San Diego County supervisors ended a controversial program last month that had survived criticism and court challenges for more than two decades.
Project 100% was the county’s effort to detect public assistance fraud through a process of unannounced home inspections. County workers could examine at will the condition and contents of a recipient’s home and determine unilaterally whether public assistance was valid. It was the only welfare fraud program with such broad powers in the country.
An examination by The San Diego Union-Tribune found that the inspections had a traumatizing effect on people who lived through them and they were not as effective at finding fraud as the county claimed.
Union-Tribune reporter Greg Moran joined Midday Edition on Monday to discuss the program and its demise.