CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 2023 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“REVIVE THIS BILL, LET FOSTER KIDS KEEP THEIR OWN
MONEY”
If there’s one California politician who
has consistently run as a child welfare advocate, it is Gov. Gavin Newsom,
father of four.
So if there’s one bill he should not
have vetoed this fall, it was the lone proposed law that actually promised to
put money into the hands of youngsters who need it most: foster children.
And yet, there was Newsom’s Oct. 8 veto
message: “I am returning Assembly Bill 1512 without my signature…”
Some background here: California has
between 55,000 and 60,000 children in foster care at any given time. Many are
disabled youths from poor families. Some have seen one or both parents die.
Others have been placed there because parents cannot cope with them for any of
a host of possible reasons.
About 20 percent of foster kids get
monthly payments (ranging from $1,000 to about $2,400, depending on the child’s
financial background) under the federal Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
program. But across the nation, including in California, some counties take all
or part of the money from those kids and use it to refund themselves for
payments they make to foster parents and other expenses of caring for foster
kids.
So, unlike almost all non-foster kids, youngsters who have suffered the
most tragedies and other difficulties often are actually paying for their own
support. This can come at the expense of their future.
Newsom had a chance to correct this by
signing AB 1512, sponsored by Democratic Assemblyman Isaac Bryan of Culver
City. The measure would have prevented California counties from taking benefits
like SSI payments away from orphaned or disabled children to cover costs of
their foster care.
But Newsom turned into a bean-counting bureaucrat in considering this
potential law. He said he vetoed it because the question did not come up during
last summer’s negotiations on the state budget. Uh-huh. As if a $19 million
expense (the approximate cost of letting the kids keep their own cash) would be
anything more than the proverbial drop in the bucket of a $311 billion state
budget. Letting kids keep their cash for future use would add a small fraction
of 1 percent to that budget.
Said Newsom, “With our state facing continuing economic risk…it is
important to remain disciplined when considering bills with significant fiscal
implications, such as this measure.” Less than one-tenth of one percent is
significant?
By contrast, the money that might pile
up in bank accounts held for foster kids might be very significant to them once
their foster care eligibility ends when they turn 18.
No foster child has anything more than a
high school education when that time arrives. High-paying jobs in technology
and management will never be open to most of them unless they are especially
determined and somehow find scholarship money, loans or part-time employment
allowing them to attend college, which can increase earning power
exponentially.
But if foster kids have SSI money
awaiting them at age 18, things can be different. Those funds can add up to
tens of thousands of dollars per child, enough for modest living expenses while
attending community colleges and later transferring to four-year schools. It’s
also money that can prevent former foster kids from becoming homeless.
Newsom has essentially foreclosed these
possibilities for many fostered youngsters for at least another year.
It’s not as if California would have
been the first to tell counties to keep hands off that money. States like
Arizona, New Mexico and Oregon did that soon after confiscations were exposed
in a 2021 investigation by NPR and the Pulitzer Prize winning Marshall Project.
Meanwhile, two of California’s biggest
counties, San Diego and Los Angeles, backed AB 1512.
Said Bryan, if counties don’t take
money, “it is not lost revenue for them; this is stolen money to begin with.”
The fact that Newsom didn’t recognize
both this and the boost the money might give aged-out foster children boggles
the mind.
The bottom line: If ever a vetoed bill
deserved a rerun, it is AB 1512, which appears certain to be reintroduced after
the Legislature reconvenes in December. Maybe if this bill reaches his desk
again, Newsom will actually live up to his child advocacy rhetoric.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book,
"The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the
Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now available in a soft cover
fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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