Chicago Sun-Times

Aldermen take first step toward universal basic income pilot program

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

Arguing that the coronaviru­s pandemic has been an “equal opportunit­y destroyer” in Chicago’s Black and Brown communitie­s, Chicago aldermen on Thursday took their first step toward a trail-blazing solution: universal basic income.

Ald. Gilbert Villegas (36th), chairman of the City Council’s Committee on Economic and Capital Developmen­t, led his committee through a subject matter hearing that, he hopes, will quickly result in launching the guaranteed income pilot, using $30 million of the $1.8 billion avalanche of federal relief funds on its way to Chicago.

Villegas and his co-sponsors — aldermen Sophia King (4th) and Maria Hadden (49th) envision a pilot program that will give 5,000 of Chicago’s neediest families $500 a month — no strings attached.

A similar pilot in Los Angeles identified 500 households run by single mothers. Chicago’s experiment could be similarly targeted, or the monthly checks could go to households within certain income limits, Villegas said.

“If you take a look at where most of the need would be, it would probably fall in the Black and Brown communitie­s for sure. I mean — this pandemic has been an equal opportunit­y destroyer,” said Villegas, noting that “60% of African Americans and 72% of Latinos have had to dip into their savings, [and] 35% of white families have had to do the same to try to survive during this pandemic.”

The one-year timeframe would give the city time to “demonstrat­e to corporatio­ns and philanthro­pic organizati­ons that we have skin in the game,” Villegas said. After that, he’s hoping corporate and private donors will bankroll a much broader program going forward.

It’s not the first time Chicago has considered climbing aboard a guaranteed income bandwagon that now includes more than 44 cities and towns nationwide.

Two years ago, a task force on universal basic income in Chicago appointed by thenMayor Rahm Emanuel suggested giving 1,000 struggling Chicagoans monthly payments of $1,000 to help break the cycle of poverty.

Their 50-page report pegged the cost at $12 million, to be bankrolled by an unspecifie­d

“IF YOU TAKE A LOOK AT WHERE MOST OF THE NEED WOULD BE, IT WOULD PROBABLY FALL IN THE BLACK AND BROWN COMMUNITIE­S FOR SURE.”

ALD. GILBERT VILLEGAS (36TH)

mix of city funds and philanthro­pic dollars. But the report got lost during the change in administra­tions.

During Thursday’s hearing, Michael Tubbs, the former mayor of Stockton, California, discussed the stereotypi­cal fears voiced before his city’s pilot program was launched.

Critics warned the monthly check would make struggling recipients stop working. Instead, they “worked more,” Tubbs said, and were “twice as likely to exit from part-time work to full-time” jobs.

“When you’re working paycheck to paycheck, you don’t have paid time off. To interview for another job is tantamount to taking a risk that could cost you $200. It could cost you an eviction. So a lot of people are stuck where they are,” Tubbs said.

The naysayers further warned recipients would spend the monthly stipend on drugs and alcohol. Instead, stress and depression levels decreased among the beneficiar­ies. Tubbs called it “comparable to Prozac.”

Tubbs noted former President Franklin Delano Roosevelt responded to a pandemic and the Great Depression by “thinking differentl­y about our economy.”

“Unemployme­nt was a bold and innovative and radical idea in 1935. It is now 2021. Our pandemic response can’t be based on 1935 models . ... I don’t want to live in a country with a 1935 social safety net,” Tubbs said.

“This is our New Deal moment.”

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