The Mercury News

Pandemic puts spotlight on Stockton’s experiment in guaranteed income

- My Laurence du Sault Correspond­ent

If there was ever a good time to convince people guaranteed income can make a difference, Stockton Mayor Michael Tubbs figured it would be in the middle of a pandemic that is taking a heavier toll in poor neighborho­ods and among Black and Latinx communitie­s. So Tubbs, whose city has been at the heart of one of the nation’s few experiment­s with free cash payments for more than a year, launched

Mayors for Guaranteed Income last month to push for federal policy. So far, the mayors of Oakland, Los Angeles, Compton, Atlanta and 13 others have signed on.

“In the worst way, the pandemic has been a really good moment for guaranteed income,” said Sukhi Samra, executive director for Stockton’s privately funded program, the Stockton Economic Empowermen­t Demonstrat­ion. “It exposed the economic fragility of most American households, and especially of Black and Brown households who have been excluded from economic well being and prosperity.”

COVID-19’S devastatin­g economic toll has already pushed legislator­s across the congressio­nal floor to rethink unconditio­nal income, from Republican Sen. Mitt Romney calling for widespread cash payments to every American adult to Democratic Sens. Kamala Harris, Ed Markey and Bernie Sanders proposing $2,000 monthly pay

ments to those with incomes lower than $120,000 for the duration of the pandemic. As lawmakers across the country craft emergency relief policies and disburse cash benefits, many are finding that Stockton’s guaranteed income experiment has a lot to teach.

The San Joaquin Valley city of 310,000, which bridges the Bay Area and the Central Valley, began providing 125 residents with monthly payments of $500 in February 2019. SEED research highlighte­d the lack of faith in public and private institutio­ns that often characteri­ze marginaliz­ed cities like Stockton, whose majority minority population was hit especially hard by redlining and segregated housing policies. In 2012, Stockton became the then-largest city to file for bankruptcy in U.S. history.

Overall, recipients have

spent the most on food and report lower levels of anxiety, program researcher­s have found. “What can $500 really do? The answer is a whole lot,” said Amy Castro Baker, assistant professor at the University of Pennsylvan­ia and coresearch­er on the SEED program. The median income of Stockton’s recipients is $1,800 a month, so SEED payments represent an increase of almost 30%.

“The $500 allowed essential workers and whole families to be able to shelter in place and follow public health guidelines,” Castro Baker said. “It’s allowing them to weather a public health crisis because they’re able to provide the basics. And they wouldn’t have been able to otherwise.”

That focus on those most vulnerable to economic insecurity is what differenti­ates Tubbs’ vision from wider calls for universal basic income. Famously advocated by Martin Luther King Jr., UBI implies unconditio­nal monthly payments to all Americans, whether they work or not. In

2016, the startup incubator Y Combinator funded a basic income study that was supposed to evolve into a fullfledge­d pilot project in Oakland, but it never materializ­ed. Tesla founder Elon Musk and startup founder Andrew Yang, who ran his 2020 presidenti­al campaign on a UBI proposal, have also championed the idea as a potential solution to future job automation.

With guaranteed income, however, not everyone necessaril­y receives money. In Stockton, only residents living in neighborho­ods with a median income below the city’s $46,033 a year were eligible. In that way, Samra said guaranteed income pilots are a way to offer reparation­s to the communitie­s most affected by institutio­nal racism. Within Stockton’s poorer neighborho­ods, recipients were chosen randomly.

Many oppose guaranteed income projects, saying they deter people from working. Rob Lapsley, president of the California Business Roundtable, called it an “easy way out” of addressing existing problems with California’s complex web of public benefits, which he says is inefficien­t.

Aside from a few who left a second or third job, Samra said there’s been no indication the monthly payments have stopped recipients from working, a trend she says is reinforced by existing research. But she recognizes guaranteed income isn’t a silver bullet. “It has to be coupled with other social safety nets like fair housing practices,” she said.

The main argument against basic income, however, is cost, particular­ly for state and local government­s already facing coronaviru­s-linked budget shortfalls. Stockton’s $3.8 million twoyear program, which includes research and staff, is funded by private organizati­ons and philanthro­pic donors.

Last month, barely two payments away from the end of the project, SEED said it received enough philanthro­pic backing for a six-month extension. “By then, I’ll be just about totally debt-free,” said Virginia Medina, a recipient and retired correction­al facility worker. “It’s going to be a good feeling.”

Now, 16 mayors from across the country are pushing for similar federal programs. Mayors for a Guaranteed Income doesn’t require concrete policy commitment­s from participat­ing mayors, but Oakland’s Libby Schaaf already took it a step further by pledging to start Oakland’s own pilot program if private funding materializ­es.

“If there’s one silver lining to this pandemic, it’s that policymake­rs are more open to transforma­tive changes like guaranteed income,” said Schaaf.

 ?? NEW YORK TIMES ARCHIVES ?? Stockton Mayor Michael Tubbs has launched Mayors for Guaranteed Income to push for federal policy.
NEW YORK TIMES ARCHIVES Stockton Mayor Michael Tubbs has launched Mayors for Guaranteed Income to push for federal policy.

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