Politics | welfare Lawmaker: Let's Cut Welfare When Kids Get Bad Grades Tennessee state senator sparks debate with new bill By Neal Colgrass Posted Jan 28, 2013 4:25 PM CST Copied Republican state Sen. Stacey Campfield, left, joins Democratic US Senate nominee Mark Clayton at a press conference in Nashville, Tenn., on Monday, Aug. 13, 2012. (AP Photo/Erik Schelzig) Tough news for Tennessee parents on welfare: Republican state Sen. Stacey Campfield introduced legislation last week that would slash welfare benefits for parents whose kids get crummy grades, Fox News reports. Critics call it an unfair proposal that will ultimately hurt children, but Campfield says the bill will inspire parents to do a better job. "We’re not asking children to re-write the Magna Carta," he said. "A D-minus gets you through." But Senate Democratic Leader Jim Kyle says a grades-for-welfare plan would "stack the deck against at-risk children," pressuring them to study "when there is no food on the dinner table." The state already cuts benefits by 20% for parents whose kids don't go to school; Campfield's bill would raise that to 30%. Campfield said his proposal would "break the cycle of poverty," but a state youth official tells the Knoxville News Sentinel that a single mom with two kids receives just $185 a month, and "that's already low." Read These Next Dilbert creator Scott Adams has died. GoFundMe for ICE agent in Minneapolis shooting gets a big donor. Actor accused of child sex abuse has turned himself in. Mike Lindell doesn't have to pay in 'prove me wrong' case. Report an error