www.heritage.org | Heritage research | Policy Blog | PolicyWire Archive August 16, 2006
Welfare Reform Turns 10
The Senate Immigration Bill Rewards Lawbreaking: Why the DREAM Act Is a Nightmare
American-Made Energy from ANWR at a Modest Cost



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Conflict with the West: Religious Drivers and Strategies of Jihad
Thurs., August 17, 2006, 12 noon |
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Welfare Reform at 10: Marking the Milestone
Thurs., August 17, 2006, 2:00p.m. |
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Coolidge: A Life for Our Time
Wednesday, September 20, 2006, 12:00 noon |
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Full event schedule

August 22 will mark the 10th anniversary of welfare reform. (Above Robert Rector testifies before Congress on welfare reform.) That 1996 legislation has achieved remarkable success in reducing child poverty and increasing employment. Moreover, the reforms have helped those dependent on government welfare become self-sufficient. The 1996 reforms signaled a significant shift in U.S. social policy, which no longer would reward dependency. Today, additional steps must be taken to secure, and further, the progress.

On August 17, The Heritage Foundation is hosting an event on 10 years of welfare reform, Welfare Reform at 10: Marking the Milestone.

Read The Impact of Welfare Reform by Robert Rector

Also Marriage and the Welfare of America: the Tenth Anniversary of Welfare Reform by Mike Leavitt

Also Welfare Reform Turns Ten: Evidence Shows Reduced Dependence, Poverty by Christine Kim and Robert Rector


It is no secret that the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2006 (S. 2611), passed by the U.S. Sen­ate on May 25, 2006, contains numerous provisions that reward illegal aliens for violating federal immigra­tion law. What is less well known is that the Senate bill also condones the violation of federal law by 10 U.S. states. Indeed, S. 2611 expressly shields these states from liability for their past violations of federal law.




Oil and gasoline prices remain high, and two wars raging in the Middle East could drive prices up further still. Yet Congress has failed to remove restrictions on oil drilling in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR). ANWR is America’s single largest untapped source of oil. A new bill, the American-Made Energy Freedom Act (H.R. 5890), would open it to energy production. Other provisions in the bill are problematic, particularly those that would use the billions in ANWR leasing and royalty revenues to fund alternative energy projects.


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