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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe US town that pays every pregnant woman $1,500: 'We're not OK with our babies being born into poverty'
When Angela Sintery first learned about Rx Kids, a program for new mothers in her home town of Flint, Michigan, she thought someone must be trying to scam her.
I had some teacher friends that kept sending me links saying: You need to apply for this. Its a brand-new program. We think you qualify, Sintery said. But it seemed too good to be true.
The program promised $1,500 for all expectant mothers during pregnancy and $500 per month for the first year of their infants life. All Sintery had to do was upload a copy of her ultrasound and ID. Pregnant with her second child 19 years after shed had her first, Sintery needed all new baby supplies. And as a preschool teacher, shed be grateful for any help she could get paying for all of it.
It wasnt too good to be true. Researchers at Michigan State University had just launched the United Statess first community-wide, unconditional cash transfer program for new families, and Sintery who gave birth to her daughter Jolene Love in May 2024 qualified.
It took so much stress away, said Sintery. I used that money to buy my car seat, to buy her bassinet and her crib. She was also able to take the first 14 weeks of her daughters life off from work, and afford diapers and wipes in the months to come. The extra money helped Sintery step back and enjoy my pregnancy.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/sep/15/rx-kids-flint-michigan-pregnancy
What a fantastic idea!

Diamond_Dog
(38,482 posts)Youll never get the Republican faction on board 100%, though.
Who was it, some Repuke lawmaker who said, in regard to monetary subsidies for low-income folks, Theyll just use it to buy drugs?
OLDMDDEM
(2,738 posts)Bernardo de La Paz
(58,398 posts)Totally Tunsie
(11,178 posts)And - yes - it's a nice program.
HOWEVER, does anyone really believe that $7,500 is going to save a baby from poverty? Pediatrician Mona Hanna is being quite short-sighted if she thinks that once the formula is ingested, the diapers are discarded, and the crib is outgrown, the poverty has been solved. You don't "prescribe away poverty with $7,500. It helps, but it solves nothing IMO.
Jilly_in_VA
(13,047 posts)It's a START, FFS!
Totally Tunsie
(11,178 posts)unless there are other many programs to continue to lift them from then on. What about daycare expenses? What about school lunches and clothing? What about transportation?
It's a "start", but it doesn't "prescribe away poverty".
Not being a "Debbie Downer"...just realistic and practical.
Jilly_in_VA
(13,047 posts)And you need to look at the other comments, including the ones about the other countries where this isw done. And yes you are.
Torchlight
(5,695 posts)And it seems to be doing it rather well.
WhiskeyGrinder
(25,689 posts)Jilly_in_VA
(13,047 posts)and the point of the article. It doesn't SOLVE anything, it just eases the grind of that first year a bit. Uganda is doing the same thing and has found it helps new moms a great deal. The democratic socialist nations of western Europe do similar (especially Finland) with extended maternity (and paternity) leaves,
eased time off for parents of young children who are sick, etc. Not us, oh no! Just "tough it out", Americans!