for their future, for our future: strengthening competitiveness, ending child poverty
DESCRIPTION
The loss of one person’s potential is a tragedy. The loss of millions’ is a national emergency.TRANSCRIPT
Paid for by Cory Booker for Senate.
FOR THEIR FUTURE, FOR OUR FUTURE
Strengthening American
Competitiveness by
Ending Child Poverty
in the United States
Paid for by Cory Booker for Senate.
3
FOR THEIR FUTURE, FOR OUR FUTURE:
ENDING CHILD POVERTY IN THE UNITED STATES
INTRODUCTION
The loss of one person’s potential is a tragedy. The loss of millions’ is a national
emergency.
Here’s why: America finds itself today in an unprecedented competition for talent,
creativity and intelligence. The knowledge-based, high-skilled jobs of the future – jobs
that can support a family and drive a community – will be won by those countries that
can best realize the potentials of their people. This is a worldwide, cut-throat competition,
and everyone is out to win it.
Allowing an American child to grow up in poverty makes victory for the U.S. impossible.
It may not guarantee the loss of that child’s potential, but it comes awfully close.
Because of child poverty, our nation loses out on the talent and ingenuity of millions of
people. And precious tax dollars – resources that will be stretched thinner with every
passing Baby Boom year – are misdirected: spent on prisons and preventable medical
interventions, instead of our schools and universities, instead of countless priorities that
would strengthen America’s competitive position.
If we want to win this global competition, we have to be smarter. And we have to
understand that this isn’t an urban problem, a suburban problem, or a rural problem. It’s
an American problem.
Fixing it does not simply mean strengthening our public education system, though, that is
critical. We must acknowledge that there are large numbers of American children, who
because of circumstance, are unlikely to be able to take advantage of the best schools or
the best teachers. We must acknowledge this reality and do something about it. These
children are born staring at a mountain they lack the tools to climb. In Newark, I see it
every day: So many children, generation after generation, repeating history.
I’ve fought to help end this cycle, and we’ve made headway. Our fatherhood program has
helped curb recidivism and strengthened families. Our financial empowerment centers
have enabled households to keep more of what they make, and I’ve worked to attract
more than $200 million in new investment to Newark’s public schools.
But combating poverty is a national problem, and it requires national solutions.
This plan is a roadmap for action. It is not only a plan to alleviate suffering and improve
the lives of individuals: It is a blueprint for strengthening our competitiveness by
fostering job growth and economic opportunity.
Paid for by Cory Booker for Senate.
4
In Christ’s admonition to care for the poor, he said, “What you do unto the least of these
my brothers, you do unto me.” There are far broader implications today for failing to
heed these words. It’s not just about an individual’s soul. It’s about the fate of our nation.
In a global competition with finite resources, the U.S. cannot afford to waste human
capital. We must harness the potential of every American. That means acting on the
simple truth that our fates today are tied together in unprecedented ways.
THE CHALLENGE
Make no mistake: Child poverty is a national epidemic that affects kids in every town in
New Jersey. It is linked to higher rates of asthma, diabetes, obesity, and crime,1 as well as
lower test scores,2 graduation rates, and earnings.
3 Once concentrated in our cities, child
poverty is both spreading to our suburbs and growing statewide. It has increased 25
percent across New Jersey since 2007,4 with marked increases in many smaller cities and
towns. Nationally, child and adult poverty rose by nearly two thirds in the suburbs
between 2000 and 2011, over twice the rate in cities.5 In New Jersey, some rural and
suburban counties have seen child poverty rates increase more than 100 percent since
2007.6
It has been estimated that child poverty costs the U.S. $500 billion annually—nearly 4
percent of GDP.7 This tally includes tens of billions of dollars lost to the associated costs
of crime, increased health expenditures, and foregone productivity.8 On top of costing
taxpayers and failing our moral obligations, New Jersey cannot compete economically if
it leaves behind more of its future workforce each year. There will always be other states,
1 Susan Popkin, “Treating the Disease of Childhood Poverty,” The Urban Institute (May 29,
2013), http://blog.metrotrends.org/2013/05/treating-disease-child-poverty/ 2 Richard J. Murnane. “Improving the Education of Children Living in Poverty,” 17 The Future of
Children 161-82 (2007), http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/foc/summary/v017/17.2murnane.html. 3 Harry J. Holzer et al., “The Economic Costs of Poverty in the United States: Subsequent Effects
of Children Growing up Poor,” Center for American Progress (2007), http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/poverty/report/2007/01/24/2450/the-economic-costs-of-
poverty/. 4 Between 2007-2011, child poverty increased by 27% in New Jersey. Advocates for Children of
New Jersey, New Jersey Pocket Guide: The State of Our Counties (2013),
http://www.acnj.org/admin.asp?uri=2081&action=15&di=2514&ext=pdf&view=yes 5 Poverty rates in cities increased by 29% and by 64% in suburbs between 2000-2011. Brad
Plumer, “Poverty Is Growing Twice As Fast in the Suburbs As in Cities,” Washington Post (May
23, 2013), http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/05/23/poverty-is-now-
growing-twice-as-fast-in-the-suburbs-as-in-the-city. 6 Child poverty rates increased by 102% in Cape May County, 124% in Hunterdon County, and
129% in Somerset County between 2007-2011. See New Jersey Pocket Guide, supra note 3. 7 Holzer et. al., supra note 1.
8 Id. at pg. 1.
Paid for by Cory Booker for Senate.
5
and other countries, willing to work for less. We—both New Jersey and the United
States—win not by being cheaper, but by being better. We win by offering the finest
workforce in the country, at the center of the global economy.
We must make eradicating child poverty and its effects a national mission. Fortunately, it
is entirely within our power. The United States cut poverty nearly in half in a single
decade from 1959 to 1969.9 If given the opportunity to be your Senator, I will make
eliminating child poverty the moral and economic priority it must be for New Jersey and
the United States to continue leading the world.
TAKING ACTION
I. Support strong families, affordable housing, and work that pays
a. Make work pay; and
b. Support adequate, geographically diverse affordable housing; and
c. Promote family success by supporting the involvement of two parents, gay or
straight, in their child’s life, and providing robust assistance to the heroic
work of single parents.
II. Improve health and nutrition
a. Deliver seamless health coverage that starts in the womb to every child, with
a focus on preventing costly chronic conditions before they develop; and
b. Ensure access to nutrition for every child, and improve available food choices so parents and children can make healthier decisions.
III. Provide world-class early care and education
a. Provide universal access to high-quality preschool starting at age 3; and
b. Make sure that every child has the opportunity to attend a world-class public
school with strong social supports and competitive, 21st-century standards.
IV. Provide Affordable College and Post-Secondary Career Training Options
a. Congress must reverse its recent failure to keep federal student loan rates
from doubling; and
9 U.S. Census Bureau, Number in Poverty and Poverty Rate: 1950 to 2010,
http://www.census.gov/hhes/www/poverty/data/incpovhlth/2010/figure4.pdf.
Paid for by Cory Booker for Senate.
6
b. Start college and professional / technical school trust accounts for children in
Earned Income Tax Credit households.
STRONG SUPPORT, HIGH EXPECTATIONS
Every child in New Jersey and across America should grow up in a strong family and
community, receive excellent nutrition and healthcare, and have access to high-quality
pre-K and world-class public schools. We should give every child a strong foundation
and make crystal clear that with strong support comes high expectations. The weight of
America’s future challenges, ranging from international competition to growing out of
our deficit by creating a stronger economy, rests on their shoulders.
I. STRONG FAMILIES, AFFORDABLE HOUSING, AND WORK THAT PAYS
Strong families and communities are the bedrock of success, yet too many kids grow up
in surroundings too strained to provide the support they need. To strengthen our families
and communities, we should:
a. Make work pay. Work doesn’t work for many of our families and communities,
robbing both of the support they need and providing our children less incentive to
study hard and stay in school. The $7.25 minimum wage does not come close to
supporting an adequate standard of living in most places, including in New Jersey.
Create pathways out of low-wage work by making sure jobs supported
by federal funds, like those in health care and child care, offer a real
career track upward, with decent wages and opportunities for training
and advancement.10
Pass The Fair Minimum Wage Act of 2013, which, among other
reforms, will raise the federal minimum wage to $10.10 per hour over
two years. If the minimum wage had tracked productivity growth since
1968, it would be over $21 per hour.11
Studies have found that for
every dollar increase in the minimum wage, spending by households
10
Jacob S. Hacker & Nate Loewentheil, Prosperity Economics: Building an Economy for All
(2012), http://www.goiam.org/images/pdfs/Hacker%20-%20Prosperity%20Economics.pdf. 11
Nick Hanauer, “The Capitalist’s Case for a $15 Minimum Wage,” Bloomberg News (June 19,
2013), http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-06-19/the-capitalist-s-case-for-a-15-minimum-
wage.html.
Paid for by Cory Booker for Senate.
7
with minimum wage worers increases by $2,800 a year.12
One study
found that this legislation, specifically, would generate more than $32
billion in GDP growth.13
Bolster the earned income tax credit (EITC) by reducing its “marriage
penalty,” in which a single parent’s credit may decrease once she or he
marries and files a joint tax return. Expanding the eligibility range by
$5,000 for married filers would substantially reduce the penalty. The
EITC benefits nearly 600,000 households in New Jersey and each year
lifts about 3 million children out of poverty nationally14
– more than
any other federal program.15
b. Support adequate, geographically diverse affordable housing, and do more to
help families facing foreclosure. Affordable housing is the foundation of strong
families and communities. Yet, in many towns, hard-working New Jerseyans
cannot afford a home without spending over a third of their income on rent or
mortgage payments.16
Residents of affordable homes have the means to support a
family and purchase goods and services in their communities.
Preserve and expand federal housing programs like Section 8 that
make housing more affordable for thousands of New Jersey families,
and improve enforcement of anti-discrimination laws that too often fail
to protect tenants using Section 8 vouchers from being turned away
from wealthier and geographically diverse communities.
Expand affordable housing options with convenient access to urban
areas by public transit, so that young professionals, empty-nesters, and
workers can afford a home in New Jersey’s more affluent towns,
12
Daniel Aaronson, Sumit Angarwal & Eric French, “The Spending and Debt Response to
Minimum Wage Hikes,” Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago (Feb. 2011),
http://www.chicagofed.org/webpages/publications/working_papers/2007/wp_23.cfm. 13
David Cooper and Doug Hall, “Raising the Federal Minimum Wage to $10.10 Would Give
Working Families, and the Overall Economy, A Much-Needed Boost.” Economic Policy Institute
Briefing Paper (March 13, 2013), http://www.epi.org/publication/bp357-federal-minimum-wage-
increase/. 14
581,000 households in New Jersey receive EITC benefits. Chuck Marr, Jimmy Charite &
Chye-Ching Huang, “Earned Income Tax Credit Promotes Work, Encourages Children’s Success
at School, Research Finds,” Center for Budget and Policy Priorities (Apr. 9, 2013),
http://www.cbpp.org/cms/?fa=view&id=3793. 15
Arloc Sherman, “Safety Net Effective at Fighting Poverty But Has Weakened for the Very
Poorest,” Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, (July 6, 2009),
http://www.cbpp.org/cms/?fa=view&id=2859. 16
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, “Affordable Housing” (May 9, 2013),
http://www.hud.gov/offices/cpd/affordablehousing/.
Paid for by Cory Booker for Senate.
8
which can develop greener, denser, more vibrant downtowns in the
process. In low-income suburbs only a quarter of jobs in metro areas
are accessible via transit in less than 90 minutes.17
The Federal Housing Finance Agency should immediately take steps
to approve principal reductions for underwater mortgages held by
Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. Negative equity is a driving cause of
mortgage delinquency18
and Fannie and Freddie should play a
leadership role in helping homeowners stay in their homes. The
federal government should also help community development finance
institutions and nonprofit community banks to compete in the
secondary mortgage markets by appropriating additional Hardest Hit
Funds to acquire distressed home mortgages. Building on FHA's
Distressed Asset Stabilization Program, HUD and the U.S.
Treasury should incentivize portfolio and private-label security
mortgage holders to auction distressed mortgages at deep discounts to
face value in order to prevent foreclosures and help housing markets
recover. Finally, the federal government should restore funding to the
network of nonprofit foreclosure counselors who are the front line of
defense to predators and scam artists preying on desperate
homeowners.
c. Promote family success by supporting the involvement of two parents, gay or
straight, in their child’s life, and providing robust assistance to the heroic work
of single parents.
Work towards participation by two parents, regardless of sexual
orientation, in children’s lives. Nationwide, over 40 percent of births
are to unmarried women.19
One parent is often enough, and countless
single mothers and fathers do the job of raising a child as well or better
than two-parent households despite the serious challenges of raising a
child alone. That said, two sets of hands—and two paychecks—is
usually better, especially for families juggling several jobs and
struggling to make ends meet. The federal government should support
17
Confronting Suburban Poverty, “Infographic: What’s Driving the Rapid Rise of Poverty” (May
17, 2013), http://confrontingsuburbanpoverty.org/wp-
content/uploads/2013/05/Brookings_Toolkit_National-Infographic.jpg. 18 Ronel Elul et. al., “What ‘Triggers’ Mortgage Default?” Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia,
(April 2010), https://www.philadelphiafed.org/research-and-data/publications/working-
papers/2010/wp10-13.pdf. 19
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “Unmarried Childbearing” (Jan. 18, 2013),
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/unmarry.htm (In 2010, 40.8% of all births were to unmarried
women.).
Paid for by Cory Booker for Senate.
9
the expansion of successful local initiatives like Newark’s Fatherhood
Program, which engages more fathers in the lives of their children. It is
never too late for lapsed fathers and mothers to reengage.
Work to support single parent or grandparent households. In Newark,
for example, we started a program focused on grandparents raising
grandchildren. The federal government should provide funding to
support existing programs and incentivize their growth and
proliferation.
II. HEALTH AND NUTRITION
Few things slow a child’s development more dramatically than chronic disease, and few
conditions predict a lifetime of health challenges more reliably than childhood obesity.
Making sure our future parents, workers, and leaders are healthy is the most basic step to
ensuring future prosperity. To do so, we should:
a. Deliver seamless health coverage that starts in the womb for every child and
prevents costly chronic conditions before they develop. About one in 10 New
Jersey kids lacks health insurance, nearly quadruple the rate in Massachusetts and
almost double the rate in Connecticut.20
Even for those with coverage, over a
quarter of children in Medicaid experienced one or more gaps in coverage over
just a three-year period.21
Expand access to health care through implementation of the landmark
Affordable Care Act, and work hard to expand Medicaid enrollment
among poor and immigrant communities. By expanding federal
funding for education and outreach efforts, particularly for states that
regrettably did not opt for state run exchanges, states will be better
able to collaborate with community-based organizations and schools to
identify and enroll our most vulnerable citizens. The goal is health
insurance for every single child; regular doctor visits and preventive
care improve health and save money.
20
9.4% of children in New Jersey do not have health insurance, compared to 2.5% in
Massachusetts and 5.3% in Connecticut. Children’s Defense Fund, State Data Repository,
http://www.childrensdefense.org/child-research-data-publications/data/state-data-
repository/cits/2013/2013-children-in-the-states-complete.pdf (last updated March 2013). 21
26.7% of children with full Medicaid benefits experienced at least one gap in coverage between
2005-2007. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, “Medicaid Policy Brief” (June 2012),
http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Computer-Data-and-
Systems/MedicaidDataSourcesGenInfo/Downloads/MAX_IB6_EnrollGaps.pdf.
Paid for by Cory Booker for Senate.
10
Use competitive grants to support the design and implementation of
state-level comprehensive performance monitoring systems that
quarterback the care of every child in Medicaid. Programs similar to
Connecticut’s HUSKY independent performance monitoring system
will help ensure that children stay enrolled and receive appropriate,
effective treatment. Too often, changes in eligibility or life
circumstances create gaps in care that allow preventable illnesses to go
undetected or untreated. The Connecticut program has also gone a
long way to ensure accountability for tax dollars spent on Medicaid.22
Increase the federal government’s support of Nurse Family
Partnership-type programs, creating a federal 50 percent matching
program to provide at-home prenatal care and counseling for all first-
time, at-risk pregnancies. Such a program, at a 2.5-year price tag of
approximately $8,500 per pregnancy, would provide intensive at-home
nurse services to the mother and child from the second trimester until
the child’s second birthday. A study funded by the Pew Center
estimated the returns of such a program exceed $73,000 over the life
of the child.23
Other studies have shown a reduction in crime of 56
percent for mothers and 16 percent for children; 24
a 48 percent
reduction in child abuse and neglect; a 67 percent reduction in
behavioral and cognitive problems;25
and a 60 percent decline in infant
death rates.26
b. Ensure access to nutrition for every child, and improve available food choices
so parents and children can make healthier decisions. Even here in one of
America’s richest states, one in eight households do not have enough food, and
nearly 400,000 children depend on food stamps.27
And the food that is available
tends to be very unhealthy: More than a third of New Jersey kids from ages 2-5
22
Connecticut Voices for Children: “Independent Performance Monitoring in the HUSKY
Program: Ensuring Accountability for Scarce State Dollars,” (February, 2013),
http://www.ctvoices.org/sites/default/files/h13perfmonitorfacts.pdf . 23
Ted R. Miller, “Nurse-Family Partnership Home Visitation: Costs, Outcomes, and Return on
Investment,” H.B.S.A, Inc. (Sept. 2012),
http://www.pewstates.org/uploadedFiles/PCS_Assets/2013/Costs_and_ROI_executive_summary.
pdf. 24
Washington State Institute for Public Policy, Evidence-Based Public Policy Options to Reduce
Future Prison Construction, Criminal Justice Costs, and Crime Rates (2006),
http://www.wsipp.wa.gov/rptfiles/06-10-1201.pdf. 25
Nurse-Family Partnership, “Benefits and Costs” (Nov. 2011),
http://www.nursefamilypartnership.org/assets/PDF/Fact-sheets/NFP_Benefits-Cost. 26
Miller, supra note 24. 27
Roughly 396,000 children in New Jersey were SNAP program participants in 2012. Advocates
for Children of New Jersey, New Jersey Kids Count: The State of Our Children: 2013, http://www.acnj.org/admin.asp?uri=2081&action=15&di=2463&ext=pdf&view=yes.
Paid for by Cory Booker for Senate.
11
are overweight or obese,28
and nationally, severe obesity rates are almost twice as
high among poor children.29
Given the choices they face, from the large size of
portions to the high sugar and fat content of many foods, it is little surprise so
many poor children struggle with weight. These are serious challenges, but we
aren’t without options.
Preserve funding for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program
(formerly known as food stamps), as well as for free and reduced-price
school lunches. The stalled Farm Bill debate, with two sides debating
between bad and worse when it comes to SNAP, is indicative of
Congress’s deep misunderstanding of a fundamental truth: That in the
richest nation on earth, not a single child should go hungry—nor can
we afford them to.
Eradicate food deserts – places without easy access to fresh food,
where the main sources of food are convenience stores and fast food
restaurants. The problem in New Jersey is enormous: 300,000 of our
residents live in more than 100 food deserts.30
We must support proven
and promising food access programs, such as Newark’s Fresh Foods
Program, and the First Lady’s focus on strategic public-private
partnerships to assist underserved neighborhoods. Such initiatives do
not only bring healthy fresh foods to food deserts, but also new jobs
and economic development to some of our most heavily impacted
communities.
Engage in a forceful and public dialogue with the food industry
focused on how to stem the tide of child obesity. The problem is far
bigger than sugary drinks and Happy Meals—it implicates portion
sizes, dinner-plate diameters, and sedentary lifestyles, and we must
solve it. We must have this conversation, just as I did as co-chair of the
First Lady’s Partnership for a Healthier America, and work with the
food industry to address this crisis.
28
Centers for Disease Control, “New Jersey: State Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Obesity
Profile,” (Sept. 2012), http://www.cdc.gov/obesity/stateprograms/fundedstates/pdf/New-Jersey-
State-Profile.pdf (34.3% of New Jersey children are overweight or obese). 29
Nationally, children in low-income families are 1.7 times more likely to be severely obese.
Food Research and Action Center, “Relationship Between Poverty and Overweight or Obesity,”
http://frac.org/initiatives/hunger-and-obesity/are-low-income-people-at-greater-risk-for-
overweight-or-obesity/ (last visited July 1, 2013). 30
“Stranded in ‘Food Deserts,’ Hundreds of Thousands of N.J. Residents Lack Access to
Healthy, Fresh Food,” Newark Star-Ledger (Aug. 8, 2011),
http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2011/08/stranded_in_food_deserts_hundr.html (more than
340,000 New Jerseyans live in food deserts).
Paid for by Cory Booker for Senate.
12
III. WORLD-CLASS EARLY CARE AND EDUCATION
Healthy children from strong families and communities are a good start, but education is
essential. The United States lags many of its peer nations in student achievement,31
and
New Jersey lags many of its peer states in educational attainment: Maryland,
Connecticut, Colorado, and Massachusetts all boast a greater proportion of high school
and college graduates.32
Creating a world-class education system means that we must:
a. Provide universal access to high-quality preschool for children beginning at
age three. High-quality pre-kindergarten education produces huge improvements
in the lives of children and extraordinarily high returns on every dollar spent, yet
America is one of only a few advanced nations that does not provide universal
early education.33
Guarantee universal access to preschool, starting at age 3, for every
child by 2025. “Universal access” does not mean paying for preschool
for families who can already afford it; it means ensuring those who
cannot are able to provide that opportunity to their children. A quality
pre-kindergarten foundation improves educational and health
outcomes for at-risk children and enhances long-term economic
productivity.34
Implement a rigorous quality assurance system to hold preschools to
the same high standards we expect of the rest of our education system.
The early years are when the opportunity for progress is greatest. Our
education priorities should reflect that.
b. Make sure every child has the opportunity to attend a world-class public school
with strong social supports and competitive, 21st-century standards. Public
schools are the chief institution in our country for preparing children to succeed in
the world. Yet, millions of children attend underperforming schools that leave
them unprepared to compete at home and abroad.
Support competitive grant programs for expanded learning time in
low-performing schools. Increased instruction time ensures that
31
National Center for Education Statistics, Program for International Student Assessment
Results: 2009, http://nces.ed.gov/surveys/pisa/pisa2009highlights.asp. 32
U.S. Census Bureau, Educational Attainment by State (2012),
http://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/2012/tables/12s0233.pdf. 33
Hacker & Loewentheil, supra note 10. 34
Cynthia Brown et al., “Investing in Our Children: A Plan to Expand Access to Preschool and
Child Care,” Center for American Progress (2013),
http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/education/report/2013/02/07/52071/investing-in-our-
children/.
Paid for by Cory Booker for Senate.
13
teachers have the time they need to close the achievement gap, and has
been implemented by many of the most successful schools in low-
income areas. In a study of schools that have extended learning time,
over half outperformed district averages by more than 20 percent in
Math and/or English.35
Promote the use of competitive federal dollars, like Race to the Top
funding, to spur innovation and reform in our schools. These programs
encourage schools to adopt a framework of best practices and provide
support through funding and metrics-based assessments. Over the past
two years, states that received federal Race to the Top funding have
adopted innovative STEM education programs, built intensive data
systems to enhance classroom instruction, and used teacher
evaluations to improve the quality of instruction.
IV. Provide Affordable College and Post-Secondary Career Training Options
A highly reliable predictor of whether an American is poor is whether his or her parents
were poor. Access to higher education offers a pathway out of this cycle. Yet, in the past
ten years the cost of tuition at four-year public colleges has increased by 66 percent36
and low-income families now spend the equivalent of 72 percent of their income to pay
for one year of higher education.37
a. Congress must reverse its recent failure to keep federal student loan rates
from doubling and make post-secondary education more affordable. The
current trends make it difficult for most, from the poor to the middle class, to
afford college. We must also do more to control costs and offer alternatives.
Act to address Congress’s failure last week to stop Stafford student
loan rates from doubling. This affects all students with federal loans,
from the poor to the middle class, and is fundamentally inexcusable.
We must do more to ensure that every young child has the resources
they need to advance their education. Their success and our economic
35
18 of 30 schools studied outperformed the district average in Math and/or English by more than
20 percent. See Claire Kaplan & Roy Chan, “Time Well Spent: Eight Powerful Practices of
Successful Expanded-Time Schools,” National Center on Time & Learning (2013),
http://issuu.com/nationalcenterontimelearning/docs/timewellspent/1?e=0. 36
"The Price of College: A Background Primer," New America Foundation,
(2013), http://pnpi.newamerica.net/spotlight/the_price_of_college. 37
"High College Costs, Low Aid Burden Struggling Families," The Education Trust, (2011),
http://www.finance.senate.gov/newsroom/chairman/release/?id=16f12ec7-f0db-4e15-95a4-
1aad82db2f8a.
Paid for by Cory Booker for Senate.
14
competitiveness rely upon it.
Support President Obama's efforts to link federal funding for campus-
based aid programs to college affordability and improvements in
education quality. The President's plan provides states with significant
financial incentives to curb rising costs and helps ensure that taxpayer
dollars go to colleges that are doing as much as possible to provide
affordable, high-quality education.
Promote innovative policies, such as technical training programs, that
strengthen alternatives to traditional four-year schools and give
participants a concrete path to the middle class.38
By strengthening
community colleges and providing credit for skills acquired outside
the classroom we can reward individual initiative, decrease the cost of
education, and make college more accessible to students with
nontraditional schedules.
b. Start college and professional / technical school trust accounts for children
in Earned Income Tax Credit households. We can promote work, deliver the
American Dream, and reduce long-term costs to society by making college a
reality for millions of low-income children.
We should help poor working families plan for college by launching
an ambitious college savings trust plan tied to the Earned Income Tax
Credit: a $400 per year (tied to inflation), per child deposit, into a trust
account that is specifically designated for approved post-secondary
college or career education. The deposit would be issued in
conjunction with a family’s EITC payment and would need to be
accessed within a set time frame following high school graduation.
This program will:
o Incentivize work by bolstering EITC benefits; and
o Promote planning for college or post-secondary professional
education in poor households; and
o Pay for close to a quarter of an average four-year public
38
"300 Million Engines of Growth: A Middle-Out Plan for Jobs, Business, and a Growing
Economy," Center for American Progress, (June
2013), http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/economy/report/2013/06/13/66204/300-million-
engines-of-growth/.
Paid for by Cory Booker for Senate.
15
college tuition,39
and an even higher share of most technical or
vocational training; and
o Allow states, localities, philanthropists, and the families and
friends of participating children to access up to $100 per year
(tied to inflation) of supplemental federal matching funds for
accounts, and make supplemental unmatched deposits beyond
that.
WE’RE ALL IN THIS TOGETHER
Child poverty is not an “us versus them” problem, as it has too often been framed.
Allowing a single child to fall through the cracks is a catastrophic failure for that child, to
be sure, but it also comes at a high cost for everyone in our society. We, in New Jersey
and in America, need everyone to pull his or her own weight. Our competitiveness in the
world, the strength of our families and communities, our ability to grow our economy out
of our long-term deficits, and the very question of whether we will offer the American
Dream to everyone, depends on how we face the epidemic of child poverty.
39
The average cost of tuition and fees at public four-year institutions is $8,655. College Board,
“In-State Tuition and Fees by State and Sector: 2012-13 and 5-Year Percentage Change,” (2013),
http://trends.collegeboard.org/college-pricing/figures-tables/state-tuition-and-fees-state-and-
sector-2012-13-and-5-year-percentage-change. The EITC college tax credit would set aside up to
$7,200 (or $9,000 with full matching funds) before a child attends college.