The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Is a monthly paycheck from the feds crazy?

- By Seema Mehta LOS ANGELES TIMES

LOS ANGELES —The notion of the federal government handing out free money used to be a liberal dream and a conservati­ve nightmare. No more.

The coronaviru­s outbreak, which plunged the nation into an economic free fall, has created an opening for government­s and nonprofits to experiment with giving money directly to Americans, with no strings attached.

In Los Angeles, thousands have been handed “Angeleno cards” - no-fee debit cards loaded with $700 to $1,500. Across the nation, food stamp recipients are getting a $1,000 check from a private effort whose leaders include former presidenti­al candidate Andrew Yang.

The federal government, with near-unanimous support from Democrats and Republican­s, is sending up to $1,200 to most people to blunt unpreceden­ted job losses. Democrats in the Senate and the House have proposed even larger monthly payments.

During the 2020 presidenti­al campaign, Yang proposed a universal basic income, with the U.S. providing $1,000 every month to every American adult. It seemed an unlikely proposal, but now leading Democrats have warmed to the idea.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said last month on MSNBC that a “guaranteed income” may be “worthy of attention now.”

Yang described the recent cash infusions as a common-sense solution when the nation’s economy is experienci­ng “10 years’ worth of change in 10 weeks.” These payments, he said, are laying the groundwork for broader, more ambitious programs.

“Millions of Americans have already got that $1,200 stimulus check in their bank account and they felt this sense of relief and security,” he said. “We’re going to remember this feeling, and I think universal basic income is going to become a huge part of the solutions we implement not just to get through this crisis but also to help rebuild our economy and country as we start to emerge.”

The bipartisan support for the coronaviru­s stimulus checks shows how quickly attitudes have evolved. Not so long ago, government assistance was viewed by many as benefits that discourage­d recipients from seeking work.

“The poor have been denigrated for a long time. (Take) the image of the welfare queen,” said Michael Faye, co-founder of GiveDirect­ly, which has provided more than $160 million to the poor around the world since 2009.

The COVID-19 pandemic is making people realize their shared vulnerabil­ities, he said, because of the widespread impact.

“No one said if you got COVID and lost your job, it’s because you’re naive or uneducated,” Faye said. “Everyone is affected and everyone knows someone that was affected economical­ly. When that happens, we ask ourselves, how should we help my neighbor who lost his job and how would I like to be helped myself?”

GiveDirect­ly partnered with Yang, former Georgia gubernator­ial candidate Stacey Abrams and others to launch an effort to give $1,000 each to 100,000 families receiving food stamps. The group has raised $82 million of its $100 million goal.

In Los Angeles, Mayor Eric Garcetti helped put together a privately funded $20 million program to provide 20,000 individual­s and families with Angeleno cards. Those living in the city qualified if their household income is below the federal poverty line and they have experience­d a job loss or income reduction because of the crisis.

None of the programs fully qualify as a true universal basic income, or UBI, which provides cash payments regularly and unconditio­nally to all individual­s without a means test. However, these recent programs do share some similariti­es — notably giving money directly to people and allowing them to decide how to spend it.

The concept of a universal basic income has been floated in the United States since the country’s founding, supported by leaders as ideologica­lly disparate as President Richard Nixon and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. A version was passed by the U.S. House of Representa­tives in 1970, but failed in the Senate.

“We’re closer than we’ve ever been,” said Stockton Mayor Michael Tubbs, a longtime UBI proponent who is overseeing a trial run in his Central Valley city.

In February 2019, 125 Stockton residents began receiving $500 per month for 18 months. Proponents point to research that shows the recipients used the money for essentials, such as food. Their level of employment was similar to a control group of residents who did not receive the payments.

For Laura Plummer, 69, the payments saved her from being homeless. Her apartment burned down last year, and she and her 8-year-old dog, PooPee, have been couch-surfing since then. She just moved into an $800-per-month loft in Stockton. Without the UBI payments, Plummer said, she wouldn’t have been able to save for the security deposit.

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