


 
Drug Testing and Crime-Related Restrictions 
in TANF, SNAP, and Housing Assistance 
Maggie McCarty 
Specialist in Housing Policy 
Gene Falk 
Specialist in Social Policy 
Randy Alison Aussenberg 
Analyst in Nutrition Assistance Policy 
David H. Carpenter 
Legislative Attorney 
May 12, 2014 
Congressional Research Service 
R42394 
 
Drug Testing and Crime-Related Restrictions in TANF, SNAP, and Housing Assistance 
 
Summary 
Throughout the history of social assistance programs, administrators have attempted to limit 
access only to those families considered “worthy” of assistance. Policies about worthiness have 
included both judgments about need—generally tied to income, demographic characteristics, or 
family circumstances—and judgments about moral character, often as evidenced by behavior. 
Past policies evaluating moral character based on family structure have been replaced by today’s 
policies, which focus on criminal activity, particularly drug-related criminal activity. The existing 
crime and drug-related restrictions were established in the late 1980s through the mid-1990s, 
when crime rates, especially drug-related violent crime rates, were at peak levels. While crime 
rates have since declined, interest in expanding these policies has continued. 
The three programs examined in this report—the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families 
(TANF) block grant, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly Food 
Stamps), and federal housing assistance programs (public housing and Section 8 tenant and 
project-based assistance)—are similar, in that they are administered at the state or local level. 
They are different in the forms of assistance they provide. TANF provides cash assistance and 
other supports to low-income parents and their children, with a specific focus on promoting work. 
SNAP provides food assistance to a broader set of poor households including families with 
children, elderly households, and persons with disabilities. The housing assistance programs offer 
subsidized rental housing to all types of poor families, like SNAP.  
All three programs feature some form of drug- and other crime-related restrictions and all three 
leave discretion in applying those restrictions to state and local administrators. Both TANF and 
SNAP are subject to the statutory “drug felon ban,” which bars states from providing assistance to 
persons convicted of a drug-related felony, but also gives states the ability to opt-out of or modify 
the ban, which most states have done. The 2014 farm bill also added new restrictions for certain 
ex-offenders seeking SNAP assistance. Housing assistance programs are not subject to the drug 
felon ban, but they are subject to a set of policies that allows local program administrators to deny 
or terminate assistance to persons involved in drug-related or other criminal activity. Housing law 
also includes mandatory restrictions related to specific crimes, including sex offenses and 
methamphetamine production. All three programs also have specific restrictions related to 
fugitive felons. 
Recently, the issue of drug testing in federal assistance programs has risen in prominence. In the 
case of TANF, states are permitted to drug-test recipients; however, state policies involving 
suspicionless drug testing of TANF applicants and recipients are currently being challenged in 
courts. SNAP law does not explicitly address drug testing, but given the way that SNAP and 
TANF law interact, state TANF drug testing policies may affect SNAP participants. The laws 
governing housing assistance programs are silent on the topic of drug testing. 
The current set of crime- and drug-related restrictions in federal assistance programs is not 
consistent across programs, meaning that similarly situated persons may have different 
experiences based on where they live and what assistance they are seeking. This variation may be 
considered important, in that it reflects a stated policy goal of local discretion. However, the 
variation may also be considered problematic if it leads to confusion among eligible recipients as 
to what assistance they are eligible for or if the variation is seen as inequitable. Proposals to 
modify these policies also highlight a tension that exists between the desire to use these policies 
as a deterrent or punishment and the desire to support the neediest families, including those that 
have ex-offenders in the household.  
 
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Contents 
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1 
Evolution of Federal Policies .................................................................................................... 1 
Overview of Selected Federal Assistance Programs ................................................................. 4 
TANF .................................................................................................................................. 4 
SNAP .................................................................................................................................. 5 
Housing Assistance ............................................................................................................. 6 
Drug Testing and Crime-Related Restrictions ................................................................................. 8 
TANF ......................................................................................................................................... 8 
TANF Drug Testing............................................................................................................. 8 
TANF Drug Felon Ban ........................................................................................................ 9 
Fleeing Felons and Other Crime-Related Restrictions in TANF ........................................ 9 
Applicability of Policies in TANF ...................................................................................... 9 
SNAP ...................................................................................................................................... 10 
SNAP Drug Testing ........................................................................................................... 10 
SNAP Drug Felon Ban ...................................................................................................... 10 
“Fleeing Felon” Ban in SNAP .......................................................................................... 12 
Applicability of Policies in SNAP .................................................................................... 13 
Housing Assistance ................................................................................................................. 16 
Drug Testing in Housing Assistance ................................................................................. 16 
Drug- and Other Crime-Related Restrictions in Housing Assistance Programs ............... 17 
Applicability of Policies ................................................................................................... 21 
Legal Issues Involving Drug Testing Policies: Recent Developments .................................... 22 
Conclusion ..................................................................................................................................... 23 
Similarities and Differences .................................................................................................... 23 
Considerations for Policy Makers ........................................................................................... 24 
 
Tables 
Table 1. State Policies on the SNAP Drug Felony Disqualification for 
Applicants and Reapplicants ...................................................................................................... 12 
Table 2. Summary of Federal Drug- and Other Crime-Related Restrictions in Federal 
Housing Assistance Programs .................................................................................................... 20 
Table A-1.State Policies on Drug Testing for TANF Assistance Applicants and Recipients 
(As of June 2012) ....................................................................................................................... 26 
 
Appendixes 
Appendix. State Policies on Drug Testing in TANF ...................................................................... 26 
 
Contacts 
Acknowledgments ......................................................................................................................... 32 
Congressional Research Service 
Drug Testing and Crime-Related Restrictions in TANF, SNAP, and Housing Assistance 
 
Introduction 
This report describes and compares the drug- and crime-related policy restrictions contained in 
selected federal programs that provide assistance to low-income individuals and families: the 
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) block grant, the Supplemental Nutrition 
Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly Food Stamps), and the three primary federal housing 
assistance programs (the public housing program, the Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher 
program, and the project-based Section 8 rental assistance program). These programs were 
chosen because they serve many of the same families. However, the programs also differ. They 
have different drug- and other crime-related restrictions, with varying levels of federal 
administration and discretion for state or local administrators.  
The drug- and crime-related restrictions in TANF, SNAP, and the housing assistance programs 
were developed at different times in different laws, but it appears they are intended to serve 
similar purposes. To some extent, they are intended to deter people from engaging in drug-related 
and other criminal activity. They may also be intended to punish individuals for engaging in 
undesirable behavior. Further, when resources are limited, these policies may be intended to 
direct assistance to other households who are deemed more worthy of assistance. Additionally, 
particularly for housing assistance programs, drug- and crime-related restrictions may be intended 
to protect vulnerable communities from the consequences of drug-related and other criminal 
activity.  
The report begins by providing a brief overview of the history and evolution of policies 
establishing drug- and crime-related restrictions in federal assistance programs. It then briefly 
describes TANF, SNAP, and the three housing programs, and then discusses the specific policies 
in those programs related to drug testing and drug-related and other criminal activity. It concludes 
by comparing and contrasting those policies and highlighting considerations for policy makers. 
Evolution of Federal Policies 
Since governments began providing assistance to the poor, policy makers have been concerned 
with whether those receiving benefits were worthy of assistance.1 “Worthiness” has been defined 
both by judgments of economic need—are families or individuals truly unable to meet their needs 
without assistance?—and judgments of character, often as evidenced by certain behaviors. When 
the federal cash assistance program began in the 1930s,2 states were permitted to consider the 
“moral character” of an applicant as a factor in determining eligibility.3 This led to states adopting 
policies that reflected dominant societal expectations at the time about behavior and family 
structure. Examples of such policies included so-called “suitable home” rules, giving state or 
                                                 
1 According to Regulating the Poor by Francis Fox Piven, as early as 1550 when relief for the poor began in Lyons, 
France, there were provisions to distinguish the “worthy” poor from the “unworthy” and assist only those deemed 
“worthy.” Frances Fox Piven and Richard A. Cloward, Regulating the Poor: The Functions of Public Welfare (New 
York: Pantheon Books, 1971). 
2 The original program under the Social Security Act of 1935 was titled Aid to Dependent Children. It was renamed 
Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) in 1962 and was replaced by the Temporary Assistance for Needy 
Families (TANF) program in 1996. 
3 Roger E. Kohn, “AFDC Eligibility Requirements Unrelated to Need: The Impact of King v. Smith,” University of 
Pennsylvania Law Review, Vol. 118, No. 8 (July 1970), pp. 1219-1250. 
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local administrators wide discretion to disqualify applicants for assistance, and “man in the 
house” rules, penalizing unmarried mothers for cohabiting with men. These moral character 
policies were the subject of controversy and legal challenge; critics condemned such policies, 
arguing that, among other concerns, they had racial overtones and disproportionately affected 
black families, particularly black mothers.4 States that had adopted these policies argued that they 
discouraged immoral behavior.5 By the late 1960s and early 1970s, many of the policies related to 
family structure and behavior were struck down by federal administrative rulings and the courts.6  
Around the same time that morality tests based on family structure were being eliminated in 
AFDC, worries about rates of crime and drug use were increasing across the nation. Between 
1960 and 1980, violent crime rates more than tripled,7 and rates of drug use also increased 
significantly.8 After first declaring a “War on Poverty,” the Johnson Administration formed the 
Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice and declared a “War on Crime.”9 
Several years later, the Nixon Administration declared drug abuse “public enemy number one in 
the United States.”10 The federal “War on Drugs” was intensified by the Reagan Administration, 
particularly in response to the “epidemic” of crack-cocaine and its associated violence. During 
this period, policy makers grappled with how best to address concerns about crime and drug use, 
their causes, and their disproportionate effects in poor communities, particularly predominantly 
African American urban communities.11 Policy makers also struggled with the challenge of how 
to distinguish between drug use as a crime and drug addiction as a public health problem.  
Specific drug-related sanctions were added to certain federal assistance programs for the first 
time by the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988 (P.L. 100-690). The act made it the policy of the U.S. 
government to create a drug-free America and included both penalties for drug offenders as well 
as support for drug abuse education and prevention. So-called “user accountability” provisions 
denied certain federal benefits—namely all grants, loans (including student loans), licenses, and 
contracts—to persons convicted of certain drug-related crimes. Social Security, welfare programs 
(including AFDC [now TANF], Food Stamps [since renamed SNAP],12 and housing assistance), 
and veterans’ benefits were all exempted from these user accountability provisions in the final 
law, although earlier versions of the provision had included housing assistance and veterans’ 
                                                 
4 The concern about such policies being used to disguise systematic racial discrimination can be found in King v. 
Smith, 392 U.S. 309, 321-322 (1968). 
5 Roger E. Kohn, “AFDC Eligibility Requirements Unrelated to Need: The Impact of King v. Smith,” University of 
Pennsylvania Law Review, Vol. 118, No. 8 (July 1970), pp. 1226. 
6 For example, suitable home provisions were restricted in 1960 by the so-called “Flemming Rule,” and in King v. 
Smith, 392 U.S. 309 (1968), the Supreme Court struck down Alabama’s substitute father regulation. 
7 Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, Uniform Crime Reporting Statistics, Violent Crime Rates, 1960-
2009. 
8 Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Substance Abuse: The Nation’s Number One Health Problem, Key Indicators for 
Policy, Update, February 2001, pg 15. 
9 President Lyndon B. Johnson’s Annual Message to the Congress on the State of the Union, January 17, 1968, 
available at http://www.lbjlib.utexas.edu/johnson/archives.hom/speeches.hom/680117.asp. 
10 Richard M. Nixon, Remarks About an Intensified Program for Drug Abuse Prevention and Control, June 17, 1971, 
available at http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=3047#axzz1kxlMtfYk. 
11 Roland G. Fryer, “Measuring the Impact of Crack Cocaine,” National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, 
MA, 2005, available at http://papers.nber.org/papers/w11318. 
12 P.L. 110-246 renamed the Food Stamp program the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, beginning 
October 1, 2008. 
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benefits in the definition of federal benefits.13 During debate on these user accountability 
provisions, supporters argued that they would serve as a deterrent to drug use,14 while detractors 
criticized these provisions as “post-conviction penalties” to further punish drug offenders.15  
The act included congressional findings expressing specific concern about the role drugs and 
drug-related crimes were playing in public housing communities. While the act excluded housing 
assistance programs from the federal user accountability bans, it did include provisions permitting 
local administrators to adopt policies restricting persons involved with drugs or drug-related 
criminal activity from receiving federal public housing assistance and allowing for drug-related 
and other criminal activity to serve as grounds for termination of tenancy.  
Less than a decade later, Congress passed and President Clinton signed the Personal 
Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 (PRWORA; P.L. 104-193). 
PRWORA ended almost four decades of debate about how to reform the nation’s cash welfare 
program. During the welfare reform debates of the 1980s and 1990s leading up to PRWORA, 
welfare receipt was often mentioned together with crime and drug addiction as problems 
afflicting the urban “underclass.”16  
While the focus of PRWORA was to fundamentally restructure cash assistance to make it time-
limited and work-conditioned, it also included provisions to address the associated social ills of 
crime and drugs. The law made persons convicted of drug felonies subject to a lifetime ban on 
receiving assistance under both the newly created TANF program as well as the federal Food 
Stamp program (now SNAP).17 This provision was added during Senate floor consideration of the 
bill and was the subject of only limited debate, with four Senators speaking briefly on the topic. 
The sponsor, Senator Phil Gramm, argued “if we are serious about our drug laws, we ought not 
give people welfare benefits who are violating the Nation’s drug laws.” Opponents raised 
concerns about the implications for people who are addicted and their children.18 The act also 
authorized states to drug-test TANF recipients and to sanction recipients who test positive for 
drug use. It also added prohibitions on assisting “fleeing felons” to all federal assistance 
programs, including TANF, SNAP, and housing assistance.19 
Just prior to PRWORA, Congress passed a housing law (P.L. 104-120) that significantly 
expanded crime- and drug-related restrictions in assisted housing programs. The primary focus of 
                                                 
13 While housing assistance programs and veterans’ benefits were ultimately excluded from the definition of federal 
benefit, they were included in the House version of the Anti Drug Abuse Act, H.R. 5210, 100th Congress. The Senate 
version of the bill included public housing among the exempted programs. For a discussion, see Christopher D. 
Sullivan, “‘User-Accountability’ Provisions in the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988: Assaulting Civil Liberties in the War 
on Drugs,” 40 Hastings L.J. 1223 (1989). 
14 Representative McCollum, Congressional Record, vol. 134 (September 8, 1988), p. H23000. 
15 Representative Cardin, Congressional Record, vol. 134 (September 8, 1988), p. H23002. 
16 For example, journalist Ken Auletta opens his 1982 book The Underclass with the question: “who are the people 
behind the bulging crime, welfare, and drug statistics—and the all-too-visible rise in anti-social behavior that afflicts 
most American cities?” Ken Auletta, The Underclass (New York: Random House, 1982). 
17 See footnote 12. 
18 Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 142 (July 23, 1996), p. S8498. 
19 The fleeing felon restrictions were incorporated from stand-alone legislation, S. 599 (104th Congress). During his 
introductory remarks, the sponsor of the legislation, Senator Santorum (PA), cited a need for information sharing with 
law enforcement and cited several instances of specific persons who had been receiving public assistance while they 
were fugitives. Congressional Record, vol. 53 (March 22, 1995), p. S4383. 
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the law was to extend the expiring authorizations for a number of housing programs, but it also 
included a section related to the “safety and security of public and assisted housing.” Specifically, 
the section made people who had been evicted from assisted housing for drug-related activities 
ineligible for assistance for three years and permitted local administrators to restrict assistance to 
families based on demonstrated patterns of drug use or alcohol abuse. This law was enacted 
following President Clinton’s 1996 State of the Union address in which he claimed that the nation 
faced a great challenge to take its streets back from crime, drugs, and gangs.20 In reference to 
assisted housing, he stated that “criminal gang members and drug dealers are destroying the lives 
of decent tenants.”21 
Just two years after enactment of PRWORA and P.L. 104-120, Congress passed the Quality 
Housing and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1998 (QHWRA; P.L. 105-276), a major 
assisted housing reform law. The law modified and expanded the crime- and drug-related 
provisions previously enacted in 1988 and 1996. QHWRA also included several provisions to 
restrict access to housing assistance for persons involved with several specific crimes, namely, 
production of methamphetamines and sex offenses. In the case of the methamphetamine 
restriction, the provision was added during floor debate in the Senate, and the discussion of the 
amendment by its sponsors recounted the dangers associated with exploding methamphetamine 
production labs, citing several anecdotes related to such labs in assisted housing.22 The 
amendment related to sex offenders was also offered as a House floor amendment.23 The sponsor 
spoke of a specific anecdote in which a child living in public housing had been assaulted by a 
person previously convicted of a sex offense, as well as the dangers sex offenders may pose to 
communities more generally.24  
Overview of Selected Federal Assistance Programs 
The following section of the report briefly describes TANF, SNAP, and major housing assistance 
programs. The next section of the report specifically discusses the drug- and crime-related 
provisions of these programs. 
TANF 
The Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) block grant provides grants to states, 
Indian tribes, and territories for a wide range of benefits, services, and activities that address 
economic disadvantage. TANF is best known for funding state cash welfare programs for low-
income families with children. However, in FY2011 cash welfare represented only 29% of TANF 
funds. TANF funds a wide range of activities that seek both to ameliorate the effects of and 
address the root causes of child poverty. In addition to state block grants, TANF includes 
competitive grants to fund healthy marriage and responsible fatherhood initiatives.  
                                                 
20 Statement of President William Jefferson Clinton, State of the Union Address, U.S. Capitol, January 23, 1996. 
21 Ibid. 
22 Senate debate, Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 144 (July 16, 1998), pp. S8366-S8367. 
23 The amendment was added during floor debate of H.R. 2 (105th Congress), which was incorporated into P.L. 105-
276. Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 143 (May 6, 1997), p. H2191. 
24 Ibid. 
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The TANF cash assistance program provides aid to very poor families with children. Many of 
these families are headed by a single mother, though TANF also provides aid to families of 
children cared for by non-parent relatives (e.g., grandparents, aunts, and uncles). States determine 
the rules that govern financial eligibility for TANF cash assistance. States also determine the rules 
for how much a family receives in assistance (there is no federal eligibility floor). In 2010, the 
maximum benefit for a family of three was $923 per month in Alaska, or 48% of poverty-level 
income. New York had the highest benefits in the lower 48 contiguous states and the District of 
Columbia, paying $753 per month (49% of poverty guidelines). Mississippi, the state with the 
lowest benefit levels, paid a family of three a maximum of $170 per month, 11% of poverty 
guidelines. The maximum benefit is generally the amount paid for a family with no other income 
who is complying with program requirements. Federal law limits cash assistance to a family with 
an adult to 60 months (five years of benefits). Additionally, states are subject to work 
participation standards and are required to have a specified percentage of their cash assistance 
families engaged in work or job preparation activities. In FY2011, TANF cash assistance was 
received by 1.9 million families, which had 1.2 million recipient adults and 3.4 million 
recipient children.  
Almost all federal policy for TANF relates to its cash assistance programs. However, TANF also 
funds a wide range of other benefits and services, including help to the working poor (child care, 
refundable tax credits), subsidized jobs, pre-kindergarten early childhood education, and benefits 
and services for families at risk of having their children removed from the home because of abuse 
and neglect. States have considerable discretion in designing these programs, which are not 
subject to time limits, work requirements, or the drug testing and crime-related restrictions 
discussed in this report. There are no caseload figures to describe the number of families 
receiving TANF benefits other than cash assistance. 
The TANF block grant is administered at the federal level by the Department of Health and 
Human Services (HHS). State or local welfare offices administer the cash assistance funded 
through TANF. TANF benefits or services other than cash assistance are administered by a range 
of state and local governmental entities as well as local (governmental, nonprofit, or for-profit) 
service providers. The program is funded with mandatory federal appropriations, subject to a 
ceiling. States participating in the program must also meet a maintenance of effort requirement. 
The block grant was funded at $17.2 billion in FY2011 and states were required to contribute at 
least another $10.4 billion that year.25 
SNAP 
SNAP (formerly Food Stamps) provides benefits (through the use of electronic benefit transfer 
cards) that supplement low-income recipients’ food purchasing power. Benefits vary by 
household size, income, and expenses (like shelter and medical costs) and averaged $134 per 
person per month for FY2011. All 50 states, the District of Columbia, Guam, and the Virgin 
Islands participate in SNAP.26 In FY2010, SNAP had average monthly participation of 
                                                 
25 This amount includes $16.5 billion for the basic block grant to the states, $0.1 billion for the territories, $0.2 billion 
for TANF supplemental grants, and $0.3 billion for TANF contingency funds (detail does not add to total because of 
rounding). For more information, see CRS Report RL32760, The Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) 
Block Grant: Responses to Frequently Asked Questions, by Gene Falk.  
26 In lieu of SNAP benefits, (1) Puerto Rico operates a nutrition assistance block grant program using rules very similar 
to the SNAP; (2) over 250 Indian reservations operate a food distribution program with eligibility rules similar to 
SNAP; and (3) American Samoa and the Northern Marianas receive nutrition assistance block grants for programs 
(continued...) 
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approximately 40.3 million individuals in 18.6 million households. Nearly half (47%) of 
participants were under age 18; another 8% were age 60 or older. 
In general, eligible households must meet a gross income test (monthly cash income below 130% 
of the federal poverty guidelines), a net income test (monthly cash income subtracting SNAP 
deductible expenses at or below 100% of the federal poverty guidelines), and have liquid assets 
under $2,000. However, households with elderly or disabled members do not have to meet the 
gross income test and may have greater assets (under $3,250).27 Recipients of TANF cash 
assistance, Supplemental Security Income (SSI), or state-funded General Assistance are 
categorically eligible for SNAP. The state option of broad-based categorical eligibility also allows 
for the modification of some SNAP eligibility rules and has resulted in the vast majority of states 
not utilizing an asset test for the SNAP program because states deem an applicant eligible based 
on a TANF-funded benefit.28 
SNAP is administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food and Nutrition Service 
(USDA-FNS). The program is co-administered by state agencies, usually the same human 
services entities that administer the states’ TANF cash assistance programs. SNAP law includes 
many state options and opportunities to seek waivers, such that for some aspects of the law there 
can be considerable state-to-state variation.29 This is particularly the case for some of the crime-
related policies discussed in this report.  
Virtually all of the funding for SNAP is mandatory, although it is still subject to the congressional 
appropriations process as an “appropriated entitlement.” SNAP benefits are 100% federally 
funded, and the federal government shares state administrative costs 50/50. In FY2011, SNAP 
obligated approximately $70 billion.30 
Housing Assistance 
The federal government funds three primary direct housing assistance programs for low-income 
individuals and families: the public housing program,31 the Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher 
program,32 and the Section 8 project-based rental assistance program.33 Combined, these 
                                                                 
(...continued) 
serving their low-income populations. 
27 The Food and Nutrition Act adjusts SNAP asset limits for inflation and rounds down to the nearest $250. For 
FY2012, the limits are $2,000 and $3,250, as described in this paragraph. 
28 For more on categorical eligibility, see CRS Report R42054, The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program 
(SNAP): Categorical Eligibility, by Gene Falk and Randy Alison Aussenberg. 
29 U.S. Department of Agriculture, Food and Nutrition Service, Program Development Division, Supplemental 
Nutrition Assistance Program: State Options Report, Ninth Edition, November 2010. 
30 See Table 18 of CRS Report R41964, Agriculture and Related Agencies: FY2012 Appropriations, coordinated by 
Jim Monke. This approximate total does not include the funds in the SNAP account used to purchase The Emergency 
Food Assistance Program (TEFAP) commodities and does include various grants that are neither benefits nor state 
administrative costs. 
31 The program is codified at 42 U.S.C. §1437d. For more information about the public housing program, see CRS 
Report R41654, Introduction to Public Housing, by Maggie McCarty. 
32 The program is codified at 42 U.S.C. §1437f(o). For more information, see CRS Report RL32284, An Overview of 
the Section 8 Housing Programs: Housing Choice Vouchers and Project-Based Rental Assistance, by Maggie 
McCarty. 
33 The program is codified at 42 U.S.C. §1437f. For more information about the project-based Section 8 program, see 
(continued...) 
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programs serve roughly 4 million low-income households, including households made up of 
persons who are elderly and persons who have disabilities, families with and without children, 
and single adults. All three programs are 100% federally funded, and due to resource constraints, 
combined serve roughly only one out of every three or four eligible families. All three programs 
offer housing to low-income families that costs no more than 30% of family income; however, the 
form the assistance takes varies across the three programs. Further, while all three programs are 
administered at the federal level by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), 
the programs vary in their local administration.  
In the case of the public housing program, assistance is provided in the form of low-rent housing 
units that are subsidized by the federal government but owned and administered by local, quasi-
governmental public housing authorities (PHAs). In the case of the Section 8 voucher program, 
assistance is provided in the form of rental vouchers that families can use to secure the housing of 
their choice in the private market. Like in the public housing program, vouchers are federally 
funded but administered at the local level by PHAs. In the case of the Section 8 project-based 
rental assistance program, assistance is provided in the form of low-rent housing units subsidized 
by the federal government but owned and administered by private property owners (both for-
profit and nonprofit).  
In the case of all three programs, federal policies govern basic income eligibility and the method 
for determining tenant rent and subsidy level. However, owners and PHAs have discretion to set 
their own policies related to screening tenants for suitability for entrance to the program and for 
tenancy in a given unit. In the case of public housing and the Section 8 voucher program, 
suitability for admittance to the program is determined by the PHAs that administer the program 
and their discretionary screening policies are generally contained in administrative plans 
developed by the PHAs. After families have been screened by PHAs for suitability for the 
programs, landlords can further screen tenants for suitability for tenancy in their units. In the case 
of the voucher program, private landlords can screen tenants wishing to lease from them using 
any criteria they wish.34 In the case of the public housing program, since PHAs are the landlords, 
they can choose to do additional screening for suitability for specific public housing 
developments. In the case of the Section 8 project-based rental assistance program, since the 
private property owner is both the program administrator and the landlord, s/he screens tenants 
for both suitability for the program and suitability for tenancy.  
In FY2011, the three housing assistance programs combined received over $34 billion in 
discretionary appropriations.35 
                                                                 
(...continued) 
CRS Report RL32284, An Overview of the Section 8 Housing Programs: Housing Choice Vouchers and Project-Based 
Rental Assistance, by Maggie McCarty. 
34 As long as those criteria comply with federal, state, and local law, including Fair Housing laws. 
35 See Table 2 of CRS Report R41700, Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD): FY2012 
Appropriations, coordinated by Maggie McCarty. Total includes the following accounts: Tenant-Based Rental 
Assistance, Project-Based Rental Assistance, Public Housing Operating Fund, Public Housing Capital Fund, and HOPE 
VI. 
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Drug Testing and Crime-Related Restrictions  
This section of the report describes specific federal TANF, SNAP, and housing assistance policies 
on drug testing and pertaining to drug-related and other criminal activity engaged in by applicants 
and recipients. In some cases, the federal policies are prescriptive; in other cases, they leave 
discretion to the state or local administering entity.  
TANF 
As mentioned above, all federal drug and crime-related restrictions in TANF are for TANF 
“assistance”—essentially, the monthly ongoing cash benefit provided to needy families with 
children.36 These restrictions do not apply to the broader set of benefits and services that are 
funded through the TANF block grant. States have broad latitude in determining for whom and 
how these non-cash benefits and services are structured, and though not required by federal law, 
they may include restrictions related to drugs and crime. 
TANF Drug Testing37 
The 1996 welfare reform law gave states the option of requiring drug tests for TANF recipients 
and penalizing those who fail such tests.38 As of June 2012, 19 states had policies to require either 
applicants or recipients to undergo a drug test. (See Appendix for details on state TANF drug 
testing policies.) Among those 19 states, only Florida and Georgia require all applicants to 
undergo a drug test. Several other states (Idaho, Louisiana, Missouri, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and 
Utah) require that applicants be screened for substance abuse and subsequently tested if that 
screening indicates that the person is at risk for substance abuse. Arizona requires testing when 
there is “reasonable cause” to believe an individual engages in illegal use of controlled 
substances. South Carolina requires testing of those identified as requiring substance abuse 
treatment. Several additional states (Connecticut, Indiana, Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, 
Montana, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin) require drug testing of applicants and/or 
recipients who had previously been convicted of a drug felony. 
In general, TANF requires states to conduct an assessment of the skills, prior work experience, 
and employability of each adult recipient (or teen who dropped out of high school).39 There is no 
explicit mention of drug testing or screening as a part of this assessment, but states have 
discretion in how they want to implement the assessment. Moreover, TANF allows states to 
establish Individual Responsibility Plans (IRPs) for their TANF families on the basis of that 
assessment and the IRP may require participation in a substance abuse treatment program. A 
family may be sanctioned for failure to comply with its IRP. 
                                                 
36 In addition to basic cash assistance, “assistance” includes both transportation aid and child care subsidies provided to 
nonworking families with children. 
37 For an overview of drug testing and screening policies in states, see Office of the Assistant Secretary for Policy and 
Evaluation, Drug Testing Welfare Recipients: Recent Proposals and Continuing Controversies , November 2011, 
http://aspe.hhs.gov/hsp/11/DrugTesting/ib.shtml. 
38 Section 902 of P.L. 104-193. 
39 42 U.S.C. §608(b)(1). 
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TANF Drug Felon Ban 
The 1996 welfare law bars states from providing TANF assistance to persons convicted of a 
felony for possession, use, or distribution of illegal drugs, but it also gives states the ability to 
opt-out of the ban or modify the period for which the ban applies.40 States can opt-out or modify 
the ban only through enacting a law, so it requires an affirmative act by the state’s legislature and 
governor. (The statutory requirement, and the ability of states to opt-out of it, also applies to 
SNAP benefits; see “SNAP” later in this report.) The ban on drug felons in TANF applies only to 
TANF “assistance,” which is essentially ongoing cash assistance benefits. It does not apply to 
other TANF benefits and services such as child care for working families, refundable tax credits, 
or subsidized jobs.  
The majority of states have either opted-out of or modified the drug felon ban in their TANF 
programs. According to the Legal Advocacy Center, a prisoner re-entry advocacy group, as of 
December 2011 13 states had opted out of the drug felon ban and 26 states had modified the ban, 
leaving only 12 states fully implementing the ban.41 
Fleeing Felons and Other Crime-Related Restrictions in TANF 
The 1996 welfare law bars “fugitive” or “fleeing” felons from assistance under TANF and other 
specified public assistance. That is, a person fleeing to avoid prosecution, custody, or confinement 
after conviction for a felony or violating a condition of probation or parole is ineligible for 
assistance. HHS regulations are generally silent on how states are to implement and enforce this 
ban under the TANF program. However, USDA has proposed detailed regulations for SNAP, a 
program administered at the state level, usually in the same office as TANF cash assistance. States 
sometimes adopt SNAP procedures for their TANF cash assistance programs as well, to ease 
administrative burdens. (See “SNAP” fleeing felons discussion later in this report.) 
In addition to the drug felon ban and fleeing felon ban, TANF law includes a 10-year prohibition 
on assisting those who have committed welfare fraud by applying for benefits in more than one 
state.42 The fraud could involve applying in multiple states for TANF, SNAP, or Supplemental 
Security Income (SSI). The 10-year prohibition begins on the date the individual was convicted in 
a federal or state court for such a crime.  
Applicability of Policies in TANF 
Generally, TANF provides benefits to families with dependent children. TANF financial 
eligibility rules and benefit amounts are solely determined by the states. Federal law is silent on 
these two matters. Most states base TANF cash assistance benefits on family size, with larger 
families receiving larger benefits (all else being equal).  
States have a great deal of flexibility in how to apply drug- and other crime-related restrictions on 
benefits. The federal drug felon ban, fleeing felon provisions, and welfare fraud provisions apply 
                                                 
40 Section 115 of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-193). 
41 Note that the total adds to 51 because it includes Washington, DC. See http://www.lac.org/doc_library/lac/
publications/HIRE_Network_State_TANF_Options_Drug_Felony_Ban.pdf. 
42 42 U.S.C. §602(a)(8). 
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specifically to individuals, who individually may be barred from participation under 
these policies. 
SNAP 
This section discusses SNAP current law with regard to drug testing, drug felony, and fleeing 
felon policies, as well as the mechanisms by which these policies can affect an entire SNAP 
household. New additions to this area of SNAP law were contemplated and added in the 2014 
farm bill (P.L. 113-79); these additions are discussed in a text box on p. 15. 
SNAP Drug Testing 
For the most part, USDA does not allow states to use drug testing in determining eligibility for 
the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.43 There are two exceptions to this rule; both give 
states discretion44 and relate to the interrelationship of SNAP with TANF and the law that created 
TANF (PRWORA, P.L. 104-193). 
As described earlier, PRWORA permanently disqualified applicants with a felony drug conviction 
from participating in TANF or SNAP. However, state legislatures are permitted to opt-out or 
modify the drug felon ban.45 Some states have chosen to modify the ban by legislating that those 
convicted of a drug felony may be eligible for SNAP benefits subject to a drug test. As of August 
2012, three states have modified the drug felon ban in this way—Maryland, Minnesota, and 
Wisconsin. (The drug felon ban and state options within are discussed further below.) 
A SNAP participant may also be disqualified from SNAP based on noncompliance with a drug 
testing requirement in other programs in states that implement such a requirement. SNAP state 
agencies may choose to disqualify a SNAP recipient who fails to perform an action required by 
another means-tested program, such as TANF.46 For example, a state that disqualifies someone 
from TANF (or another means-tested program) for not participating in or failing a drug test may 
also disqualify that individual from SNAP. Federal regulation is clear that this comparable 
disqualification policy applies only to ongoing SNAP cases and not to new applicants. Therefore, 
a past TANF disqualification will not, in and of itself, disqualify an applicant to the SNAP 
program. 
SNAP Drug Felon Ban 
As noted earlier, although federal SNAP law bars drug felons from participating in the program, a 
state may opt to serve such felons by waiving or modifying the requirement. 
                                                 
43 Section 5(b) of the Food and Nutrition Act, codified at 7 U.S.C. §2014(b), “No plan of operation submitted by a State 
agency shall be approved unless the standards of eligibility meet those established by the Secretary, and no State 
agency shall impose any other standards of eligibility as a condition for participating in the program” (emphasis 
added). 
44 SNAP State Options Report, August 2012, http://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/rules/Memo/Support/State_Options/10-
State_Options.pdf . 
45 7 C.F.R. §273.11(m) 
46 7 U.S.C. §2015(i); 7 C.F.R. §273.11(k). 
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PRWORA prohibited states from providing SNAP (then, Food Stamps) to convicted drug felons 
unless the state passes legislation to extend benefits to convicted drug felons. According to 
USDA-FNS’s August 2012 state options report,47 the majority of states have either modified or 
eliminated the ban on SNAP benefits for convicted drug felons. (See Table 1.) In addition to three 
states’ addition of a drug test, other state modifications to disqualification include limiting the 
types of drug felonies, requiring participation in drug treatment, or requiring only a temporary 
disqualification.  
The Federal Interagency Reentry Council, a group that includes USDA, published a fact sheet 
outlining the ways in which SNAP remains open and accessible to formerly incarcerated 
individuals in general (not specifically drug felons).48 They emphasize several ways that the 
SNAP program remains accessible to those who may be in transition due to a recent 
incarceration. For instance, an applicant may still receive SNAP benefits if the applicant does not 
have a mailing address and may apply for SNAP without a valid state-issued identification card.49  
                                                 
47 SNAP State Options Report, August 2012, http://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/rules/Memo/Support/State_Options/10-
State_Options.pdf. 
48 Federal Interagency Reentry Council , “Reentry Mythbuster on SNAP Benefits,” http://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/
government/pdf/SNAP_mythbusters.pdf, accessed May 2012. 
49 Federal Interagency Reentry Council, pp. 2-3. 
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Table 1. State Policies on the SNAP Drug Felony Disqualification for 
Applicants and Reapplicants 
Lifetime Disqualification for 
No Disqualification for Drug 
Drug Felons (12) 
Felons (21) 
Modified Disqualification (20) 
Alabama 
Delaware 
Arkansas 
Alaska 
District of Columbia 
California 
Arizona 
Illinois 
Colorado 
Georgia 
Iowa 
Connecticut 
Guam 
Kansas 
Florida 
Mississippi 
Maine 
Hawaii 
Missouri 
Massachusetts 
Idaho 
North Dakota 
New Hampshire 
Indiana 
South Carolina 
New Jersey 
Kentucky 
Texas  
New Mexico 
Louisiana 
Virgin Islands 
New York 
Marylanda 
West Virginia 
Ohio 
Michigan 
 
Oklahoma 
Minnesotaa 
Oregon 
Montana 
Pennsylvania 
Nebraska 
Rhode Island 
Nevada 
South Dakota 
North Carolina 
Utah 
Tennessee 
Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
Wisconsina 
Wyoming 
 
Source: Table prepared by CRS based on USDA-FNS SNAP State Options Report, August 2012 and additional 
information from Arkansas SNAP Policy Manual. 
a.  This state requires drug felons to pass a drug test before receiving benefits.  
“Fleeing Felon” Ban in SNAP 
As discussed earlier in this report, PRWORA included provisions that prohibit so-called “fugitive 
felons” from receiving certain public assistance benefits, including SNAP benefits. Specifically, 
persons fleeing to avoid prosecution, custody, or confinement after conviction for a felony or 
violating a condition of probation or parole are ineligible for SNAP benefits. In 2008, the farm 
bill required that USDA define related terms and “ensure that State agencies use consistent 
procedures.”50 Following the 2008 law, USDA-FNS recently proposed revisions to the regulations 
on fleeing felons’ treatment in SNAP. 
                                                 
50 Section 4120 of the 2008 farm bill (P.L. 110-246) added the following to this section of the law : “(2) The secretary 
(continued...) 
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The current regulations related to the “fleeing felon” provision simply restate the 1996 statute:  
no member of a household who is otherwise eligible ... shall be eligible to participate in the 
program as a member of that or any other household during any period during which the 
individual is (A) fleeing to avoid prosecution, or custody or confinement after conviction, 
under the law of the place from which the individual is fleeing, for a crime, or attempt to 
commit a crime, that is a felony under the law of the place [or a high misdemeanor in New 
Jersey], (B) violating a condition of probation or parole imposed under a Federal or State 
law.51  
USDA-FNS promulgated this final rule in January 2001 together with the implementation of 
other PRWORA provisions;52 the agency also released guidance at the time of promulgating this 
rule.53  
In August 2011, USDA-FNS proposed a rule to implement the 2008 farm bill’s changes.54 The 
proposed rule discusses the policy problems at length in the preamble, including such issues as 
accessing law enforcement data, interstate law enforcement issues, variable impact of warrants 
that are not being enforced, and inconsistent interpretation between agencies. As of the date of 
this report, a final rule has not yet been issued. 
The proposed rule includes more detailed definitions for “fleeing” and “actively seeking.” The 
proposed rule also specifies that for a probation or parole violator to be “fleeing,” the individual 
“must have violated a condition of his or her probation or parole and law enforcement must be 
actively seeking the individual” (emphasis added). The proposed rule also lays out procedural 
protections and consistencies; it assigns timeframes for law enforcement and SNAP agency 
responsibilities, and it also requires that the SNAP agency continue to process the SNAP 
application “while verifying fleeing felon or probation or parole violator status.” The proposed 
rule generally appears to address situations where law enforcement is no longer enforcing a 
warrant as well as providing clarification for what officially constitutes a probation violation. 
Applicability of Policies in SNAP 
Many factors are considered in calculating the size of the monthly SNAP benefit that a household 
receives, but two of the main considerations are the size of the household (the larger the 
household, the larger the monthly benefit) and the household’s income (the higher the income, the 
smaller the monthly benefit).55 For these reasons, drug testing and criminal justice 
                                                                 
(...continued) 
shall (A) define the terms ‘fleeing’ and ‘actively seeking’ for purposes of this subsection; and (B) ensure that State 
agencies use consistent procedures ... that disqualify individuals who law enforcement authorities are actively seeking 
for the purpose of holding criminal proceedings against the individual” (emphasis added). 
51 7 C.F.R. §272.1(c)(1)(vii) (disclosure), §273.1(b)(7)(ix) (special household requirements), §273.2(b)(4)(ii) (privacy 
act statement), and §273.11(n) (fleeing felons and probation or parole violators).  
52 U.S. Department of Agriculture, “Food Stamp Program: Personal Responsibility Provisions of the Personal 
Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996,” 66 Federal Register 4438-4471, January 17, 2001. 
53 http://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/rules/Memo/2001/Fleeingfelons.htm;  
54 Federal Register on August 19, 2011, http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2011-08-19/pdf/2011-21194.pdf. 
55 This report is not intended to be a thorough treatment on SNAP eligibility. For a more detailed discussion of 
eligibility in the SNAP program and state-based options within, please see CRS Report R42054, The Supplemental 
Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP): Categorical Eligibility, by Gene Falk and Randy Alison Aussenberg. 
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disqualifications can affect even those household members that have not been disqualified. When 
it comes to disqualifying a drug-related felon or imposing other PRWORA-related 
disqualifications, to what extent that individual, the individual’s assets, and the individual’s 
income are included in the household’s eligibility determination and benefit calculation are 
significant for the entire household’s benefits.  
Generally, everyone who lives together and purchases and prepares meals together is considered a 
SNAP household. Some individuals who live together, such as spouses, are included in the same 
household, even if they purchase and prepare meals separately. If a member of the household is 
elderly or disabled, that member (and the member’s spouse) may be able to qualify as a separate 
household if they have income below 165% of the federal poverty guidelines.  
As certain household members may be ineligible for SNAP (for example, certain legal 
immigrants), whether and the extent to which the income of such ineligible members is included 
in the calculation for SNAP benefits depends on the member’s reason for ineligibility. In the case 
of disqualified drug-related felons, per current USDA-FNS regulations, the individual is excluded 
from the household size but the household (if the drug-related felon is part of a larger household) 
remains eligible for benefits.56 As an illustration, if an apartment houses a mother subject to the 
drug-felon ban, an eligible father, and an eligible toddler, the household would be considered to 
have two members for purposes of SNAP.  
SNAP law defines income as “income from whatever source” but also explicitly excludes dozens 
of income sources.57 USDA-FNS regulations, in response to comments at the time of final 
promulgation,58 require state agencies to count all of the disqualified individual’s assets and only 
a pro rata share (as opposed to all) of the disqualified individual’s income.59 This applies to 
individuals disqualified due to a modified drug-related felon ban as well as those disqualified due 
to comparable disqualification. Recalling the example household above, if the disqualified mother 
is the only household member with an income, two-thirds of her income will be used to determine 
eligibility and benefit level for the household of two (father and toddler). 
As an additional caveat, USDA-FNS regulations give states the option, within certain parameters, 
to align SNAP income requirements with state TANF or Medicaid policy. As of November 2010, 
39 states have opted for this alignment (either assets, income, or both).60 It is possible that 
TANF’s or Medicaid’s policies on the calculation of income and assets thereby have an impact on 
how a disqualified individual’s assets or income are treated.  
 
                                                 
56 7 C.F.R. §273.11(k). 
57 Income exclusions are listed in §5(d) of the Food and Nutrition Act of 2008, codified at 7 U.S.C. §2014(d). 
58 U.S. Department of Agriculture, “Food Stamp Program: Personal Responsibility Provisions of the Personal 
Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996,” 66 Federal Register 4448-4449, January 17, 2001. 
59 Formula in 7 C.F.R. §273.11(c)(2), “This pro rata share is calculated by first subtracting the allowable exclusions 
from the ineligible member’s income and dividing the income evenly among the household members, including the 
ineligible members. All but the ineligible members’ share is counted as income for the remaining household members.” 
This same formula is applied for Social Security number disqualifications, child support disqualification, and those 
ineligible Able-Bodied Adults without Dependents (ABAWDs). 
60 See 7 C.F.R. §273.9(c)(19) and SNAP State Options Report, November 2010, http://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/rules/
Memo/Support/State_Options/9-State_Options.pdf. 
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SNAP: Proposed Changes to Drug Testing,  
Enacted Changes to Criminal Conviction Disqualification in 
2014 Farm Bill (Agricultural Act of 2014, P.L. 113-79) 
After action to reauthorize the 2008 farm bill in both the 112th and 113th Congresses, the Agriculture Act of 
2014 (P.L. 113-79; “2014 farm bill”) was enacted on February 7, 2014. In addition to farm programs and 
other agricultural policies, this newest omnibus farm bill reauthorizes the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance 
Program (SNAP) and other related nutrition programs.61 Proposals related to SNAP drug testing and crime-
related restrictions were part of the formulation of this new farm bill; ultimately, a new disqualification for 
ex-offenders was enacted.  
Drug testing changes were proposed by the House but were not enacted:  The 2014 farm bill does 
not give states the option to administer drug testing as part of the eligibility determination processes. A 
change had been proposed and incorporated into the House’s bill during floor consideration. During House 
floor consideration of H.R. 1947, the House passed an amendment (H.Amdt. 196) by voice vote to give 
states the option to enact legislation to provide for testing SNAP applicants for the unlawful use of 
controlled substances. The amendment did not provide any additional funding for such testing and provided 
that such an option would be “at the full cost to [the] State.” The language was also included in the House-
passed SNAP bill, H.R. 3102, the Nutrition Reform and Work Opportunity Act of 2013. Drug testing was 
not proposed during Senate consideration of S. 954. 
2014 farm bill disqualifies ex-offenders with convictions for non-drug crimes, but in a narrower 
way than was proposed in Senate- and House-passed bills:62    
The 2014 farm bill disqualifies individuals convicted of specified federal crimes (including murder, rape, and 
certain crimes against children) and state offenses determined by the Attorney General to be substantially 
similar from receiving SNAP, but—unlike House and Senate proposals—only when such individuals are not 
compliant with the terms of their sentence or are “fleeing felons.” The law still allows the disqualified ex-
offender’s household members to apply for and potentially receive benefits, but the household’s benefit 
amount will likely be smaller than if the ex-offender were included.63  The law requires the state agency that 
administers SNAP benefits to collect, in writing, information on SNAP applicants’ convictions. The law also 
specifies that this disqualification is not to apply to convictions that occurred before the new law’s enactment 
(February 7, 2014); this specification had been included in the House bill but not the Senate bill. The exact 
timing and implementation of this policy will depend on federal rulemaking.64 
The new law is expected to affect fewer people than the broader disqualifications included in both the 
House and Senate conference bills. Both Section 4020 of the Senate conference proposal and Section 4037 
of the House proposal would have barred from receiving benefits individuals solely convicted of those same 
crimes listed in the final law (specified federal crimes, including murder, rape, and certain crimes against 
children, and state offenses determined by the Attorney General to be substantially similar).65 
                                                 
61 For information on all Nutrition Title policies in the 2014 farm bill, see CRS Report R43332, SNAP and Related 
Nutrition Provisions of the 2014 Farm Bill (P.L. 113-79) , by Randy Alison Aussenberg 
62 For further discussion of these ex-offender disqualification proposals, including crimes specified, CRS has released a 
congressional memorandum. Congressional clients may request a copy from Randy Alison Aussenberg at 
raussenberg@crs.loc.gov or Richard M. Thompson II at rthompson@crs.loc.gov. 
63 Similar to the current law discussion in “Applicability of Policies in SNAP,” this is because the newly enacted 
provision would exclude the ex-offender from household size but include the member’s income and assets. 
64 See Jessica Shahin, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program Provisions of the Agricultural Act of 2014 - 
Implementing Memorandum, USDA-FNS, March 21, 2014, http://www.fns.usda.gov/sites/default/files/
SNAP%20Provisions%20of%20the%20Agricultural%20Act%20of%202014%20-%20Implementing%20Memo.pdf. 
65 In addition to their cost estimate of the Senate-reported bill, CBO composed an official cost estimate for the Senate 
floor amendment that added the ex-offender provision to the bill before it passed the Senate. See CBO website, 
http://cbo.gov/publication/44905. They estimate that the provision would reduce spending by as little as $21 million or 
as much as $185 million over 10 years (FY2014-FY2023), depending on whether the provision is interpreted to apply 
to convictions that occurred before the change to SNAP eligibility law. 
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Housing Assistance 
Drug Testing in Housing Assistance 
There are no federal policies explicitly permitting or prohibiting administrators of federal housing 
assistance programs from drug testing applicants or recipients. Anecdotally, it appears several 
PHAs have adopted drug testing policies in their public housing programs.66 The Chicago 
Housing Authority has a policy of drug testing all adult household members who wish to live in 
certain redeveloped public housing communities.67 While this policy has been controversial, it 
does not appear to have been formally challenged administratively or legally.68 Similarly, the 
Indianapolis Housing Authority has a policy of drug testing families in several of its public 
housing developments.69 It also does not appear to have been challenged administratively or 
legally. A proposal by the Chicago Housing Authority to expand suspicionless drug testing to all 
public housing residents was dropped following opposition, including a letter from the Illinois 
chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union challenging the proposed policy.70  
The Flint (MI) Housing Commission was reportedly considering adopting a policy of drug testing 
all public housing residents in 2010.71 In response, the Michigan chapter of the American Civil 
Liberties Union sent a letter to the commission urging them to reconsider adopting this policy and 
indicating that its adoption may lead to expensive and protracted litigation.72  
Similarly, there are no federal policies explicitly permitting or prohibiting private property 
owners from drug testing potential tenants or making drug testing a requirement of a lease for 
tenancy.73 This is particularly relevant for the Section 8 voucher program and the Section 8 
project-based rental assistance program, which involve leases between private property owners 
and families. Anecdotally, it appears some private property owners have adopted drug testing 
policies.74 To date, there do not appear to have been any legal challenges to private property 
                                                 
66 In the draft Admissions and Continued Occupancy Plan for one development owned by the Indianapolis Housing 
Authority, there is a requirement for mandatory drug testing of applicants, http://www.indyhousing.org/annualPlan/
ACOP_16%20Park-draft%2007%2019%2010.pdf. 
67 Chicago Housing Authority, Tenant Selection Plan, Lake Parc Place, Selection and Screening Policy, Board 
Approved, October 20, 2009, http://www.thecha.org/filebin/pdf/MixedIncome/LPP_TSP.pdf. 
68 Megan Cottrell, “Should public housing residents be drug tested?” Chicago Now, September 3, 2009, 
http://www.chicagonow.com/blogs/one-story-up/2009/09/should-public-housing-residents-be-drug-
tested.html#ixzz1Hcl1Sllu  
69 Drug testing policies can be found in the Admissions and Continued Occupancy Plans for several of the Indianapolis 
Housing Authority’s public housing developments and in the draft Admissions and Continued Occupancy Plan for at 
least one development: http://www.indyhousing.org/ACOP%20-%20Georgetown.pdf, http://www.indyhousing.org/
ACOP%20-%20Red%20Maple%20Grove.pdf, http://www.indyhousing.org/annualPlan/ACOP_16%20Park-
draft%2007%2019%2010.pdf. 
70 See ACLU Press Release, CHA Drops Proposal for Suspicionless Drug Testing of All Residents, June 22, 2011. 
71 Ron Fonger, “Flint Housing Commission chief looks at drug tests for tenants in some public housing,” Flint Journal, 
May 13, 2010, http://www.mlive.com/news/flint/index.ssf/2010/05/flint_housing_commission_chief.html. 
72 See letter from Michael J. Steinberg, Legal Director, American Civil Liberties Union of Michigan, and Gregory T. 
Gibbs, Law Office of Gregory T. Gibbs, to Ron Slaughter, Flint Housing Commission, Executive Director, August 12, 
2010, http://www.aclumich.org/sites/default/files/file/flinthousingcommission.pdf. 
73 For a discussion of legal issues involving drug testing, see Robert J. Alberts, “Drug Testing Tenants: Does it Violate 
Rights of Privacy?” Journal of Real Property Probate and Trust, vol. 38, 2003-2004. 
74 Ibid. 
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owners’ policies involving drug testing of residents generally, or federally assisted renters 
specifically.75 
Drug- and Other Crime-Related Restrictions in Housing Assistance Programs 
The federal policies governing the treatment of drug-related and other criminal activity among 
applicants for and recipients of federally assisted housing are complicated. They are governed by 
several different laws, enacted at different points of time, with different levels of specificity and 
discretion. For example, federal policies mandate that PHAs deny admission to the programs or 
terminate assistance under the programs in some circumstances, but leave discretion to the PHAs 
and private property owners who administer the programs in others. Some of the federal policies 
apply only to eligibility for initial assistance or initial tenancy, some apply only to eligibility for 
ongoing assistance or termination of tenancy (eviction), and some apply to both. Finally, in many 
cases, the federal policies differ, sometimes significantly and sometimes slightly, across the three 
programs.  
In addition to federal policies, PHAs and property owners may adopt their own optional criteria to 
screen applicants for suitability and set their own rules governing grounds for termination of 
assistance, as discussed earlier in this report.76  
Applicants 
PHAs and property owners across all three programs—public housing, Section 8 voucher, and 
project-based Section 8—are required under federal law to deny admission to the programs to 
persons subject to lifetime registration on a sex offender registry under a state program.77  
In the case of the public housing and Section 8 voucher programs, PHAs are required under 
federal law to deny admission to the programs to persons convicted of producing 
methamphetamines on the premises of federally assisted housing.78 This mandatory federal 
prohibition does not apply to the project-based Section 8 program. 
PHAs and property owners across all three housing assistance programs are required under 
federal law to establish policies that deny admission to the programs to households that 
include tenants 
  who are determined by the administrator to be currently engaging in illegal use of 
a drug;79 
                                                 
75 Based on CRS search for relevant case law. For more information on private landlord drug testing, see David Lang, 
“Get Clean or Get Out: Landlords Drug-Testing Tenants,” Washington University Journal of Law and Policy, 2000, p. 
459, and Alberts, 2002. 
76 In the case of the public housing program and the project-based Section 8 program, since the administrator and the 
landlord are the same entity, termination of assistance generally means eviction. In the case of the Section 8 voucher 
program, termination of assistance does not necessarily have to mean eviction, because a tenant could potentially 
negotiate with the private landlord to remain in the unit without assistance. However, in most cases it is reasonable to 
assume that termination of assistance will lead to eviction. 
77 42 U.S.C. §13663 
78 42 U.S.C. §1437n(f)(1) 
79 42 U.S.C. §13661(b)(1) 
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Drug Testing and Crime-Related Restrictions in TANF, SNAP, and Housing Assistance 
 
  whose illegal use of a drug or pattern of illegal use of a drug is determined by the 
administrator, based on reasonable cause, to interfere with the health, safety, or 
right to peaceful enjoyment of the premises by other residents;80 
  whose abuse of alcohol or pattern of alcohol abuse is determined by the 
administrator, based on reasonable cause, to interfere with the health, safety, or 
right to peaceful enjoyment of the premises by other residents;81 or 
  who were evicted from federally assisted housing within the last three years for 
drug-related criminal activity, unless the tenant has completed a drug 
rehabilitation program or the circumstances leading to the eviction no longer 
exist (i.e., the offending tenant is no longer a member of the household).82 
In the last three circumstances, owners and PHAs may take into account whether or not the tenant 
has completed, or is participating in, substance abuse treatment.83 Unlike the prohibitions related 
to persons convicted of producing methamphetamines and persons subject to lifetime registration 
on a sex-offender registry, each of the mandatory grounds for denial of admission in the bulleted 
list above leave some discretion in implementation to the administering entity.  
In addition to the mandatory denials of admission to the programs already described, federal law 
explicitly lists other categories of criminal activity that may be grounds for denial of admission. 
For all three programs, administrators may deny admission to households if a member is engaged 
in or has, during a reasonable period of time84 prior to admission, been engaged in violent or 
drug-related criminal activity.85 
As noted earlier, in addition to these federal policies, PHAs and owners are permitted to adopt 
their own discretionary screening criteria to determine whether households are suitable for 
tenancy.86 For example, a PHA could adopt screening criteria that make persons convicted of 
felonies ineligible for assistance. Any screening criteria adopted by a PHA or owner must be in 
compliance with federal fair housing and civil rights laws, as well as state and local 
nondiscrimination laws. 
Recipients 
The laws governing both the public housing and Section 8 voucher programs require that PHAs 
terminate assistance to tenants convicted of producing methamphetamines on the premises of 
federally assisted housing.87 The law does not extend this mandatory requirement to the Section 8 
project-based rental assistance program. Federal law does not require PHAs to terminate 
                                                 
80 42 U.S.C. §13661(b)(1) 
81 Ibid. 
82 42 U.S.C. §13661(a) 
83 42 U.S.C. §13661(b)(2) 
84 “Reasonable period of time” is not defined in regulation, and thus is left to be defined by PHAs and property owners. 
85 42 U.S.C. §13661(c) 
86 See Chapter 4 of the Public Housing Occupancy Guidebook, 42 U.S.C. §1437f(o)(6)(B), and Chapter 4 of the 
Occupancy Requirements of Subsidized Multifamily Housing Programs Handbook (4350.3).  
87 42 U.S.C. §1437n(f)(2) 
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Drug Testing and Crime-Related Restrictions in TANF, SNAP, and Housing Assistance 
 
assistance to persons subject to lifetime registration on a sex offender registry; however, HUD has 
issued guidance “strongly encouraging” PHAs and property owners to adopt such policies.88  
PHAs and property owners across all three programs—public housing, Section 8 vouchers, and 
project-based Section 8—are required under federal law to adopt policies that allow for the 
termination of assistance to households including tenants 
  who are determined by the administrator to be currently engaging in illegal use of 
a drug;89  
  whose illegal use of a drug or pattern of illegal use of a drug is determined by the 
administrator to interfere with the health, safety, or right to peaceful enjoyment of 
the premises by other residents;90 or 
  whose abuse of alcohol or pattern of alcohol abuse is determined by the 
administrator to interfere with the health, safety, or right to peaceful enjoyment of 
the premises by other residents.91 
In the latter two cases, owners and PHAs may take into account whether or not the tenant has 
completed rehabilitation.92 
A separate section of the governing statute 
Restrictions on Legal Services 
requires that certain criminal activities serve as 
Corporation Assistance to Public 
cause for termination of assistance; however, these 
Housing Tenants 
rules vary by program.93 In the case of public 
housing, any criminal activity that threatens the 
Since 1996, Legal Services Corporation (LSC)- 
funded legal services agencies have been prohibited 
health, safety, or right to peaceful enjoyment of 
from defending a public housing tenant in an eviction 
other tenants, or any drug-related criminal activity 
proceeding if (1) the person has been charged with 
on or off the premises, engaged in by a tenant, 
the illegal sale or distribution of a controlled 
member of the tenant’s household, or guest or 
substance, and (2) the eviction proceeding is 
brought by a public housing authority because the 
other person under the tenant’s control is cause for 
illegal drug activity of the person threatens the 
termination of tenancy.94  
health or safety of another tenant residing in the 
public housing project or an employee of the public 
In the case of the project-based Section 8 
housing agency. For more information, see CRS 
program, any criminal activity that threatens the 
Report R40679, Legal Services Corporation: Restrictions 
on Activities, by Carmen Solomon-Fears. 
health, safety, or right to peaceful enjoyment of 
other residents in the immediate vicinity or any 
drug-related criminal activity on or near the premises engaged in by a tenant, member of the 
tenant’s household, or guest or other person under the tenant’s control is cause for termination 
of tenancy.95  
                                                 
88 See HUD Notice PIH 2009-35(HA). 
89 42 U.S.C. §13662(a)(1) 
90 42 U.S.C. §13662(a)(2) 
91 Ibid 
92 42 U.S.C. §13661(b)(2) 
93 All of these rules include special provisions designed to protect victims of domestic violence, dating violence, and 
stalking. 
94 42 U.S.C. §1437d(l)(6).  
95 42 U.S.C. §1437f(d)(3) 
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In the case of the Section 8 voucher program, any criminal activity that threatens the health, 
safety, or right to peaceful enjoyment of other residents in the immediate vicinity or any drug-
related or violent criminal activity on or near the premises engaged in by a tenant, member of the 
tenant’s household, or guest or other person under the tenant’s control is cause for termination of 
tenancy.96  
In all of these cases in which federal law requires the adoption of policies that allow for or make 
cause for termination of tenancy, the law does not go so far as to require the termination of 
tenancy (except in the case of production of methamphetamines on federally assisted property). 
Instead, discretion is left to the program administrators as to whether and when to pursue 
termination of assistance if these circumstances arise. 
Fleeing Felons 
As noted earlier, PRWORA restricted access to assistance for fugitive felons. As a result, fugitive 
felon status is cause for termination of tenancy in the three housing assistance programs.97 
However, while federal law makes fugitive felon and probation or parole violation status cause 
for immediate termination of assisted housing tenancy, the statute does not actually require 
termination of tenancy.98 As is the case in TANF and SNAP, current HUD regulations provide no 
additional guidance on who is to be considered a fugitive felon or what is to be considered a 
probation or parole violation. 
Table 2. Summary of Federal Drug- and Other Crime-Related Restrictions in 
Federal Housing Assistance Programs 
(denial=denial of admission to applications; termination=termination of assistance and/or tenancy) 
Section 8 
Project-Based 
Activity 
Public Housing  
Vouchers 
Section 8 
Drug-related criminal activity 
Grounds for denial; 
Grounds for denial; 
Grounds for denial; 
grounds for 
grounds for 
grounds for 
termination 
termination 
termination 
Violent criminal activity 
Grounds for denial 
Grounds for denial; 
Grounds for denial 
grounds for 
termination 
Criminal activity that interferes with 
Grounds for denial; 
Grounds for denial; 
Grounds for denial; 
health, safety, peaceful enjoyment of 
grounds for 
grounds for 
grounds for 
other residents 
termination 
termination 
termination 
Determined to be currently using 
Mandatory denial; 
Mandatory denial; 
Mandatory denial; 
illegal drugs 
grounds for 
grounds for 
grounds for 
termination 
termination 
termination 
Abuse of drugs or alcohol that 
Grounds for denial; 
Grounds for denial; 
Grounds for denial; 
interferes with health, safety, peaceful  grounds for 
grounds for 
grounds for 
enjoyment of other residents 
termination 
termination 
termination 
                                                 
96 42 U.S.C. §1437f(o)(7)(D) 
97 42 U.S.C. §1437(d)(l)(9) (Public Housing); 42 U.S.C. §1437f(d)(1)(B)(v) (project-based Section 8 and Section 8 
vouchers).  
98 24 C.F.R. §5.859. 
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Section 8 
Project-Based 
Activity 
Public Housing  
Vouchers 
Section 8 
Subject to lifetime registration on a 
Mandatory denial 
Mandatory denial 
Mandatory denial 
state sex-offender registry 
Convicted of producing 
Mandatory denial; 
Mandatory denial; 
No provision 
methamphetamines on federally 
mandatory 
mandatory 
assisted property 
termination 
termination 
Fugitive felon 
Grounds for 
Grounds for 
Grounds for 
termination 
termination 
termination 
Drug testing 
No provision 
No provision 
No provision 
Source: Table prepared by CRS.  
Note: This table summarizes only federal policies. While there may be no federal policies in a given category, 
local administrators may have adopted a policy in that category using their discretionary authority. 
Applicability of Policies 
Housing assistance benefits are provided to households. As a result, the background of all the 
members of the household is taken into account when determining household eligibility and 
screening households for suitability. Generally, if one member of the household is deemed 
ineligible or unsuitable, the entire household is deemed ineligible or unsuitable, unless the 
offending member is removed from the household. When it comes to ongoing assistance and 
termination of tenancy, the behavior of all members of the household is considered. So, if one 
member of the household engages in actions that provide grounds for termination of assistance, 
then the entire household is at risk of having their assistance terminated, at the discretion of the 
local administrator. Further, in the case of drug-related criminal activity, the household may be 
evicted based on actions of a guest or other person under the tenant’s control, again, at the 
discretion of the local administrator. 
“One Strike and You’re Out” and “No-Fault” Evictions 
President Clinton, in his 1996 State of the Union speech, stated “I challenge local housing 
authorities and tenant associations: Criminal gang members and drug dealers are destroying the 
lives of decent tenants. From now on, the rule for residents who commit crime and peddle drugs 
should be one strike and you're out.” Following President Clinton’s address, HUD issued 
guidance to PHAs regarding how to implement the crime and drug-related sanctions, including 
eviction based on the actions of other household members and guests, that had been in the law 
since the Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988, described earlier in this report. The “One Strike” policy 
included so-called “no-fault” eviction rules, which permit PHAs to evict assisted households 
because of the actions of a guest and for events that take place outside the assisted unit. These 
rules proved controversial and were the subject of legal challenge. 
In 2002, the Supreme Court upheld HUD’s no-fault eviction rules. The case in Department of 
Housing and Urban Development v. Rucker began when the Oakland Housing Authority sought 
to evict four tenants: two whose resident grandchildren were caught smoking marijuana in a 
housing project parking lot, one whose daughter was found with cocaine three blocks from the 
apartment, and a disabled 75-year-old man whose caretaker was found with cocaine in his 
apartment. The housing authority did not claim that the elder tenants knew about, facilitated, or 
condoned the drug activity. The U.S. Supreme Court held that the federal law was not ambiguous 
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and that it permitted eviction of tenants for the actions of third parties regardless of their 
knowledge of drug or criminal activity.99 
Legal Issues Involving Drug Testing Policies: 
Recent Developments100  
As noted earlier in this report, several states have recently proposed or adopted new or expanded 
drug testing policies for recipients of federal assistance, including TANF. Federal or state laws 
that condition the initial or ongoing receipt of governmental benefits on passing drug tests 
without regard to individualized suspicion of illicit drug use are vulnerable to constitutional 
challenge. To date, only two state laws requiring suspicionless drug tests as a condition to 
receiving governmental benefits have sparked litigation, and neither case has been fully litigated 
on its merits.101 The U.S. Supreme Court has not yet rendered an opinion on such a law; however, 
the Court has issued decisions on drug testing programs in other contexts that have guided the 
few lower court opinions on the subject.102  
Constitutional challenges to suspicionless governmental drug testing most often focus on issues 
of personal privacy and Fourth Amendment protections against “unreasonable searches.” The 
U.S. Supreme Court, on a number of occasions, has held that drug tests are searches under the 
Fourth Amendment.103 
The reasonableness of searches generally requires individualized suspicion, unless the 
government can show a “special need” warranting a deviation from the norm. However, 
governmental benefit programs like TANF, SNAP, unemployment compensation, and housing 
assistance do not naturally evoke special needs grounded in public safety that the Supreme Court 
has recognized in the past. Thus, if lawmakers wish to pursue policies requiring drug testing of 
public assistance recipients, policies that only require individuals to submit to a drug test based on 
an individualized suspicion of drug use are less likely to run afoul of the Fourth Amendment. 
Additionally, governmental drug testing procedures that restrict the sharing of test results and that 
minimize the negative repercussions of failed tests will be on firmer constitutional ground. 
                                                 
99 CRS Report RS21199, No-fault Eviction of Public Housing Tenants for Illegal Drug Use: A Legal Analysis of 
Department of Housing and Urban Development v. Rucker. 
100 This discussion is excerpted from a more complete discussion found in CRS Report R42326, Constitutional 
Analysis of Suspicionless Drug Testing Requirements for the Receipt of Governmental Benefits, by David H. Carpenter. 
101 Lebron v. Sec’y, Fla. Dept. of Children and Families, Docket No. 6:11-cv-01473-Orl-35DAB (11th Cir. 2013), 
available at http://www.ca11.uscourts.gov/opinions/ops/201115258.pdf (affirming the district court order granting 
motion for preliminary injunction). Marchwinski v. Howard, 113 F. Supp. 2d 1134 (E.D. Mich. 2000); Marchwinski v. 
Howard, 60 Fed. App’x 601 (6th Cir. 2003) (affirming the district court decision in accordance with Stupak-Thrall v. 
United States, 89 F.3d 1269 (6th Cir. 1996), because a 12-member en banc panel of appellate judges was evenly split, 
with 6 judges wanting to affirm and 6 judges wanting to reverse the district court’s opinion). 
102 See, for example, Skinner v. Ry. Labor Exec. Ass’n, 489 U.S. 602 (1989); Nat’l Treasury Emp. Union v. Van Raab, 
489 U.S. 656 (1989); Vernonia Sch. Dist. v. Acton, 515 U.S. 646 (1995); Chandler v. Miller, 520 U.S. 305 (1997); and 
Bd. of Educ. of Indep. Sch. Dist. No. 92 of Pottawatomie Cnty. v. Earls, 536 U.S. 822 (2002). 
103 Ibid. 
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Conclusion 
As is evident in this report, there are similarities and differences in federal policies governing 
drug- and crime-related restrictions in TANF, SNAP, and federal housing assistance programs. 
Some may reflect the intentions underlying the policies. As noted earlier in this report, those 
policy goals may include the desire to deter people from engaging in undesirable behavior, to 
punish people for engaging in undesirable behavior, to direct limited resources to persons deemed 
most “worthy” of assistance, or to protect vulnerable communities. They may also reflect the 
similarities and differences in the programs themselves, including the goals of the programs, how 
they are administered, the populations they serve, and what benefits are provided. 
The following section of the report summarizes the similarities and differences between TANF, 
SNAP, and the major housing assistance programs and how they may affect the drug- and crime-
related policies in those programs. The information provided in this report may raise 
considerations for policy makers, which are presented at the end of this report. 
Similarities and Differences  
TANF, SNAP, and the major housing assistance programs are all administered either at the state 
or local level, and they have left a great deal of discretion to state or local decision-makers. As a 
result, the experiences of similarly situated families will differ based both on where they live and 
in which assistance programs they wish to participate.  
The programs also differ in terms of the way they are funded, which may affect how assistance is 
provided or rationed. SNAP benefits are a 100% federally financed entitlement to eligible 
individuals. As a result, when states adopt SNAP rules that are more expansive or inclusive, they 
do not affect state budgets, but do affect federal spending. TANF, on the other hand, is both 
federally financed and state financed. Since federal funding is limited and states are required to 
pay a portion of the costs of the program, state TANF program administrators may have an 
incentive to limit the number of persons who can receive benefits. Assisted housing is 100% 
federally funded, but it is not an entitlement and, given limited federal resources, the program 
only serves roughly one in four eligible families. This scarcity of resources leads housing 
program administrators to prioritize who receives assistance, which may involve weighing who is 
most in need of assistance versus who is most worthy of assistance.  
In terms of populations served, SNAP and federal housing assistance programs serve a wider 
population than does TANF. SNAP and housing assistance are received by households of all 
types, including those made up of persons who are elderly and/or disabled, in addition to other 
families with children and childless nonelderly and nondisabled adults. On the other hand, TANF 
predominately serves families with children headed by an able-bodied adult of working age. 
Further, TANF generally serves only the poorest of families with children, as its state-determined 
income eligibility standards tend to be lower than those of SNAP and federal housing assistance 
programs. Since societal concern about crime and drug use is not generally associated with 
persons who are elderly or have disabilities, SNAP and housing program administrators have a 
different set of considerations about how and to whom to apply crime- and drug-related policies 
than do TANF administrators.  
The goals and benefit structures of the programs also vary. SNAP and housing assistance are 
intended to meet two of the basic needs of all families: food and shelter. SNAP provides 
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assistance that can only be used for food; housing assistance provides subsidies that only can be 
used for housing expenses. TANF cash assistance, on the other hand, while intended to also help 
meet a family’s basic needs, is used to purchase goods and services at the discretion of the 
recipient. Given these different goals and benefit structures, the potential consequences of 
limiting access to SNAP and housing assistance are much more clear—hunger and 
homelessness—than those of limiting access to TANF. Concern about these potential 
consequences may make it more difficult for SNAP and housing assistance administrators to 
broadly apply sanctions. Since the spending of TANF cash cannot be easily regulated, policy 
makers and program administrators may place recipients of TANF cash assistance under greater 
scrutiny to ensure that federal tax dollars are not being used for undesirable purposes, such as 
illicit drug use.  
In the case of the housing assistance programs, the structure of the benefit is place-based. If a 
family did not receive the assistance, arguably, the family could not afford to live where it does. 
As a result, assisted housing administrators may feel an added responsibility to ensure that 
assisted tenants not engage in activities that could have negative spillover effects for other 
residents or the surrounding neighborhood. This concern may be most evident in the public 
housing program, where an assisted tenant is surrounded by other assisted tenants and the PHA, 
which owns the property, is responsible for providing safe and decent housing to all tenants. 
TANF and SNAP program administrators do not have these place-based considerations. 
Considerations for Policy Makers 
In recent years, there have been calls for expansions of crime- and drug-related policy 
restrictions, and conflicting calls for reforms to current policies meant to limit their impact. This 
report raises several considerations that policy makers may wish to evaluate when contemplating 
changes to federal crime- and drug-related restrictions. 
This report highlights the variations in federal crime- and drug-related restrictions in the TANF, 
SNAP, and housing assistance programs. These variations in policy exist across programs, in part, 
due to the differences in the goals and design of the programs, as well as the laws that govern 
them. There is also the potential for geographic variation in these policies, attributable to the 
discretion that federal law leaves to local policy makers. The policy goal behind the devolution of 
social programs is to allow states and localities to design their programs differently, to reflect 
their interests, values, and needs. State and local variations in crime- and drug-related restrictions 
are consistent with that goal. However, inconsistencies in crime- and drug-related policies may 
have unintended consequences. For example, inconsistent policies may cause confusion among 
potential recipients, possibly limiting their access to federal assistance for which they are eligible. 
Variations may also raise questions of equity and fairness.  
This report also observes that while some states are increasing their drug-related sanctions 
(specifically, implementing drug testing policies), most states are opting-out of or modifying the 
federal drug felon ban in TANF and SNAP. This may raise questions about the appropriateness of 
current federal policy. For example, some may ask whether the federal policy intentions 
underlying drug- and crime-related sanctions should override the desires of state and local 
administrators.  
In order to inform the federal policy debate, it may be useful to better understand state policy 
choices. For instance, the drug felon ban is the default policy, which raises questions as to 
whether states are actively choosing the default or passively choosing not to pursue legislation to 
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Drug Testing and Crime-Related Restrictions in TANF, SNAP, and Housing Assistance 
 
opt out—a subtle but possibly significant policy difference. While some of the factors that might 
influence state and local policies are identified in this report—including budget constraints, value 
judgments, and other policy goals—this report does not attempt to answer the question of which 
factors are actually driving state and local policy choices. There appears to be an overall absence 
of evidence about the impact and effectiveness of crime- and drug-related restrictions in federal 
assistance programs. In part, the challenge of this is identifying the desired objectives of crime-
related restriction policies—decreasing drug use, deterring criminal activity, reducing or 
prioritizing applications—and whether the desired objectives apply to the entire population or 
only certain program participants. More research in this area could be useful for policy makers. 
There are several other considerations that may be of interest to policy makers, but they are 
beyond the scope of this report. One such consideration may be the populations affected by 
crime- and drug-related restrictions. Since the War on Drugs began, incarceration rates have risen 
sharply, particularly among young black men.104 Given this, questions may be raised about 
whether crime- and drug-related restrictions have disproportionate implications for racial 
minorities. The Government Accountability Office (GAO) attempted to evaluate this question in a 
2005 report, but found that the data needed to fully assess the question were not available.105 The 
same GAO report raised a related question for policy makers regarding how current crime- and 
drug-related restrictions may interact with recent federal initiatives to support prisoner reentry106 
and responsible fatherhood,107 and whether these policies may be at cross purposes.108 Also, the 
current sets of crime- and drug-related restrictions were established in the 1980s and 1990s, when 
rates of violent crime, particularly drug-related violent crime, were much higher than they are 
today. Given this shift, policy makers may wish to reevaluate current federal policies to ensure 
that they appropriately address today’s concerns. 
A final consideration is whether current policies related to drug testing will withstand legal 
challenge as they are currently designed, or whether modifications will be necessary.109 
 
                                                 
104 For an illustration of the trend, see The Pew Charitable Trusts, Collateral Costs: Incarceration’s Effect on Economic 
Mobility, Washington, DC, September 2010, Figure 3. 
105 U.S. Government Accountability Office, Drug Offenders: Various Factors May Limit the Impacts of Federal Laws 
that Provide for Denial of Selected Benefits, GAO-05-238, September 2005. 
106 For more information, see CRS Report RL34287, Offender Reentry: Correctional Statistics, Reintegration into the 
Community, and Recidivism, by Nathan James. 
107 See CRS Report R41431, Child Well-Being and Noncustodial Fathers, by Carmen Solomon-Fears, Gene Falk, and 
Adrienne L. Fernandes-Alcantara. 
108 U.S. Government Accountability Office, Drug Offenders: Various Factors May Limit the Impacts of Federal Laws 
that Provide for Denial of Selected Benefits, GAO-05-238, September 2005. 
109 For more information, see CRS Report R42326, Constitutional Analysis of Suspicionless Drug Testing 
Requirements for the Receipt of Governmental Benefits, by David H. Carpenter. 
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Appendix. State Policies on Drug Testing in TANF 
Table A-1.State Policies on Drug Testing for TANF Assistance 
Applicants and Recipients (As of June 2012) 
Family 
State 
Citation 
Coverage 
Description 
Implications 
Other 
Arizona 
2012 Ariz. 
Requires any 
Individuals who test 
 
 
ALS 299 
recipients “who the  positive are ineligible 
department has 
for TANF benefits for 
reasonable cause to  one year. 
believe engages in 
the illegal use of 
 
controlled 
substances” to be 
screened and 
tested. Applies to 
FY2012-FY2013. 
Connecticut  Conn. Gen. 
TANF recipients 
Individuals are eligible 
 
 
Stat. §17b-
convicted of felony 
if sentence is 
112d 
possession or use 
completed or if 
of controlled 
recipient is on 
substance are 
probation or enrolled 
covered. 
in substance abuse 
treatment or testing 
program. 
Florida 
Fla. Stat. 
All TANF 
Individuals who test 
The child’s 
The cost of the 
§414.0652 
applicants are drug 
positive are ineligible 
benefits are 
drug test is to be 
tested, including 
for TANF benefits for  unaffected. 
borne by the 
 
any parent or 
one year. Individuals 
Dependent 
applicant family. 
caretaker relative 
who reapply after 
children may 
The applicant 
included in the cash  one year and test 
receive benefits 
must be 
assistance group.  
positive again are 
through a 
informed that 
ineligible for three 
“protective 
s/he can avoid 
years. Individuals who  payee.” The 
the drug test by 
complete a substance 
parent may 
not applying for 
abuse treatment 
choose another 
TANF benefits. 
program may reapply 
person to 
Individuals who 
after six months. 
receive benefits 
test negative for 
on behalf of the 
controlled 
children. The 
substances are 
parent’s designee 
reimbursed for 
also must pass a 
the cost of the 
drug test. 
test through an 
increase in initial 
TANF benefit. 
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Drug Testing and Crime-Related Restrictions in TANF, SNAP, and Housing Assistance 
 
Family 
State 
Citation 
Coverage 
Description 
Implications 
Other 
Georgia 
Ga. ALS 
Requires all 
Individuals 
The child’s 
 
§583 
applicants to be 
determined to be 
benefits are 
screened.  
using drugs after 
unaffected. 
completion of a 
Dependent 
treatment program 
children may 
are ineligible for cash 
receive benefits 
benefits until they are 
through a 
determined to be 
“protective 
drug free. 
payee.” The 
parent may 
choose another 
person to 
receive benefits 
on behalf of the 
children. The 
parent’s designee 
also must pass a 
drug test. 
Idaho 
Idaho Code 
All TANF 
Participants must 
If the applicant 
 
§56-209j 
applicants are 
enter a substance 
chooses not to 
screened for 
abuse treatment 
comply with 
IDAPA 
substance abuse 
program and 
substance abuse 
16.03.08.111  and tested if the 
cooperate with 
screening and 
screening indicates 
treatment, if 
testing 
the person is 
screening, 
requirements, 
engaged in or at 
assessment, or testing  the children in 
high risk for 
shows them in need 
the case can still 
substance abuse.  
of substance abuse 
be eligible for 
treatment. 
assistance. 
Indiana 
Burns Ind. 
TANF recipients 
TANF recipients 
 
 
Code Ann. 
convicted of felony 
convicted of a drug 
§12-14-28-
possession or use 
felony must be tested 
3.3 
of controlled 
once every two 
substance are 
months. 
covered. 
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Drug Testing and Crime-Related Restrictions in TANF, SNAP, and Housing Assistance 
 
Family 
State 
Citation 
Coverage 
Description 
Implications 
Other 
Louisiana 
La. R.S. 
All adult applicants 
Failure to cooperate 
Eligibility of other  The assessment 
46:460.10  
for and recipients 
in screening, 
family members 
of a recipient 
of TANF are 
assessment, or drug 
is not affected as 
determined to be 
LAC 
screened for illegal 
treatment results in 
long as the 
using illegal drugs 
67:III.1249  
drug use. When 
case closure.  
individual 
will determine 
indicated by the 
participates in a 
his/her ability to 
screening or other 
 
treatment 
participate in 
reasonable cause, 
If the formal 
program. 
activities other 
recipient 
assessment 
than 
undergoes formal 
determines the 
rehabilitation. 
assessment, which 
recipient is using or is 
may include urine 
 
dependent on illegal 
testing. 
drugs, the most 
If residential 
appropriate and cost-
treatment is 
effective method of 
recommended 
education and 
and the recipient 
rehabilitation will be 
is unable to 
determined. 
arrange 
temporary care 
  
for children, 
Individuals 
arrangements will 
determined to be 
be made for the 
using drugs after 
care of children. 
completion of a 
treatment program 
are ineligible for cash 
benefits until they are 
determined to be 
drug free. 
Maine 
2011 Me. 
TANF recipients 
Individuals who test 
 
 
Laws 380 
who have been 
positive must request 
 
convicted of a 
a fair hearing and 
Sec. LL-1. 
drug-related felony 
submit to a second 
22 MRSA 
may be drug tested.  drug test or TANF 
Section 
assistance is 
3762, sub-
terminated. 
Section 18 
Individuals whose 
second drug test is 
positive may maintain 
benefits by enrolling 
in a substance abuse 
treatment program. 
Maryland 
Md. Human 
TANF applicants 
Applicants who do 
Benefits for 
 
Services 
and recipients 
not comply are 
other household 
Code Ann. 
convicted of a 
denied assistance. 
members are 
§5-601  
drug-related felony 
Benefits for recipients  paid to a third 
are subject to 
who do not comply 
party. 
COMAR 
testing for 
are reduced by the 
07.03.03.09 
substance abuse for  individual’s 
two years. 
incremental portion.  
Congressional Research Service 
28 
Drug Testing and Crime-Related Restrictions in TANF, SNAP, and Housing Assistance 
 
Family 
State 
Citation 
Coverage 
Description 
Implications 
Other 
Minnesota 
Minn. Stat. 
All applicants who 
TANF benefits are 
 
 
§609B.435 
have been 
reduced by 30% of 
convicted of a drug 
the MN family 
Minn. Stat. 
offense must 
investment program 
§256J.26 
submit to random 
standard if the drug 
drug testing. 
test is positive. A 
second positive test 
 
results in permanent 
disqualification from 
assistance. 
Missouri 
R.S. Mo. 
Requires all 
Requires a urine 
Other members 
 
§208.027 
applicants and 
dipstick five panel 
of the household 
recipients to be 
test. Positive test 
may continue to 
screened. Testing is  results in an 
receive TANF 
required if the 
administrative 
benefits if 
screening 
hearing. Those tested 
otherwise 
determines 
positive are referred 
eligible. Benefits 
“reasonable cause 
to an appropriate 
are paid to a 
to believe” the 
substance abuse 
vendor or third-
applicant/recipient 
treatment program. 
party payee.  
“engages in illegal 
Individuals continue 
use of controlled 
to receive benefits 
substances.” 
while in the substance 
abuse treatment 
program. Those who 
do not successfully 
complete the 
program are ineligible 
for TANF benefits for 
three years unless 
they successfully 
complete a substance 
abuse treatment 
program and test 
negative for illegal 
substances for six 
months.  
Montana 
Mont. Code 
Requires the 
 
 
 
Anno., §53-
department to 
4-212  
adopt rules 
concerning random 
drug testing or 
reporting 
requirements for 
convicted drug 
felons. 
Congressional Research Service 
29 
Drug Testing and Crime-Related Restrictions in TANF, SNAP, and Housing Assistance 
 
Family 
State 
Citation 
Coverage 
Description 
Implications 
Other 
New Jersey 
N.J. Stat. 
In order to be 
Eligibility is 
 
 
§44:10-48 
eligible, individuals 
terminated if the 
convicted of a drug 
individual fails a drug 
N.J.A.C. 
related offense 
test while in 
10:90-18.6  
must complete 
treatment or for a 
drug treatment 
60-day period 
program, and 
following treatment.  
undergo drug 
testing while in the 
program and for a 
60-day period after 
completion. 
Oklahoma 
2012 OK. 
Requires all 
Applicants with a 
The child’s 
 
ALS 263 
applicants to be 
confirmed positive 
benefits are 
screened using a 
test result are 
unaffected. 
56 O.S. 
“Substance Abuse 
ineligible for benefits 
Dependent 
2011, 
Subtle Screening 
for one year. 
children may 
§230.52  
Inventory” (SASSI) 
Individuals can 
receive benefits 
process. If 
reapply for benefits 
through a 
“reasonable cause” 
after six months upon  “protective 
is determined, drug 
completion of a 
payee.” The 
tests may be 
substance abuse 
parent may 
administered. 
treatment program. 
choose another 
person to 
 
receive benefits 
on behalf of the 
children. The 
parent’s designee 
also must pass a 
drug test. 
Pennsylvania  PA Public 
All public assistance  Individuals who fail 
 
 
Welfare 
(TANF, food 
the test are provided 
Code 62 
stamps, general 
treatment. If the 
P.S. §432.24 
assistance, State 
individual fails a 
supplemental 
second test, benefits 
assistance) 
are suspended for 12 
applicants 
months. Individuals 
convicted of a 
who fail a third test 
felony drug offense.  are no longer eligible 
At least 20% of 
for assistance.  
recipients 
convicted of a 
felony must 
undergo random 
drug testing during 
each six month 
period following 
enactment. 
Congressional Research Service 
30 
Drug Testing and Crime-Related Restrictions in TANF, SNAP, and Housing Assistance 
 
Family 
State 
Citation 
Coverage 
Description 
Implications 
Other 
South 
S.C. Code 
TANF recipients 
Individuals who 
“The 
 
Carolina 
Ann. §43-5-
who are “identified 
complete a treatment 
Department may 
1190 
as requiring alcohol  program are 
impose a full-
and other drug 
monitored through 
family sanction 
S.C. Code 
abuse service,” or 
random drug tests. 
for 
Regs. 114-
convicted of an 
Individuals who 
noncompliance 
1130 
alcohol or drug 
subsequently test 
with the 
related offense or 
positive for drugs or 
Individual Self-
give birth to a child 
are convicted for a 
Sufficiency Plan 
with evidence of 
controlled substance 
participants who 
maternal substance 
violation are ineligible 
complete 
abuse must submit 
for assistance. 
treatment and fail 
to random drug 
to pass a random 
testing and/or 
 
test for use of 
participate in a 
illegal drugs.” 
treatment program.  
Tennessee 
Tenn. ALS  
Applicants will be 
Applicants with a 
In a two-parent 
 
§1079 
screened using a 
confirmed positive 
household, only 
“Substance Abuse 
test result are 
one parent is 
Subtle Screening 
ineligible for benefits 
required to 
Inventory” (SASSI) 
for one year. 
undergo a drug 
process to 
Individuals can 
test. Dependent 
determine 
reapply for benefits 
children may 
“reasonable cause 
after six months upon  receive benefits 
that an applicant 
completion of a 
through a 
for TANF is using a 
substance abuse 
“protective 
drug.” If 
treatment program 
payee.”  
“reasonable cause” 
and two negative 
is determined, drug 
drug tests. 
tests may be 
administered. 
Utah 
Utah Code 
Requires applicants 
Applicants with 
 
Written drug 
35A-3-304.5   to complete a 
confirmed positive 
screening done 
written drug 
test results may 
during the 
screening 
receive benefits after 
employment 
questionnaire. If 
completing at least 60 
assessment. If a 
“reasonable 
days at a substance 
parent tests 
likelihood” is 
abuse treatment 
positive, the 
determined, drug 
program and a 
employment plan 
tests may be 
negative drug test. 
shall include an 
administered. 
agreement to 
participate in 
treatment for a 
substance abuse 
disorder. 
Wisconsin 
Wis. Stat. 
Wisconsin Works 
Benefits for 
 
 
§49.148  
participants in 
individuals who test 
community service 
positive are reduced 
 
jobs or transitional 
by 15% or less for at 
Wis. Stat. 
placements who 
least 12 months. 
§49.79  
have been 
After 12 months, 
convicted of a drug 
individuals who test 
felony must submit 
negative may have full 
to drug testing. 
benefits restored.  
Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS), based on information in the LexisNexis legal database August 2011. 
Congressional Research Service 
31 
Drug Testing and Crime-Related Restrictions in TANF, SNAP, and Housing Assistance 
 
 
Acknowledgments 
The authors would like to thank Meredith Peterson and Abigail Rudman for their assistance with 
identifying state drug testing laws. 
 
Congressional Research Service 
32