients with two new work support services. They were Employment Intervention Services (EIS) and Transitional Support Services (TSS). 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 during application process. EIS is available only once in a client's lifetime. TSS assistance provides transportation, childcare and various incidentals (occupational licensing fees, special work boots, clothing, tools, etc.) to allow TANF applicants and recipients to seek and/or maintain employment. Applicants who are employed or become employed but remain eligible for TANF cash assistance have an option to choose between EIS or TSS. They cannot receive both. TSS is available only once per 24-calendar-month period.
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During SFY 2007, we implemented the Work Support Program. The Work Support Program provides Work Support Payments (WSP), Transitional Support Services (TSS) and Job Coaching to working families. In order to address job retention, the work support payments will assist the former TANF recipient with additional work related expenses or incidentals, while the TSS provides transportation, childcare and various incidentals needed to maintain employment. The services of the work support program are available to the former TANF families for a period of twelve (12) months and twice in their lifetime receipt of TANF.
TANF Work Support Payments Number of Clients SFY 2008
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TANF Work Support Payments Number of Clients SFY 2009
1,200 1,149
1,000
1,049 1,033
1,019 1,009
962
948
920
884
856
800
720
600
382 400
200
0 Jul-08 Aug-08 Sep-08 Oct-08 Nov-08 Dec-08 Jan-09 Feb-09 Mar-09 Apr-09 May-09 Jun-09
WSP
The Work Support Payments are paid through a two tiered process:
During the first six months, the former TANF family can receive a cash supplement of $200.00 per month. The family will also be eligible to receive transitional support services for this initial six-month period.
During the second six months, the former TANF family can receive a cash supplement of $100.00 per month. The family will no longer be eligible to receive transitional support services during this time.
As the caseloads decreased, the WSP also decreased during SFY 2009.
NOTE: The family that remains eligible for a reduced TANF check must be given an option to choose between TANF and the WSP.
EIS
Employment Intervention Service (EIS) is available to an applicant who has a short term critical need and she or he: has a full time job but is temporarily on unpaid leave due to his or her temporary
illness or the illness of a family member and is scheduled to return to work within 4 months, and the family unit meets the gross income ceiling (GIC) test, is employed at the time of application and is potentially eligible for less than the maximum amount of cash assistance for the family 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.
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Employment status and amount of earnings must be verified and documented in SUCCESS and the source of verification must be filed in the case record.
TSS
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 is available to: an applicant whose employment obtained during applicant job search causes the
family to become ineligible for cash assistance, an applicant who voluntarily withdraws his or her TANF application and chooses
TSS because employment obtained during applicant job search has significantly reduced his or her potential TANF grant amount and the client wishes to preserve months of potential TANF eligibility, an applicant employed at the time of application, is potentially eligible for less than the maximum amount of cash assistance for the family size, declines TANF cash assistance to preserve months of TANF eligibility and chooses TSS to meet his or her immediate need to maintain the job, a recipient whose employment causes the family 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.
Comparison of Cash Assistance and Childcare Expenditures in Millions of Dollars
SFY 1999 thru SFY 2009
$250
$219
$200 $150
$177
$179 $182
$160
$144$145
$146
$156 $15$4161
$161
$133
$121
$118
$191 $175 $167
$100 $50
$86
$62
$54
$50
$0 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2 009
TANF Cash Assistance Childcare Subsidies
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Transportation
Transportation expenditures greatly increased with the implementation of TANF and subsequently decreased as the number of TANF cases declined. GDHS/DFCS offers two transportation work supports options: direct payment to applicants and clients and transportation services through GDHS' Consolidated Transportation System. Although funds were available for transportation expenses, transportation services were not readily available, particularly in rural areas. In SFY 2000, GDHS/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 2000 to $7.5M in SFY 2009. TANF funds paid directly to applicants and clients totaled $1.7M in SFY 2009.
Childcare
Affordable, quality childcare is essential to the success of individuals going to work. The average number of children in childcare from month to month during SFY 2009 was 54,000 which was a decrease from the 54,700 children in care in SFY 2008. In addition, expenditures in the program steadily decreased over the last four years, from $219M in SFY 2006 to $167M in SFY 2009. Even with the decline in the number of children in childcare and the funds spent on the program, childcare continues to be one of the largest programs managed by caseworkers at the county level.
Number of Children in Childcare
(Based on payments processed)
State Fiscal Year 2008 - 2009
57,000
56,000
55,000
54,000
53,000
52,000
51,000
50,000
49,000 Jul
SFY 2009 52,916 SFY 2008 56,682
Aug 54,270 56,162
Se p 54,984 54,775
Oct 54,084 56,037
Nov 54,037 54,741
De c 53,525 55,048
Jan 52,095 53,235
Fe b 52,816 53,296
M ar 54,043 54,637
Apr 53,989 53,575
M ay 55,369 54,360
Jun 56,313 54,634
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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. As of June of 2009, there were 685,358 Georgia families that received Medicaid through ABD, LIM, TMA, and RSM.
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. There had been a slight drop in the amount of child support collected in SF 2008 ($566M) but the collections rebounded (595M) in FY 2009.
Increasing Success in Collecting Child Support
$800 $700 $600 $500 $400
(Collections in Millions)
$338
$368
$403
$464 $430
$524
$554
$596
$628
$651
$566
$595
$300
$200
$100
$0
SFY98 SFY99 SFY00 SFY01 SFY02 SFY03 SFY04 SFY05 SFY06 SFY07 SFY08 SFY09
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 project. Job training is provided to assist fathers in securing employment that will
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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 includes a continuing focus on moving families to economic independence through stable employment. Most recipients who are currently remaining on TANF fall into three main categories. The first and largest 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 who are enrolled in an activity and participating at the required federally mandated level for adults receiving TANF for themselves and their children. The third and most challenging category consists of recipients who are dealing 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 GDHS Division of Mental Health, Developmental Disabilities and Addictive Diseases (MHDDAD) 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.
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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 applicant/recipient has an active child protective services case and the
circumstances necessitating the CPS case create a barrier to the applicant's/recipient's attainment of self-sufficiency. 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 consistently 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. In June of 2006, 49 families received an extension, while in June 2009; Georgia had only 18 families who received a hardship extension.
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TANF Hardship Extensions
June of the Year from 2002 to 2009
2,000 1,500
1,566
1,000
1,528
1,102
500
0 2002
2003
2004
230
2005
49
2006
19
2007
16
2008
18
2009
Teen Pregnancy Prevention
The Scope of the Problem Preventing teenage pregnancy is critical to the vision of the Georgia Department of Community Health (DCH): Georgians living safe, healthy, and self-reliant lives. Research shows that the negative consequences of teen births on the health and wellbeing of individual youth and their families, community infrastructures, and Georgia's economy are both immediate and long-term. Analysis from the National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy shows that teen childbearing (teens 19 and younger) in Georgia cost taxpayers (federal, state, and local) at least $344 million in 2004. 1When teens give birth, they are less likely to complete high school and more likely to require government assistance to pay for the birth and care of their children. Children born to teen mothers may also experience poorer health outcomes, lower educational attainment, and higher rates of adolescent childbearing themselves when compared to children born to older mothers. 2
Progress Teen pregnancy rates have decreased both in Georgia and nationally. Georgia has made significant progress in reducing teen pregnancy and its associated personal and economic costs. The progress Georgia has made in reducing teen childbearing saved taxpayers an estimated $227 million in 2004 alone. Despite the good news that the
1 http://www.thenationalcampaign.org/costs/pdf/states/georgia/press_release.pdf
2 http://health.state.ga.us/pdfs/epi/cdiee/CDIEE%20Data%20Summaries%202008/2008_TeenPG_Program_Data_Summary.pdf
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rates are declining, Georgia must continue to reduce the teen pregnancy rate even further by reducing sexual activity among unmarried teens.
What is the Georgia Department of Community Health Doing? During 1997, the Georgia General Assembly appropriated $9 million in state and federal funds for a teenage pregnancy prevention initiative to be implemented beginning in FY1998 by the then Georgia Department of Human Resources.3
Together with WorkFirst, the aim of the teenage pregnancy prevention initiative is to prevent welfare dependency and improve economic opportunity and responsible parenting. Through this initiative, the Adolescent Health and Youth Development (AHYD) Unit was established. AHYD program strategies and activities are an integral part of the Georgia Maternal Child Health System, Family and Children Services, and other state, county, and community agencies.
In July 2009, the Division of Public Health transferred to the Georgia Department of Community Health (DCH). Located in the DCH, Division of Public Health, Health Promotions and Disease Prevention Programs, the AHYD Unit offers a comprehensive program addressing a wide range of risk-taking behaviors including substance abuse, violence, tobacco use, obesity, and teen sexual activity before marriage. AHYD-funded programs and services build on the strengths or "assets" of individual youth, their families, and individual communities; promote optimism about the futures of the youth it serves, and provide youth with important skills so that they can resist peer pressure and make healthy choices. The goal of Georgia's Adolescent Health Unit is to help adolescents grow up healthy, educated, connected to their families and communities, and employable.
Strategies Research shows that successful pregnancy prevention programs address the broad range of social and economic factors that affect teen behavior. No single approach is effective by itself. AHYD funds teen pregnancy prevention programs and services in communities throughout Georgia. AHYD funds 30 Teen Center Programs located in 28 counties and a District Youth Development Coordinator (YDC) in all 18 public health districts in Georgia. The state office provides ongoing program monitoring, technical assistance and training to district and program staff. AHYD program strategies and activities include:
Coordinated district adolescent health services. District and county health departments actively partner with other local youth organizations/providers to cosponsor health education and promotion events and to assure that youth have access to needed services and opportunities within their communities (e.g., legal services; food and housing assistance, dental services; tutoring and academic support; entrepreneurship; mental health counseling; youth development, physical activity, socialization, mentoring and related services). AHYD supports these local
3 http://dch.georgia.gov/vgn/images/portal/cit_1210/26/47/150831535BirthtoTeenAgers.pdf
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partnerships and collaborations by providing funding for a District Youth Development Coordinator (YDC) in all 18 public health districts in Georgia. Annual plans demonstrate local collaboration.
Comprehensive preventive health services. DCH funds 30 teen center programs to provide comprehensive prevention services, including abstinence education; drug and alcohol prevention education; and adolescent reproductive health services. Services are often placed in teen-friendly facilities and in locations such as shopping centers, welfare offices, community centers, and mobile units (vans) that go to places where teens feel comfortable. Most of the youth who come to the centers do so with the knowledge of their parents. The teens come with a wide variety of needs. They may ask for information, attend abstinence classes, learn to improve their reaction to stress and conflict, get advice on nutrition and physical activity, obtain sports physicals, be tested for a sexually transmitted disease or pregnancy, join a support group, or just have someone to talk to. These programs also provide youth access to screening for health problems and provide or link them with needed services such as immunizations and physicals. They hear about centers from their parents, other teens, school staff, caseworkers, community members, and outreach workers. Programs also pair pregnant teens with experienced mothers to encourage the young women to access prenatal care, provide them with information and resources to care for their babies, and prevent additional unplanned pregnancies. AHYD teen center programs are also funded to conduct male involvement education.
Abstinence education. Abstinence is the primary prevention method promoted across AHYD-funded programs. Abstinence education emphasizes sexual abstinence as the best choice for all teens to prevent pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases. AHYD teen center programs are funded to conduct "abstinence until marriage" education in conjunction with the DHR Teen Center Pregnancy and STD/HIV Prevention Policy (September 2004).
Outreach and community referral. Adolescent Health and Youth Development programs coordinate with other professionals and agencies to assist adolescents and their families who are in need of AHYD services to obtain accurate information and easy access. Specially trained staff with first-hand knowledge of and experience with the challenges faced by many teens at-risk are available.
Parent education and involvement. Information and education programs are available to help parents strengthen their parenting and communication skills, build strong bonds with their teen and understand the developmental changes specific to adolescence. Each DCH teen center program has established a Parent Advisory Committee (PAC) to provide parents a meaningful way to participate in planning decision-making, and opportunities for positive health promotion in the community.
Faith/health community partnerships. AHYD has formed a partnership with members of the faith community, holding conferences with community faith and
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public health leadership to engage them to work together for positive youth development and health promotion. In conjunction with the Emory Interfaith Health Program, Rollins School of Public Health, the Division of Public Health has developed a CD entitled Empowering Congregations as Resources for Adolescent Health and Youth Development, which provides information, tools, and online resources to help communities develop healthy youth. The CD is available through the AHYD Unit.
DHS Afterschool Care Program
Since the fall of 2005, the DHS Afterschool Care Program (formerly DHR Afterschool Services) has expanded out-of-school time services to school age youth throughout the state of Georgia. The program was designed to and continues to support DHS' broader goal of reducing teen pregnancy, promoting self-sufficiency among families and ending intergenerational poverty. Educational attainment and healthy living are key factors in preventing future welfare dependency among today's youth, particularly youth of economically disadvantaged families. Structured out-of-school time services can play a critical role in reducing the opportunity for youth to engage in at-risk behavior, including pre-marital sex, motivating youth to reach a high level of educational attainment, such as on-time grade promotion and graduation from high school, and can provide youth with an opportunity to increase physical fitness activity and gain exposure to good nutrition habits that helps in the prevention and decrease of obesity and other diseases and illnesses that can affect them.
In FFY '06 over $13 million dollars in TANF and state funding were used to expand summer and afterschool programs for children ages 6-19. These funds were distributed to community-based organizations and public agencies and the awards ranged from $28,000 to $800,000 to over $6 million for the GA Alliance of Boys and Girls Clubs, Inc. statewide. Over 200 sites and 19,000 youth benefited from these services. Through a pilot program with the Division of Mental Health (formerly a part of the Department of Human Resources) 5,300 youth with severe emotional difficulty and behavior disorders took part in summer recreation programs. A total of $3.5 million was provided for these programs.
In FFY '07 the budget in TANF and state funding remained at the same level but the distribution was changed. Funds were distributed to community-based organizations and public agencies. The awards ranged from $18,000 to $647,900 to over $6 million for the GA Alliance of Boys and Girls Clubs, Inc. Over 230 sites and 19,000 youth benefited from these services. Through the continued partnership with the Department's Division of Mental Health, 2,800 young people with severe emotional difficulty and behavior disorders (or those at risk for developing such behaviors) took part in summer recreation programs. A total of $1.8 million was provided for these programs.
In FFY '08 the Afterschool Care Program was funded solely with TANF funds. In addition, the maintenance of effort requirement was increased from $20M to $28M. Funds were distributed to community based-organizations and public agencies. The
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awards ranged from $25,000 to $850,000 to $8 million for the Georgia Alliance of Boys and Girls Clubs, Inc. to continue providing services state wide. Over 300 sites and 23,000 youth benefited from these services. $1M in funding was allocated to continue the pilot program with the Division of Mental Health and service youth with severe emotional or co-occurring disorders. In FFY '09 the Afterschool Care Program continued to provide funding to programs using only TANF funds and the awards ranged from to $5,000 to $850,000 for community-based organizations and public agencies and $7 million for the Georgia Alliance of Boys and Girls Clubs, Inc. This year, the DHS Afterschool Care Program funds have impacted over 330 program sites and over 38,000 youth have benefited from these programs across the state. Through a partnership with the Georgia Afterschool Investment Council, United Way of Metropolitan Atlanta and the Governor's Office of Children and Families, the Georgia Afterschool Institute was implemented and provided professional development training to staff that work in the out-of-school time field.
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 reducing the 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.
xix
A. The Total TANF Caseload Count
Total TANF Caseload Count
State Fiscal Year 2009
Average
County
Monthly
Adults
Appling
0
Atkinson
0
Bacon
0
Baker
1
Baldwin
2
Banks
2
Barrow
9
Bartow
7
Ben Hill
0
Berrien
0
Bibb
45
Bleckley
8
Brantley
0
Brooks
0
Bryan
1
Bulloch
19
Burke
12
Butts
3
Calhoun
0
Camden
4
Candler
4
Carroll
11
Catoosa
1
Charlton
0
Chatham
2
Chattahooche 2
Chattooga
7
Cherokee
10
Clarke
44
Clay
3
Clayton
121
Clinch
0
Cobb
153
Coffee
0
Colquitt
3
Columbia
6
Cook
0
Coweta
6
Crawford
3
Crisp
14
Dade
0
Dawson
5
Decatur
2
DeKalb
412
Dodge
3
Dooly
12
Dougherty
59
Douglas
36
Early
1
Echols
0
Effingham
1
Elbert
8
Emanuel
1
Average Monthly Children
55 23 35 15 118 36 91 157 77 48 624 33 47 47 29 170 86 32 17 68 56 297 81 29 296 15 49 77 215 20 835 26 616 118 143 104 41 205 36 87 14 24 89 1,252 67 26 519 238 53 3 72 67 88
Average Monthly County Cases
55 Evans 23 Fannin 35 Fayette 16 Floyd 120 Forsyth 38 Franklin 100 Fulton 164 Gilmer 77 Glascock 48 Glynn 669 Gordon 41 Grady 47 Greene 47 Gwinnett 30 Habersham 189 Hall 98 Hancock 35 Haralson 17 Harris 72 Hart 60 Heard 308 Henry 82 Houston 29 Irwin 298 Jackson 17 Jasper 56 Jeff Davis 87 Jefferson 259 Jenkins 23 Johnson 956 Jones 26 Lamar 769 Lanier 118 Laurens 146 Lee 110 Liberty 41 Lincoln 211 Long 39 Lowndes 101 Lumpkin 14 Macon 29 Madison 91 Marion 1,664 McDuffie 70 McIntosh 38 Meriwether 578 Miller 274 Mitchell 54 Monroe 3 Montgomery 73 Morgan 75 Murray 89 Muscogee
Average Monthly Adults
4 2 13 37 11 2 544 0 0 6 10 5 2 195 6 25 3 0 8 17 0 35 67 0 8 4 3 6 1 5 6 2 0 19 0 27 0 1 1 2 3 5 1 3 2 3 3 3 3 7 2 4 140
Average Average
Monthly Monthly County
Children Cases
39
43 Newton
17
19 Oconee
84
97 Oglethorpe
207
244 Paulding
52
63 Peach
47
49 Pickens
2,099 2,643 Pierce
21
21 Pike
5
5 Polk
173
179 Pulaski
116
126 Putnam
66
71 Quitman
41
43 Rabun
457
652 Randolph
36
42 Richmond
222
247 Rockdale
32
35 Schley
59
59 Screven
38
46 Seminole
66
83 Spalding
39
39 Stephens
310
345 Stewart
263
330 Sumter
33
33 Talbot
85
93 Taliaferro
40
44 Tattnall
37
40 Taylor
77
83 Telfair
52
53 Terrell
34
39 Thomas
63
69 Tift
41
43 Toombs
32
32 Towns
142
161 Treutlen
28
28 Troup
82
109 Turner
19
19 Twiggs
39
40 Union
249
250 Upson
29
31 Walker
41
44 Walton
64
69 Ware
33
34 Warren
79
82 Washington
26
28 Wayne
75
78 Webster
19
22 Wheeler
78
81 White
46
49 Whitfield
29
36 Wilcox
59
61 Wilkes
80
84 Wilkinson
582
722 Worth
STATE
Average Monthly Adults
19 1 2 1 14 4 0 1 8 14 8 3 0 3 130 20 0 9 1 11 19 1 20 2 0 4 9 2 5 6 0 12 0 8 16 0 3 2 5 2 10 0 5 5 3 1 1 4 2 7 6 2 3 2,713
Average Monthly Children
229 20 24 122 90 36 46 33 106 29 57 11 14 39 647 189 13 67 40 201 71 18 150 26 9 72 27 45 57 117 96 102 6 24 218 21 41 16 78 109 119 109 22 58 76 5 16 34 118 28 31 30 51 18,461
Average Monthly Cases
248 21 26 123 104 40 46 34 114 43 65 14 14 42 777 209 13 76 41 212 90 19 170 28 9 76 36 47 62 123 96 114 6 32 234 21 44 18 83 111 129 109 27 63 79 6 17 38 120 35 37 32 54 21,174
2
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, 2009
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
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 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 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
EXTENSION REASON
Participate in
Cares For
Substance Diabled Disabled
Abuse
(Not SSI) Household
Program
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
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
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 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
Limited Employment Opportunities
Total
Total
Families with TANF
Extentions Families
Percentage of Families
with Extentions
0
0
50
0.0%
0
0
21
0.0%
0
0
32
0.0%
0
0
13
0.0%
0
0
125
0.0%
0
0
37
0.0%
0
0
98
0.0%
0
0
164
0.0%
0
0
72
0.0%
0
0
51
0.0%
0
1
660
0.2%
0
0
41
0.0%
0
0
48
0.0%
0
0
38
0.0%
0
0
25
0.0%
0
0
197
0.0%
0
0
98
0.0%
0
0
36
0.0%
0
0
17
0.0%
0
0
73
0.0%
0
1
57
1.8%
0
0
304
0.0%
0
0
76
0.0%
0
0
22
0.0%
0
2
263
0.8%
0
0
15
0.0%
0
0
52
0.0%
0
0
76
0.0%
0
0
253
0.0%
0
0
23
0.0%
0
1
938
0.1%
0
0
25
0.0%
0
0
838
0.0%
0
0
118
0.0%
8
County
COLQUITT COLUMBIA COOK COWETA CRAWFORD CRISP 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
TANF FAMILIES WITH HARDSHIP EXTENSIONS
As of June 30, 2009
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 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 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
EXTENSION REASON
Participate in
Cares For
Substance Diabled Disabled
Abuse
(Not SSI) Household
Program
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
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
2
0
0
0
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
Incomplete Work Plan
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 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
Total
Total
Families with TANF
Extentions Families
Percentage of Families
with Extentions
0
0
141
0.0%
0
0
110
0.0%
0
0
35
0.0%
0
0
202
0.0%
0
0
38
0.0%
0
0
89
0.0%
0
0
15
0.0%
0
0
24
0.0%
0
0
84
0.0%
0
3
1,628
0.2%
0
0
70
0.0%
0
0
34
0.0%
0
0
563
0.0%
0
0
279
0.0%
0
0
52
0.0%
0
0
3
0.0%
0
0
74
0.0%
0
0
71
0.0%
0
0
89
0.0%
0
0
44
0.0%
0
0
17
0.0%
0
0
90
0.0%
0
2
257
0.8%
0
0
66
0.0%
0
1
46
2.2%
0
1
2,655
0.0%
0
0
23
0.0%
0
0
6
0.0%
0
0
166
0.0%
0
0
122
0.0%
0
0
65
0.0%
0
0
41
0.0%
0
0
666
0.0%
0
0
42
0.0%
9
County
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 MADISON MARION MCDUFFIE MCINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL MONROE
TANF FAMILIES WITH HARDSHIP EXTENSIONS
As of June 30, 2009
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 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 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
EXTENSION REASON
Participate in
Cares For
Substance Diabled Disabled
Abuse
(Not SSI) Household
Program
Member
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
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
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
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 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
Limited Employment Opportunities
Total
Total
Families with TANF
Extentions Families
Percentage of Families
with Extentions
0
0
254
0.0%
0
0
31
0.0%
0
1
50
2.0%
0
0
37
0.0%
0
0
75
0.0%
0
0
36
0.0%
0
0
326
0.0%
0
1
310
0.3%
0
0
35
0.0%
0
0
88
0.0%
0
0
46
0.0%
0
0
43
0.0%
0
0
79
0.0%
0
0
49
0.0%
0
0
36
0.0%
0
0
65
0.0%
0
0
43
0.0%
0
0
35
0.0%
0
0
159
0.0%
0
0
31
0.0%
0
0
103
0.0%
0
0
18
0.0%
0
0
39
0.0%
0
0
241
0.0%
0
0
27
0.0%
0
0
39
0.0%
0
0
68
0.0%
0
0
39
0.0%
0
0
79
0.0%
0
0
27
0.0%
0
1
74
1.4%
0
0
18
0.0%
0
0
79
0.0%
0
0
51
0.0%
10
County
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
TANF FAMILIES WITH HARDSHIP EXTENSIONS
As of June 30, 2009
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 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 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
EXTENSION REASON
Participate in
Cares For
Substance Diabled Disabled
Abuse
(Not SSI) Household
Program
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
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
0
0
0
Incomplete Work Plan
0 0 0 0 1 0 0 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
Limited Employment Opportunities
Total
Total
Families with TANF
Extentions Families
Percentage of Families
with Extentions
0
0
37
0.0%
0
0
57
0.0%
0
0
88
0.0%
0
0
733
0.0%
0
1
233
0.4%
0
0
19
0.0%
0
0
23
0.0%
0
0
120
0.0%
0
0
104
0.0%
0
0
42
0.0%
0
0
40
0.0%
0
0
30
0.0%
0
0
110
0.0%
0
0
40
0.0%
0
0
63
0.0%
0
0
14
0.0%
0
0
17
0.0%
0
0
41
0.0%
0
0
770
0.0%
0
0
196
0.0%
0
0
12
0.0%
0
1
77
1.3%
0
0
42
0.0%
0
0
200
0.0%
0
0
84
0.0%
0
0
18
0.0%
0
0
162
0.0%
0
0
25
0.0%
0
0
9
0.0%
0
0
70
0.0%
0
0
33
0.0%
0
0
50
0.0%
0
0
59
0.0%
0
0
121
0.0%
11
County
TIFT TOOMBS TOWNS TREUTLEN TROUP TURNER TWIGGS UNION UPSON WALKER WALTON WARE WARREN WASHINGTON WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH TOTAL
TANF FAMILIES WITH HARDSHIP EXTENSIONS
As of June 30, 2009
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
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
EXTENSION REASON
Participate in
Cares For
Substance Diabled Disabled
Abuse
(Not SSI) Household
Program
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
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
1
3
1
Incomplete Work Plan
1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 13
Limited Employment Opportunities
Total
Total
Families with TANF
Extentions Families
Percentage of Families
with Extentions
0
1
106
0.9%
0
0
118
0.0%
0
0
4
0.0%
0
0
33
0.0%
0
0
218
0.0%
0
0
23
0.0%
0
0
44
0.0%
0
0
23
0.0%
0
0
73
0.0%
0
0
94
0.0%
0
0
137
0.0%
0
0
113
0.0%
0
0
23
0.0%
0
0
60
0.0%
0
0
88
0.0%
0
0
7
0.0%
0
0
17
0.0%
0
0
41
0.0%
0
0
110
0.0%
0
0
32
0.0%
0
0
33
0.0%
0
0
24
0.0%
0
0
50
0.0%
0
18
20,803
0.1%
12
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 2009
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 DOUGLAS EARLY ECHOLS EFFINGHAM
Annual
Clients
0 0 0 0 3 7 12 22 0 0 95 11 0 0 0 26 29 18 0 0 11 4 16 0 0 0 0 15 32 0 1867 0 1375 0 0 0 0 2 8 11 0 41 1 28 3 0 111 130 0 0 0
Annual
Funds
$0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $260.00 $605.00 $770.00 $1,201.50 $0.00 $0.00 $7,685.00 $795.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $1,655.00 $2,680.00 $1,105.00 $0.00 $0.00 $940.00 $175.00 $650.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $1,277.22 $2,470.00 $0.00 $384,235.85 $0.00 $53,683.99 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $220.00 $605.00 $835.00 $0.00 $3,180.00 $90.00 $2,872.66 $265.00 $0.00 $9,410.00 $13,111.39 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00
Cost Per
Client
$0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $86.67 $86.43 $64.17 $54.61 $0.00 $0.00 $80.89 $72.27 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $63.65 $92.41 $61.39 $0.00 $0.00 $85.45 $43.75 $40.63 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $85.15 $77.19 $0.00 $205.80 $0.00 $39.04 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $110.00 $75.63 $75.91 $0.00 $77.56 $90.00 $102.60 $88.33 $0.00 $84.77 $100.86 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00
13
TANF RECIPIENT TRANSPORTATION ASSISTANCE
State Fiscal Year 2009
COUNTY
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 MADISON MARION MCDUFFIE MCINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL MONROE
Annual
Clients
21 0 16 4 45 102 92 4 11517 0 0 0 75 2 4 833 33 155 0 0 1 87 1 258 186 0 22 7 12 16 1 0 10 0 0 6 0 5 0 0 1 2 4 10 1 7 0 8 6 5 0
Annual
Funds
$6,061.00 $0.00
$1,260.00 $275.00 $3,314.46 $6,875.00 $7,650.00 $315.00 $522,404.50
$0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $3,326.54 $130.00 $230.00 $64,599.00 $2,476.00 $11,189.00 $0.00 $0.00 $80.00 $6,668.17 $85.00 $30,765.00 $14,905.00 $0.00 $1,440.70 $545.00 $725.00 $1,090.00 $100.00 $0.00 $805.00 $0.00 $0.00 $525.00 $0.00 $350.00 $0.00 $0.00 $10.00 $105.00 $268.00 $1,080.00 $100.00 $515.00 $0.00 $725.00 $605.00 $315.00 $0.00
Cost Per
Client
$288.62 $0.00 $78.75 $68.75 $73.65 $67.40 $83.15 $78.75 $45.36 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $44.35 $65.00 $57.50 $77.55 $75.03 $72.19 $0.00 $0.00 $80.00 $76.65 $85.00
$119.24 $80.13 $0.00 $65.49 $77.86 $60.42 $68.13 $100.00 $0.00 $80.50 $0.00 $0.00 $87.50 $0.00 $70.00 $0.00 $0.00 $10.00 $52.50 $67.00 $108.00 $100.00 $73.57 $0.00 $90.63 $100.83 $63.00 $0.00
14
TANF RECIPIENT TRANSPORTATION ASSISTANCE
State Fiscal Year 2009
COUNTY
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 TURNER TWIGGS UNION UPSON WALKER WALTON WARE WARREN WASHINGTON WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER
Annual
Clients
25 3 31 578 15 0 6 0 15 39 0 26 14 21 27 8 0 0 458 0 0 38 0 2 0 0 34 4 0 19 24 30 7 0 0 2 0 30 0 0 3 7 1 0 22 0 3 2 2 0 0
Annual
Funds
$2,540.00 $300.00 $2,998.00 $44,969.00 $982.00
$0.00 $620.00
$0.00 $1,320.00 $2,323.06
$0.00 $2,695.00 $800.00 $1,710.00 $1,750.00 $710.00
$0.00 $0.00 $37,579.00 $0.00 $0.00 $2,460.00 $0.00 $150.00 $0.00 $0.00 $2,995.00 $295.00 $0.00 $1,090.00 $1,310.00 $3,865.00 $495.00 $0.00 $0.00 $140.00 $0.00 $2,145.00 $0.00 $0.00 $175.00 $1,090.00 $50.00 $0.00 $1,090.00 $0.00 $209.00 $115.00 $110.00 $0.00 $0.00
Cost Per
Client
$101.60 $100.00 $96.71 $77.80 $65.47
$0.00 $103.33
$0.00 $88.00 $59.57 $0.00 $103.65 $57.14 $81.43 $64.81 $88.75 $0.00 $0.00 $82.05 $0.00 $0.00 $64.74 $0.00 $75.00 $0.00 $0.00 $88.09 $73.75 $0.00 $57.37 $54.58 $128.83 $70.71 $0.00 $0.00 $70.00 $0.00 $71.50 $0.00 $0.00 $58.33 $155.71 $50.00 $0.00 $49.55 $0.00 $69.67 $57.50 $55.00 $0.00 $0.00
15
TANF RECIPIENT TRANSPORTATION ASSISTANCE
State Fiscal Year 2009
COUNTY
WHITE WHITFIELD WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH STATE
Annual Clients
32 15 8 12 2 15 19,017
Annual Funds
$3,130.69 $1,385.00 $1,375.00 $940.00
$85.00 $930.00 $1,309,615.73
Cost Per Client
$97.83 $92.33 $171.88 $78.33 $42.50 $62.00 $68.87
16
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 2009
County
Type of Assistance
Annual Clients
Annual Funds
Average Cost per Client
APPLING ATKINSON BACON BAKER BALDWIN BANKS BARROW BARTOW BEN HILL BERRIEN BIBB BLECKLEY BRANTLEY BROOKS BRYAN BULLOCH BURKE BUTTS
Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation
12 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 60 9 14 0 0 14 54 1 14 39 0 5 2 0 0 0 0 0 2545 709 370 14 0 10 0 0 0 9 0 4 0 0 2 310 0 27 3 0 0 79 36 47
$1,320.00 $211.20 $15.00
$0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $36.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $8,655.00 $1,126.14 $445.00 $0.00 $0.00 $573.00 $9,322.00 $55.59 $1,005.00 $4,393.00 $0.00 $185.00 $116.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $340,752.00 $334,660.36 $16,232.50 $1,579.00 $0.00 $340.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $1,045.00 $0.00 $40.00 $0.00 $0.00 $10.00 $39,161.00 $0.00 $2,983.76 $225.00 $0.00 $0.00 $8,351.00 $9,900.00 $2,025.00
$110.00 $211.20 $15.00
$0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $36.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $144.25 $125.13 $31.79 $0.00 $0.00 $40.93 $172.63 $55.59 $71.79 $112.64 $0.00 $37.00 $58.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $133.89 $472.02 $43.87 $112.79 $0.00 $34.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $116.11 $0.00 $10.00 $0.00 $0.00 $5.00 $126.33 $0.00 $110.51 $75.00 $0.00 $0.00 $105.71 $275.00 $43.09
17
DIVERSIONARY ASSISTANCE TO PREVENT TANF RECEIPT
State Fiscal Year 2009
County
Type of Assistance
Annual Clients
Annual Funds
Average Cost per Client
Childcare
CALHOUN
Incidentals
Transportation
Childcare
CAMDEN
Incidentals
Transportation
Childcare
CANDLER
Incidentals
Transportation
Childcare
CARROLL
Incidentals
Transportation
Childcare
CATOOSA
Incidentals
Transportation
Childcare
CHARLTON
Incidentals
Transportation
Childcare
CHATHAM
Incidentals
Transportation
Childcare
CHATTAHOOCHEE Incidentals
Transportation
Childcare
CHATTOOGA
Incidentals
Transportation
Childcare
CHEROKEE
Incidentals
Transportation
Childcare
CLARKE
Incidentals
Transportation
Childcare
CLAY
Incidentals
Transportation
Childcare
CLAYTON
Incidentals
Transportation
Childcare
CLINCH
Incidentals
Transportation
Childcare
COBB
Incidentals
Transportation
Childcare
COFFEE
Incidentals
Transportation
Childcare
COLQUITT
Incidentals
Transportation
Childcare
COLUMBIA
Incidentals
Transportation
0 0 0 72 0 0 4 0 1 430 163 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 12 32 130 88 5 138 269 0 54 0 0 2 4518 0 1 0 0 0 2174 1 1461 0 0 1 78 3 22 5 0 0
$0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $13,911.00 $0.00 $0.00 $487.00 $0.00 $20.00 $41,006.00 $36,602.58 $0.00 $166.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $720.00 $16,491.26 $3,793.63 $16,177.00 $1,556.81 $5,410.97 $30,441.00 $0.00 $2,315.00 $0.00 $0.00 $150.00 $787,402.00 $0.00 $7,510.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $384,929.00 $300.00 $28,456.61 $0.00 $0.00 $15.00 $10,037.00 $173.00 $546.29 $898.00 $0.00 $0.00
$0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $193.21 $0.00 $0.00 $121.75 $0.00 $20.00 $95.36 $224.56 $0.00 $83.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $60.00 $515.35 $29.18 $183.83 $311.36 $39.21 $113.16 $0.00 $42.87 $0.00 $0.00 $75.00 $174.28 $0.00 $7,510.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $177.06 $300.00 $19.48 $0.00 $0.00 $15.00 $128.68 $57.67 $24.83 $179.60 $0.00 $0.00
18
DIVERSIONARY ASSISTANCE TO PREVENT TANF RECEIPT
State Fiscal Year 2009
County
Type of Assistance
Annual Clients
Annual Funds
Average Cost per Client
COOK COWETA CRAWFORD CRISP DADE DAWSON DECATUR DEKALB DODGE DOOLY DOUGHERTY DOUGLAS EARLY ECHOLS EFFINGHAM ELBERT EMANUEL EVANS
Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation
38 0 35 81 34 9 7 0 1 63 4 11 0 0 2 6 1 3 5 0 2 7845 3403 26347 24 0 0 42 0 1 111 1 63 1775 10 3 0 0 9 0 0 0 26 0 0 48 1 11 4 0 0 0 0 7
$4,809.00 $0.00
$665.00 $10,165.00 $6,941.75
$195.00 $887.00
$0.00 $25.00 $7,175.00 $351.11 $265.00 $0.00 $0.00 $75.00 $822.00 $574.43 $145.00 $424.00 $0.00 $50.00 $1,421,097.00 $8,200.71 $185,766.50 $2,325.00 $0.00 $0.00 $5,034.00 $0.00 $65.00 $15,694.00 $940.00 $4,375.00 $328,523.00 $1,321.39 $2,757.57 $0.00 $0.00 $290.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $3,484.00 $0.00 $0.00 $5,435.00 $52.83 $585.00 $539.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $315.00
$126.55 $0.00 $19.00
$125.49 $204.17 $21.67 $126.71
$0.00 $25.00 $113.89 $87.78 $24.09 $0.00 $0.00 $37.50 $137.00 $574.43 $48.33 $84.80 $0.00 $25.00 $181.15 $2.41 $7.05 $96.88 $0.00 $0.00 $119.86 $0.00 $65.00 $141.39 $940.00 $69.44 $185.08 $132.14 $919.19 $0.00 $0.00 $32.22 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $134.00 $0.00 $0.00 $113.23 $52.83 $53.18 $134.75 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $45.00
19
DIVERSIONARY ASSISTANCE TO PREVENT TANF RECEIPT
State Fiscal Year 2009
County
Type of Assistance
Annual Clients
Annual Funds
Average Cost per Client
FANNIN FAYETTE FLOYD FORSYTH FRANKLIN FULTON GILMER GLASCOCK GLYNN GORDON GRADY GREENE GWINNETT HABERSHAM HALL HANCOCK HARALSON HARRIS
Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation
91 9 164 167 1 4 813 97 43 72 2 65 0 0 6 9834 4 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 175 0 2 153 5 244 3 0 18 24 3 1 2372 0 2459 22 16 175 153 1 155 3 0 0 2 0 0 2 0 2
$10,962.00 $1,667.78 $5,538.70 $30,458.00 $940.00 $135.00 $108,714.00 $5,538.32 $2,002.94 $12,573.00 $415.00 $3,545.00
$0.00 $0.00 $120.00 $1,900,592.00 $3,237.50 $0.00 $140.00 $417.73 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $18,030.00 $0.00 $750.00 $20,747.00 $371.63 $7,867.92 $288.00 $0.00 $470.00 $2,938.00 $273.74 $25.00 $422,674.00 $0.00 $36,947.00 $2,728.00 $4,754.41 $2,700.00 $32,724.00 $300.00 $5,515.00 $156.00 $0.00 $0.00 $296.00 $0.00 $0.00 $238.00 $0.00 $100.00
$120.46 $185.31 $33.77 $182.38 $940.00 $33.75 $133.72 $57.10 $46.58 $174.63 $207.50 $54.54
$0.00 $0.00 $20.00 $193.27 $809.38 $0.00 $140.00 $208.87 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $103.03 $0.00 $375.00 $135.60 $74.33 $32.25 $96.00 $0.00 $26.11 $122.42 $91.25 $25.00 $178.19 $0.00 $15.03 $124.00 $297.15 $15.43 $213.88 $300.00 $35.58 $52.00 $0.00 $0.00 $148.00 $0.00 $0.00 $119.00 $0.00 $50.00
20
DIVERSIONARY ASSISTANCE TO PREVENT TANF RECEIPT
State Fiscal Year 2009
County
Type of Assistance
Annual Clients
Annual Funds
Average Cost per Client
HART HEARD HENRY HOUSTON IRWIN JACKSON JASPER JEFF DAVIS JEFFERSON JENKINS JOHNSON JONES LAMAR LANIER LAURENS LEE LIBERTY LINCOLN
Childcare
2
Incidentals
3
Transportation
228
Childcare
0
Incidentals
0
Transportation
0
Childcare
722
Incidentals
169
Transportation
1
Childcare
987
Incidentals
14
Transportation
332
Childcare
0
Incidentals
0
Transportation
0
Childcare
19
Incidentals
4
Transportation
10
Childcare
12
Incidentals
2
Transportation
4
Childcare
0
Incidentals
1
Transportation
8
Childcare
1
Incidentals
0
Transportation
9
Childcare
0
Incidentals
0
Transportation
4
Childcare
34
Incidentals
5
Transportation
3
Childcare
0
Incidentals
1
Transportation
3
Childcare
10
Incidentals
13
Transportation
1
Childcare
2
Incidentals
0
Transportation
1
Childcare
53
Incidentals
0
Transportation
17
Childcare
0
Incidentals
0
Transportation
0
Childcare
97
Incidentals
0
Transportation
9
Childcare
0
Incidentals
0
Transportation
0
$300.00 $218.65 $6,545.00
$0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $115,919.00 $58,500.00 $15.00 $133,448.00 $149,902.72 $24,750.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $2,655.00 $332.88 $374.03 $1,380.00 $132.84 $180.00 $0.00 $68.64 $315.00 $136.00 $0.00 $220.00 $0.00 $0.00 $140.00 $4,098.00 $320.96 $90.00 $0.00 $1,000.00 $180.00 $1,225.00 $4,200.00 $25.00 $350.00 $0.00 $75.00 $6,492.00 $0.00 $780.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $12,121.00 $0.00 $550.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00
$150.00 $72.88 $28.71 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $160.55 $346.15 $15.00 $135.21 $10,707.34 $74.55 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $139.74 $83.22 $37.40 $115.00 $66.42 $45.00 $0.00 $68.64 $39.38 $136.00 $0.00 $24.44 $0.00 $0.00 $35.00 $120.53 $64.19 $30.00 $0.00 $1,000.00 $60.00 $122.50 $323.08 $25.00 $175.00 $0.00 $75.00 $122.49 $0.00 $45.88 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $124.96 $0.00 $61.11 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00
21
DIVERSIONARY ASSISTANCE TO PREVENT TANF RECEIPT
State Fiscal Year 2009
County
Type of Assistance
Annual Clients
Annual Funds
Average Cost per Client
LONG LOWNDES LUMPKIN MACON MADISON MARION MCDUFFIE MCINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN MURRAY MUSCOGEE NEWTON OCONEE
Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation
0 0 0 175 0 33 17 0 28 2 0 2 46 1 6 0 0 0 4 6 3 0 1 0 70 38 4 0 0 0 1 3 3 2 0 0 6 4 6 6 1 11 6 2 26 1460 0 1 172 3 7 4 1 0
$0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $18,210.00 $0.00 $390.00 $1,987.00 $0.00 $1,505.00 $210.00 $0.00 $85.00 $5,721.00 $95.00 $370.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $680.00 $3,089.49 $180.00 $0.00 $20.00 $0.00 $7,272.00 $8,025.00 $375.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $70.00 $798.12 $75.00 $210.00 $0.00 $0.00 $390.00 $555.20 $120.00 $629.00 $102.88 $235.00 $600.00 $448.90 $500.09 $195,186.00 $0.00 $20.00 $19,903.00 $1,360.80 $275.00 $684.00 $53.64 $0.00
$0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $104.06 $0.00 $11.82 $116.88 $0.00 $53.75 $105.00 $0.00 $42.50 $124.37 $95.00 $61.67 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $170.00 $514.92 $60.00 $0.00 $20.00 $0.00 $103.89 $211.18 $93.75 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $70.00 $266.04 $25.00 $105.00 $0.00 $0.00 $65.00 $138.80 $20.00 $104.83 $102.88 $21.36 $100.00 $224.45 $19.23 $133.69 $0.00 $20.00 $115.72 $453.60 $39.29 $171.00 $53.64 $0.00
22
DIVERSIONARY ASSISTANCE TO PREVENT TANF RECEIPT
State Fiscal Year 2009
County
Type of Assistance
Annual Clients
Annual Funds
Average Cost per Client
OGLETHORPE PAULDING PEACH PICKENS PIERCE PIKE POLK PULASKI PUTNAM QUITMAN RABUN RANDOLPH RICHMOND ROCKDALE SCHLEY SCREVEN SEMINOLE SPALDING
Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation
5 0 1 125 0 24 271 0 5 0 7 37 0 0 0 21 13 0 5 0 0 61 0 9 0 2 20 0 0 3 0 0 8 0 0 0 1557 26 58 641 0 818 0 0 0 113 11 29 8 0 1 393 145 0
$786.00 $0.00
$100.00 $20,092.00
$0.00 $630.00 $38,185.00
$0.00 $335.00
$0.00 $1,111.13 $2,114.87
$0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $3,921.00 $3,425.00 $0.00 $490.00 $0.00 $0.00 $7,555.00 $0.00 $395.00 $0.00 $133.00 $1,000.00 $0.00 $0.00 $225.00 $0.00 $0.00 $375.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $198,239.00 $1,935.00 $2,035.00 $126,394.00 $0.00 $19,786.50 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $10,892.00 $4,260.66 $1,173.00 $1,040.00 $0.00 $30.00 $36,761.00 $36,025.00 $0.00
$157.20 $0.00
$100.00 $160.74
$0.00 $26.25 $140.90 $0.00 $67.00 $0.00 $158.73 $57.16 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $186.71 $263.46 $0.00 $98.00 $0.00 $0.00 $123.85 $0.00 $43.89 $0.00 $66.50 $50.00 $0.00 $0.00 $75.00 $0.00 $0.00 $46.88 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $127.32 $74.42 $35.09 $197.18 $0.00 $24.19 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $96.39 $387.33 $40.45 $130.00 $0.00 $30.00 $93.54 $248.45 $0.00
23
DIVERSIONARY ASSISTANCE TO PREVENT TANF RECEIPT
State Fiscal Year 2009
County
Type of Assistance
Annual Clients
Annual Funds
Average Cost per Client
Childcare
192
STEPHENS
Incidentals
0
Transportation
347
Childcare
0
STEWART
Incidentals
0
Transportation
0
Childcare
69
SUMTER
Incidentals
3
Transportation
13
Childcare
0
TALBOT
Incidentals
0
Transportation
3
Childcare
0
TALIAFERRO
Incidentals
0
Transportation
0
Childcare
24
TATTNALL
Incidentals
0
Transportation
7
Childcare
0
TAYLOR
Incidentals
0
Transportation
8
Childcare
0
TELFAIR
Incidentals
0
Transportation
0
Childcare
0
TERRELL
Incidentals
0
Transportation
0
Childcare
27
THOMAS
Incidentals
12
Transportation
120
Childcare
2
TIFT
Incidentals
1
Transportation
0
Childcare
11
TOOMBS
Incidentals
0
Transportation
6
Childcare
0
TOWNS
Incidentals
0
Transportation
0
Childcare
10
TREUTLEN
Incidentals
3
Transportation
8
Childcare
309
TROUP
Incidentals
167
Transportation
1
Childcare
0
TURNER
Incidentals
0
Transportation
0
Childcare
12
TWIGGS
Incidentals
1
Transportation
1
Childcare
1
UNION
Incidentals
4
Transportation
9
$22,624.00 $0.00
$27,158.39 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00
$7,001.00 $2,782.00 $830.00
$0.00 $0.00 $115.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $1,832.00 $0.00 $245.00 $0.00 $0.00 $360.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $3,279.00 $1,020.57 $2,504.00 $340.00 $105.38 $0.00 $980.00 $0.00 $160.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $884.00 $1,027.84 $335.00 $35,060.00 $40,125.00 $65.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $2,014.00 $150.00 $55.00 $140.00 $791.73 $500.00
$117.83 $0.00 $78.27 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00
$101.46 $927.33 $63.85
$0.00 $0.00 $38.33 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $76.33 $0.00 $35.00 $0.00 $0.00 $45.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $121.44 $85.05 $20.87 $170.00 $105.38 $0.00 $89.09 $0.00 $26.67 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $88.40 $342.61 $41.88 $113.46 $240.27 $65.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $167.83 $150.00 $55.00 $140.00 $197.93 $55.56
24
DIVERSIONARY ASSISTANCE TO PREVENT TANF RECEIPT
State Fiscal Year 2009
County
UPSON WALKER WALTON WARE WARREN WASHINGTON WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH TOTAL
Type of Assistance
Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation Childcare Incidentals Transportation
Annual Clients
32 19 2 12 0 169 408 17 43 1 1 0 17 0 0 0 0 5 43 0 1 6 0 1 0 0 0 63 0 15 9 0 4 6 0 2 2 0 8 19 0 2 0 0 4 43,126 5,258 34,713
Annual Funds
Average Cost per Client
$2,514.00 $4,125.00
$70.00 $1,025.00
$0.00 $4,019.00 $58,413.00 $1,740.13 $1,507.50 $140.00 $1,120.00
$0.00 $2,312.00
$0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $220.00 $4,305.00 $0.00 $40.00 $642.00 $0.00 $10.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $7,398.00 $0.00 $769.00 $1,346.00 $0.00 $200.00 $990.00 $0.00 $125.00 $420.00 $0.00 $335.00 $1,292.00 $0.00 $75.00 $0.00 $0.00 $95.00 $7,200,946.00 $766,478.43 $439,759.77
$78.56 $217.11 $35.00 $85.42
$0.00 $23.78 $143.17 $102.36 $35.06 $140.00 $1,120.00 $0.00 $136.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $44.00 $100.12 $0.00 $40.00 $107.00 $0.00 $10.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $117.43 $0.00 $51.27 $149.56 $0.00 $50.00 $165.00 $0.00 $62.50 $210.00 $0.00 $41.88 $68.00 $0.00 $37.50 $0.00 $0.00 $23.75 $166.97 $145.77 $12.67
25
F. The Number of Individuals Denied Assistance Due to a Serious Felony Conviction
NUMBER OF INDIVIDUALS DENIED ASSISTANCE DUE TO A SERIOUS VIOLENT FELONY CONVICTION
State Fiscal Year 2009
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 DOUGLAS EARLY ECHOLS
Number Denied/ County Closed
0 EFFINGHAM 0 ELBERT 0 EMANUEL 0 EVANS 3 FANNIN 0 FAYETTE 1 FLOYD 0 FORSYTH 1 FRANKLIN 0 FULTON 0 GILMER 0 GLASCOCK 1 GLYNN 1 GORDON 0 GRADY 2 GREENE 0 GWINNETT 0 HABERSHAM 0 HALL 0 HANCOCK 1 HARALSON 0 HARRIS 1 HART 0 HEARD 2 HENRY 0 HOUSTON 0 IRWIN 0 JACKSON 1 JASPER 0 JEFF DAVIS 7 JEFFERSON 0 JENKINS 4 JOHNSON 0 JONES 0 LAMAR 0 LANIER 0 LAURENS 2 LEE 0 LIBERTY 0 LINCOLN 0 LONG 0 LOWNDES 0 LUMPKIN 6 MACON 0 MADISON 0 MARION 4 MCDUFFIE 1 MCINTOSH 0 MERIWETHER 0 MILLER
Number Denied/ County Closed
0 MITCHELL 1 MONROE 0 MONTGOMERY 0 MORGAN 0 MURRAY 1 MUSCOGEE 0 NEWTON 0 OCONEE 2 OGLETHORPE 9 PAULDING 0 PEACH 0 PICKENS 1 PIERCE 0 PIKE 0 POLK 0 PULASKI 3 PUTNAM 1 QUITMAN 3 RABUN 2 RANDOLPH 0 RICHMOND 0 ROCKDALE 0 SCHLEY 1 SCREVEN 1 SEMINOLE 4 SPALDING 1 STEPHENS 1 STEWART 0 SUMTER 0 TALBOT 0 TALIAFERRO 1 TATTNALL 2 TAYLOR 0 TELFAIR 0 TERRELL 0 THOMAS 2 TIFT 0 TOOMBS 1 TOWNS 0 TREUTLEN 1 TROUP 0 TURNER 0 TWIGGS 0 UNION 2 UPSON 0 WALKER 0 WALTON 0 WARE 0 WARREN 0 WASHINGTON
Number
Number
Denied/ County
Denied/
Closed
Closed
1 WAYNE
3
0 WEBSTER
0
0 WHEELER
0
0 WHITE
0
0 WHITFIELD
3
2 WILCOX
0
0 WILKES
0
0 WILKINSON 1
0 WORTH
0
1 TOTAL
107
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
3
2
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
1
1
0
0
2
0
0
0
2
0
2
0
0
0
26
G. The Number of Mothers Under 19 Years of Age Who Received Assistance and Their
Percentage of the Total TANF Caseload
NUMBER OF MOTHERS UNDER 19 YEARS OF AGE WHO RECEIVED ASSISTANCE AND THEIR PERCENTAGE OF
THE TOTAL TANF CASELOAD
State Fiscal Year 2009
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 DOUGLAS
Number of Teen Moms as of June
2009
TANF Caseload as of June 2009
Percentage of Total Caseload
1
50
2.0%
1
21
4.8%
1
32
3.1%
1
13
7.7%
1
125
0.8%
1
37
2.7%
6
98
6.1%
1
164
0.6%
1
72
1.4%
1
51
2.0%
13
660
2.0%
4
41
9.8%
1
48
2.1%
1
38
2.6%
1
25
4.0%
3
197
1.5%
9
98
9.2%
1
36
2.8%
1
17
5.9%
2
73
2.7%
1
57
1.8%
1
304
0.3%
1
76
1.3%
1
22
4.5%
1
263
0.4%
1
15
6.7%
9
52
17.3%
1
76
1.3%
9
253
3.6%
1
23
4.3%
23
938
2.5%
1
25
4.0%
30
838
3.6%
1
118
0.8%
2
141
1.4%
2
110
1.8%
1
35
2.9%
1
202
0.5%
1
38
2.6%
4
89
4.5%
1
15
6.7%
1
24
4.2%
1
84
1.2%
87
1,628
5.3%
2
70
2.9%
5
34
14.7%
17
563
3.0%
9
279
3.2%
27
NUMBER OF MOTHERS UNDER 19 YEARS OF AGE WHO RECEIVED ASSISTANCE AND THEIR PERCENTAGE OF
THE TOTAL TANF CASELOAD
State Fiscal Year 2009
County
APPLING 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 MADISON
Number of Teen Moms as of June
2009
TANF Caseload as of June 2009
Percentage of Total Caseload
1
50
2.0%
1
52
1.9%
1
3
33.3%
1
74
1.4%
1
71
1.4%
1
89
1.1%
1
44
2.3%
1
17
5.9%
2
90
2.2%
15
257
5.8%
4
66
6.1%
1
46
2.2%
96
2,655
3.6%
1
23
4.3%
1
6
16.7%
1
166
0.6%
2
122
1.6%
1
65
1.5%
1
41
2.4%
17
666
2.6%
2
42
4.8%
6
254
2.4%
1
31
3.2%
1
50
2.0%
1
37
2.7%
5
75
6.7%
1
36
2.8%
6
326
1.8%
19
310
6.1%
1
35
2.9%
1
88
1.1%
1
46
2.2%
1
43
2.3%
1
79
1.3%
2
49
4.1%
1
36
2.8%
1
65
1.5%
1
43
2.3%
1
35
2.9%
7
159
4.4%
1
31
3.2%
8
103
7.8%
1
18
5.6%
1
39
2.6%
1
241
0.4%
1
27
3.7%
1
39
2.6%
1
68
1.5%
28
NUMBER OF MOTHERS UNDER 19 YEARS OF AGE WHO RECEIVED ASSISTANCE AND THEIR PERCENTAGE OF
THE TOTAL TANF CASELOAD
State Fiscal Year 2009
County
APPLING 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 TURNER
Number of Teen Moms as of June
2009
TANF Caseload as of June 2009
Percentage of Total Caseload
1
50
2.0%
4
39
10.3%
2
79
2.5%
1
27
3.7%
1
74
1.4%
1
18
5.6%
1
79
1.3%
1
51
2.0%
3
37
8.1%
1
57
1.8%
1
88
1.1%
42
733
5.7%
1
233
0.4%
1
19
5.3%
1
23
4.3%
1
120
0.8%
4
104
3.8%
1
42
2.4%
1
40
2.5%
1
30
3.3%
3
110
2.7%
5
40
12.5%
3
63
4.8%
1
14
7.1%
1
17
5.9%
1
41
2.4%
40
770
5.2%
3
196
1.5%
1
12
8.3%
4
77
5.2%
1
42
2.4%
4
200
2.0%
3
84
3.6%
1
18
5.6%
12
162
7.4%
1
25
4.0%
1
9
11.1%
2
70
2.9%
1
33
3.0%
1
50
2.0%
2
59
3.4%
2
121
1.7%
1
106
0.9%
8
118
6.8%
1
4
25.0%
5
33
15.2%
1
218
0.5%
1
23
4.3%
29
NUMBER OF MOTHERS UNDER 19 YEARS OF AGE WHO RECEIVED ASSISTANCE AND THEIR PERCENTAGE OF
THE TOTAL TANF CASELOAD
State Fiscal Year 2009
County
APPLING TWIGGS UNION UPSON WALKER WALTON WARE WARREN WASHINGTON WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH TOTAL
Number of Teen Moms as of June
2009
TANF Caseload as of June 2009
Percentage of Total Caseload
1
50
2.0%
1
44
2.3%
1
23
4.3%
1
73
1.4%
1
94
1.1%
3
137
2.2%
1
113
0.9%
2
23
8.7%
1
60
1.7%
1
88
1.1%
1
7
14.3%
1
17
5.9%
1
41
2.4%
1
110
0.9%
1
32
3.1%
3
33
9.1%
1
24
4.2%
3
50
6.0%
693
20,803
3.3%
30
H. The Number of Children Receiving Subsidized Child Care and the Total Average
Recipient Cost of Child Care Provided to TANF Recipients
County
APPLING ATKINSON BACON BAKER BALDWIN BANKS BARROW BARTOW BEN HILL BERRIEN BIBB BLECKLEY BRANTLEY BROOKS
SUBSIDIZED CHILDCARE
Annual Expenditures State Fiscal Year 2009
Type of Assistance
Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional
Annual Clients
12 2 3 38 0 16 0 0 0 1 1 8 0 0 2 4 60 16 63 144 0 13 21 40 54 164 40 178 39 275 29 33 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2,545 724 4,156 3,930 14 73 23 77 0 0 0 0 9 9 4 20
Annual Funds
$1,320.00 $124.00 $181.20 $4,517.00
$0.00 $1,370.00
$0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $45.00 $36.00 $1,260.00 $0.00 $0.00 $220.00 $612.00 $8,655.00 $600.00 $11,642.35 $18,442.00 $0.00 $1,630.00 $1,178.00 $2,606.00 $9,322.00 $14,591.00 $8,663.12 $26,995.00 $4,393.00 $27,579.00 $1,532.46 $4,386.00 $116.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $340,752.00 $66,897.00 $1,036,706.70 $526,479.00 $1,579.00 $4,725.00 $1,273.82 $6,196.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $1,045.00 $761.00 $40.00 $2,425.00
Average Cost per Client
$110.00 $62.00 $60.40 $118.87 $0.00 $85.63 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $45.00 $36.00 $157.50 $0.00 $0.00 $110.00 $153.00 $144.25 $37.50 $184.80 $128.07 $0.00 $125.38 $56.10 $65.15 $172.63 $88.97 $216.58 $151.66 $112.64 $100.29 $52.84 $132.91 $58.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $133.89 $92.40 $249.45 $133.96 $112.79 $64.73 $55.38 $80.47 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $116.11 $84.56 $10.00 $121.25
31
SUBSIDIZED CHILDCARE
Annual Expenditures State Fiscal Year 2009
County
BRYAN BULLOCH BURKE BUTTS CALHOUN CAMDEN CANDLER CARROLL CATOOSA CHARLTON CHATHAM CHATTAHOOCHEE CHATTOOGA CHEROKEE
Type of Assistance
Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional
Annual Clients
0 9 8 12 310 235 84 1,078 3 455 55 89 79 0 109 214 0 0 1 0 72 212 2 165 4 21 12 18 430 0 177 859 2 44 18 53 0 0 0 0 0 671 1 202 0 0 11 67 12 0 188 13 88 104 173 517
Annual Funds
$0.00 $923.00 $3,705.00 $2,756.00 $39,161.00 $18,252.00 $9,988.57 $143,117.00 $225.00 $31,220.00 $5,492.31 $10,397.00 $8,351.00
$0.00 $13,836.00 $23,829.00
$0.00 $0.00 $44.78 $0.00 $13,911.00 $23,697.00 $200.90 $34,749.00 $487.00 $1,996.00 $960.00 $2,288.00 $41,006.00 $0.00 $38,912.58 $92,163.00 $166.00 $4,199.00 $2,107.31 $8,420.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $62,773.00 $105.00 $26,233.00 $0.00 $0.00 $6,945.00 $6,491.00 $720.00 $0.00 $37,270.52 $1,505.00 $16,177.00 $8,927.00 $13,557.83 $98,249.00
Average Cost per Client
$0.00 $102.56 $463.13 $229.67 $126.33 $77.67 $118.91 $132.76 $75.00 $68.62 $99.86 $116.82 $105.71
$0.00 $126.94 $111.35
$0.00 $0.00 $44.78 $0.00 $193.21 $111.78 $100.45 $210.60 $121.75 $95.05 $80.00 $127.11 $95.36 $0.00 $219.85 $107.29 $83.00 $95.43 $117.07 $158.87 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $93.55 $105.00 $129.87 $0.00 $0.00 $631.36 $96.88 $60.00 $0.00 $198.25 $115.77 $183.83 $85.84 $78.37 $190.04
32
SUBSIDIZED CHILDCARE
Annual Expenditures State Fiscal Year 2009
County
CLARKE CLAY CLAYTON CLINCH COBB COFFEE COLQUITT COLUMBIA COOK COWETA CRAWFORD CRISP DADE DAWSON
Type of Assistance
Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional
Annual Clients
269 404 329 538
0 0 6 0 4,518 24 1,954 14,709 0 0 0 3 2,174 522 4,128 7,353 0 11 1 21 78 187 42 147 5 166 7 128 38 13 43 68 81 931 46 274 7 2 12 1 63 0 155 86 0 6 3 0 6 51 46 3
Annual Funds
$30,441.00 $36,206.00 $82,693.51 $68,695.00
$0.00 $0.00 $1,850.00 $0.00 $787,402.00 $2,202.00 $438,641.46 $2,675,340.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $555.00 $384,929.00 $53,231.00 $356,210.87 $1,307,145.00 $0.00 $264.00 $15.00 $1,784.00 $10,037.00 $13,440.00 $4,378.90 $16,948.00 $898.00 $11,431.00 $10,750.00 $17,391.00 $4,809.00 $1,110.00 $1,240.00 $7,705.00 $10,165.00 $84,961.00 $7,360.75 $40,012.00 $887.00 $165.00 $1,150.74 $224.00 $7,175.00 $0.00 $26,589.63 $8,729.00 $0.00 $690.00 $139.00 $0.00 $822.00 $5,049.00 $4,034.43 $305.00
Average Cost per Client
$113.16 $89.62 $251.35 $127.69 $0.00 $0.00 $308.33 $0.00 $174.28 $91.75 $224.48 $181.88 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $185.00 $177.06 $101.98 $86.29 $177.77 $0.00 $24.00 $15.00 $84.95 $128.68 $71.87 $104.26 $115.29 $179.60 $68.86 $1,535.71 $135.87 $126.55 $85.38 $28.84 $113.31 $125.49 $91.26 $160.02 $146.03 $126.71 $82.50 $95.90 $224.00 $113.89 $0.00 $171.55 $101.50 $0.00 $115.00 $46.33 $0.00 $137.00 $99.00 $87.71 $101.67
33
SUBSIDIZED CHILDCARE
Annual Expenditures State Fiscal Year 2009
County
DECATUR DEKALB DODGE DOOLY DOUGHERTY DOUGLAS EARLY ECHOLS EFFINGHAM ELBERT EMANUEL EVANS FANNIN FAYETTE
Type of Assistance
Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional
Annual Clients
5 238
9 0 7,845 774 34,336 15,900 24 359 5 85 42 0 52 25 111 1,536 580 753 1,775 59 219 4,494 0 0 16 28 0 0 0 0 26 11 2 218 48 17 44 120 4 363 2 17 0 0 23 0 91 78 140 162 167 30 90 649
Annual Funds
$424.00 $17,646.00
$720.00 $0.00
$1,421,097.00 $77,591.00
$1,275,496.47 $2,893,930.00
$2,325.00 $25,098.00 $1,510.00 $7,555.00 $5,034.00
$0.00 $10,851.77 $1,572.00 $15,694.00 $143,097.00 $119,735.43 $103,863.00 $328,523.00 $6,007.00 $125,553.40 $794,521.00
$0.00 $0.00 $683.98 $2,462.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $3,484.00 $1,487.00 $300.00 $25,600.00 $5,435.00 $1,108.00 $55,439.79 $9,783.00 $539.00 $34,108.00 $15.00 $2,058.00 $0.00 $0.00 $1,575.00 $0.00 $10,962.00 $3,968.00 $6,125.04 $16,084.00 $30,458.00 $3,450.00 $12,673.09 $122,943.00
Average Cost per Client
$84.80 $74.14 $80.00 $0.00 $181.15 $100.25 $37.15 $182.01 $96.88 $69.91 $302.00 $88.88 $119.86 $0.00 $208.69 $62.88 $141.39 $93.16 $206.44 $137.93 $185.08 $101.81 $573.30 $176.80 $0.00 $0.00 $42.75 $87.93 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $134.00 $135.18 $150.00 $117.43 $113.23 $65.18 $1,260.00 $81.53 $134.75 $93.96 $7.50 $121.06 $0.00 $0.00 $68.48 $0.00 $120.46 $50.87 $43.75 $99.28 $182.38 $115.00 $140.81 $189.43
34
SUBSIDIZED CHILDCARE
Annual Expenditures State Fiscal Year 2009
County
FLOYD FORSYTH FRANKLIN FULTON GILMER GLASCOCK GLYNN GORDON GRADY GREENE GWINNETT HABERSHAM HALL HANCOCK
Type of Assistance
Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional
Annual Clients
813 343 423 891 72
0 181 344
0 0 13 0 9,834 2,535 12,225 27,611 1 21 15 21 0 0 0 0 175 24 5 585 153 205 383 98 3 152 21 35 24 22 10 20 2,372 1,802 4,134 6,150 22 4 220 1 153 544 416 254 3 0 0 1
Annual Funds
$108,714.00 $30,439.00 $73,988.27 $108,454.00 $12,573.00
$0.00 $17,427.75 $61,241.00
$0.00 $0.00 $690.00 $0.00 $1,900,592.00 $296,294.00 $1,548,572.06 $5,428,251.78 $140.00 $1,259.00 $733.18 $4,265.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $18,030.00 $2,173.00 $1,320.66 $81,114.00 $20,747.00 $15,074.00 $40,819.57 $12,163.00 $288.00 $11,059.00 $647.00 $2,405.00 $2,938.00 $1,324.00 $632.35 $1,064.00 $422,674.00 $185,851.00 $284,959.01 $1,049,820.00 $2,728.00 $351.00 $12,691.90 $88.00 $32,724.00 $62,160.00 $32,356.60 $50,922.00 $156.00 $0.00 $0.00 $200.00
Average Cost per Client
$133.72 $88.74 $174.91 $121.72 $174.63 $0.00 $96.29 $178.03 $0.00 $0.00 $53.08 $0.00 $193.27 $116.88 $126.67 $196.60 $140.00 $59.95 $48.88 $203.10 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $103.03 $90.54 $264.13 $138.66 $135.60 $73.53 $106.58 $124.11 $96.00 $72.76 $30.81 $68.71 $122.42 $60.18 $63.24 $53.20 $178.19 $103.14 $68.93 $170.70 $124.00 $87.75 $57.69 $88.00 $213.88 $114.26 $77.78 $200.48 $52.00 $0.00 $0.00 $200.00
35
SUBSIDIZED CHILDCARE
Annual Expenditures State Fiscal Year 2009
County
HARALSON HARRIS HART HEARD HENRY HOUSTON IRWIN JACKSON JASPER JEFF DAVIS JEFFERSON JENKINS JOHNSON JONES
Type of Assistance
Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional
Annual Clients
2 0 0 27 2 0 66 66 2 79 290 171 0 21 1 0 722 848 504 1,840 987 958 601 3,270 0 0 0 0 19 189 54 164 12 0 16 0 0 0 22 0 1 0 31 76 0 0 14 123 34 9 15 4 0 87 23 69
Annual Funds
$296.00 $0.00 $0.00
$2,942.00 $238.00
$0.00 $14,305.42 $8,930.00
$300.00 $5,525.00 $14,398.50 $17,737.00
$0.00 $1,362.00
$85.00 $0.00 $115,919.00 $88,544.00 $112,683.96 $324,414.00 $133,448.00 $84,943.00 $251,457.33 $425,778.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $2,655.00 $15,731.00 $72,427.53 $19,174.00 $1,380.00 $0.00 $1,167.84 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $2,428.64 $0.00 $136.00 $0.00 $3,258.00 $8,498.00 $0.00 $0.00 $5,530.00 $10,993.00 $4,098.00 $498.00 $1,073.68 $234.00 $0.00 $5,731.00 $8,016.97 $8,486.00
Average Cost per Client
$148.00 $0.00 $0.00
$108.96 $119.00
$0.00 $216.75 $135.30 $150.00 $69.94 $49.65 $103.73
$0.00 $64.86 $85.00 $0.00 $160.55 $104.42 $223.58 $176.31 $135.21 $88.67 $418.40 $130.21 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $139.74 $83.23 $1,341.25 $116.91 $115.00 $0.00 $72.99 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $110.39 $0.00 $136.00 $0.00 $105.10 $111.82 $0.00 $0.00 $395.00 $89.37 $120.53 $55.33 $71.58 $58.50 $0.00 $65.87 $348.56 $122.99
36
County
LAMAR LANIER LAURENS LEE LIBERTY LINCOLN LONG LOWNDES LUMPKIN MACON MADISON MARION MCDUFFIE MCINTOSH
SUBSIDIZED CHILDCARE
Annual Expenditures State Fiscal Year 2009
Type of Assistance
Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional
Annual Clients
10 0 17 83 2 7 1 20 53 547 45 256 0 99 0 0 97 90 36 722 0 19 0 66 0 15 0 0 175 153 39 853 17 133 46 73 2 0 35 5 46 130 23 23 0 0 11 21 4 131 26 93 0 0 2 0
Annual Funds
$1,225.00 $0.00
$5,270.00 $9,573.00 $350.00 $854.00
$75.00 $2,033.00 $6,492.00 $37,896.00 $3,353.11 $30,174.00
$0.00 $6,807.00
$0.00 $0.00 $12,121.00 $9,114.00 $7,094.25 $91,457.00 $0.00 $945.00 $0.00 $4,179.00 $0.00 $1,121.00 $0.00 $0.00 $18,210.00 $14,148.00 $875.00 $110,996.00 $1,987.00 $12,109.00 $2,660.00 $12,037.00 $210.00 $0.00 $5,922.00 $371.00 $5,721.00 $10,115.00 $2,610.28 $3,416.00 $0.00 $0.00 $9,782.00 $2,111.00 $680.00 $12,603.00 $5,300.23 $14,094.00 $0.00 $0.00 $35.00 $0.00
Average Cost per Client
$122.50 $0.00
$310.00 $115.34 $175.00 $122.00 $75.00 $101.65 $122.49 $69.28 $74.51 $117.87
$0.00 $68.76 $0.00 $0.00 $124.96 $101.27 $197.06 $126.67 $0.00 $49.74 $0.00 $63.32 $0.00 $74.73 $0.00 $0.00 $104.06 $92.47 $22.44 $130.12 $116.88 $91.05 $57.83 $164.89 $105.00 $0.00 $169.20 $74.20 $124.37 $77.81 $113.49 $148.52 $0.00 $0.00 $889.27 $100.52 $170.00 $96.21 $203.86 $151.55 $0.00 $0.00 $17.50 $0.00
37
SUBSIDIZED CHILDCARE
Annual Expenditures State Fiscal Year 2009
County
MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN MURRAY MUSCOGEE NEWTON OCONEE OGLETHORPE PAULDING PEACH PICKENS
Type of Assistance
Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional
Annual Clients
70 0 70 49 0 19 7 10 1 0 18 0 2 9 1 52 6 8 55 28 6 66 74 20 6 6 67 80 1,460 1,011 1,961 2,951 172 0 336 931 4 118 1 12 5 49 8 117 125 147 24 586 271 144 68 555 0 13 80 9
Annual Funds
$7,272.00 $0.00
$21,863.23 $5,869.00
$0.00 $1,457.00 $805.00 $1,034.00
$70.00 $0.00 $3,623.12 $0.00 $210.00 $192.00 $55.96 $3,232.00 $390.00 $625.00 $8,385.43 $2,570.00 $629.00 $6,489.00 $62,237.88 $2,116.00 $600.00 $243.00 $5,063.09 $12,658.00 $195,186.00 $98,204.00 $361,785.20 $404,837.00 $19,903.00 $0.00 $124,408.84 $127,766.00 $684.00 $6,714.00 $53.64 $1,159.00 $786.00 $5,384.00 $847.80 $17,723.00 $20,092.00 $17,400.00 $630.00 $110,575.00 $38,185.00 $11,269.00 $9,224.40 $71,156.00 $0.00 $2,249.00 $7,171.70 $722.00
Average Cost per Client
$103.89 $0.00
$312.33 $119.78
$0.00 $76.68 $115.00 $103.40 $70.00 $0.00 $201.28 $0.00 $105.00 $21.33 $55.96 $62.15 $65.00 $78.13 $152.46 $91.79 $104.83 $98.32 $841.05 $105.80 $100.00 $40.50 $75.57 $158.23 $133.69 $97.14 $184.49 $137.19 $115.72 $0.00 $370.26 $137.24 $171.00 $56.90 $53.64 $96.58 $157.20 $109.88 $105.98 $151.48 $160.74 $118.37 $26.25 $188.69 $140.90 $78.26 $135.65 $128.21 $0.00 $173.00 $89.65 $80.22
38
SUBSIDIZED CHILDCARE
Annual Expenditures State Fiscal Year 2009
County
PIERCE PIKE POLK PULASKI PUTNAM QUITMAN RABUN RANDOLPH RICHMOND ROCKDALE SCHLEY SCREVEN SEMINOLE SPALDING
Type of Assistance
Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional
Annual Clients
0 36 0 0 21 0 40 117 5 0 14 20 61 155 41 83 0 7 478 135 0 0 14 0 0 0 9 0 0 0 3 0 1,557 215 679 3,760 641 606 919 2,551 0 0 1 0 113 29 94 268 8 269 5 42 393 0 214 588
Annual Funds
$0.00 $2,894.00
$0.00 $0.00 $3,921.00 $0.00 $6,142.44 $13,658.00 $490.00 $0.00 $782.00 $3,036.00 $7,555.00 $8,003.00 $5,061.54 $8,845.00 $0.00 $314.00 $462,419.48 $18,740.00 $0.00 $0.00 $2,182.65 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $465.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $1,233.81 $0.00 $198,239.00 $18,951.00 $80,486.09 $483,547.00 $126,394.00 $66,216.00 $31,530.04 $490,574.00 $0.00 $0.00 $150.00 $0.00 $10,892.00 $2,070.00 $15,792.80 $31,904.00 $1,040.00 $19,375.00 $966.63 $4,831.00 $36,761.00 $0.00 $51,191.02 $77,920.00
Average Cost per Client
$0.00 $80.39 $0.00 $0.00 $186.71 $0.00 $153.56 $116.74 $98.00 $0.00 $55.86 $151.80 $123.85 $51.63 $123.45 $106.57 $0.00 $44.86 $967.40 $138.81 $0.00 $0.00 $155.90 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $51.67 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $411.27 $0.00 $127.32 $88.14 $118.54 $128.60 $197.18 $109.27 $34.31 $192.31 $0.00 $0.00 $150.00 $0.00 $96.39 $71.38 $168.01 $119.04 $130.00 $72.03 $193.33 $115.02 $93.54 $0.00 $239.21 $132.52
39
SUBSIDIZED CHILDCARE
Annual Expenditures State Fiscal Year 2009
County
STEPHENS STEWART SUMTER TALBOT TALIAFERRO TATTNALL TAYLOR TELFAIR TERRELL THOMAS TIFT TOOMBS TOWNS TREUTLEN
Type of Assistance
Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional
Annual Clients
192 0
376 427
0 0 3 0 69 0 195 50 0 0 14 0 0 0 0 0 24 0 27 131 0 0 114 0 0 49 30 1 0 0 7 18 27 492 144 186 2 19 1 1 11 128 11 37 0 0 0 0 10 122 78 18
Annual Funds
$22,624.00 $0.00
$29,791.92 $42,166.00
$0.00 $0.00 $900.00 $0.00 $7,001.00 $0.00 $46,942.00 $5,553.00 $0.00 $0.00 $2,360.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $1,832.00 $0.00 $1,477.00 $11,792.00 $0.00 $0.00 $25,437.69 $0.00 $0.00 $3,280.00 $3,865.00 $80.00 $0.00 $0.00 $495.00 $1,853.00 $3,279.00 $31,103.00 $8,910.05 $21,304.00 $340.00 $1,828.00 $105.38 $70.00 $980.00 $8,629.00 $690.48 $4,581.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $884.00 $7,740.00 $9,353.94 $1,221.00
Average Cost per Client
$117.83 $0.00 $79.23 $98.75 $0.00 $0.00
$300.00 $0.00
$101.46 $0.00
$240.73 $111.06
$0.00 $0.00 $168.57 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $76.33 $0.00 $54.70 $90.02 $0.00 $0.00 $223.14 $0.00 $0.00 $66.94 $128.83 $80.00 $0.00 $0.00 $70.71 $102.94 $121.44 $63.22 $61.88 $114.54 $170.00 $96.21 $105.38 $70.00 $89.09 $67.41 $62.77 $123.81 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $88.40 $63.44 $119.92 $67.83
40
SUBSIDIZED CHILDCARE
Annual Expenditures State Fiscal Year 2009
County
TROUP TURNER TWIGGS UNION UPSON WALKER WALTON WARE WARREN WASHINGTON WAYNE WEBSTER WHITE WHITFIELD
Type of Assistance
Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services TANF Transitional TANF Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional
Annual Clients
309 93 210 503 0 0 0 0 12 1 11 44 1 3 26 6 32 0 30 123 12 69 169 77 408 107 87 444 1 51 8 4 17 47 3 0 0 34 13 174 43 38 7 41 6 1 8 0 63 0 54 36 9 41 27 45
Annual Funds
$35,060.00 $10,011.00 $64,486.55 $65,838.00
$0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $2,014.00 $110.00 $2,171.71 $6,380.00 $140.00 $210.00 $3,888.40 $704.00 $2,514.00 $0.00 $8,011.62 $12,362.00 $1,025.00 $3,688.00 $4,019.00 $5,937.00 $58,413.00 $14,085.00 $5,256.38 $61,422.00 $140.00 $3,073.00 $2,965.00 $416.00 $2,312.00 $2,277.00 $209.00 $0.00 $0.00 $3,009.00 $733.60 $16,470.00 $4,305.00 $2,826.00 $2,705.47 $4,108.00 $642.00 $10.00 $434.00 $0.00 $7,398.00 $0.00 $5,344.13 $3,677.00 $1,346.00 $4,246.00 $3,023.75 $6,273.00
Average Cost per Client
$113.46 $107.65 $307.08 $130.89
$0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $167.83 $110.00 $197.43 $145.00 $140.00 $70.00 $149.55 $117.33 $78.56 $0.00 $267.05 $100.50 $85.42 $53.45 $23.78 $77.10 $143.17 $131.64 $60.42 $138.34 $140.00 $60.25 $370.63 $104.00 $136.00 $48.45 $69.67 $0.00 $0.00 $88.50 $56.43 $94.66 $100.12 $74.37 $386.50 $100.20 $107.00 $10.00 $54.25 $0.00 $117.43 $0.00 $98.97 $102.14 $149.56 $103.56 $111.99 $139.40
41
County
WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH STATE
SUBSIDIZED CHILDCARE
Annual Expenditures State Fiscal Year 2009
Type of Assistance
Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional Applicant Services Pre-K TANF Transitional
Annual Clients
6 0 13 4 2 83 31 26 19 73 8 37 0 30 24 0 43,114 22,378 74,438 112,982
Annual Funds
$990.00 $0.00
$1,907.00 $416.00 $420.00 $5,514.00 $3,043.64 $3,355.00 $1,292.00 $5,892.00 $1,610.00 $3,613.00
$0.00 $1,552.00 $1,976.09
$0.00 $7,199,626.00 $2,083,646.00 $7,791,229.39 $19,251,430.78
Average Cost per Client
$165.00 $0.00
$146.69 $104.00 $210.00 $66.43 $98.18 $129.04 $68.00 $80.71 $201.25 $97.65
$0.00 $51.73 $82.34 $0.00 $166.99 $93.11 $104.67 $170.39
42
I. Data On Teen Pregnancy Prevention
COUNTY Appling Atkinson Bacon Baker Baldwin Banks Barrow Bartow Ben Hill Berrien Bibb
TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA DECLINING PREGNANCY
Rates for 15 - 19 Years Old
1998 thru 2008 Trends
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
58
57
79
51
56
55
45
45
55
691
690
688
678
663
641
614
602
595
83.9
82.6
114.8
75.2
84.5
85.8
73.3
74.8
92.4
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
36
46
42
30
45
23
31
28
28
303
315
313
272
270
269
274
274
274
118.8 146.0 134.2 110.3 166.7
85.5
113.1 102.2 102.2
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
37
34
43
31
25
20
33
24
36
383
377
372
348
328
323
303
308
295
96.6
90.2
115.6
89.1
76.2
61.9
108.9
77.9
122.0
Total Pregnancies
12
8
11
12
10
4
5
3
9
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
165
166
158
163
157
157
163
166
164
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
72.7
48.2
69.6
73.6
63.7
*
30.7
*
54.9
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
132 1,822 72.4
144 1,862 77.3
124 1,878 66.0
106 1,726 61.4
89 1,683 52.9
123 1,722 71.4
140 1,771 79.1
113 1,920 58.9
133 2,087 63.7
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
31
43
35
38
31
39
40
31
36
454
462
470
460
450
453
452
474
489
68.3
93.1
74.5
82.6
68.9
86.1
88.5
65.4
73.6
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
123 1,359 90.5
123 1,403 87.7
138 1,432 96.4
137 1,503 91.2
134 1,581 84.8
115 1,673 68.7
130 1,775 73.2
142 1,815 78.2
125 1,935 64.6
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
262 2,288 114.5
297 2,352 126.3
253 2,396 105.6
254 2,517 100.9
226 2,648 85.3
235 2,761 85.1
248 2,884 86.0
250 2,859 87.4
258 2,900 89.0
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
82
81
69
75
68
55
72
80
78
681
680
660
648
655
649
634
667
674
120.4 119.1 104.5 115.7 103.8
84.7
113.6 119.9 115.7
Total Pregnancies
65
44
47
44
49
42
53
63
54
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
544
543
540
535
541
555
542
594
590
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
119.5
81.0
87.0
82.2
90.6
75.7
97.8
106.1
91.5
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
539 6,323 85.2
487 6,272 77.6
530 6,223 85.2
490 6,096 80.4
478 6,079 78.6
461 6,274 73.5
459 6,355 72.2
474 6,464 73.3
467 6,473 72.1
2007
56 604 92.7
27 293 92.2
42 297 141.4
11 147 74.8
110 2,059 53.4
36 508 70.9
146 2,097 69.6
271 2,932 92.4
73 632 115.5
54 588 91.8
443 6,463 68.5
2008*
51 605 84.3
27 308 87.7
28 289 96.9
7 146 47.9
112 2,188 51.2
37 518 71.4
139 2,174 63.9
255 2,961 86.1
69 609 113.3
53 584 90.8
419 6,485 64.6
43
COUNTY Bleckley Brantley Brooks Bryan Bulloch Burke Butts Calhoun Camden Candler Carroll
TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA DECLINING PREGNANCY
Rates for 15 - 19 Years Old
1998 thru 2008 Trends
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Total Pregnancies
52
41
40
33
26
27
25
21
25
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
516
522
518
491
485
485
517
553
572
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
100.8
78.5
77.2
67.2
53.6
55.7
48.4
38.0
43.7
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
21
36
31
15
41
33
44
26
35
507
518
523
538
548
592
558
557
530
41.4
69.5
59.3
27.9
74.8
55.7
78.9
46.7
66.0
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
47
52
56
54
35
41
39
49
48
620
623
620
601
583
560
563
556
547
75.8
83.5
90.3
89.9
60.0
73.2
69.3
88.1
87.8
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
79
75
63
56
45
67
47
53
39
891
921
928
978
1,067 1,079 1,114 1,152 1,129
88.7
81.4
67.9
57.3
42.2
62.1
42.2
46.0
34.5
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
175 3,683 47.5
184 3,728 49.4
170 3,745 45.4
178 2,988 59.6
173 2,698 64.1
146 2,710 53.9
183 2,990 61.2
156 3,710 42.0
203 4,265 47.6
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
108
124
125
115
93
97
78
105
89
926
945
942
965
911
918
889
853
822
116.6 131.2 132.7 119.2 102.1 105.7
87.7
123.1 108.3
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
53
71
65
78
61
59
57
57
63
594
612
625
638
656
658
670
692
694
89.2
116.0 104.0 122.3
93.0
89.7
85.1
82.4
90.8
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
25
20
214
214
116.8
93.5
18
29
18
19
28
11
20
207
198
195
187
183
184
167
87.0
146.5
92.3
101.6 153.0
59.8
119.8
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
106 1,628 65.1
96 1,607 59.7
100 1,624 61.6
119 1,685 70.6
106 1,765 60.1
112 1,771 63.2
85 1,847 46.0
88 1,877 46.9
103 1,856 55.5
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
43
29
31
32
40
44
48
45
39
310
294
289
285
316
332
340
327
339
138.7
98.6
107.3 112.3 126.6 132.5 141.2 137.6 115.0
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
291 3,772 77.1
301 3,833 78.5
284 3,902 72.8
290 3,788 76.6
285 3,803 74.9
255 3,857 66.1
255 3,909 65.2
246 4,151 59.3
282 4,053 69.6
2007
35 627 55.8
47 543 86.6
56 550 101.8
53 1,085 48.8
189 4,236 44.6
82 833 98.4
51 668 76.3
19 159 119.5
125 1,890 66.1
38 317 119.9
299 4,339 68.9
2008*
25 714 35
38 538 70.6
45 541 83.2
45 1,099 40.9
175 4,335 40.4
91 809 112.5
59 680 86.8
19 149 127.5
107 1,839 58.2
44 295 149.2
269 4,436 60.6
44
COUNTY Catoosa
TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA DECLINING PREGNANCY
Rates for 15 - 19 Years Old
1998 thru 2008 Trends
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
124 1,635 75.8
115 1,660 69.3
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
98 2,069 47.4
137 2,125 64.5
Charlton
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
34
31
32
25
24
21
25
12
24
393
396
391
402
402
423
448
431
433
86.5
78.3
81.8
62.2
59.7
49.6
55.8
27.8
55.4
Chatham
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
768 8,111 94.7
757 8,107 93.4
685 8,074 84.8
725 7,711
94
665 7,711 86.2
630 7,988 78.9
678 8,198 82.7
670 8,574 78.1
667 8,884 75.1
Chattahoochee Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
26
40
35
30
35
23
24
15
12
390
392
401
438
502
601
551
531
552
66.7
102.0
87.3
68.5
69.7
38.3
43.6
28.2
21.7
Chattooga
Total Pregnancies
94
70
82
88
53
82
46
59
67
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
752
746
740
729
724
749
746
739
700
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
125.0
93.8
110.8 120.7
73.2
109.5
61.7
79.8
95.7
Cherokee
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
264 3,972 66.5
281 4,160 67.5
285 4,278 66.6
262 4,607 56.9
249 4,991 49.9
225 5,323 42.3
260 5,736 45.3
254 6,091 41.7
306 6,355 48.2
Clarke
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
233 5,961 39.1
260 6,004 43.3
249 6,026 41.3
249 5,015 49.7
207 4,845 42.7
223 4,427 50.4
216 4,705 45.9
208 5,807 35.8
248 9,214 26.9
Clay
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
18 132 136.4
24 131 183.2
14 133 105.3
18
15
8
125
126
122
144
119.0
65.6
7
14
5
125
118
115
56.0
118.6
43.5
Clayton
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
767 7,960 96.4
774 8,166 94.8
790 8,338 94.7
785 8,665 90.6
770 8,978 85.8
751 9,145 82.1
798 9,430 84.6
873 9,856 88.6
845 10,135
83.4
Clinch
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
20
26
31
36
26
29
25
23
21
281
273
264
250
244
244
246
263
263
71.2
95.2
117.4
144
106.6 118.9 101.6
87.5
79.8
Cobb
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
1,146 17,590
65.2
1,150 18,163
63.3
1,165 18,742
62.2
1,101 19,857
55.4
1,140 20,468
55.7
1,035 20,426
50.7
1,131 20,640
54.8
1,032 21,127
48.8
1,116 21,690
51.5
2007
135 2,133 63.3
22 390 56.4
698 9,143 76.3
12 466 25.8
82 700 117.1
285 6,538 43.6
239 6,454 37.0
8 119 67.2
886 10,385
85.3
33 245 134.7
1,164 21,926
53.1
2008*
111 2,109 52.6
20 387 51.7
626 9,366 66.8
17 530 32.1
63 707 89.1
274 6,721 40.8
210 6,394 32.8
9 108 83.3
849 10,583
80.2
27 233 115.9
1,106 21,974
50.3
45
COUNTY Coffee Colquitt Columbia Cook Coweta Crawford Crisp Dade Dawson Decatur Dekalb
TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA DECLINING PREGNANCY
Rates for 15 - 19 Years Old
1998 thru 2008 Trends
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
149 1,398 106.6
186 1,420 131.0
140 1,428 98.0
150 1,400 107.1
149 1,391 107.1
124 1,359 91.2
138 1,346 102.5
134 1,386 96.7
160 1,386 115.4
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
147 1,567 93.8
165 1,575 104.8
170 1,582 107.5
149 1,514 98.4
154 1,522 101.2
138 1,485 92.9
149 1,477 100.9
123 1,500 82.0
145 1,503 96.5
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
157 3,289 47.7
169 3,362 50.3
170 3,408 49.9
166 3,581 46.4
150 3,754 40.0
146 3,843 38.0
152 3,900 39.0
153 4,062 37.7
177 4,097 43.2
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
50
60
53
43
56
42
41
52
61
540
537
539
556
577
637
620
614
578
92.6
111.7
98.3
77.3
97.1
65.9
66.1
84.7
105.5
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
214 2,718 78.7
203 2,799 72.5
206 2,831 72.8
185 2,987 61.9
175 3,203 54.6
181 3,353 54.0
197 3,502 56.3
190 3,574 53.2
230 3,654 62.9
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
28
31
18
26
25
28
29
16
15
429
423
421
437
457
468
475
454
431
65.3
73.3
42.8
59.5
54.7
59.8
61.1
35.2
34.8
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
112
104
96
92
90
66
90
90
85
855
851
848
846
832
805
754
774
757
131.0 122.2 113.2 108.7 108.2
82.0
119.4 116.3 112.3
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
35
28
30
32
30
26
17
25
32
654
667
674
669
693
703
706
698
717
53.5
42.0
44.5
47.8
43.3
37.0
24.1
35.8
44.6
Total Pregnancies
42
34
39
37
30
31
39
38
27
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
390
408
421
470
484
520
562
570
590
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
107.7
83.3
92.6
78.7
62.0
59.6
69.4
66.7
45.8
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
129 1,074 120.1
114 1,062 107.3
106 1,054 100.6
91 1,036 87.8
78 1,056 73.9
69 1,057 65.3
93 1,051 88.5
70 1,070 65.4
105 1,064 98.7
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
1922 21,021
91.4
2092 21,161
98.9
1837 21,163
86.8
1763 20,743
85
1626 20,459
79.5
1640 20,758
79.0
1622 21,145
76.7
1650 21,736
75.9
1583 23,469
67.5
2007
164 1,343 122.1
181 1,502 120.5
180 4,112 43.8
59 556 106.1
217 3,719 58.3
23 411 56.0
99 754 131.3
23 706 32.6
35 648 54.0
107 1,021 104.8
1640 23,534
69.7
2008*
140 1,386 101
148 1,495
99
164 4,153 39.5
50 531 94.2
190 3,865 49.2
20 421 47.5
80 742 107.8
22 715 30.8
34 682 49.9
84 995 84.4
1534 23,508
65.3
46
COUNTY Dodge Dooly Dougherty Douglas Early Echols Effingham Elbert Emanuel Evans Fannin
TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA DECLINING PREGNANCY
Rates for 15 - 19 Years Old
1998 thru 2008 Trends
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
45
46
59
57
58
56
43
51
55
655
647
639
618
615
606
610
646
635
68.7
71.1
92.3
92.2
94.3
92.4
70.5
78.9
86.6
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
50
60
59
53
54
35
433
438
429
412
412
366
115.5 137.0 137.5 128.6 131.1
95.6
30
37
34
344
344
351
87.2
107.6
96.9
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
402 4,318 93.1
421 4,261 98.8
365 4,212 86.7
364 4,022 90.5
303 3,898 77.7
345 3,873 89.1
320 3,889 82.3
348 3,996 87.1
384 4,067 94.4
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
237 3,169 74.8
232 3,217 72.1
249 3,245 76.7
236 3,310 71.3
216 3,404 63.5
229 3,548 64.5
239 3,752 63.7
219 4,016 54.5
264 4,299 61.4
Total Pregnancies
60
47
28
42
47
44
42
31
36
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
484
476
472
486
487
488
477
454
452
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
124.0
98.7
59.3
86.4
96.5
90.2
88.1
68.3
79.6
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
3
3
10
12
9
15
15
12
8
121
130
156
164
146
142
138
132
124
*
*
64.1
73.2
61.6
105.6 108.7
90.9
64.5
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
106 1,351 78.5
90 1,415 63.6
108 1,448 74.6
90 1,525
59
105 1,568 67.0
81 1,631 49.7
104 1,634 63.6
85 1,676 50.7
87 1,692 51.4
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
56
57
51
42
57
41
53
40
61
702
714
718
742
749
749
699
691
662
79.8
79.8
71.0
56.6
76.1
54.7
75.8
57.9
92.1
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
93
100
92
87
85
92
86
83
78
983
1,000 1,006
983
974
977
929
814
800
94.6
100.0
91.5
88.5
87.3
94.2
92.6
102.0
97.5
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
35
37
45
37
36
45
50
45
36
395
401
418
406
418
431
406
391
397
88.6
92.3
107.7
91.1
86.1
104.4 123.2 115.1
90.7
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
50
46
42
51
36
36
40
45
46
535
541
543
574
597
611
638
600
582
93.5
85.0
77.3
88.9
60.3
58.9
62.7
75.0
79.0
2007
61 659 92.6
37 347 106.6
369 4,132 89.3
282 4,542 62.1
33 440 75.0
23 130 176.9
91 1,754 51.9
50 660 75.8
105 749 140.2
52 403 129.0
46 555 82.9
2008*
55 641 85.8
38 351 108.3
323 4,079 79.2
247 4,693 52.6
32 430 74.4
16 130 123.1
91 1,747 52.1
44 641 68.6
87 719 121
45 394 114.2
43 532 80.8
47
COUNTY Fayette Floyd Forsyth Franklin Fulton Gilmer Glascock Glynn Gordon Grady Greene
TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA DECLINING PREGNANCY
Rates for 15 - 19 Years Old
1998 thru 2008 Trends
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
114 3,302 34.5
108 3,437 31.4
99 3,510 28.2
83 3,941 21.1
103 4,226 24.4
100 4,223 23.7
107 4,309 24.8
126 4,250 29.6
98 4,181 23.4
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
255 3,245 78.6
260 3,254 79.9
285 3,267 87.2
281 3,232 86.9
249 3,223 77.3
261 3,246 80.4
257 3,319 77.4
224 3,298 67.9
297 3,434 86.5
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
142 2,175 65.3
153 2,330 65.7
150 2,405 62.4
123 2,784 44.2
116 3,075 37.7
156 3,393 46.0
143 3,747 38.2
171 3,896 43.9
172 4,146 41.5
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
44
57
48
53
47
44
50
46
55
738
750
755
748
753
733
713
690
712
59.6
76.0
63.6
70.9
62.4
60.0
70.1
66.7
77.2
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
2,712 26,639 101.8
2,719 26,902 101.1
2,608 26,847
97.1
2,338 26,369
88.7
2,242 26,308
85.2
2,028 26,135
77.6
1,800 26,535
67.8
1,849 29,947
61.7
1,831 31,506
58.1
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
79
61
75
59
78
78
72
77
67
633
673
690
727
767
741
754
714
714
124.8
90.6
108.7
81.2
101.7 105.3
95.5
107.8
93.8
Total Pregnancies
6
4
3
10
2
4
3
4
0
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
86
88
87
82
83
78
80
72
68
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
69.8
*
*
122
*
*
*
*
0.0
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
206 2,348 87.7
207 2,371 87.3
165 2,364 69.8
163 2,377 68.6
156 2,386 65.4
175 2,472 70.8
164 2,490 65.9
172 2,479 69.4
205 2,504 81.9
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
159 1,417 112.2
160 1,450 110.3
156 1,464 106.6
170 1,464 116.1
150 1,468 102.2
162 1,469 110.3
154 1,534 100.4
162 1,532 105.7
165 1,589 103.8
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
61
74
94
89
80
93
98
82
102
878
892
888
894
910
901
918
881
868
69.5
83.0
105.9
99.6
87.9
103.2 106.8
93.1
117.5
Total Pregnancies
57
48
54
53
44
37
33
33
37
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
545
561
556
543
564
542
530
490
456
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
104.6
85.6
97.1
97.6
78.0
68.3
62.3
67.3
81.1
2007
123 4,069 30.2
259 3,443 75.2
150 4,387 34.2
53 723 73.3
1,944 33,378
58.2
84 714 117.6
7 65 107.7
216 2,494 86.6
165 1,566 105.4
83 868 95.6
29 428 67.8
2008*
110 4,035 27.3
260 3,442 75.5
157 4,717 33.3
50 728 68.7
1,735 34,550
50.2
81 739 109.6
3 62 48.4
181 2,502 72.3
166 1,602 103.6
94 849 110.7
31 406 76.4
48
COUNTY Gwinnett Habersham Hall Hancock Haralson Harris Hart Heard Henry Houston Irwin
TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA DECLINING PREGNANCY
Rates for 15 - 19 Years Old
1998 thru 2008 Trends
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
943 17,335
54.4
980 18,249
53.7
1062 18,887
56.2
1161 20,398
56.9
1222 21,335
57.3
1265 22,081
57.3
1327 23,009
57.7
1408 23,996
58.7
1547 24,896
62.1
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
95 1,079 88.0
114 1,112 102.5
124 1,128 109.9
94 1,138 82.6
99 1,160 85.3
99 1,173 84.4
101 1,218 82.9
87 1,272 68.4
85 1,224 69.4
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
407 4,361 93.3
439 4,521 97.1
438 4,626 94.7
445 4,710 94.5
448 4,791 93.5
449 5,014 89.5
430 5,083 84.6
445 5,233 85.0
434 5,354 81.1
Total Pregnancies
40
39
36
39
23
33
34
30
26
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
374
358
351
343
334
333
313
315
300
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
107.0 108.9 102.6 113.7
68.9
99.1
108.6
95.2
86.7
Total Pregnancies
100
81
83
76
81
72
73
55
72
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
828
843
848
819
847
842
872
920
915
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
120.8
96.1
97.9
92.8
95.6
85.5
83.7
59.8
78.7
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
47
52
52
40
32
49
35
32
50
776
789
800
825
830
882
892
915
979
60.6
65.9
65.0
48.5
38.6
55.6
39.2
35.0
51.1
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
49
57
44
47
41
61
44
32
37
649
648
646
648
677
714
704
725
716
75.5
88.0
68.1
72.5
60.6
85.4
62.5
44.1
51.7
Total Pregnancies
43
36
36
28
25
25
19
21
34
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
345
356
357
353
387
375
413
377
389
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
124.6 101.1 100.8
79.3
64.6
66.7
46.0
55.7
87.4
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
268 3,344 80.1
256 3,602 71.1
259 3,790 68.3
253 4,311 58.7
265 4,730 56.0
311 5,181 60.0
299 5,576 53.6
329 5,829 56.4
352 6,124 57.5
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
302 4,100 73.7
264 4,212 62.7
280 4,289 65.3
296 4,335 68.3
301 4,529 66.5
276 4,705 58.7
283 4,777 59.2
311 4,829 64.4
324 4,839 67.0
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
30
26
39
23
26
33
27
23
24
363
369
379
383
381
364
350
375
354
82.6
70.5
102.9
60.1
68.2
90.7
77.1
61.3
67.8
2007
1440 25,568
56.3
91 1,242 73.3
437 5,548 78.8
31 288 107.6
69 954 72.3
41 984 41.7
43 708 60.7
32 378 84.7
330 6,464 51.1
313 4,799 65.2
29 340 85.3
2008*
1508 25,974
58.1
94 1,244 75.6
456 5,686 80.2
28 259 108.1
71 926 76.7
39 1001
39
41 693 59.2
26 385 67.5
341 6,655 51.2
301 4,788 62.9
26 324 80.2
49
COUNTY Jackson Jasper Jeff Davis Jefferson Jenkins Johnson Jones Lamar Lanier Laurens Lee
TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA DECLINING PREGNANCY
Rates for 15 - 19 Years Old
1998 thru 2008 Trends
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
140 1,287 108.8
117 1,349 86.7
135 1,380 97.8
117 1,348 86.8
119 1,382 86.1
131 1,425 91.9
123 1,483 82.9
110 1,539 71.5
105 1,628 64.5
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
32
36
42
37
33
33
25
33
36
377
395
402
404
420
453
459
459
457
84.9
91.1
104.5
91.6
78.6
72.8
54.5
71.9
78.8
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
59
72
57
52
49
47
50
49
42
477
472
468
453
444
430
440
445
444
123.7 152.5 121.8 114.8 110.4 109.3 113.6 110.1
94.6
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
57
69
50
75
74
65
46
52
58
690
674
659
665
665
667
646
621
592
82.6
102.4
75.9
112.8 111.3
97.5
71.2
83.7
98.0
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
45
46
28
35
39
30
33
32
29
347
349
350
329
329
324
328
315
329
129.7 131.8
80.0
106.4 118.5
92.6
100.6 101.6
88.1
Total Pregnancies
32
30
28
34
23
24
33
18
15
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
320
315
312
301
299
293
293
289
276
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
100.0
95.2
89.7
113
76.9
81.9
112.6
62.3
54.3
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
49
62
51
49
45
49
44
56
38
856
869
873
876
894
885
890
896
915
57.2
71.3
58.4
55.9
50.3
55.4
49.4
62.5
41.5
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
64
42
41
44
29
34
47
48
34
684
706
719
694
682
603
624
634
747
93.6
59.5
57.0
63.4
42.5
56.4
75.3
75.7
45.5
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
18
22
26
270
270
271
66.7
81.5
95.9
22
21
18
22
18
21
262
270
263
266
254
254
84
77.8
68.4
82.7
70.9
82.7
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
159 1,638 97.1
119 1,640 72.6
133 1,638 81.2
152 1,617
94
135 1,620 83.3
121 1,632 74.1
114 1,619 70.4
118 1,585 74.4
129 1,549 83.3
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
63
62
47
48
36
36
40
46
50
977
1,007 1,023 1,102 1,120 1,166 1,202 1,239 1,290
64.5
61.6
45.9
43.6
32.1
30.9
33.3
37.1
38.8
2007
115 1,753 65.6
43 448 96.0
43 443 97.1
71 558 127.2
20 328 61.0
19 266 71.4
57 920 62.0
49 757 64.7
28 241 116.2
146 1,550 94.2
49 1,294 37.9
2008*
113 1,810 62.4
34 445 76.4
49 452 108.4
58 553 104.9
29 320 90.6
16 263 60.8
48 915 52.5
38 750 50.7
22 254 86.6
120 1,542 77.8
45 1,318 34.1
50
COUNTY Liberty Lincoln Long Lowndes Lumpkin Macon Madison Marion McDuffie McIntosh Meriwether
TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA DECLINING PREGNANCY
Rates for 15 - 19 Years Old
1998 thru 2008 Trends
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
238 2,231 106.7
235 2,284 102.9
268 2,292 116.9
247 2,175 113.6
221 2,209 100.0
198 2,140 92.5
210 2,326 90.3
193 2,255 85.6
189 2,465 76.7
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
15
17
20
18
18
19
20
11
18
272
273
268
286
287
289
299
294
296
55.1
62.3
74.6
62.9
62.7
65.7
66.9
37.4
60.8
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
37
31
39
42
30
20
34
30
16
450
464
475
431
411
389
372
367
361
82.2
66.8
82.1
97.4
73.0
51.4
91.4
81.7
44.3
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
233 3,836 60.7
272 3,840 70.8
229 3,819 60.0
237 3,598 65.9
217 3,580 60.6
252 3,563 70.7
246 3,614 68.1
235 3,809 61.7
268 4,060 66.0
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
62 1,033 60.0
49 1,084 45.2
65 1,107 58.7
41 1,077 38.1
36 1,115 32.3
38 1,165 32.6
47 1,241 37.9
53 1,243 42.6
45 1,293 34.8
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
54
55
64
44
42
50
38
35
41
541
529
530
521
499
498
478
488
504
99.8
104.0 120.8
84.5
84.2
100.4
79.5
71.7
81.3
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
77
71
70
58
74
58
67
67
64
803
825
835
848
870
875
891
909
926
95.9
86.1
83.8
68.4
85.1
66.3
75.2
73.7
69.1
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
22
31
22
235
234
244
93.6
132.5
90.2
28
20
21
30
26
21
250
258
255
256
256
272
112
77.5
82.4
117.2 101.6
77.2
Total Pregnancies
86
95
82
79
72
76
77
90
77
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
784
782
779
817
828
821
806
826
818
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
109.7 121.5 105.3
96.7
87.0
92.6
95.5
109.0
94.1
Total Pregnancies
40
30
40
30
34
21
25
23
34
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
339
334
338
350
335
321
342
390
418
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
118.0
89.8
118.3
85.7
101.5
65.4
73.1
59.0
81.3
Total Pregnancies
86
98
80
85
79
68
65
65
69
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
831
814
803
802
792
810
850
846
829
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
103.5 120.4
99.6
106
99.7
84.0
76.5
76.8
83.2
2007
256 2,321 110.3
29 291 99.7
18 383 47.0
286 4,226 67.7
32 1,362 23.5
33 498 66.3
57 912 62.5
21 271 77.5
74 788 93.9
29 415 69.9
59 802 73.6
2008*
202 2,324 86.9
19 288 66
23 407 56.5
249 4,226 58.9
43 1,361 31.6
34 483 70.4
63 904 69.7
24 281 85.4
77 803 95.9
26 440 59.1
61 773 78.9
51
COUNTY Miller Mitchell Monroe Montgomery Morgan Murray Muscogee Newton Oconee Oglethorpe Paulding
TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA DECLINING PREGNANCY
Rates for 15 - 19 Years Old
1998 thru 2008 Trends
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
18
20
20
18
14
19
5
7
21
238
240
238
228
249
235
233
209
204
75.6
83.3
84.0
78.9
56.2
80.9
21.5
33.5
102.9
Total Pregnancies
91
84
94
81
67
54
68
69
72
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
901
888
885
891
848
836
809
763
773
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
101.0
94.6
106.2
90.9
79.0
64.6
84.1
90.4
93.1
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
69
68
73
55
54
50
49
43
41
720
738
741
761
806
844
804
846
836
95.8
92.1
98.5
72.3
67.0
59.2
60.9
50.8
49.0
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
20
26
33
28
19
26
22
15
15
336
335
326
345
336
364
382
364
364
59.5
77.6
101.2
81.2
56.5
71.4
57.6
41.2
41.2
Total Pregnancies
53
50
43
34
30
30
39
27
30
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
511
515
513
515
512
536
545
552
600
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
103.7
97.1
83.8
66
58.6
56.0
71.6
48.9
50.0
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
136 1,166 116.6
120 1,224 98.0
126 1,241 101.5
131 1,257 104.2
129 1,264 102.1
131 1,257 104.2
131 1,295 101.2
145 1,247 116.3
140 1,241 112.8
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
756 6,773 111.6
767 6,760 113.5
732 6,753 108.4
697 6,594 105.7
637 6,399 99.5
633 6,450 98.1
620 6,452 96.1
518 6,452 80.3
642 6,706 95.7
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
187 2,029 92.2
165 2,067 79.8
170 2,108 80.6
195 2,267
86
190 2,450 77.6
195 2,655 73.4
213 2,916 73.0
203 3,007 67.5
227 3,195 71.0
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
33
27
34
24
27
42
22
22
32
877
926
958
1029
1,072
1,132 1,209
1,189
1,200
37.6
29.2
35.5
23.3
25.2
37.1
18.2
18.5
26.7
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
31
33
30
38
27
23
28
38
22
394
396
400
416
415
426
434
435
437
78.7
83.3
75.0
91.3
65.1
54.0
64.5
87.4
50.3
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
148 2,172 68.1
147 2,301 63.9
157 2,397 65.5
162 2,642 61.3
171 2,892 59.1
170 3,170 53.6
158 3,441 45.9
167 3,591 46.5
189 3,810 49.6
2007
11 198 55.6
85 756 112.4
49 823 59.5
20 383 52.2
36 632 57.0
139 1,211 114.8
633 6,603 95.9
259 3,397 76.2
24 1,174 20.4
24 450 53.3
219 4,059 54.0
2008*
13 202 64.4
68 754 90.2
45 808 55.7
18 373 48.3
29 652 44.5
139 1,231 112.9
574 6,665 86.1
221 3,493 63.3
26 1,209 21.5
28 451 62.1
193 4,303 44.9
52
COUNTY Peach Pickens Pierce Pike Polk Pulaski Putnam Quitman Rabun Randolph Richmond
TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA DECLINING PREGNANCY
Rates for 15 - 19 Years Old
1998 thru 2008 Trends
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Total Pregnancies
100
89
89
94
81
76
58
66
79
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
1,036 1,028 1,017
993
985
978
966
1018
970
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
96.5
86.6
87.5
94.7
82.2
77.7
60.0
64.8
81.4
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
51
68
63
64
52
57
55
46
68
637
680
725
733
749
788
813
820
832
80.1
100.0
86.9
87.3
69.4
72.3
67.7
56.1
81.7
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
54
54
54
51
50
44
59
54
44
561
554
556
568
577
572
575
536
505
96.3
97.5
97.1
89.8
86.7
76.9
102.6 100.7
87.1
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
33
31
30
31
36
25
30
30
25
435
449
455
464
503
533
567
560
574
75.9
69.0
65.9
66.8
71.6
46.9
52.9
53.6
43.6
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
138 1,314 105.0
156 1,325 117.7
154 1,334 115.4
146 1,328 109.9
150 1,294 115.9
134 1,281 104.6
123 1,313 93.7
120 1,283 93.5
112 1,287 87.0
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
31
25
24
30
26
18
15
22
18
327
325
321
299
312
313
302
324
335
94.8
76.9
74.8
100.3
83.3
57.5
49.7
67.9
53.7
Total Pregnancies
65
66
63
49
31
51
53
65
54
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
611
634
622
651
639
655
635
606
574
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
106.4 104.1 101.3
75.3
48.5
77.9
83.5
107.3
94.1
Total Pregnancies
9
8
10
3
10
11
8
11
8
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
93
88
89
85
85
81
81
81
86
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
96.8
90.9
112.4
*
117.6 135.8
98.8
135.8
93.0
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
24
27
33
29
34
35
36
31
23
409
412
428
436
479
489
483
477
468
58.7
65.5
77.1
66.5
71.0
71.6
74.5
65.0
49.1
Total Pregnancies
41
35
27
34
21
17
19
22
30
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
374
378
380
357
321
351
329
341
348
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
109.6
92.6
71.1
95.2
65.4
48.4
57.8
64.5
86.2
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
744 7,500 99.2
748 7,488 99.9
740 7,491 98.8
750 7,227 103.8
684 7,174 95.3
704 7,175 98.1
708 7,240 97.8
618 7,286 84.8
706 7,344 96.1
2007
66 1027 64.3
73 842 86.7
54 524 103.1
25 556 45.0
148 1,246 118.8
30 328 91.5
41 547 75.0
8 86 93.0
36 491 73.3
26 332 78.3
740 7,295 101.4
2008*
70 1145 61.1
65 842 77.2
51 527 96.8
27 549 49.2
127 1,257 101
24 331 72.5
51 525 97.1
9 83 108.4
32 483 66.3
20 324 61.7
674 7,265 92.8
53
COUNTY Rockdale Schley Screven Seminole Spalding Stephens Stewart Sumter Talbot Taliaferro Tattnall
TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA DECLINING PREGNANCY
Rates for 15 - 19 Years Old
1998 thru 2008 Trends
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
157 2,629 59.7
187 2,644 70.7
176 2,666 66.0
182 2,789 65.3
181 2,878 62.9
187 2,921 64.0
161 2,976 54.1
194 3,046 63.7
191 3,095 61.7
Total Pregnancies
18
13
12
7
12
14
9
14
10
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
129
125
124
135
132
127
141
151
141
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
139.5 104.0
96.8
51.9
90.9
110.2
63.8
92.7
70.9
Total Pregnancies
62
44
39
43
40
54
45
31
56
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
547
546
544
540
547
579
623
666
647
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
113.3
80.6
71.7
79.6
73.1
93.3
72.2
46.5
86.6
Total Pregnancies
37
32
40
22
23
31
17
31
22
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
347
342
339
328
334
322
319
316
323
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
106.6
93.6
118.0
67.1
68.9
96.3
53.3
98.1
68.1
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
271 2,085 130.0
243 2,080 116.8
223 2,073 107.6
238 2,029 117.3
194 1,999 97.0
230 2,009 114.5
212 2,047 103.6
192 2,033 94.4
197 2,078 94.8
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
65
73
61
75
57
58
44
60
51
918
915
915
878
855
838
832
896
914
70.8
79.8
66.7
85.4
66.7
69.2
52.9
67.0
55.8
Total Pregnancies
17
25
10
11
19
12
11
14
13
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
165
160
155
162
150
144
145
157
146
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
103.0 156.2
64.5
67.9
126.7
83.3
75.9
89.2
89.0
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
137 1,368 100.1
143 1,356 105.5
100 1,345 74.3
134 1,285 104.3
120 1,257 95.5
87 1,300 66.9
114 1,247 91.4
111 1,298 85.5
108 1,318 81.9
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
20
20
27
25
21
13
15
13
19
229
221
215
200
191
180
205
219
217
87.3
90.5
125.6
125
109.9
72.2
73.2
59.4
87.6
Total Pregnancies
5
6
3
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
65
62
62
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
76.9
96.8
*
4
6
2
11
4
5
66
63
65
69
60
53
*
95.2
*
159.4
*
94.3
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
92
73
66
68
67
76
72
64
68
653
659
652
669
673
672
694
682
660
140.9 110.8 101.2 101.6
99.6
113.1 103.7
93.8
103.0
2007
179 3,171 56.4
10 140 71.4
43 632 68.0
27 321 84.1
200 2,121 94.3
71 924 76.8
22 150 146.7
126 1,352 93.2
24 216 111.1
2 52 *
80 650 123.1
2008*
185 3,263 56.7
10 140 71.4
41 628 65.3
25 321 77.9
195 2,191
89
58 918 63.2
14 154 90.9
105 1,353 77.6
17 226 75.2
4 46 87
67 659 101.7
54
COUNTY Taylor Telfair Terrell Thomas Tift Toombs Towns Treutlen Troup Turner Twiggs
TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA DECLINING PREGNANCY
Rates for 15 - 19 Years Old
1998 thru 2008 Trends
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Total Pregnancies
35
32
29
15
25
15
21
19
16
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
322
313
306
288
298
318
326
292
308
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
108.7 102.2
94.8
52.1
83.9
47.2
64.4
65.1
51.9
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
35
29
52
24
33
30
36
33
38
381
371
373
353
353
332
317
317
319
91.9
78.2
139.4
68
93.5
90.4
113.6 104.1 119.1
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
60
51
50
57
36
443
445
439
420
397
135.4 114.6 113.9 135.7
90.7
34
38
31
48
395
379
375
376
86.1
100.3
82.7
127.7
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
168 1,601 104.9
141 1,589 88.7
145 1,591 91.1
128 1,615 79.3
92 1,639 56.1
123 1,629 75.5
123 1,610 76.4
106 1,543 68.7
106 1,519 69.8
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
158 1,531 103.2
142 1,520 93.4
141 1,512 93.3
118 1,439
82
115 1,423 80.8
105 1,440 72.9
116 1,462 79.3
154 1,538 100.1
126 1,558 80.9
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
98
113
118
103
99
89
82
97
104
989
985
981
1005
1,010
998
999
1000
999
99.1
114.7 120.3 102.5
98.0
89.2
82.1
97.0
104.1
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
13
17
11
16
12
5
14
14
9
350
355
365
380
393
383
387
375
338
37.1
47.9
30.1
42.1
30.5
13.1
36.2
37.3
26.6
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
20
29
25
23
19
22
10
15
9
258
257
258
231
227
214
206
206
199
77.5
112.8
96.9
99.6
83.7
102.8
48.5
72.8
45.2
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
234 2,142 109.2
241 2,132 113.0
207 2,130 97.2
217 2,177 99.7
194 2,205 88.0
183 2,208 82.9
193 2,236 86.3
204 2,244 90.9
181 2,279 79.4
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
29
36
50
42
37
31
33
28
30
393
399
394
391
380
380
370
363
347
73.8
90.2
126.9 107.4
97.4
81.6
89.2
77.1
86.5
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
30
40
31
33
26
23
27
35
31
401
411
416
420
407
407
399
357
330
74.8
97.3
74.5
78.6
63.9
56.5
67.7
98.0
93.9
2007
30 306 98.0
31 325 95.4
36 362 99.4
122 1,495 81.6
136 1,542 88.2
88 1,010 87.1
13 384 33.9
15 216 69.4
207 2,289 90.4
37 347 106.6
22 341 64.5
2008*
17 309 55
32 306 104.6
34 371 91.6
106 1,513 70.1
117 1,610 72.7
87 1,003 86.7
12 393 30.5
14 217 64.5
184 2253 81.7
32 330 97
29 326 89
55
COUNTY Union Upson Walker Walton Ware Warren Washington Wayne Webster Wheeler White
TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA DECLINING PREGNANCY
Rates for 15 - 19 Years Old
1998 thru 2008 Trends
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
29
33
30
450
462
474
64.4
71.4
63.3
32
20
21
27
30
37
492
495
508
528
526
539
65
40.4
41.3
51.1
57.0
68.6
Total Pregnancies
100
87
97
95
86
66
64
86
76
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
879
873
861
892
897
889
924
889
862
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
113.8
99.7
112.7 106.5
95.9
74.2
69.3
96.7
88.2
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
190 1,988 95.6
179 1,981 90.4
164 1,979 82.9
157 1,973 79.6
167 1,953 85.5
145 1,989 72.9
136 1,995 68.2
155 1,998 77.6
164 2,005 81.8
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
147 1,880 78.2
173 2,016 85.8
153 2,087 73.3
150 2,131 70.4
149 2,206 67.5
148 2,315 63.9
161 2,458 65.5
164 2,494 65.8
186 2,553 72.9
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
136 1,229 110.7
116 1,214 95.6
111 1,195 92.9
91 1131 80.5
112 1102 101.6
89 1146 77.7
101 1130 89.4
100 1080 92.6
115 1073 107.2
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
20
21
26
15
21
14
17
24
28
231
240
237
232
232
222
213
206
202
86.6
87.5
109.7
64.7
90.5
63.1
79.8
116.5 138.6
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
66
64
64
61
50
49
40
44
54
818
822
822
801
785
759
763
711
773
80.7
77.9
77.9
76.2
63.7
64.6
52.4
61.9
69.9
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
87
79
80
69
86
82
70
107
95
967
973
980
997
986
968
946
961
962
90.0
81.2
81.6
69.2
87.2
84.7
74.0
111.3
98.8
Total Pregnancies
8
4
2
6
10
5
4
5
8
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
84
82
83
80
71
68
76
70
73
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
95.2
*
*
75
140.8
73.5
*
71.4
109.6
Total Pregnancies
24
13
17
15
14
16
18
20
17
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
209
199
196
201
199
202
186
188
188
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
114.8
65.3
86.7
74.6
70.4
79.2
96.8
106.4
90.4
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
56
51
49
39
55
52
43
49
42
600
612
634
644
689
715
744
754
768
93.3
83.3
77.3
60.6
79.8
72.7
57.8
65.0
54.7
2007
33 543 60.8
91 855 106.4
187 1,995 93.7
184 2,602 70.7
123 1076 114.3
13 187 69.5
64 785 81.5
103 976 105.5
3 67 *
17 172 98.8
43 762 56.4
2008*
29 554 52.3
74 881 84
147 1945 75.6
170 2648 64.2
100 1068 93.6
19 181 105
50 783 63.9
91 997 91.3
5 66 75.8
16 173 92.5
48 753 63.7
56
COUNTY Whitfield Wilcox Wilkes Wilkinson Worth
TEENAGE PREGNANCY PREVENTION - GEORGIA DECLINING PREGNANCY
Rates for 15 - 19 Years Old
1998 thru 2008 Trends
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
319 2,771 115.1
345 2,794 123.5
336 2,820 119.1
362 2,811 128.8
314 2,850 110.2
309 2,844 108.6
315 2,853 110.4
309 2,844 108.6
312 2,887 108.1
Total Pregnancies
29
20
14
35
15
24
16
19
25
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
263
265
261
265
257
269
251
246
225
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
110.3
75.5
53.6
132.1
58.4
89.2
63.7
77.2
111.1
Total Pregnancies
45
42
29
31
19
28
35
28
26
Female Population (age 15 to 19)
399
398
396
376
375
367
347
327
312
Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
112.8 105.5
73.2
82.4
50.7
76.3
100.9
85.6
83.3
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
36
36
31
38
25
35
21
31
25
422
422
422
421
389
382
370
356
348
85.3
85.3
73.5
90.3
64.3
91.6
56.8
87.1
71.8
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
75
76
71
61
53
59
65
52
42
908
899
887
858
837
828
835
896
885
82.6
84.5
80.0
71.1
63.3
71.3
77.8
58.0
47.5
2007
314 2,859 109.8
21 229 91.7
16 307 52.1
26 332 78.3
61 868 70.3
2008*
314 2889 108.7
18 217 82.9
23 314 73.2
28 329 85.1
51 874 58.4
Georgia
Total Pregnancies Female Population (age 15 to 19) Rate of Pregnancies per 1,000
23,780 279,228
85.2
23,985 283,808
84.5
23,298 286,463
81.3
22,586 287,916
78.4
21,437 292,120
73.4
21,040 296,639
70.9
21,098 303,451
69.5
21,058 314,220
67.0
22,083 326,722
67.6
22,773 329,199
69.2
21,179 333,417
63.5
* To be considered PRELIIMINARY. These are projections based on a linear regression model using 1995-2007 data (DCH/DPH/EPI/OHIP) (11.4.09)
57
J. Sanctions Applied to TANF Recipients
TANF SANCTIONS
State Fiscal Year 2009
County
Clients with Clients
Reductions Applied in
with Closures
County
SFY 2009 SFY 2009
Clients with
Reductions Applied in SFY 2009
Clients with
Closures SFY 2009
County
Clients with Clients Reductions with Applied in Closures SFY 2009 SFY 2009
APPLING
0
ATKINSON
0
BACON
1
BAKER
0
BALDWIN
2
BANKS
0
BARROW
6
BARTOW
5
BEN HILL
1
BERRIEN
1
BIBB
14
BLECKLEY
2
BRANTLEY
0
BROOKS
0
BRYAN
1
BULLOCH
3
BURKE
1
BUTTS
0
CALHOUN
0
CAMDEN
15
CANDLER
0
CARROLL
1
CATOOSA
2
CHARLTON
0
CHATHAM
1
CHATTAHOOCHEE
0
CHATTOOGA
1
CHEROKEE
4
CLARKE
14
CLAY
1
CLAYTON
19
CLINCH
0
COBB
21
COFFEE
0
COLQUITT
1
COLUMBIA
1
COOK
0
COWETA
2
CRAWFORD
0
CRISP
8
DADE
0
DAWSON
1
DECATUR
0
DEKALB
62
DODGE
0
DOOLY
7
DOUGHERTY
4
DOUGLAS
13
EARLY
1
ECHOLS
0
EFFINGHAM
0
ELBERT
2
EMANUEL
1
EVANS
0
FANNIN
1
FAYETTE
2
FLOYD
20
FORSYTH
2
0 FRANKLIN
0
0 FULTON
52
0 GILMER
0
0 GLASCOCK
0
0 GLYNN
1
0 GORDON
1
2 GRADY
2
0 GREENE
1
0 GWINNETT
16
0 HABERSHAM
0
4 HALL
13
0 HANCOCK
0
0 HARALSON
0
0 HARRIS
0
1 HART
2
14 HEARD
1
0 HENRY
4
0 HOUSTON
22
0 IRWIN
0
0 JACKSON
3
0 JASPER
0
0 JEFF DAVIS
0
0 JEFFERSON
1
0 JENKINS
0
2 JOHNSON
0
0 JONES
1
0 LAMAR
2
0 LANIER
0
4 LAURENS
3
1 LEE
0
0 LIBERTY
0
0 LINCOLN
0
1 LONG
1
0 LOWNDES
1
0 LUMPKIN
0
0 MACON
1
0 MADISON
1
0 MARION
1
0 MCDUFFIE
0
2 MCINTOSH
0
0 MERIWETHER
2
2 MILLER
0
0 MITCHELL
1
5 MONROE
0
0 MONTGOMERY
0
3 MORGAN
0
30 MURRAY
1
3 MUSCOGEE
29
0 NEWTON
2
0 OCONEE
2
0 OGLETHORPE
1
1 PAULDING
0
0 PEACH
1
0 PICKENS
0
0 PIERCE
0
1 PIKE
0
2 POLK
3
2 PULASKI
3
0 PUTNAM
5
8
18 QUITMAN
0
0
0 RABUN
0
0
0 RANDOLPH
0
0
0 RICHMOND
20
0
1 ROCKDALE
2
0
0 SCHLEY
0
0
0 SCREVEN
7
2
2 SEMINOLE
0
0
0 SPALDING
1
0
1 STEPHENS
0
0
0 STEWART
0
0
0 SUMTER
8
3
0 TALBOT
0
0
2 TALIAFERRO
0
0
0 TATTNALL
0
0
0 TAYLOR
1
2
11 TELFAIR
0
0
0 TERRELL
2
1
0 THOMAS
0
0
0 TIFT
0
0
0 TOOMBS
1
16
0 TOWNS
0
0
0 TREUTLEN
1
0
0 TROUP
8
5
3 TURNER
0
0
0 TWIGGS
0
0
0 UNION
1
0
0 UPSON
0
0
0 WALKER
1
0
0 WALTON
6
0
0 WARE
1
0
0 WARREN
2
0
0 WASHINGTON
4
0
0 WAYNE
1
2
0 WEBSTER
0
0
0 WHEELER
0
0
0 WHITE
0
0
0 WHITFIELD
0
0
0 WILCOX
5
3
2 WILKES
0
0
0 WILKINSON
0
0
1 WORTH
1
0
0 STATE
497
200
0
0
0
25
7
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
3
2
58
K. The Number of Legal Immigrants Receiving TANF Benefits by Category of
Immigration Status
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 DOUGLAS EARLY ECHOLS
LEGAL IMMIGRANTS RECEIVING TANF BY IMMIGRATION STATUS
State Fiscal Year 2009
Eligible Alien
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0
Entrant
After
8/22/96
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 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Permanent Resident
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 11 0 19 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 22 0 0 1 1 0 0
Refugee
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 6 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 77 0 0 0 0 0 0
Total NonCitizen
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 19 0 26 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 101 0 0 1 1 0 0
59
County
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 MADISON MARION MCDUFFIE MCINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER
LEGAL IMMIGRANTS RECEIVING TANF BY IMMIGRATION STATUS
State Fiscal Year 2009
Eligible Alien
0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 1 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 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Entrant
After
8/22/96
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
Permanent Resident
0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 13 0 0 1 0 0 0 55 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Refugee
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 292 0 0 0 0 0 0 17 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 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Total NonCitizen
0 0 0 0 0 2 2 1 0 306 0 0 1 0 0 0 72 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
60
County
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 TURNER TWIGGS UNION UPSON WALKER WALTON WARE WARREN WASHINGTON
LEGAL IMMIGRANTS RECEIVING TANF BY IMMIGRATION STATUS
State Fiscal Year 2009
Eligible Alien
0 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 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Entrant
After
8/22/96
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
Permanent Resident
0 0 0 0 0 2 2 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
Refugee
0 0 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 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 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Total NonCitizen
0 0 0 0 0 7 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
61
County
WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH
STATE
Source: State TANF09
LEGAL IMMIGRANTS RECEIVING TANF BY IMMIGRATION STATUS
State Fiscal Year 2009
Eligible Alien
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
13
Entrant After
8/22/96
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
1
Permanent Resident
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
141
Refugee
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
405
Total NonCitizen
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
560
62
L. Number of Families No Longer Eligible Because of Time Limits
`
NUMBER OF FAMILIES NO LONGER ELIGIBLE BECAUSE OF TIME LIMITS
As of January 1, 2001 thru June 30, 2009
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 DOUGLAS EARLY ECHOLS EFFINGHAM ELBERT EMANUEL EVANS FANNIN
Number of Families
0 3 1 2 41 3 0 4 19 7 281 10 2 9 1 20 27 3 9 2 2 14 1 0 93 1 3 1 61 8 124 3 133 7 47 13 35 11 1 37 0 1 24 327 20 7 225 21 36 2 9 5 28 1 0
County
Number of Families
County
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 MADISON MARION MCDUFFIE MCINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN MURRAY MUSCOGEE NEWTON OCONEE OGLETHORPE PAULDING
8 18 2 1 1,352 0 0 19 2 11 7 68 4 38 20 4 7 14 0 19 89 5 1 7 3 20 13 11 4 0 6 42 2 21 2 10 49 0 11 8 4 40 0 7 2 55 3 4 3 2 271 26 1 6 2
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 TURNER TWIGGS UNION UPSON WALKER WALTON WARE WARREN WASHINGTON WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH TOTAL
Number of
Families 56 0 9 0 1 19 12 3 1 11 357 11 0 31 18 9 13 16 111 14 2 9 10 11 80 51 39 10 0 6 30 3 11 0 12 4 20 23 14 33 10 0 1 6 3 3 10 9 45
5,216
63
M. Follow-up Information on Job Retention and Earnings
FOLLOW-UP INFORMATION ON JOB RETENTION AND EARNINGS
Adult Recipients Exited from July 2007 thru June 2008
County
APPLING BAKER BALDWIN BANKS BARROW BARTOW BEN HILL BIBB BLECKLEY BRANTLEY BRYAN BULLOCH BURKE BUTTS CAMDEN CANDLER CARROLL CATOOSA CHATHAM CHATTAHOOCH CHATTOOGA CHEROKEE CLARKE CLAY CLAYTON COBB COLQUITT COLUMBIA COWETA CRAWFORD CRISP DADE DAWSON DECATUR DEKALB DODGE DOOLY DOUGHERTY DOUGLAS EARLY EFFINGHAM ELBERT EMANUEL EVANS FANNIN FAYETTE FLOYD FORSYTH FRANKLIN FULTON
Adult Leavers
4 2 48 6 15 11 1 75 14 1 7 59 21 17 9 11 70 5 52 4 16 34 79 13 261 362 20 15 12 6 22 1 6 12 972 9 8 309 75 10 27 26 21 9 7 36 61 46 12 1,539
Employed at Exit
Number
1 1 24 2 7 6 0 41 7 1 5 41 5 15 4 7 40 1 39 4 4 27 50 2 152 239 13 8 9 3 9 0 3 5 560 6 4 162 45 2 17 13 9 5 5 22 27 33 6 946
Percent
25.0% 50.0% 50.0% 33.3% 46.7% 54.5% 0.0% 54.7% 50.0% 100.0% 71.4% 69.5% 23.8% 88.2% 44.4% 63.6% 57.1% 20.0% 75.0% 100.0% 25.0% 79.4% 63.3% 15.4% 58.2% 66.0% 65.0% 53.3% 75.0% 50.0% 40.9% 0.0% 50.0% 41.7% 57.6% 66.7% 50.0% 52.4% 60.0% 20.0% 63.0% 50.0% 42.9% 55.6% 71.4% 61.1% 44.3% 71.7% 50.0% 61.5%
Employed at 6 Months
Number Percent
2
50.0%
2
100.0%
26
54.2%
2
33.3%
10
66.7%
7
63.6%
1
100.0%
41
54.7%
8
57.1%
0
0.0%
4
57.1%
38
64.4%
7
33.3%
11
64.7%
6
66.7%
8
72.7%
42
60.0%
2
40.0%
32
61.5%
2
50.0%
6
37.5%
25
73.5%
45
57.0%
3
23.1%
136
52.1%
225
62.2%
12
60.0%
10
66.7%
8
66.7%
4
66.7%
13
59.1%
1
100.0%
3
50.0%
4
33.3%
537
55.2%
8
88.9%
1
12.5%
154
49.8%
43
57.3%
4
40.0%
13
48.1%
13
50.0%
12
57.1%
3
33.3%
3
42.9%
24
66.7%
27
44.3%
29
63.0%
6
50.0%
877
57.0%
Quarterly Wages, 6 Months
Average Total
$2,054 $2,603 $2,575 $1,506 $3,045 $2,312 $1,146 $2,244 $3,638
$4,108 $5,205 $66,949 $3,011 $30,447 $16,184 $1,146 $91,988 $29,103
$2,727 $1,836 $2,906 $1,928 $2,676 $2,322 $2,383 $1,994 $1,829 $2,020 $1,794 $3,330 $2,159 $1,472 $2,786 $3,527 $2,047 $4,131 $1,949 $1,915 $1,016 $565 $2,233 $2,157 $2,826 $2,361 $3,644 $2,103 $2,991 $3,919 $2,437 $2,465 $2,334 $3,989 $2,765 $3,709 $2,621 $2,980 $2,345 $2,572
$10,907 $69,768 $20,344 $21,213 $16,059 $18,576 $100,073 $3,988 $58,515 $4,039 $10,766 $83,255 $97,176 $4,415 $378,916 $793,500 $24,561 $41,306 $15,594 $7,660 $13,206
$565 $6,700 $8,626 $1,517,569 $18,892 $3,644 $323,901 $128,604 $15,678 $31,677 $32,040 $28,008 $11,966 $8,294 $89,006 $70,765 $86,418 $14,067 $2,255,692
64
FOLLOW-UP INFORMATION ON JOB RETENTION AND EARNINGS
Adult Recipients Exited from July 2007 thru June 2008
County
GLASCOCK GLYNN GORDON GRADY GREENE GWINNETT HABERSHAM HALL HANCOCK HARALSON HARRIS HART HEARD HENRY HOUSTON JACKSON JASPER JEFF DAVIS JEFFERSON JENKINS JOHNSON JONES LAMAR LAURENS LEE LIBERTY LINCOLN LONG LOWNDES LUMPKIN MACON MADISON MARION MCDUFFIE MCINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN MUSCOGEE NEWTON OCONEE OGLETHORPE PAULDING PEACH PICKENS PIKE
Adult Leavers
4 9 44 6 4 280 9 54 5 5 15 51 2 113 130 17 1 2 20 9 19 22 7 48 2 119 1 18 4 7 10 13 1 18 5 14 5 5 10 11 3 596 93 2 6 23 23 2 6
Employed at Exit
Number
3 1 24 1 3 170 5 29 3 4 6 28 0 72 75 7 0 1 11 3 12 20 4 30 1 82 1 7 1 6 8 6 1 9 2 8 2 4 5 6 3 338 64 1 4 9 14 1 1
Percent
75.0% 11.1% 54.5% 16.7% 75.0% 60.7% 55.6% 53.7% 60.0% 80.0% 40.0% 54.9% 0.0% 63.7% 57.7% 41.2% 0.0% 50.0% 55.0% 33.3% 63.2% 90.9% 57.1% 62.5% 50.0% 68.9% 100.0% 38.9% 25.0% 85.7% 80.0% 46.2% 100.0% 50.0% 40.0% 57.1% 40.0% 80.0% 50.0% 54.5% 100.0% 56.7% 68.8% 50.0% 66.7% 39.1% 60.9% 50.0% 16.7%
Employed at 6 Months
Number Percent
1
25.0%
1
11.1%
24
54.5%
1
16.7%
4
100.0%
155
55.4%
5
55.6%
26
48.1%
3
60.0%
5
100.0%
7
46.7%
28
54.9%
1
50.0%
67
59.3%
72
55.4%
6
35.3%
0
0.0%
0
0.0%
10
50.0%
4
44.4%
11
57.9%
15
68.2%
3
42.9%
23
47.9%
2
100.0%
75
63.0%
1
100.0%
9
50.0%
1
25.0%
3
42.9%
4
40.0%
7
53.8%
1
100.0%
7
38.9%
2
40.0%
9
64.3%
2
40.0%
4
80.0%
5
50.0%
6
54.5%
1
33.3%
317
53.2%
52
55.9%
1
50.0%
3
50.0%
13
56.5%
17
73.9%
0
0.0%
3
50.0%
Quarterly Wages, 6 Months
Average Total
$5,402 $2,670 $2,352 $3,112 $1,654 $3,602 $3,375 $1,945 $2,811 $1,603 $2,563 $2,570 $4,941 $3,187 $2,341 $1,902
$5,402 $2,670 $56,449 $3,112 $6,615 $558,345 $16,874 $50,561 $8,434 $8,016 $17,943 $71,964 $4,941 $213,519 $168,541 $11,413
$2,254 $1,902 $1,952 $2,797 $4,120 $2,173 $1,867 $2,209 $1,619 $2,726 $200 $1,764 $780 $1,859 $4,033 $1,818 $1,184 $2,333 $4,514 $2,234 $4,285 $2,452 $2,334 $2,177 $2,599 $1,955 $3,360 $3,546 $2,213
$5,324
$22,536 $7,607 $21,470 $41,949 $12,361 $49,982 $3,733 $165,666 $1,619 $24,536 $200 $5,293 $3,122 $13,014 $4,033 $12,723 $2,368 $20,999 $9,028 $8,935 $21,426 $14,709 $2,334 $690,109 $135,155 $1,955 $10,081 $46,095 $37,629
$15,972
65
FOLLOW-UP INFORMATION ON JOB RETENTION AND EARNINGS
Adult Recipients Exited from July 2007 thru June 2008
County
POLK PULASKI PUTNAM QUITMAN RABUN RANDOLPH RICHMOND ROCKDALE SCHLEY SCREVEN SEMINOLE SPALDING STEPHENS STEWART SUMTER TALBOT TATTNALL TAYLOR TELFAIR TERRELL THOMAS TOOMBS TOWNS TREUTLEN TROUP TWIGGS UNION UPSON WALKER WALTON WARE WARREN WASHINGTON WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH State Totals
Adult Leavers
12 28 23 7 1 11 461 83 1 35 8 67 41 11 81 8 14 21 12 6 26 30 1 16 17 5 7 17 32 24 1 23 18 12 2 2 9 5 16 8 9 11 7,553
Employed at Exit
Number
5 14 15 0 0 4 230 45 0 16 4 31 24 4 35 2 9 7 5 3 11 13 1 9 12 4 2 7 10 17 0 7 13 6 0 1 5 2 5 4 2 8 4,325
Percent
41.7% 50.0% 65.2% 0.0% 0.0% 36.4% 49.9% 54.2% 0.0% 45.7% 50.0% 46.3% 58.5% 36.4% 43.2% 25.0% 64.3% 33.3% 41.7% 50.0% 42.3% 43.3% 100.0% 56.3% 70.6% 80.0% 28.6% 41.2% 31.3% 70.8% 0.0% 30.4% 72.2% 50.0% 0.0% 50.0% 55.6% 40.0% 31.3% 50.0% 22.2% 72.7% 57.3%
Employed at 6 Months
Number Percent
5 15 14 0 0 5 242 52 1 15 4 24 22 4 45 2 7 8 9 3 13 19 1 10 10 0 4 6 9 13 0 14 10 4 0 1 4 2 7 5 4 7 4,137
41.7% 53.6% 60.9% 0.0% 0.0% 45.5% 52.5% 62.7% 100.0% 42.9% 50.0% 35.8% 53.7% 36.4% 55.6% 25.0% 50.0% 38.1% 75.0% 50.0% 50.0% 63.3% 100.0% 62.5% 58.8% 0.0% 57.1% 35.3% 28.1% 54.2% 0.0% 60.9% 55.6% 33.3% 0.0% 50.0% 44.4% 40.0% 43.8% 62.5% 44.4% 63.6% 54.8%
Quarterly Wages, 6 Months
Average Total
$2,983 $1,990 $2,652
$14,913 $29,850 $37,130
$1,094 $2,574 $2,425 $1,391 $1,663 $1,122 $1,900 $2,664 $1,887 $2,043 $1,562 $3,573 $1,648 $1,958 $4,133 $2,248 $3,150 $832 $2,281 $2,631
$5,468 $622,791 $126,126
$1,391 $24,946 $4,486 $45,599 $58,617 $7,550 $91,942 $3,123 $25,009 $13,185 $17,623 $12,399 $29,227 $59,841
$832 $22,813 $26,310
$2,131 $1,066 $2,402 $2,428
$8,525 $6,396 $21,620 $31,565
$1,984 $2,831 $942
$27,771 $28,309 $3,767
$707 $1,695 $4,026 $2,550 $2,043 $1,978 $3,304 $2,608
$707 $6,780 $8,051 $17,851 $10,213 $7,913 $23,125 $10,789,295
66
N. An Evaluation of the Effect of Code Section 49-4-186 On the Number of Births 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 CHATTAHOCHEE CHATTOOGA CHEROKEE CLARKE CLAY CLAYTON CLINCH COBB COFFEE COLQUITT
FAMILY CAP CASES AND CHILDREN
State Fiscal Year 2009
Number Family Cap Cases as of June 2009
Total Added in SFY 09
3
1
2
1
0
3
1
0
8
2
0
2
2
1
3
0
6
5
2
2
97
77
1
0
0
0
1
0
2
0
14
10
10
6
2
1
4
2
2
2
1
1
7
4
0
0
1
0
24
6
0
0
0
0
1
2
28
22
2
1
37
12
1
2
16
27
5
0
15
6
Total Family Cap Caes Served in SFY09
4 3 3 1 10 2 3 3 11 4 174 1 0 1 2 24 16 3 6 4 2 11 0 1 30 0 0 3 50 3 49 3 43 5 21
TANF Caseload as of June 2009
50 21 32 13 125 37 98 164 72 51 660 41 48 38 25 197 98 36 17 73 57 304 76 22 263 15 52 76 253 23 938 25 838 118 141
Percent of TANF
Caseload
8.0% 14.3% 9.4% 7.7% 8.0% 5.4% 3.1% 1.8% 15.3% 7.8% 26.4% 2.4% 0.0% 2.6% 8.0% 12.2% 16.3% 8.3% 35.3% 5.5% 3.5% 3.6% 0.0% 4.5% 11.4% 0.0% 0.0% 3.9% 19.8% 13.0% 5.2% 12.0% 5.1% 4.2% 14.9%
Number Family Cap Children as
of June 2009 4 2 0 1 12 0 2 3 6 2 132 1 0 1 3 17 16 3 5 2 2 10 0 1 31 0 0 2 40 2 47 4 23 7 17
Total Added in
SFY09
1 1 3 0 3 2 1 0 7 2 112 0 0 0 0 13 7 1 5 2 1 4 0 0 8 0 0 2 38 2 21 9 38 0 10
Total Family Cap Children
Served in SFY09
5 3 3 1 15 2 3 3 13 4 244 1 0 1 3 30 23 4 10 4 3 14 0 1 39 0 0 4 78 4 68 13 61 7 27
TANF
Percent of
Children as TANF Child
of June 2009 Recipients
50
10.0%
21
14.3%
32
9.4%
13
7.7%
120
12.5%
35
5.7%
86
3.5%
153
2.0%
72
18.1%
51
7.8%
605
40.3%
34
2.9%
47
0.0%
38
2.6%
25
12.0%
180
16.7%
81
28.4%
33
12.1%
17
58.8%
69
5.8%
53
5.7%
298
4.7%
75
0.0%
22
4.5%
262
14.9%
13
0.0%
42
0.0%
71
5.6%
210
37.1%
19
21.1%
813
8.4%
25
52.0%
627
9.7%
118
5.9%
140
19.3%
67
County
COLUMBIA COOK COWETA CRAWFORD CRISP 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
FAMILY CAP CASES AND CHILDREN
State Fiscal Year 2009
Number Family Cap Cases as of June 2009
Total Added in SFY 09
3
2
3
0
5
5
1
2
9
6
0
0
0
0
10
1
78
94
6
2
4
7
70
59
12
8
7
1
0
0
2
2
4
5
12
5
3
0
0
0
2
0
9
10
0
0
3
0
255
177
2
1
1
0
10
2
1
1
7
1
2
3
10
12
0
0
5
14
5
0
Total Family Cap Caes Served in SFY09
5 3 10 3 15 0 0 11 172 8 11 129 20 8 0 4 9 17 3 0 2 19 0 3 432 3 1 12 2 8 5 22 0 19 5
TANF Caseload as of June 2009
110 35 202 38 89 15 24 84 1,628 70 34 563 279 52 3 74 71 89 44 17 90 257 66 46 2,655 23 6 166 122 65 41 666 42 254 31
Percent of TANF
Caseload
4.5% 8.6% 5.0% 7.9% 16.9% 0.0% 0.0% 13.1% 10.6% 11.4% 32.4% 22.9% 7.2% 15.4% 0.0% 5.4% 12.7% 19.1% 6.8% 0.0% 2.2% 7.4% 0.0% 6.5% 16.3% 13.0% 16.7% 7.2% 1.6% 12.3% 12.2% 3.3% 0.0% 7.5% 16.1%
Number Family Cap Children as
of June 2009 5 4 5 1 15 0 0 13 96 6 4 90 17 9 0 2 5 14 5 0 2 10 0 3 338 2 1 14 1 10 2 11 0 5 7
Total Added in
SFY09
2 0 6 6 8 0 0 1 133 2 9 86 12 2 0 3 7 9 0 0 0 13 0 0 243 1 0 4 1 4 3 15 0 20 0
Total Family Cap Children
Served in SFY09
7 4 11 7 23 0 0 14 229 8 13 176 29 11 0 5 12 23 5 0 2 23 0 3 581 3 1 18 2 14 5 26 0 25 7
TANF
Percent of
Children as TANF Child
of June 2009 Recipients
100 35 198 34 79 15 22 81 1,202 68 25 482 247 50 3 73 67 89 40 16 83 212 52 43 1,994 23 6 162 116 60 41 473 36 223 28
7.0% 11.4% 5.6% 20.6% 29.1% 0.0% 0.0% 17.3% 19.1% 11.8% 52.0% 36.5% 11.7% 22.0% 0.0% 6.8% 17.9% 25.8% 12.5% 0.0% 2.4% 10.8% 0.0% 7.0% 29.1% 13.0% 16.7% 11.1% 1.7% 23.3% 12.2% 5.5% 0.0% 11.2% 25.0%
68
County
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 MADISON MARION MCDUFFIE MCINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN MURRAY
FAMILY CAP CASES AND CHILDREN
State Fiscal Year 2009
Number Family Cap Cases as of June 2009
Total Added in SFY 09
1
0
1
3
5
4
0
0
11
9
25
27
2
2
4
6
2
0
0
2
13
8
4
2
1
2
2
3
5
0
2
3
17
9
0
0
10
13
1
1
4
0
23
12
0
1
3
1
1
3
2
2
13
5
3
1
7
6
2
1
5
7
0
1
0
2
5
1
0
0
Total Family Cap Caes Served in SFY09
1 4 9 0 20 52 4 10 2 2 21 6 3 5 5 5 26 0 23 2 4 35 1 4 4 4 18 4 13 3 12 1 2 6 0
TANF Caseload as of June 2009
50 37 75 36 326 310 35 88 46 43 79 49 36 65 43 35 159 31 103 18 39 241 27 39 68 39 79 27 74 18 79 51 37 57 88
Percent of TANF
Caseload
2.0% 10.8% 12.0% 0.0% 6.1% 16.8% 11.4% 11.4% 4.3% 4.7% 26.6% 12.2% 8.3% 7.7% 11.6% 14.3% 16.4% 0.0% 22.3% 11.1% 10.3% 14.5% 3.7% 10.3% 5.9% 10.3% 22.8% 14.8% 17.6% 16.7% 15.2% 2.0% 5.4% 10.5% 0.0%
Number Family Cap Children as
of June 2009 1 1 6 0 14 29 3 4 2 0 21 5 3 2 6 2 24 0 13 1 5 28 0 3 1 2 23 6 10 3 5 0 0 6 0
Total Added in
SFY09
0 3 4 0 14 34 2 7 0 2 14 3 2 3 0 3 11 0 14 2 0 15 2 1 3 2 10 2 8 1 7 1 2 1 0
Total Family Cap Children
Served in SFY09
1 4 10 0 28 63 5 11 2 2 35 8 5 5 6 5 35 0 27 3 5 43 2 4 4 4 33 8 18 4 12 1 2 7 0
TANF
Percent of
Children as TANF Child
of June 2009 Recipients
50
2.0%
34
11.8%
58
17.2%
35
0.0%
297
9.4%
242
26.0%
35
14.3%
80
13.8%
42
4.8%
38
5.3%
74
47.3%
47
17.0%
32
15.6%
59
8.5%
38
15.8%
35
14.3%
135
25.9%
31
0.0%
80
33.8%
18
16.7%
37
13.5%
241
17.8%
24
8.3%
36
11.1%
64
6.3%
37
10.8%
76
43.4%
27
29.6%
70
25.7%
17
23.5%
76
15.8%
49
2.0%
29
6.9%
54
13.0%
83
0.0%
69
County
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
FAMILY CAP CASES AND CHILDREN
State Fiscal Year 2009
Number Family Cap Cases as of June 2009
Total Added in SFY 09
74
56
19
8
0
0
0
0
2
0
9
14
0
0
0
4
2
0
3
3
2
0
7
4
1
0
0
1
7
5
79
63
7
6
2
0
7
4
1
1
11
9
7
1
0
1
24
11
2
2
0
0
11
4
7
4
4
0
10
7
12
8
6
2
5
3
0
0
6
2
Total Family Cap Caes Served in SFY09
130 27 0 0 2 23 0 4 2 6 2 11 1 1 12 142 13 2 11 2 20 8 1 35 4 0 15 11 4 17 20 8 8 0 8
TANF Caseload as of June 2009
733 233 19 23 120 104 42 40 30 110 40 63 14 17 41 770 196 12 77 42 200 84 18 162 25
9 70 33 50 59 121 106 118 4 33
Percent of TANF
Caseload
17.7% 11.6% 0.0% 0.0% 1.7% 22.1% 0.0% 10.0% 6.7% 5.5% 5.0% 17.5% 7.1% 5.9% 29.3% 18.4% 6.6% 16.7% 14.3% 4.8% 10.0% 9.5% 5.6% 21.6% 16.0% 0.0% 21.4% 33.3% 8.0% 28.8% 16.5% 7.5% 6.8% 0.0% 24.2%
Number Family Cap Children as
of June 2009 101 25 0 0 2 11 0 0 3 4 2 9 1 0 9 116 9 2 11 3 15 9 0 26 2 0 12 9 5 14 15 8 7 0 6
Total Added in
SFY09
81 8 0 3 0 22 0 4 0 3 0 4 0 1 7 92 9 0 5 1 12 2 2 14 2 0 4 5 0 10 11 2 3 0 2
Total Family Cap Children
Served in SFY09
182 33 0 3 2 33 0 4 3 7 2 13 1 1 16 208 18 2 16 4 27 11 2 40 4 0 16 14 5 24 26 10 10 0 8
TANF
Percent of
Children as TANF Child
of June 2009 Recipients
578
31.5%
218
15.1%
19
0.0%
22
13.6%
118
1.7%
93
35.5%
37
0.0%
40
10.0%
29
10.3%
103
6.8%
29
6.9%
55
23.6%
10
10.0%
17
5.9%
37
43.2%
616
33.8%
180
10.0%
11
18.2%
64
25.0%
42
9.5%
186
14.5%
67
16.4%
17
11.8%
145
27.6%
24
16.7%
9
0.0%
68
23.5%
28
50.0%
45
11.1%
55
43.6%
114
22.8%
106
9.4%
104
9.6%
4
0.0%
21
38.1%
70
County
TROUP TURNER TWIGGS UNION UPSON WALKER WALTON WARE WARREN WASHINGTON WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH TOTAL
FAMILY CAP CASES AND CHILDREN
State Fiscal Year 2009
Number Family Cap Cases as of June 2009
Total Added in SFY 09
22 2 1 0 5 2 10 8 4 7 4 0 0 0 1 1 3 3 5 1,418
9 0 4 0 2 1 1 6 3 2 1 1 0 0 1 2 0 1 0 1,012
Total Family Cap Caes Served in SFY09
31 2 5 0 7 3 11 14 7 9 5 1 0 0 2 3 3 4 5 2,430
TANF Caseload as of June 2009
218 23 44 23 73 94 137 113 23 60 88 7 17 41 110 32 33 24 50 20,803
Percent of TANF
Caseload
14.2% 8.7% 11.4% 0.0% 9.6% 3.2% 8.0% 12.4% 30.4% 15.0% 5.7% 14.3% 0.0% 0.0% 1.8% 9.4% 9.1% 16.7% 10.0% 11.7%
Number Family Cap Children as
of June 2009 26 2 1 0 6 3 14 11 6 9 4 0 0 0 1 1 3 3 5 1,855
Total Added in
SFY09
9 0 5 0 3 5 3 8 6 2 1 1 0 0 1 2 0 1 0 1,412
Total Family Cap Children
Served in SFY09
35 2 6 0 9 8 17 19 12 11 5 1 0 0 2 3 3 4 5 3,267
TANF
Percent of
Children as TANF Child
of June 2009 Recipients
198 23 43 21 71 94 118 113 20 57 83 7 17 32 107 27 28 24 49 17,851
17.7% 8.7% 14.0% 0.0% 12.7% 8.5% 14.4% 16.8% 60.0% 19.3% 6.0% 14.3% 0.0% 0.0% 1.9% 11.1% 10.7% 16.7% 10.2% 18.3%
71