Welfare Drug Testing Moving Forward In Maine

Maine Moves Forward With Welfare Drug Testing
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WASHINGTON -- Maine Gov. Paul LePage (R) is moving forward with a plan to make some welfare recipients take drug tests if they want cash benefits, The Associated Press reported this week.

LePage is one of several Republican governors who has recently pushed drug tests for safety net programs like Temporary Assistance for Needy Families and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R) wants testing as a condition for nutrition assistance.

Georgia tried to implement a food stamp drug testing law last year, but federal law allows testing only for TANF benefits. The state backed down after the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which oversees food stamps, let state officials know breaking the rules could cost them administrative funding from the federal government. Walker has pushed ahead anyway, saying he wants to fight the federal government on it.

LePage first announced the drug tests in 2014.

"We must ensure that our tax dollars do not enable the continuation of a drug addiction," LePage said last year.

The scheme, which at the time still had to go through a rule-making process, was originally approved by the Maine Legislature in 2011, a time when statehouse Republicans across the country were making similar moves.

Only convicted felons would have to submit to tests, a narrow targeting that makes Maine's measure less vulnerable to legal challenge from civil liberties advocates. Florida's 2011 drug testing program, which forced all applicants to pee in cups, was halted by a federal judge, a decision that has been repeatedly upheld on appeal.

In Florida and other places were testing has been implemented, very few applicants' results have turned up positive for drug use.

HuffPost readers: Have you taken a drug test in order to get government benefits? Tell us about it by emailing arthur@huffingtonpost.com. Please include your phone number if you're willing to be interviewed for a story.

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