Stimulus update: Direct payments worth $500 for more than 300 families to be sent in 23 days

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FILE – In this April 23, 2020, file photo, President Donald Trump’s name is seen on a stimulus check issued by the IRS to help combat the adverse economic effects of the COVID-19 outbreak, in San Antonio. All that aid is now gone. Yet prospects for more federal stimulus this year appear all but dead, clouding the future for the unemployed, for small businesses and for the economy as a whole.(AP Photo/Eric Gay, File) (Eric Gay/AP)

Stimulus update: Direct payments worth $500 for more than 300 families to be sent in 23 days

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A program that will send $500 monthly to 305 families in Sonoma County, California, is set to send its next payment in 23 days.

The Pathway to Income Equity pilot program selected 305 families out of 6,450 applicants. To be eligible, applicants had to have at least one child under 6 years of age, be affected in some way by the coronavirus pandemic, and have a household income of no more than 185% above the federal poverty level, according to the Sonoma County Administrator’s Office. Its first payment was issued in March, and its next payment will be issued on May 17.

STIMULUS UPDATE: DIRECT PAYMENT WORTH UP TO $400 TO BE PAID TO MASSACHUSETTS RESIDENTS IN 22 DAYS

The program is partially an experiment to see how guaranteed income affects impoverished families.

“These payments will help families with young children who are often struggling under the double burden of the high costs of housing and child care — typically the two highest household expenses,” said Supervisor Chris Coursey, the chairman of the Sonoma County Board of Supervisors. “The information we gain from this pilot program will help shape future efforts to improve the health and welfare of our community.”

Angie Dillon-Shore, the executive director of First 5 Sonoma County, an independent public agency focused on early childhood development, defended the program as essential to fighting familial poverty and preempted criticisms that it may incentivize laziness.

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“The number of applications we received speaks to the issue that so many in our community are struggling,” she said. “The idea that giving people cash is a disincentive to work is a myth. Most of our selected recipients are already working, many working more than one job or more than 40 hours a week just to survive. This extra income will allow them to spend more time with their families, find a better job, or improve their financial well-being, resulting in better outcomes for their kids.”

She told the Washington Examiner that the group is using an “external evaluator to conduct qualitative research (surveys, interviews, and focus groups) with the participants over the two years” and will publish a preliminary and final report in spring 2024 and early 2025, respectively.

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