Nevada: Failure of Welfare Reform in the Southwest

By Eli Hager, ProPublica/Las Vegas Sun
January 03, 2022

As the 1960s came to their tumultuous end, California Gov. Ronald Reagan convened a summit on the topic of welfare. He was hoping to try out one of his new ideas: that poor single mothers were, in the wake of the civil rights movement, increasingly living idly and defrauding government assistance programs.

George Miller, then the welfare director in neighboring Nevada, volunteered to do a dry run for Reagan, proposing to purge his smaller state’s welfare rolls of alleged welfare cheats. It would be the first effort of its kind in the nation, he said.

Ruby Duncan, a self-described “welfare mother” on Las Vegas’s Westside, was incensed.

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