In In The News

Low-income Michiganders could face cuts to federal food, health care and heating assistance programs under proposed regulatory changes from the President Trump administration.

The White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is pushing changes to how the government calculates the official definition of poverty in the United States. The technical recalculation could have major effects: the poverty line is used to determine eligibility for more than 40 different federal assistance programs.

In 2018, there were 38.1 million people living in poverty in the United States, almost 12% of the population, according to a report from the U.S. Census Bureau. Michigan is higher than the national average with 14.1% living in poverty. That’s down slightly from 14.2% in 2017.

Gilda Jacobs, president and CEO of the Michigan League for Public Policy, a Lansing-based nonpartisan think tank, said the administration’s changes will impact housing, heating and food assistance for low-income people.

“I think President Trump is confused about what ‘moving the needle on poverty’ means,” she said. “Recalculating the poverty threshold to lower the count of people in poverty does nothing to fix the real problem, and will be particularly harmful here in Michigan. While our unemployment rate has gone down, our poverty rate is still several points higher than the national rate, meaning more people are working but still barely getting by. Taking vital food, housing, heating and other resources away from more people in Michigan and nationwide flies in the face of good governance and sound leadership.”

Read more at Michigan Advance