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accessing services less stressful, less

painful, and reduce the

bandwidth tax

on already overburdened low-income

individuals and families.

Alicia Koné

The first day I visited a welfare

office was a typical gray and rainy

October day in Seattle. I passed the

office the first time I drove by because

the building looked nothing like I was

expecting—a remodeled strip mall

between a car dealership and a gentle-

men’s club on an industrial highway.

Despite my third-trimester waddle

and obvious baby bump, I elbowed my

way through the crowd. The automatic

doors slid open to reveal what I later

came to recognize as a very typical,

busy lobby in a welfare office during

that era.

Directly in front of me was a row of

cubicles with five or six pairs of people

sitting on either side of the desk,

almost indistinguishable in dress and

manner, except one group nervously

clutching stacks of paper, with another

group staring at computer terminals

and pounding on keyboards. Client

interviews were being conducted just

a few feet away from the 25–30 adults

and children of all ages waiting in

plastic chairs or sitting on the floor

(one family even spread out a blanket

and was eating a picnic lunch). People

office across town, and that would

take a full afternoon. Once I did that,

I would meet with a case manager

who could talk to me about help with

support services like child care. I left

the office with slumped shoulders—

more time I would need to miss from

work and still no decision about how to

pay for care with my due date just a few

weeks away…

Babs Roberts

Today, Alicia’s experience would

have been very different. CSOs are

clearly marked with bold green

signage. And while lobbies are often

still very full, each office has a “navi-

gator” and electronic check-in system

with clearly marked signage hanging

from the ceiling and around the

check-in area. The navigator would

have been able to help her check in,

triage her needs based on answers to

some simple questions (i.e., I would

like to apply for benefits). The navi-

gator would have checked to see if an

application was received and pending,

and if not, directed Alicia to one of

several computer kiosks where her

application could be completed while

she waited for an interview. That appli-

cation would stream to an automated

client eligibility system within minutes

of submission and be available for

the worker by the time the client was

called. Even better, clients can opt to

have an interactive interview where

the application is populated while the

client is interviewed, printed, and

signed at the end of the interview.

Over the last eight years, by rede-

signing business processes, we’ve

adapted our office and call center

flows to create efficiencies for our

staff and customers. For instance,

live navigation and triage allow us to

move away from a “first come, first

serve” model toward an ability to

quickly move customers through our

system. This is accomplished first by

eliminating appointments and moving

from a caseload model to a task model.

Same-day service is an expectation and

“pending” is a rarity.

Streamlined, yet appropriate, eligi-

bility rules, coupled with interfacing

online verification systems (depart-

ment of licensing, child support

systems, vital records, and wage data),

looked like they were prepared to stay

awhile.

To the left was a desk that looked

like it was meant to serve for reception

with a very unhappy looking woman

standing by the desk screeching names

into a microphone, calling people to

her counter. I approached the counter

and the scary lady held up her hand

and yelled at me, “Can’t you read?”

while pointing at something behind

me. I looked over my shoulder and

saw a sign hanging on the wall that

indicated I was to “wait behind the

line to protect others’ privacy.” I

looked down and noticed some worn

masking tape on the old carpeting,

roughly indicating a line. I stepped

back to my proper station and was

promptly summoned forward by the

“receptionist.”

I learned that day that I needed to

fill out a paper application, drop it off

or mail it in, and then wait for a letter

telling me when I was to reappear for

an interview. I was told that would

probably take two weeks. When I asked

about child care assistance specifically,

I was told I would need to speak to the

worker at my interview about what I

might be eligible for going forward. I

left with more questions than answers

and, as my due date approached,

along with fall finals week, it became

increasingly harder for me to think

about anything other than how I was

going to pay for my son’s care when the

winter quarter started in January.

At my interview later that month I

learned my baby and I were eligible

for programs I never even considered,

or heard of in some cases, like Food

Stamps, Medicaid, and Aid to Families

with Dependent Children (AFDC).

But what about child care assistance?

My worker didn’t know. I asked if she

could check with a supervisor as that

was my primary need, although the

other assistance would certainly help.

She slumped her shoulders and said

I should wait, and disappeared. She

came back later with a social worker

who explained the only way for me

to get help with child care would be

to apply to a program called JOBS

(Job Opportunities and Basic Skills).

I would need to go through a separate

process, attend a required orientation

with a different agency in a different

Policy&Practice

August 2016

12

Babette (Babs)

Roberts

is the

Community

Services Division

director at the

Washington

Department of

Social and Health

Services (DSHS).

Alicia Koné

is the

owner of Koné

Consulting, LLC, a

former Washington

State SNAP director,

and a former welfare

recipient.