Opinion
Thе California Department of Social Services (Department) appeals the grant of summary judgment enjoining the denial of state foster care benefits to foster children living with relatives, while granting benefits to foster children living with nonrelatives. The court below held that the denial of such benefits deprived plaintiff children of the equal protection of the laws in violation of article I, section 7, subdivision (a), of the California Constitution.
Applying strict scrutiny to the challenged classification, the court determined it was unnecessary to further a compelling state interest. For reasons presently set forth, we determine that strict judicial scrutiny is unwarranted because the classification at issue neither designates a suspect class nor impinges upon a fundamental interest. Further, we find that the classification is rationally calculated to achieve a legitimate state *652 purpose. Consequently, we conclude that the challenged program comports with the requirements of equal proteсtion.
Statement of the Case
Plaintiffs-respondents are children placed in foster care with relatives and denied certain financial benefits by the state, and their related foster parents. In October 1981, plaintiffs, for themselves and on behalf of others similarly situated, sued the Department through its director in his official capacity. 1 On May 17, 1984, plaintiffs moved for a peremptory writ and partial summary judgment. On August 14, 1984, the trial court issued its statement of decision finding the state foster care program invalid insofar as it excluded from eligibility foster children placed with related foster parents. On September 4, 1984, the court granted plaintiffs’ motion for peremptory writ and partial summary judgment. A timely appeal by the Department followed.
I.
The foster care program is part of the program of aid to families with dependent children (AFDC) 2 authorized in 42 United States Code section 601 et seq. 3
*653
The purpose of the AFDC program is to encourage the care of dependent children in their own homes or in the homes of relatives. (42 U.S.C. § 601.) AFDC-FC payments are greater than basic AFDC, upon a recognition that foster children have greater needs and foster care is more costly than care for children in the parental home. (See
Ramos
v.
Montgomery
(S.D.Cal. 1970)
California’s program for foster care benefits is really two programs: one involving the use of federal funds, the other financed by the state alone. The state defines foster care as “24-hour out-of-home care provided to children whose own families are unable or unwilling to care for them, and who are in need of temporary or long-term substitute parenting.” (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 11400, subd. (e).)
The first of the two foster care programs is the joint federal-state foster care program (“federal program”), partially funded by the federal government and administered by the state. 4 To be eligible for foster care benefits under the federal program the child must have been receiving or eligible for AFDC-FG (family group) or AFDC-U (unemployment) prior to foster care placement. (42 U.S.C. § 672.) In addition, basic eligibility requirements under the federal program mandate that (1) the child be removed from the home of parent or guardian by a judicial determination that con *654 tinuation in the home would be contrary to the welfare of the child; (2) the placement and care of the child is the responsibility of the state or county welfare agency and (3) the child is in a foster home or institution as a result of the judicial determination. (42 U.S.C. § 672; MPP 45-202.) The federal program, which prescribes payment to relatives equal to that received by nonrelatives, is not at issue here.
For foster children who do not meet federal criteria, California has its own foster care program funded entirely by the state. 5 To be eligible under the state program, the child must meet all general AFDC requirements (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 11250) plus one of the following criteria: (1) the child has been properly relinquished for adoption or a petition to terminate parental rights has been granted; or (2) the child is living with a nonrelated legal guardian in an approved home; or (3) the child was placed with a nonrelative by a court order or under certain written voluntary agreements. Pursuant to the state statute challenged in this case, the child is ineligible for state benefits if placed with foster parents to whom he or she is related. 6 (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 11402, subd. (a), see also, Welf. & Inst. Code, §§ 11401, subd. (b)(3); 11402, subds. (b)and(d); 11405; MPP 45-203.21.) The state program allows foster care payments to a child placed with relatives only if the child is otherwise eligible to receive payments under the federal program. (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 11402, subd. (a).)
State foster care eligibility provisions are much broader than those of the federal program. In other words, despite the denial of benefits to foster children living with relatives, many categories of recipients that would not be covered under any other AFDC program are covered under state AFDC-FC. 7
*655 II.
The decision of the federal district court in
Youakim
v.
Miller
(N.D.Ill. 1974)
After the decision in Miller v. Youakim, the California Department of Social Services concluded that the state must extend benefits to children living with relatives if the children were eligible for federal foster care benefits but that state benefits could be denied if the children did not meet the federal eligibility criteria.
By classifying foster children living with relatives as ineligible under the wholly state-financed program (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 11402), the California Legislature has mandated the different treatment challenged in this action. In challenging this classification plaintiffs claim that the denial of state benefits to foster children living with relatives is neither necessary to serve *656 a compelling state interest nor rationally based, and thus denies them equal protection of the laws.
III.
“The guarantees of equal protection embodied in the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution and article I, section 7 of the California Constitution
1
compel[] recognition of the proposition that persons similarly situated with respect to the legitimate purpose of the law receive like treatment.’
(Purdy & Fitzpatrick
v.
State of Calif.
(1969)
As described by the California Supreme Court in
Westbrook
v.
Mihaly
(1970)
Recognizing the independent vitality of the California Constitution, the courts of this state traditionally extend strict scrutiny to a broader range of classifications than are so rigorously reviewed under identical provisions of the federal constitution.
(Committee to Defend Reproductive Rights
v.
Myers
(1981)
A.
The claim that the classification challenged in this case must be subjected to strict scrutiny relies heavily on
Darces
v.
Woods, supra,
Darces,
although advocating a more flexible approach to equal protection analysis, nevertheless took pains to connect the classification with more traditional indicia of a suspect class—national origin and ancestry. According to the court: “We have thus far emphasized the
reason
appellant’s children constitute a discrete minority—their inability to control their parents’ conduct. Equally crucial to our holding is the
fact
that appellant’s citizen children are classified on the basis of an immutable trait—they cannot forsake their birth into an undocumented family. They are ‘saddled with [the same] disabilities [and] subjected to [the same] history of purposeful unequal treatment’ as their brothers and mother.
(San Antonio School District
v.
Rodriguez, supra,
The classification here at issue does not touch upon any similar immutable trait. Plaintiffs do not suggest that the classification falls with disproportionate impact upon children of a particular race, ancestry or national origin. Nor can application of strict scrutiny be justified on the ground that prejudice against children placed or most likely to be placed in foster care with relatives “tends seriously to curtail the operation of those political processes ordinarily to be relied upon to protect minorities . . . .”
(U.S.
v.
Carotene Products Co.
(1938)
B.
A more difficult contention is raised by plaintiffs’ additional assertion, also concurred in by the trial court, that by refusing to pay foster care benefits to children living with related foster parents, the state has impinged upon the “fundamental interest of the children to live with the members of their extended family.”
The cases cited by the trial court and relied upon by plaintiffs, which we shall briefly assay, do not seem to us to support this contention. None of
*659
these cases identify a fundamental interest of the sort claimed here in the context of an equal protection challenge. The fundamental interest identified in
Serrano
v.
Priest
(1971)
Moore
v.
East Cleveland
(1977)
*660
Marina Point, Ltd.
v.
Wolfson
(1982)
Two other cases relied upon by plaintiffs,
City of Santa Barbara
v.
Adamson, supra,
Plaintiffs’ assertion that the California foster care program impinges upon a fundamental right to live with one’s extended family is also hard to square with
Ramos
v.
Montgomery, supra,
*661
No case that we have found identifies the right to live with one’s relatives as a fundamental interest for purposes of equal protection analysis. Moreover, legislative classifications limiting eligibility for public welfare assistance have been subjected to rational basis review and sustained despite impairment of rights and interests of families that seem to us at least as important as those at stake here.
(Dandridge
v.
Williams, supra,
The sole exception of which we are aware to the longstanding rule that rational basis review will be applied to social welfare legislation occurs in the recent case of
Robbins
v.
Superior Court
(1985)
In determining that the plaintiffs had established a strong likelihood they would prevail on the merits of their statutory and constitutional claims, the court pointed out that “the right to privacy [set forth in Cal. Const., art. I, § 1] has been held to protect a diverse range of personal freedoms. [Citations.] . . . [including] the right to choose the people with whom one lives” . . . [and that] ‘[f]reedom to associate with people of one’s choice is a necessary adjunct to privacy in the family and the home.’”
(Id.,
at p. 213, quoting
People
v.
Katrinak
(1982)
*662 Though Robbins appears to recognize that the “right to choose the people with whom one lives” (ibid.) is a fundamental right protected under the privacy clause of our state constitution, the facts of Robbins are so manifestly different from those that confront us here that the case is not fairly analogous and cannot be deemed controlling. The statutes and regulations with which we are concerned certainly do not on their face prohibit family members from living together. Foster children living with relatives remain eligible to receive basic AFDC payments designed to meet essential needs. Additional needs are satisfied by social welfare services. Moreover, there is no evidence in the record beforе us indicating that foster children living with relatives receive lesser financial support, through the state and federal AFDC programs or otherwise, than the children would receive if they remained with their natural parents.
The California Supreme Court has observed that, “Although a fundamental interest may be involved . . . not every limitation or incidental burden on a fundamental right is subject to the strict scrutiny standard. When the regulation merely has an incidental effect on exercise of protected rights, strict scrutiny is not applied. (E.g.,
Zablocki
v.
Redhail
(1978)
Accordingly, we evaluate the merits of the classification here at issue by the rational basis test, i.e., does the legislation meet the test of reasonableness?
(See McCourtney
v.
Cory
(1981)
*663 IV.
“The California Supreme Court has expressed the rational basis test in various ways. ‘Some decisions require that the classification “‘bear some rational relationship to a conceivable legitimate state purpose’”
(D’Amico
v.
Board of Medical Examiners
(1974)
At the time the parallel federal and state foster care programs with which we are here concerned were established, our Legislature declared that the purpose of foster payments was the provision of the “best substitute” home for those dependent children needing foster care. (Former Welf. & Inst. Code, § 11205, repealed 1982.) The legislative policy was restated in 1982: “The Legislature finds and declares that the family unit is of fundamental importance to society in nurturing its members, passing on values, averting potential social problems and providing the secure structure in which citizens live out their lives. ...” (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 11205.) The parties agree that “[t]he overriding state policy for foster care of neglected and/or dependent children is to provide such children with the best possible substitute home.”
The parties also agree that for those children who cannot be returned to their parental homes, the objective of the state’s foster care program is to provide stable, long-term out-of-home care. Criteria for foster care selection reflect a recognition that, all other pertinent considerations being equal, placement with a relative has the highest priority.
12
Although the parties
*664
dispute whether placement with a relative is of
primary
importance, both recognize that, ordinarily, placement with a relative serves the best interests of the child.
13
Plaintiffs view placement with relatives as required to meet the central legislative purpose of providing the best possible substitute home for those children in need of out-of-home care and claim this central purpose is undermined by denial of benefits to foster children living with relatives. Plaintiffs further point to the Department’s concession that the needs of foster children placed with relatives are no different from the needs of children placed with strangers or in institutions, arguing that “differentiation between children equally in need ‘based on a living arrangement bearing no relationship to special needs that the AFDC-FC program was created to meet’ is simply unreasonable.” (Respondent’s brief, pp. 43-45, quoting
Miller
v.
Youakim, supra,
The Department counters that although importance is given to placing a child with relatives under the foster carе program goals, the preeminent purpose of the legislative program is to provide for all of this state’s abused, neglected and orphaned children, not just those fortunate to have relatives available to care for them (see Welf. & Inst. Code, §§ 19.1, 10000) and to do so within the limits of public revenues made available for this purpose. 14 (Id., § 10001, subd. (a).) Moreover, though the Department’s regulations contemplate that placement with a relative will usually best serve the needs of the child, the regulations make the best interests of the child, not the fact of a relationship by blood or marriage, ultimately the most significant consideration.
In the absence of an expressed legislative intention that foster placement with relatives shall necessarily take precedence over all placement alternatives, we agree with the Department that the legislative goals by which we must measure the reasonableness of the challenged classification are those pertaining to all social services programs; namely, the mandate to provide “protection, care, and assistance to the people of the state in need thereof” (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 10000) “within the limits of public resources” (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 10001, subd. (a)). As applied to the AFDC-FC program, this simply means that the maximum number of abused, neglected and orphaned children in need of foster care must be provided such assistance within the limits of public funds available for this purpose.
*665
(See
County of Kern
v.
Coley
(1964)
With this goal as our yardstick, we conclude that the different treatment accorded foster children cared for by relatives and those cared for by others meets the test of reasonableness. That is, we believe the Legislature’s denial of benefits to children provided foster care by relatives is rationally calculated to achieve the goal of providing the maximum amount of needed foster care with available public funds.
A rationale that justifies this legislative treatment involves the judgments that more children in this state are in need of foster care than are now receiving it; that persons having a family tie to a child in need of foster care will often provide such assistance without any financial incentive to do so; that persons having no family tie to such a child ordinarily will not provide foster care unless financially induced to do so; and that if the savings resulting from the denial of benefits to related foster parents were instead used to increase the benefits to unrelated foster parents, more foster care would be provided to all children in need thereof than if the limited public funds available for this purpose were used to provide benefits to related as well as unrelated foster parents.
The only element of the foregoing rationale which plaintiffs challenge is the assumption that relatives will provide foster care without financial inducement. But their insistence that the denial of benefits operates to discourage the acceptance of parentless children by relatives is not оnly unsupported in the record, but is to some extent contradicted by the scant evidence plaintiffs themselves provide. The declarations of all representatives of the plaintiff class show that even relatives with very low incomes are highly motivated to care for their related foster children and do not reject them despite resulting sacrifices one would not expect of foster parents absent the family tie. None of the declarations submitted by plaintiffs indicate that the denial of state foster care benefits to foster children living with relatives actually has the effect of compelling or inducing such relatives to refuse to accept related foster children or to relinquish them to unrelated foster parents or even seriously to consider such alternatives. In short, plaintiffs have not made the factual showing necessary to support the theory of their case. 15
*666
Plaintiffs attempt to shift to the Department the burden of proving that relatives will provide foster cаre without financial incentives equal to those provided unrelated foster parents. It is not the Department’s responsibility to offer such proof, however, because under a rational basis analysis “the burden of demonstrating the invalidity of a classification . . . rests squarely upon
the party who assails it.
[Citations.]”
(D’Amico
v.
Board of Medical Examiners
(1974)
Plaintiffs’ final argument is that the state cannot shift the burden of providing support for children to nonlegally liable relatives. (See
Waits
v.
Swoap, supra,
In making this argument, plaintiffs rely most heavily upon Justice Tobriner’s opinion in
Waits
v.
Swoap, supra,
Unlike the present case, however, the classification challenged in Waits appeared in an administrative regulation found to be in conflict with the controlling statutes. (Id., at p. 889.) Here, the regulation carries into effect the mandate of the Legislature 16 and it is that legislative directive that is at issue. Additionally, Waits addressed a regulation affecting basic AFDC grants. The amounts deducted were considered “income” to the children in the form of housing and utility benefits. Relatives were in effect being required to pay for the child’s basic needs. Here, the children in question are not deprived of AFDC designed to meet their basic needs.
The rationale offered by the Department to demonstrate the reasonableness, and therefore the constitutionality, of the statute in question is essentially indistinguishable from that accepted by the three-judge federal district court in
Youakim
v.
Miller, supra,
“At the time this statute was enacted, the Illinois General Assembly could reasonably have been concerned about how to use available public funds to provide as many foster homes as possible. It could reasonably have set out to provide for allocation of the available funds in a manner designed to
*668
secure the maximum number of foster parents for children who would otherwise remain parentless. A reasonable method of achieving this goal would have been to provide for the distribution of funds only to persons who would otherwise have had no particular reason or incentive for becoming foster parents rather than allocating the funds to all persons who become foster parents and thereby reducing the amount received by each; and it is on this basis that the defendants assert the classification was made. Allegedly, the state perceived a moral obligation оn behalf of related foster parents to care for their related children which could not or would not be deepened by providing them a pro rata portion of the available funds. Therefore, according to the defendants, the state decided that the money which could have been allotted to related foster parents would be better used as added inducement to unrelated persons. [11] This classification, the wisdom of which is not for us to determine, bears a rational relationship to the legitimate purpose of attempting to assure that foster homes are made available. Some related foster parents may not be able to afford the responsibility of caring for additional children,
[17]
but the state argues that the scheme was not enacted to alleviate this problem, and from the fact that payments are not based on the relative wealth of the foster parents, this contention is borne out. . . . [U] [A]nalogous to the case at bar is Ramos v. Montgomery,
Although members of this court might prefer that the state provide foster care benefits to foster children living with relatives, the allocation of funds for public welfare purposes such as this must be left with the other branches of government where, as here, their determinations meet constitutional muster. As aptly stated by the United States Supreme Court in
Dandridge
v.
Williams, supra,
*670 For the foregoing reasons, the judgment is reversed. Each party shall bear its own costs on appeal.
Rouse, J., and Smith, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied November 13, 1986, and respondents’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied January 15, 1987.
Notes
During the pendency of this action Linda McMahon has replaced Marion J. Woods as director of the Department.
For convenience we list the principal abbreviations used in this opinion:
1. AFDC stands for aid to families with dependent children.
2. AFDC-FC refers to the AFDC foster care program.
3. AFDC-FG refers to the AFDC family group program.
4. MPP stands for the Manual of Policies and Procedures of the Deрartment of Social Services. Department regulations and procedures on AFDC and AFDC-FC are contained in this manual.
AFDC is a public assistance program aimed at the “dependent child,” that is, a child who has been deprived of parental support or care by reason of the death, continued absence from the home or mental or physical incapacity of a parent. (42 U.S.C. § 606(a).) (Children denied support or care due to the unemployment of a parent may be granted benefits for a limited period of time under the AFDC-U (unemployed) program. Welf. & Inst. Code, § 11201, which is not at issue here.) Once it has been established that a child is “dependent,” eligibility for AFDC is determined by various criteria including the monetary resources available to the child. (42 U.S.C. § 602; Welf. & Inst. Code, §§ 11200 et seq., 11450.)
Financed primarily by the federal government, AFDC is administered by the states on an elective basis. States participating in the program are required to submit a plan for approval to the federal government, which plan must conform to the Social Security Act and to federal rules and regulations.
(King
v.
Smith
(1968)
California has so elected. Its AFDC provisions, including requirements for eligibility, are contained in section 11200 et seq., of the Welfare and Institutions Code.
The basic AFDC assistance program is AFDC-FG. Fifty percent of the funds for this program are provided by the federal government.
For a family with dependent children to qualify for AFDC-FG, children must not only be deprived of parental support and care but must be “needy.” States are required to set a *653 statewide standard of basic adequate care to be used in determining the need of applicants for AFDC and the amount of the assistance payment. (45 C.F.R. § 233.20(a)(2)(i); Welf. & Inst. Code, § 11452.) To be financially eligible for AFDC-FG a family’s gross income must be less than 185 percent of this minimum standard. (MPP 44-207.2.) Once eligible, recipients are given a flat cash grant, less specified income, which is based on the number of people in the family budget unit (FBU). (MPP 44-101 et seq.; Welf. & Inst. Code, § 11450.)
The minimum basic standard is calculated to insure that a family receives safe and healthful housing; minimum clothing needs; adequate food; utilities; education; recreation; personal needs; insurance and medical and dental care not otherwise provided. However, as noted by the California Supreme Court in
County of Alameda
v.
Carleson
(1971)
Finally, to be eligible for AFDC-FG, a child must reside with certain enumerated caretaker adult relatives. (42 U.S.C. § 606 (a)(1); MPP, 44-203.2.)
In addition to the cash grant for basic needs, all AFDC-FG recipients are entitled to medical care under the Medi-Cal program and food stamps, if a household is in extreme need. (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 14005.1, MPP, 44-213; 7 U.S.C. § 2014.)
All of the named plaintiffs and identified class members receive AFDC-FG for the care of their related foster children.
Fifty percent of the funds for the federal program come from the federal government, 47.5 percent from the state and 2.5 percent from counties.
The state foster care program is described in detail in appellants’ MPP. Ninety-five percent of funds for this program are provided by the stаte, 5 percent by the county.
A relative is defined to include: “(A) The father, mother, brother, sister, half-brother, half-sister, uncle, aunt, first cousin, nephew, niece, or any such person of a preceding generation denoted by the prefixes grand-, great-, or great-great-. [1] (B) The stepfather, stepmother, stepbrother or stepsister. [I] (C) The spouse of any person named in (A) or (B) above even after the marriage has been terminated by death or dissolution.” (MPP 45-101(hh); Welf. & Inst. Code, § 11400, subd. (k).)
For example, the federal AFDC-FG program does not cover children living with unrelated individuals. The federal AFDC-FC program does not cover children living with unrelated legal guardians or children removed from their parents by means other than a judicial determination. (42 U.S.C. § 672, MPP 45-202.62.) This gap is filled by state AFDC-FC, which does provide benefits to children living with unrelated legal guardians or children removed from their homes because they are awaiting adoption or because their parents have voluntarily agreed to have the child removed. (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 11401.)
Unlike their related counterparts who are fully covered under the AFDC-FG program, these children, unrelated to their foster parents, would have no aid coverage under any of the federal or state AFDC programs but for the state foster care program. (MPP 44-203.2.)
Finally, state AFDC-FC does not require AFDC-FG eligibility prior to placement and does *655 not provide benefits to children living with relatives, the provision at issue here. (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 11401.)
Specifically addressing the question “Does the powerlessness of children justify judicial activism on their behalf?”, a noted legal scholar strongly sympathetic to the rights of children concedes that “[bjecause children do not appear to be subject to the prejudice which plagued the religious and racial groups singled out for attentions in Justice Stone’s footnote [in U.S. v. Carotene Products, cited above], the courts will have difficulty determining that the political system is systematically malfunctioning unless they examine the substantive merits of a particular law affecting children.” (Mnookin, In the Interest of Children (1985) pp. 37, 41.) The particular law with which we are here concerned does not give less favored treatment to children, but makes a distinction between two groups of foster children indistinguishable in all respects save the nature of their placement. Though the justification for this distinction in the law may certainly be debated, it clearly is not the result of political bias or other prejudice which courts must be particularly careful to guard against.
Ahwahnee Hills School v. County of Madera, Civ. No. 7516 (July 17, 1984), also cited by the court below and involving similar procedural rights, was ordered unpublished by the California Supreme Court (Minutes, Cal. Supreme Ct., Sept. 27, 1984) and therefore, is not citable precedent.
Plaintiffs also argue that although the limitation on foster care benefits to children living with relatives might not
directly
infringe a fundamental right, the foster care benefit limitation nevertheless imposes an unconstitutional condition on the exercise of fundamental rights.
(Robbins
v.
Superior Court, supra,
IUn
Cory
v.
Shierloh
(1981)
MPP section 30-336 provides in relevant part that “[w]hen placing a child, the social worker shall adhere to the following priority order: [1] The home of a relative ... [2] A licensed family home or a family home certified by a licensed homefinding agency. [3] A family home which has been certified pending licensure. [4] A licensed group home.”
The reason the Department gives priority to placement with a relative is not due to any state legislative directive but because section 675 (5)(A) of title 42 of the United States Code “specifies that foster care placement shall be in the least restrictive, i.e., most family-like, setting in close proximity to the parent’s home, consistent with the'best interest and special needs of the child.” (MPP 30-336)
In this connection, the Department estimates that it would cost the state an additional $38,063,000 per year if relatives are included in the state foster care program.
In a brief filed with the trial court, plaintiffs sum up the “prejudicial burden” described by the declarations of their clients as follows: “In each case, foster care benefits were denied because of some relationship with the foster parent. In each case, these children who have already suffered the loss of their parents and home, face the possibility of severance of remaining family ties and separation from siblings, and the knowledge that their foster parents suffer hardship in keeping them. In each case, the foster parent is forced to choose *666 between relinquishing these children so they can obtain foster care payments, or keeping the children together but without adequate funds. In each case, the fundamental purpose of the foster care program is undermined by the arbitrary denial of benefits to the best possible substitute home. ”
The adversities plaintiffs enumerate are either belied by the declarations themselves or are highly speсulative. No declarant suggests he or she is seriously considering the relinquishment of a child. Further, the declarations establish that virtually all the foster parent relatives are providing the children in their care an environment that is not only far more emotionally secure but no less financially secure than was or could be provided by the natural parents. Thus, the declarations do not genuinely show that the purpose of the foster care program is undermined by the denial of benefits to related foster parents even if such relatives are deemed the best possible substitute parents, and the trial court made no such finding.
The federal cases cited by plaintiffs similarly rely upon the conflict of the regulation at issue with the purposes of the governing legislation. Only
Boucher
v.
Minter, supra,
17In a footnote at this point the court states: “Of course, this possibility is lessened by the fact that AFDC payments are generally available.”
As we noted,
ante,
page 655, the decision of the three-judge district court in
Youakim
v.
Miller, supra,
