Los Angeles Times

County to vote on basic income program

- By Jaclyn Cosgrove Times staff writer Dakota Smith contribute­d to this report.

Los Angeles County could soon become the largest in the country to launch a universal basic income pilot program, providing at least $1,000 a month to at least 1,000 residents.

Supervisor­s Holly Mitchell and Sheila Kuehl are proposing that the guaranteed-income pilot program provide monthly payments for three years. The criteria for participan­ts have not been determined.

The two supervisor­s said the county must explore anti-poverty measures as permanent county policy, not just as emergency measures to alleviate economic instabilit­y caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“We must fundamenta­lly shift the idea that people who face financial insecurity have somehow failed, and instead recognize that it is the inequity and lack of access built into our economy and government assistance programs that have failed us,” Mitchell and Kuehl said in their motion.

The Board of Supervisor­s will vote on the measure at their Tuesday meeting.

Universal basic income has been tested across the country, including in Compton and in Stockton, where 125 randomly selected residents were given $500 per month for two years.

Especially amid the pandemic, policymake­rs have shown growing interest in testing universal basic income programs that provide monthly payments to enrolled residents with no restrictio­ns for how they spend the money. Several programs have been proposed, including in Tacoma, Wash.; New Orleans; St. Paul, Minn.; and Hudson, N.Y., according to the Stanford Basic Income Lab.

In April, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti proposed an effort that would provide $1,000 a month to 2,000 families for a year.

In the South L.A. district represente­d by City Councilman Curren Price, a program expected to launch this summer will provide $1,000 a month for a year to 500 households headed by single parents. Other council members are considerin­g programs for their districts.

Compton announced the Compton Pledge in October, a universal basic income program that will pay $300 to $600 a month to 800 lowincome city residents for two years. It is sponsored by the Fund for Guaranteed Income, a charity headed by Nika Soon-Shiong, daughter of Los Angeles Times owner Dr. Patrick SoonShiong and a co-director of the Compton Pledge.

L.A. County would need at least $36 million to finance its program as proposed in the motion. Mitchell said in an interview that the county could potentiall­y finance the program with money from the federal American Rescue Plan Act or President Biden’s infrastruc­ture bill.

“With an influx of federal dollars, this is a moment in time that I wanted to walk through that door — when people need it perhaps the most in recent years,” Mitchell said.

If the motion passes Tuesday, the county chief executive’s office would have 60 days to establish a plan for the guaranteed income pilot program. The program would be part of a “countywide poverty alleviatio­n initiative,” a broader effort created by the supervisor­s’ motion.

The target population has not been determined, but it might include low-income women who were released from jail or prison within the past seven years, young people without family support, and domestic violence survivors who are the heads of their households.

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