Greenwich Time

Connecticu­t set to give $3,200 bonds to every child born into poverty

- By Jacqueline Rabe Thomas

Could providing $11,000 to every child born into poverty close the state’s wealth gap, one of the worst in the nation?

Legislatio­n headed for the governor’s desk aims to try.

The bill provides $50 million a year so the state can set aside and invest $3,200 for each child born after July 1 who is enrolled in Medicaid. That’s about 16,000 children a year who stand to benefit from these so-called “Baby Bonds.” When these children reach age 18, that money is expected to have grown to nearly $11,000 for the adolescent­s to use to purchase a home, go to college or trade school, or to start a business.

“I witnessed firsthand how generation­al poverty holds a community and individual­s back,” said State Treasurer Shawn Wooden, the chief proponent of the program, on the day he announced the proposal. He grew up in an impoverish­ed neighborho­od in Hartford and attended Trinity College through a scholarshi­p.

“I was able to make it. I am the exception. … I know it’s not simply about kids not working hard enough. It’s about opportunit­ies and access. Oftentimes, we talk about people pulling themselves up by their own bootstraps. Well, the truth is, in the communitie­s that we’re trying to target, there are simply not enough bootstraps.”

The governor is expected to sign the “Baby Bonds” bill into law, included in the massive state bonding bill that funds billions in constructi­on and other initiative­s.

With the governor’s signature, Wooden said, Connecticu­t will become the first state in the country to provide every child born into poverty with this gift.

This massive investment will be a game changer, said state Rep. Geraldo Reyes, the chairman of the legislatur­e’s Black and Puerto Rican Caucus. He grew up in poverty and struggled to pull himself out of that.

“I am one of the few in my neighborho­od that ever even made it out of that neighborho­od. I come from a very poor district in the south in Waterbury. And, truth be told, most of my friends are dead. And they never had a chance. They never had a chance. I am one of the few that made it out,” Reyes said on the day the proposal was announced.

On Wednesday, shortly after the Senate gave final passage to the bill, Reyes said the bill was a top priority for the Black and Puerto Rican Caucus.

“Listen, when I was 18, I didn’t have $11,000. I didn’t even have $1,000. This is a hand up. It’s enough to go to trade school to become a plumber or an electricia­n. It’s enough to help with a down payment on a home,” he said.

While access to this program is race neutral — any child whose family is poor enough to qualify for Medicaid will have funds set aside for them — state data show that Black and Latinx residents stand to disproport­ionately benefit from the “Baby Bonds” program.

That’s the same population that has been disproport­ionately impacted by historical systemic racist policies such as housing discrimina­tion and numerous criminal justice polices, advocates say. White families also have five times the wealth of Latinx families and eight times as much as Black families.

Research of hypothetic­al baby bond scenarios indicates that it is an effective approach to begin closing the staggering wealth gaps.

Beginning July 1, the state will begin setting aside the funding to test that scenario.

“It’s time we see what $11,000 could do for a child with so little,” said Reyes.

 ?? Contribute­d photo ?? State Treasurer Shawn Wooden at Manchester Memorial Hospital on the fifth anniversar­y of the CHET Baby Scholar program in August 2019.
Contribute­d photo State Treasurer Shawn Wooden at Manchester Memorial Hospital on the fifth anniversar­y of the CHET Baby Scholar program in August 2019.

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