San Diego Union-Tribune

LAWMAKER EYES BASIC INCOME FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS

Calif. senator works on proposal to send some $500 a month

- BY MACKENZIE MAYS Mays writes for the Los Angeles Times.

California could send $500 a month with no strings attached to college students from low-income families as part of the Legislatur­e’s latest approach to a guaranteed basic income plan.

State Sen. Dave Cortese, D-San Jose, is considerin­g legislatio­n that would create a pilot program at select California State University campuses, issuing monthly stipends for one year to students whose family income is in the bottom 20 percent of earners in the state. Up to 14,000 students could be eligible.

Nearly 11 percent of the CSU system’s 480,000-plus students said they experience­d homelessne­ss in 2018, according to a report from the Office of the Chancellor. More than 40 percent of CSU students reported food insecurity. For Black, first-generation college students, it was worse, with nearly 70 percent reporting food insecurity and 18 percent experienci­ng homelessne­ss.

“College students are couch surfing and sleeping in their cars. This could be enough money to rent a room, and if you don’t need a room, by all means, use it for what you do need it for,” Cortese said in an interview. “It’s like a booster shot. It could help get them off of this treadmill and stop them from dropping out, being on the streets and becoming homeless long term.”

A three-campus plan would cost the state about $57 million, and a broader fivecampus plan would cost about $84 million, according to Cortese’s preliminar­y estimates, which are based on student income data.

Campuses under considerat­ion for the pilot program include CSU Los Angeles; San Francisco State; CSU East Bay; San Jose State and Fresno State.

Cortese said he will only move forward with the proposal if protection­s are in place so that students who receive the funding do not receive less from other financial aid programs because of an increase in income from the stipends.

The idea, he said, is to make guaranteed income stipends permanent for college students experienci­ng the most poverty, banking on positive results from the pilot programs.

Other universal basic income programs in the state have shown promise.

A Stockton program created in 2019 by former Mayor Michael Tubbs, now an adviser to Gov. Gavin Newsom, gave an unconditio­nal $500 a month to income-eligible residents for two years. Preliminar­y findings showed the program reduced “income volatility,” enabled recipients to find full-time employment and bettered their health, according to a bill analysis by Cortese.

Last year, Los Angeles became the biggest city in the nation to launch a $1,000-amonth guaranteed basic income program.

And as part of last year’s state budget, Newsom put $35 million toward a guaranteed income pilot program for interested cities and counties, focusing on assisting foster youths who are pregnant or parents, former foster youths and other low-income California­ns. Access to that program is not yet available, with applicatio­ns expected to open next month, according to Newsom’s Department of Finance.

Cortese, who was also involved in developing the statewide program, said he suspects it won’t be enough to keep up with demand. Targeting the new proposal toward college students, a demographi­c for which the state is able to track and obtain financial informatio­n, is a smart solution to chip away at the problem, he said.

“We’ve got a captive audience, and we know where they are: in our state institutio­ns,”

Cortese said. “I would just as soon administer a program to people on the streets as well, but there’s something to be said about doing anti-displaceme­nt work amongst a population that is so reachable.”

The plan was inspired by the Silicon Valley Pain Index, a report created in 2020 by the San Jose University Human Rights Institute that focuses on wealth and racial inequaliti­es.

Scott Myers-Lipton, lead author of the report and a professor at San Jose State, is working with Cortese on the plan and said universal basic income programs work because they cut through “bureaucrat­ic rules” that can make it difficult for students to get the help they need.

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