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Universal Basic Income Hits the Bay Area-If You're Black

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Dec 14, 2022, 4:49:08 AM12/14/22
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Civil rights lawyers cry foul over the Golden State’s cash payments based
on race

At least three guaranteed income initiatives in the San Francisco Bay Area
openly discriminate against white residents, limiting or entirely
preventing their participation in programs that dole out no-strings-
attached cash.

The programs—all of which are publicly funded—violate both the United
States and the California state constitution, lawyers say, as well as
civil rights laws that ban race discrimination in contracting and by the
recipients of government funds.

The initiatives include the Black Economic Equity Movement, which provides
$500 a month exclusively to "Black young adults," the Abundant Birth
Project, which provides $1,000 a month to "Black and Pacific Islander
mothers," and the Guaranteed Income for Transgender People program, which
will dole out $1,200 a month and "prioritize enrollment" of transgender
"Black, Indigenous, or People of Color (BIPOC)." They are financed by the
National Institutes of Health, the California Department of Social
Services, and the city of San Francisco, respectively.

These programs offer a preview of what could soon be the norm in the
Golden State. In July 2021, California lawmakers set aside $35 million
dollars in grant funding for guaranteed income pilots across the state.
Though the law did not include any racial or ethnic qualifiers, in keeping
with the California constitution, the state’s social services department
said that it would only give out the grants to pilots that "center
equity." Grant applicants were encouraged to "embed an equity-focused
approach throughout each dimension" of their programs, including their
"eligibility."

"It’s astonishing to me how brazen the State of California and its various
Bay Areas local governments have become in violating the many laws and
constitutional provisions prohibiting race discrimination," said Gail
Heriot, a member of the United States Commission on Civil Rights and a
professor at the University of San Diego School of Law.

All three initiatives appear to violate the 14th Amendment, which bans
states from discriminating based on race, said Dan Morenoff, the executive
director of the American Civil Rights Project, as well as the California
constitution and the Civil Rights Act of 1866, which ban racial
discrimination in contracting. In addition, the Black Economic Equity
Movement appears to violate Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which
bans racial discrimination by the recipients of federal funds. The
National Institutes of Health, whose "health equity" initiative funded the
program, did not respond to a request for comment.

The blueprint for these programs comes from private philanthropic
ventures, which have experimented with supplemental income schemes in
Jackson, Miss., and Atlanta that are only available to black women.

Though both the Mississippi program, underwritten by the W.K. Kellogg
foundation, and the Atlanta program, funded by the Georgia Resilience and
Opportunity Fund, discriminate based on race, they probably don’t violate
any laws, said David Bernstein, a professor of constitutional law at
George Mason Law School.

But their California counterparts are another ball game.

"The publicly funded programs are clearly unconstitutional," Bernstein
said. "It’s not a close call."

In an implicit admission of the legal stakes, every agency involved in the
Abundant Birth Project denied using the racial criteria listed on the
program’s website. The San Francisco Department of Public Health, which
oversees the program, told the Washington Free Beacon that it is "open to
all San Franciscans," albeit "with focused efforts" to reach black and
Pacific Islander "pregnant and parenting people." Jason Montiel, a
spokesman for the California Department of Social Services, which in
November wrote a $5 million grant to the Abundant Birth Project so it
could expand to other parts of the state, said the expansion "will not use
race as a basis for eligibility."

That might come as news to Grant Colfax, the director of the San Francisco
health department: In a December 6 press release trumpeting the grant, he
said it would "help hundreds more Black birthing parents in California."
San Francisco mayor London Breed likewise implied that the expansion was
racially targeted, calling the Abundant Birth Project "a model to address
racial birth disparities."

The Black Economic Equity Movement and the Guaranteed Income for
Transgender People program did not respond to requests for comment.

The legal status of a fourth program, Oakland Resilient Families, is less
clear. The initiative provides $500 a month to "BIPOC families" living in
Oakland, according to a March 2021 press release from the city’s website,
which describes it as a "partnership" with "government leaders." In a June
2021 press release, however, the city said the initiative is "not a city-
run program and is 100 percent funded through philanthropic donations,"
adding that "any" low-income family "is welcome to apply."

Oakland Resilient Families also lists Justin Berton, a spokesman for
Oakland mayor Libby Schaaf (D.), as a point of contact for the allegedly
private program. Berton did not respond to a request for comment.

Published under: Anti-Racism, California, Equity, Feature, San Francisco

https://freebeacon.com/latest-news/universal-basic-income-hits-the-bay-
area-if-youre-black/
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