California budget has $35 million for basic income pilot programs

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California Gov. Gavin Newsom wants to use a sliver of the state’s massive budget surplus to give poor people money each month with no rules on how they spend it.

Newsom’s budget proposal, announced Friday, includes $35 million over five years to pay for “universal basic income pilot programs.” The idea is to give poor people money each month to help ease the stresses of poverty that can make it harder to find full-time jobs and stay healthy.

It’s believed to be the first statewide funding for such programs, which are gaining traction in cities.

The idea has been around since at least the 18th century. Even the U.S. government experimented with it in the 1960s and 1970s under President Richard Nixon. It’s gotten new life in recent years thanks to former Stockton Mayor Michael Tubbs, who launched a privately funded guaranteed income program in his Northern California city in 2019.

Since then, mayors across the country have started their own programs, including one in Oakland earlier this year that pledges to give up to 600 families $500 each month. Last month, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti announced the city would spend $24 million to provide $1,000 per month to 2,000 households a year with “no questions asked.”

Newsom’s proposal would not create a statewide guaranteed income program. Instead, it would help pay for local governments to start their own programs. Local governments would have to help pay for it — either using local taxpayer money or finding private donors — and the programs must target low-income families.

The state proposal is a milestone for Tubbs, who has said guaranteed income programs will only work long-term if they are run by the federal government. His goal has been to demonstrate that these programs work in the hopes of convincing Congress to pay for one nationwide.

Getting state funding to commit to those programs is a big step toward that goal, as until now most of these local programs have been privately funded.

“This support from (Newsom) for local governments to test ideas to strengthen our safety net, provide economic security, and end poverty is needed to truly make the golden state golden for all,” said Tubbs, who lost his reelection bid last year and joined the Newsom administration in March as an unpaid special advisor.

Critics of these programs say they offer a disincentive for people to work. That narrative has played out over the past year as the federal government has increased the amount of monthly unemployment benefits during the pandemic. Employers have reported labor shortages as the economy reopens, blaming the increased benefits for preventing people from seeking work.

But an independent review of the guaranteed income program in Stockton found full-time employment increased among people who got the money during the first year of the project. At the start, 28 percent of people who got the money had full-time jobs. After one year, 40 percent did.
 
That sure is a nice number; makes me wonder what's going to be available for distribution once all the administration/paper-pushers get their cut.

As an aside; 35M may seem like a big number, but that wouldn't even get every citizen a dollar.
 
Oh god why won't anyone here work and why are the rich people leaving
*pikachu face*
 
Finally, some more money for dem programs.

"Pilot" program, sure. When has a welfare program ever ended?
 
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California Gov. Gavin Newsom wants to use a sliver of the state’s massive budget surplus to give poor people money each month with no rules on how they spend it.
Where the fuck did California get a budget surplus? Less than a year ago they were considering implementing taxes that would follow former Californians for a decade after they moved out of the state. I thought that trying to tax other states' citizens meant that California was desperate and poor.
 
Where the fuck did California get a budget surplus? Less than a year ago they were considering implementing taxes that would follow former Californians for a decade after they moved out of the state. I thought that trying to tax other states' citizens meant that California was desperate and poor.
Newsom called in a favor in a Hail Mary plan to keep his position as Governor. There's no way in hell the state is suddenly operating in a surplus as everyone (meaning their tax base) leaves. My guess would be all that Marijuana money that was supposed to go to education.
 
Bet your ass when the industries leave and LA becomes nothing but hobos, illegals, and minimal wagies on neetbux that the blame will be pinned on a Republican, and it'll be Gavin himself pointing the finger while the denizens of LA applaud.
"We did everything right, but these racists and their backwards logic screwed us all."
 
Going to be pretty funny when all the people who find the unemployment tap cut migrate to the streets of California.
 
There are more than 35 million people in California.
 
So... we're still not going to examine the literal boxes upon boxes of data from when we ran that experiment ages ago? I suppose $500,000 for a small team to analyze the data is too much, better spend 35 million testing it.
 
This still won't save him from getting his ass recalled. He can thrash all he wants, but his political career is dead.
 
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