About 13-thousand Michigan families will stop getting money from the state on October 1st. That’s when the families will reach their five-year federal lifetime limit for cash assistance. The cash assistance program is designed to support low-income families with pregnant women or children until they find jobs.
Sheryl Thompson is with the Department of Human Services. She says people with no income who have children will no longer be able to extend the limit for cash assistance.
"This was never meant to be a long-term solution," she said. "It was always supposed to be a short-term solution as a safety net."
Thompson says Michigan will save about 77-million-dollars this year. Other services including job placement and food assistance are available for people who qualify.
- Amelia Carpenter - Michigan Radio Newsroom