Florida News Connection
Posted By: Suzanne Potter
By Katie Fleischer for Ms.
Magazine.
Broadcast version by Suzanne Potter for Florida News Connection reporting for
the Ms. Magazine-Public News Service Collaboration
If you've ever waited in line at the DMV or struggled doing your taxes, you
know how frustrating unnecessary bureaucracy can be. For low-income families
looking to receive benefits from state or federal welfare agencies, that
bureaucracy can prevent them from getting the food, housing and money they need
to survive.
Studies show that low-income Americans are struggling, and need a more
effective and intersectional safety net. Guaranteed income could
be the path forward.
Between tax credits like the child tax credit (CTC) and earned income tax
credit (EITC), housing assistance, Medicaid, unemployment benefits, and other
state and federal systems like the Supplemental
Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and Temporary Assistance for
Needy Families (TANF), the U.S. benefits system is incredibly
complex. Policies vary from state to state, and many have confusing or
conflicting requirements. It can be difficult for low-income people to figure
out which programs they're eligible for, how to apply, and how to ensure
they're maximizing their benefits.
For example, low-income essential worker Johnnie (last
name withheld) was forced to resubmit her short-term disability paperwork
multiple times after her doctor missed a deadline, leading to an unnecessarily
arduous process to get the compensation she deserved.
And Ebony,
a low-income mom who now owns her own nail salon, was denied unemployment
benefits in Mississippi for weeks during the pandemic-and only made it to the
front of the line because she did the nails of a woman who worked at the state
unemployment department.
Many programs also have strict requirements that-by design-prevent low-income
people from accessing the benefits they deserve. Traditional welfare policies
are often paternalistic and controlling, requiring low-income women to use
benefits in specific ways, or forcing them into situations that don't work well
for their family's needs.
In Mississippi, for example, SNAP benefits require
everyone ages 16-60 capable of work to accept any offer of
suitable work, and also restrict people from using their benefits to order
groceries online. These barriers leave women vulnerable to abusive workplaces
or employers, and make it harder for people without transportation or childcare
to effectively utilize their benefits.
Work
requirements also make it harder for marginalized people to
find well-paying jobs, since they may feel pressured into accepting minimum
wage roles in order to keep their benefits. During the pandemic, low-income
mom Roneisha struggled
to find jobs that paid more than $7.25/hour-not nearly enough to support her
three kids:
"I've worked jobs that are $11 or $12 an hour, so it doesn't make sense
for me to then have a minimum wage job when I have the experience of
higher-paid positions-even $9 is me humbling myself. I know my worth. The
struggle with the job hunt makes the child tax credit payments and the
guaranteed income even more important this year as I work to find a job that
pays an even semi-livable wage."
Economic Justice Through Unrestricted Guaranteed Income
In contrast to the current American safety net, guaranteed income is a
transformative economic justice program that gives no-strings cash to those who
need it most. Instead of requiring recipients to spend money on specific items,
guaranteed income programs provide monthly payments that can be used to cover
whatever families need most-housing, food, diapers, books, transportation and
more.
Women of color, especially moms, are disproportionately likely to be low-income
and face systemic barriers in higher education and attaining
high-paying jobs. That's why guaranteed income programs, such as the
Mississippi-based Magnolia Mother's Trust (MMT),
focus on low-income Black women to address the deeply entrenched economic
inequities caused by systemic racism and sexism. It's designed to be a minimum
"income floor" that ensures nobody is forced to live in poverty.
Programs like MMT have put this equity-focused policy into practice. By
providing $1,000 per month for a year to Black women living in extreme poverty
in Mississippi, MMT gives support to those who need it most and empowers women
to invest in their families and futures. Guaranteed income provides a true
safety net that places trust in low-income women and doesn't force them to jump
through complex hoops just to provide for their families.
"Let's give people money-not vouchers, not subsidies. [Let's] not have
people prove to us that they are poor enough for support," said Aisha
Nyandoro, CEO of Springboard
to Opportunities, which runs MMT. "Imagine having to go back to
prove that you are poor enough. What would that do to you psychologically? What
would that do to your self-worth?"
Existing benefits programs frequently rely on faulty assumptions that
low-income people don't
want to work, or can't manage their money well. But the moms
receiving guaranteed income from MMT have proven that they know how to save,
invest and spend money smartly to provide for their families and work towards
future goals.
"I do a good job at saving," wrote MMT mom Sabrina in
Ms. "I learned to save. I do couponing, and I just put money to the side
and don't touch it. I just think about, 'What is light, what is gas, what is
rent, what about an emergency?'"
Offering low-income families unrestricted
cash means that the recipients can make financial decisions
based on what's best for their families, and give them the flexibility to cover
emergencies and make long-term plans. MMT recipients have used their monthly
payments to go
back to school, find stable
housing, escape predatory
cycles of debt, and start
their own businesses.
Mother of two Kimberly,
who works for the state and receives guaranteed income from MMT, shared:
"I carry a really heavy load as a single mom. There's no one
else-everything is on me. Overall, things have been hard. You keep working and
keep going, but things never seem to change. But, being a part of the Magnolia Mother's Trust made
me realize that things can change for the better. There are people out there,
programs out there, that want to help mothers like me get out of a continuous
cycle of poverty. It has really given me hope."
And low-income mom Annette,
who works as a cook at an elementary school and dreams of owning her own
daycare center, wrote:
"If I were able to sit down with our country's leaders, I would tell
them how important a program like the Trust is. It helps low-income women like
myself better ourselves. The money has helped me in pursuing a better future
for me and my kids and allows me to do things that I wasn't really able to
before-like going back to school. I know if I finish school I will be a better
person, and I'll be a better person for my kids."
Protecting Existing Benefits
The current benefits system isn't always designed to actually help low-income
families. Even once people struggle through the process to receive their
benefits, and even if they fulfill all the requirements, receiving some
benefits could negate others. Because the overall system is so complex, the
compensation from some programs can influence the amount people receive from
other programs.
In other words, instead of being a true safety net that empowers low-income
people to escape poverty, the current system is designed to keep people at a
certain financial level.
Guaranteed income recipient and mother of three I'esha discovered
this the hard way when her payments from MMT led to her rent increasing, since
she lives in income-based housing. So even when programs like MMT work to end
poverty, state benefits systems can readjust to penalize low-income families.
Fortunately, the monthly guaranteed income payments were more than enough to
balance out I'esha's rent, enabling her to pay her bills and live more
comfortably. But her story is not unique, and it demonstrates the conflict
between the U.S.'s current benefits system, and true anti-poverty policies.
Some states are beginning to address this divide. This spring, New York became
the second state in the country, behind Illinois, to pass
a bill protecting guaranteed
income recipients from losing state benefits. Because state
laws don't impact federal benefits, recipients could still lose the SNAP, WIC
and federal housing benefits they rely on. But their TANF and state housing
assistance will be protected once the bill is signed into law. The bill only
lasts for two years-a temporary solution to an ongoing issue. But it marks a
significant step towards creating a benefits system that takes an
intersectional approach to actually fight poverty and support low-income
families.
Existing state and federal benefits provide much needed relief for struggling
families, and guaranteed income is not a replacement. It's designed to work
alongside other forms of assistance to ensure that Americans aren't forced to
live in poverty. But the effectiveness of unrestricted monthly payments does
shine a light on the burdens caused by our overly complex system.
A federal guaranteed income program is an opportunity to design a social safety
net that takes social and historical context into account, empowers low-income
parents and ends cycles of poverty.
Katie Fleischer wrote
this article for Ms. Magazine.
Content for this Post is provided by Florida News
Connection, a Bureau of Public News Service.
Public News Service is a member of the The Trust Project.
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