Welfare Providers Getting Rich off Poor

Member Group : Commonwealth Foundation

Contact: Jay Ostrich 717.671.1901; cell: 717.649.6547 | [email protected]

Research Finds Welfare Providers Getting Rich off Poor

The Commonwealth Foundation released results from its examination of Pennsylvania welfare fraud, waste and abuse that found many providers taking millions of tax dollars from programs designed to help the poor and using it instead for luxuries, amusement and personal gain.

Limousine services to college basketball games; sunset booze cruises; lavish parties at adult amusement restaurants; chartered fishing trips, custom-made suits; luxury car leases and sweetheart salaries and severance packages were among the abuses discovered by policy analysts from the free-market think tank.
"Frivolity, frills and fraud have taken money and services from Pennsylvania’s neediest families, and robbed taxpayers of dollars and trust at a time when they can afford neither," said Jay Ostrich, director of public affairs. "Increasing transparency and decreasing barriers that prohibit swift discovery and dismantling of fraud, waste and abuse can end the injustice of getting rich off the poor."

Analysts also found welfare spending in Pennsylvania has grown by 55 percent in just 10 years with taxpayers now spending $27 billion annually in state and federal dollars on programs. For the first time in history, welfare is now the largest department in the state General Fund budget.

"A supportive safety net has now turned into a hammock of havoc with many of Pennsylvanian’s most needy forgotten as some just party it up at their expense" said Ostrich. "It’s unacceptable and key reform can end these abuses."
The Commonwealth Foundation recommends several reforms to protect both the poor and taxpayers. These include setting clear rates for provider payments to prevent confusion and eliminate the opportunity for wasteful spending, and passing recovery audit legislation to allow private contractors to audit providers and recoup funds from those cheating the system

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For more information on welfare or to interview a policy analyst, please contact Jay Ostrich, director of public affairs at 717-649-6547 or [email protected]. The Commonwealth Foundation crafts free-market policies, convinces Pennsylvanians of their benefits, and counters attacks on liberty.

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