GAMC is not the end of the Campaign –
Disabled, ill and very poor Minnesotans are still in the bull’s eye
General Assistance
and the Minnesota Family Investment Program:
Just as important as unemployment insurance during a recession
General Assistance and MFIP offer income support to low-wage workers who become seriously ill, disabled or cannot find work.
• 64% of the men and women who turn to General Assistance are seriously ill and unable to work during their illness.
• The most common reason a parent enrolls on the Minnesota Family Investment Program is just having lost a job. They are most likely to have worked in retail, hotel/restaurant, temporary agencies or health care.
Work protections do not exist evenly for all workers
• Only 50% of unemployed workers in Minnesota collect unemployment insurance.
• Only 33% of U.S. workers earning $10.50 an hour or less have paid sick leave — while 81% of those earning more than $24 an hour do.
• Only one-third of Minnesota employers offer paid sick leave and one in 10 employers offer paid time off (which combines paid sick leave, vacation and personal leave).
• Only half of Minnesota’s workers are offered short or long-term disability insurance through their employers; only 10% of part-time workers are offered the coverage.
The spending on these programs has not been increasing.
• The combined state spending on General Assistance and the Minnesota Family Investment Program is barely one half of one percent.
• Minnesota has not increased the assistance Minnesotans receive in these programs since 1986: someone on General Assistance receives $203 a month; a parent with two children on the Minnesota Family Investment Program receives $532 a month.
• The state budget forecast expects a decline in state spending on MFIP for the second year in a row and only a 1% increase in spending for General Assistance.
33,000 Minnesota men and women receive General Assistance benefits in a month. 29,000 Minnesota families receive cash assistance in a month. They rely on this income assistance when illness, disability, lost transportation or child care, changing shift demands or reduced hours mean a lost job. General Assistance and MFIP are bare-bones substitutes for unemployment insurance, paid sick leave, short and long-term disabilities and living wages that can cover not only shelter, food and clothing but transportation and child care costs.