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CRS87309EPWpage10
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with children aged at least 3), grant diversion programs (using grant funds to subsidize a job), and job search. After 4 months of work, benefits are reduced by all earn- ings except a standard allowance, $105 monthly for 8 months, $75 thereafter, and child care expense (up to $160 monthly per child). (lst 4 months: disregard $105 monthly, child care costs, and 1/3 of remaining earnings.) ‘ Regulations
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CRS87309EPWpage24
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NAME OR BILL NO. GENERAL THEME BENEFIT RULES WORK/SCHOOL oBLIcATIoNS TREATMENT or EARNINGS VJOB REFUSAL ON A INCOME GROUNDS TWO-PARENT FAMILIES FEDERAL FUNDING SHARE INTERACTION WITH: MEDICAID Room STAMPS LOW-INCOME HOME ENERGY AID CRS-16 S. 610 (Dole, by Administration request, et al.) and H.R. 1288 (Duncan et al.). 100th Congress. Low-Income Opportunity Improvement Act of 1987. Proposal
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and H. Brown) Greater Avenues of Independence Act of 1987........................... 19 H.R. 2245 (Rep. Martinez) Economic Self—Sufficiency Act of l987................................. 20 ‘H.R. 2405 (Rep. Hawkins) a Family Opportunities for Child Care Act of l987....................... 21 S. 1511 (Sen. Moynihan et al.) and H.R. 3148 (Rep. Gradison) 19870.0000IOOOOOCGOOOCCOCCCOOCOCOIOOOOOCOOOOOOGC H
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CRS87309EPWpage30
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NAME OR BILL NO. BENEFIT RULES WORK/SCHOOL OBLIGATIONS JOB REFUSAL ON INCOME GROUNDS TWO-PARENT FAMILIES FEDERAL FUNDING SHARES dINTERACTION WITH: MEDICAID CHILD SUPPORT OTHER apersons receiving aid for 30 months. CR5-22; S. lSll (Sen. Moynihan et al) and H.R. 3148 (Rep. Gradison Family Security Act of 1987. 100th Congress Replace AFDC with “Child Support Supplement Program" (CSS). Require
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)ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooon HORO R0 al0)‘ooAooooooo0cocoonoiooooooooooovoooooooooo H.R. 1255 (Rep. Kennelly). Family Investment Act of l987............. H.R. 1604 (Rep. Roukema) and s. 869 (Sen. Dole)i Child Support Enforcement Improvement Act of l987..................... H.R. 1696 (Rep. Levin et al.). Work Opportunities and ]-9870OOOOIOOOOOOOOOAOCOOOOOOOOQCOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOQC H.R. 1720 (Rep. H. Ford et a1.).O Family Welfare
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NAME OR BILL NO. BENEFIT RULES WORK/SCHOOL OBLIGATIONS TREATMENT OF EARNINGS JOB REFUSAL ON INCOME GROUNDS TWO-PARENT FAMILIES FEDERAL FUNDING SHARES INTERACTIoN WITH: MEDICAID FOOD STAMPS LOW-INCOME HOME ENERGY AID EARNED INCOME TAX CREDIT JOB TRAIN1NC PARTNERSHIP ACT PERFORMANCE STANDARDS ,[Fair Work Opportunities Act of 1987] pdependency, and education. for certain participants. A Services
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cRs-2 early August with the endorsement of the President by 102 Republican and 2 Democratic House Members and by Senators Dole and D'Amato, would require remedial education, work, or training for parents whose youngest child isl6 months old. This report provides brief sumaries of major bills to revise programs of aid for needy children and their families. The report summarizes several
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CRS87371Lpage33
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THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. QM ' of/7/g/2. 3& 0198'] Reproduced with Permission. The Wall Street Journal Is This Trip Necessary? Over the past week it has become widely known that the US. Embassy presence in Moscow is, in the delicate language of diplomacy, “compro- mised." First..the "new" U.S. Embassy. under construction by Soviet crews since 1972. It turns out
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Tillie Wtilaltelpfiia ilttquirer 0198 7 The Philadelphia Inquirer. Reproduced with Perm5SSi0"- /fiff/e //A1 Confronting the paranoia gap Gennady Gerasimov, the Soviet For- eign Ministry's affable, telegenic chief spokesman, has been cracking jokes about the “Soviet Mata Hari” who al- legedly led a U.S. Marine sergeant astray. “American fear of spying is a permanent feature of our
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Elbe gait flake iitihune fl/w////¢J?f,a 5‘? 01987 -The‘Salt Lake Tribune. Reproduced with Permission. About a Few of ‘The Few’ It would be a mistake, as the Ma- rine Corps and State Department obliquely advise, to read too much into the decision to return to the Unit- ed States the entire Marine guard de- tachment at the American Embassy in Moscow. In light of the very serious breach- es
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to the em- ‘ bassy in 1952. Microwaves were beamed at the embassy in 1975-78. Bugs were found in embassy typewriters in 1978 and in 1984. “Spy dust” was discovered there in 1985. The new U.S. chancery is being built -- ever so slowly —-- under a 1972 agreement that was based on reciprocity and allowed precautions such as the recruiting of American plasterers, plumbers and electricians for the inside work
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Elie iiiiazni iiieralb @¢i/Z /zrg /. 244 e193 7 Reproduced with Permission. The Miami Herald Caught Red-Faced w’S HARD to believe that after 70 years of dealing with a hostile totalitarian regime, the United States would fall into the trap of its own negligence and fail to forestall what the Soviet Union does best -- spy. Priorities must have been quite mixed up in the U.S. Embassy in Moscow. Now
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W deeper @¢z«;/5% /fig /. /5% 01987 The (Portland) Oregonian. Reproduced with Permission. Security blunder at State The security breach at the U.S. embassy in Moscow is a monumental blunder for which the State Depart- ment must bear final responsibility. The possibility of Soviet agents roaming the embassy building makes a laughingstock of what passes for security precautions in the agency
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THE INDIANAPOLIS STAR am/-7, /W; 5.4%.-1...//7a as "f:’3‘i“;i;’.“;§2‘{’{;“‘§“;“.;.. Marine Spy Case Two Marines have been formally charged with spy-related activities, a third has been arrested and the entire Marine guard contin- gent at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow has been ordered home. Another spy scandal has erupted. this time involving elite. highly trained U.S. servicemen who reportedly
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. They also are told the rules against fralemization, and are under obligation to lookout for each other. - Either the training is insufficient or the guards are too young -- average age is 2-1 ~- to maintain‘ tlieir responsibility against in- volvement with foreign nationals, particu- larly in the Soviet Union. Security at the Moscow Embassy has been breached. The extent of the damage is not clear
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50¢ lliasbingtun Eimcs a/ti/5; /rig/7. 7% The eight-story mike So acute is the crisis at our embassy in Moscow that even the State Department has conceded having a problem and has offered to take “whatever action is necessary" to make the embassy spy-proof. It is good to have such willing hands in the service of the state. Unfortunately, no reasonable view of recent events suggests that State Depart- ment spy-proofing is exactly what the doctor ordered. It was the State Department, let us bear in mind, that negotiated the agreement allow- ing the Soviets to plant umpteen hundred listening devices in the floor boards, ceiling tiles, and walls of our new embassy building in Moscow, making it into what Rep. Dick Armey, without much exaggeration, calls “an eight-story microphone." It was the State Department that, deaf to lively protests from the intelligence commu- nity, agreed to have the new Soviet embassy here planted atop Mount Alto, from which site the KGB’s laser-equipped peeping toms might peer more easily through the walls of the Pentagon, the State Department, the Capitol. and the White_I~Iouse. -31- °l 98 7 Reproduced with Permission. The Washington Times It is also the State Department that, until last year, had resisted repeated efforts to have Russian employees at our embassy in Moscow replaced with security-checked Americans, thus sparing the KGB the neces- sity of supplying our diplomats with make- believe butlers, cooks (such as the lass who T snared Marine Cpl. Arnold Bracy), and re- ceptionists (such as the one who snared Sgt. Clayton Lonetree). If, preoccupied with loftier matters, the State Department simply had failed to grasp the security risk entailed in having the new American embassy constructed from pre- fabricated modulesof Soviet manufacture. that you could understand. But the State De- partment was warned, most recently last fall, and still did nothing about it. With his Moscow-bound secretary of state wondering whether to carry along his own house trailer for private conversations, even President Reagan was musing yesterday about having to demolish the still leakier new building and start over. That would be a be- ginning, but the truly vital demolition work awaits at the Department of State.
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ST. LOUISPOST-DISPATCH éma/'57/¢fZ /.26 c198 7 Reproduced with Permission. St. Louis Post-Dispatch The Moscow Embassy Scandal That Soviet agents were able to use sexu- al entrapment (one of the oldest tricks in the book) to compromise five Marine guards clearly shows a failure in the Ma- runes’ training and a failure on the part of State Department officials who were su- pervising
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September, following hearings into charges of a $100 million cost overrun, inordi- nate delays and more bugs than a back-yard barbecue in the new U.S. chancery in Moscow. So where was the committee 15 years ago _ when the Nixon administration reached the agreement that let the Kremlin supervise con- struction? Why, debating the anti-ballistic mis- sile treaty, another monument to the proposition so
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areas at the em- bassy. U.S. intelligence ollicials say both men, who worked together when their stints at the embassy overlapped from July 1985 to March 1986, have admitted that they allowed the agents to enter. That means the agents could have had access to files containing the names of U.S. agents in the Soviet Union, the methods for communicating with them and other information. In addition, U
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