Bill Text: NY A06197 | 2023-2024 | General Assembly | Amended


Bill Title: Establishes the mothers and infants lasting change ("MILC") allowance to provide income to eligible participants for the last three months of pregnancy and the first 18 months of the child's life; excludes income received from the MILC allowance for purposes of supplemental nutrition assistance program eligibility.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 24-0)

Status: (Introduced) 2024-01-11 - print number 6197a [A06197 Detail]

Download: New_York-2023-A06197-Amended.html



                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________

                                         6197--A

                               2023-2024 Regular Sessions

                   IN ASSEMBLY

                                      April 3, 2023
                                       ___________

        Introduced  by M. of A. CLARK, JACKSON, SIMON, LEVENBERG, HEVESI, GONZA-
          LEZ-ROJAS, MEEKS, SHRESTHA -- read once and referred to the  Committee
          on  Social Services -- recommitted to the Committee on Social Services
          in accordance with Assembly Rule 3, sec. 2  --  committee  discharged,
          bill  amended,  ordered  reprinted  as amended and recommitted to said
          committee

        AN ACT to amend the social services law, in relation to establishing the
          mothers and infants lasting change allowance

          The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and  Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:

     1    Section  1.  This  act shall be known and may be cited as the "mothers
     2  and infants lasting change ("MILC") allowance".
     3    § 2. Legislative findings and intent. The legislature hereby finds and
     4  declares that child poverty in New York city and cities across New  York
     5  state  is  shamefully  high  and  will likely worsen if current economic
     6  trends continue. Half of the top six cities in the  United  States  with
     7  the highest child poverty rates are in New York state, disproportionate-
     8  ly affecting communities and children of color. In New York city, nearly
     9  1  in  4 children live in poverty. In Rochester and Buffalo, that number
    10  is even higher: 1 in 2 children live in poverty.
    11    The legislature hereby finds and declares that New Yorkers are  unable
    12  to cover their basic necessities and support their families, particular-
    13  ly in the face of rising interest rates and inflation. Most notably, the
    14  cost  of  childcare,  which already consumes a massive portion of family
    15  income, rose 41% during the pandemic, and the total cost  of  raising  a
    16  child  through  high  school has risen to more than $300,000, which is a
    17  $26,000 increase from five years ago and is likely to present a  heavier
    18  burden  for  low-income  parents  and families for whom expenses such as
    19  food, housing, and gas comprise an even larger portion of their income.
    20    The legislature  hereby  finds  and  declares  there  is  overwhelming
    21  evidence  that  the  prenatal-to-three  and  early childhood development

         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD04583-05-3

        A. 6197--A                          2

     1  period are critical for a child's future  prospects  and  affects  their
     2  physical,  mental,  emotional  and  social  outcomes  over a lifetime. A
     3  program targeting infants in this formative phase would help  break  the
     4  intergenerational cycle of poverty rather than attempting to mitigate it
     5  later  on,  creating  a  positive  impact on children's lives and saving
     6  government funds down the road.
     7    The legislature hereby finds and declares  it  is  proven  that  unre-
     8  stricted  cash is a direct and effective solution to alleviating poverty
     9  and meeting needs for families. This was shown on a national level  with
    10  the  overwhelming success of the expanded Child Tax Credit, which lifted
    11  millions of children out of poverty with its monthly payments and led to
    12  a 41% spike in child poverty the  first  month  it  expired.  The  unre-
    13  stricted  cash  intervention  further  proved  how  an investment in the
    14  earliest days of life can have multiplying effects: studies  have  found
    15  that  a  permanent expansion of the expanded Child Tax Credit would have
    16  generated 10 times as much revenue as it  cost.    New  York  state  has
    17  recently  made  a  commitment through the Child Poverty Reduction Act in
    18  December 2021 to reduce child poverty by 50%  over  the  course  of  ten
    19  years, with the support of the Child Poverty Reduction Advisory Council,
    20  and  there  is an opportunity for unrestricted cash to support this goal
    21  and help the state reach its target.
    22    Therefore, the legislature hereby finds and  declares  that  New  York
    23  state has an opportunity and obligation to invest in its most vulnerable
    24  residents  by leading the fight against childhood poverty, and toward an
    25  equitable economy for all,  through  a  guaranteed  income  program  for
    26  infants.
    27    §  3.  Article 6 of the social services law is amended by adding a new
    28  title 4-C to read as follows:
    29                                   TITLE 4-C
    30            MOTHERS AND INFANTS LASTING CHANGE ("MILC") ALLOWANCE
    31  Section 409-o. Mothers and infants lasting change allowance.
    32    § 409-o. Mothers and infants lasting change allowance. 1.  Within  one
    33  year  of the effective date of this section, the department shall estab-
    34  lish a mothers and infants lasting change  allowance  pilot  program  to
    35  support  low-income  families for three months of pregnancy and eighteen
    36  months of a child's life. Such pilot program  shall  be  in  effect  for
    37  twenty-one months.
    38    2.  (a)  The  department,  in  coordination with local social services
    39  districts, shall develop criteria that local social  services  districts
    40  shall  use  to  select a total of fifteen thousand eligible families for
    41  participation in the program.
    42    (b) Eligible individuals chosen for participation in the program shall
    43  receive a subsidy of one thousand dollars per month for the  last  three
    44  months of pregnancy and the first nine months of a child's life and five
    45  hundred  dollars  per month for the last nine months of participation in
    46  the program.
    47    (c) The department shall allocate the necessary funds to local  social
    48  services districts for selected eligible selected participants.
    49    (d)  Monthly  distributions  shall  be  made  by local social services
    50  districts on the first of each month for the duration of the program  to
    51  the eligible selected participants.
    52    3. Eligible participants shall:
    53    (a)  have  an income which is below two hundred percent of the federal
    54  poverty line. Such income shall  be  proven  by  providing  one  of  the
    55  following:
    56    (i) a filed tax return from the previous year;

        A. 6197--A                          3

     1    (ii)  a  letter  from an employer documenting the dates of work of the
     2  applicant and the yearly pay from the employer;
     3    (iii) a W-2 or 1099 form from the previous tax year; or
     4    (iv)  a  wage  notice provided pursuant to section one hundred ninety-
     5  five of the labor law that documents employment for  a  period  of  time
     6  within  six  months prior to the date the applicant certifies that he or
     7  she became eligible;
     8    (b) participate in monthly surveys provided by the department; and
     9    (c) meet any other criteria deemed necessary by the department.
    10    4. Of the fifteen thousand eligible participants:
    11    (a) Ten thousand participants shall reside in a city with a population
    12  of one hundred forty thousand or more; and
    13    (b) Five thousand participants shall reside in a rural area as defined
    14  in section twenty-nine hundred fifty-one of the public health law.
    15    5.  The  department,  in  coordination  with  local  social   services
    16  districts,  shall assist eligible participants with access to resources,
    17  subsidy management, and anything else deemed necessary  by  the  depart-
    18  ment.
    19    6.  The department and local social services districts shall conduct a
    20  monthly survey to determine the impact of the  program.  The  department
    21  shall prepare an interim report regarding the first twelve months of the
    22  program  which shall be completed by the eighteenth month of the program
    23  and a final report shall be made no later than twelve months  after  the
    24  completion of the twenty-one month program.
    25    §  4.  Paragraph  (a)  of subdivision 8 of section 131-a of the social
    26  services law is amended by adding a new subparagraph (xiv)  to  read  as
    27  follows:
    28    (xiv)  any financial assistance received by individuals from the moth-
    29  ers and infants lasting change ("MILC") allowance.   Such exemption  and
    30  disregard  shall  be  applicable  for  the length of time the individual
    31  receives the allowance.  The  commissioner  shall  seek  federal  waiver
    32  authority  to  disregard the income from the mothers and infants lasting
    33  change ("MILC") allowance for the purpose of the supplemental  nutrition
    34  assistance program.
    35    § 5. This act shall take effect immediately.
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