Santa Cruz Sentinel

$600 checks proposed for some residents

- By Kathleen Ronayne

SACRAMENTO >> Millions of low-income California­ns would get a $600 payment from the state under a budget proposal by Gov. Gavin Newsom.

The proposed payment, announced Wednesday, would go to people with annual incomes of less than $ 30,000, including immigrants living in the country illegally who file taxes with the state. Roughly 4 million people would be eligible for the payment, for a total state cost of $2.4 billion. Newsom is also asking the Legislatur­e to extend a moratorium on evictions.

Newsom called on lawmakers to join him with a sense of urgency to help California­ns who are dealing with stress and anxiety over the prospect of putting food on the table, paying for child care or facing eviction.

“We recognize our responsibi­lity to do more,” he said.

State lawmakers normally pass the budget in June, but Newsom is asking them to act early on several proposals to provide faster relief to people suffering due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. California’s unemployme­nt rate was 8.2% in November, the most recent month with available state data. But that doesn’t reflect the true number of out-of-work California­ns, as many people have stopped seeking work.

A handful of Democratic lawmakers joined Newsom for a virtual announceme­nt, indicating he’ll find support in the Legislatur­e.

“Millions of working families all across California, they’re on the ropes. They’re barely hanging on during this pandemicin­duced recession,” said State Sen. Mike McGuire, a Democrat who represents the state’s north coast.

T he $ 600 payment matches a federal stimulus payment approved by Congress, meaning some California­ns could receive $1,200 in relief.

Newsom hopes payments of the state stimulus go out to California­ns in February and March. If his plan is approved and signed into law, it will take three to four weeks to get payments out to people who filed their taxes electronic­ally, said H. D. Palmer, spokesman for the California Department of Finance.

Taxpayers who received the California Earned Income Tax Credit, available to people making less than $30,000 annually, last year would receive the $600 payment. That covered about 3.9 million filers in 2020, Palmer said.

T he $ 6 0 0 payment would also go to people with Individual Taxpayer Identifica­tion Numbers who would be eligible to receive the tax credit this year. T hose ta x payers are mostly immigrants living in the country illegally. T he state estimates about 250,000 of those filers would be eligible for the payment, Palmer said.

Beyond the cash payments, Newsom’s proposal aims to help California­ns struggling to pay rent or losing out on money that would normally come in from tenants. The Legislatur­e passed an eviction moratorium last year, and it bars landlords from evicting people who suffered economic loss due to the pandemic. They must be able to pay at least 25% of their monthly rent.

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