Cash payments to Georgia parents start this month

Some believe the new stimulus will lift many children out of poverty, but tax policy experts say it’s not so simple
Alice Onebo, the mother of 12-year-old Noah,  is anxious to receive her monthly child credit payments from the IRS. She plans to use the money to buy groceries.

Credit: Submitted photo

Credit: Submitted photo

Alice Onebo, the mother of 12-year-old Noah, is anxious to receive her monthly child credit payments from the IRS. She plans to use the money to buy groceries.

Alice Onebo was laid off in October 2019 from a five-year job as an estimator at a construction firm. The timing was especially bad, because just two months prior she had purchased a home in Decatur for herself and her 12-year-old son, Noah.

Then, the pandemic hit, and opportunities for finding steady work vanished along with her income. Because her son needed her to be at home to help with on-line school, her job choices were limited. So, she agreed to a remote job as a customer service representative.

“I was mom and teacher,’' Onebo said. “That was just too much on a person.”

Now, as her son prepares to return to in-person school, the single parent is expected to receive $250 on July 15, and then every month for the rest of this year, because of the expanded child tax credit provided under the American Rescue Act.

Hundreds of thousands of Georgia families will receive monthly payments of up to $300 for each dependent child, a measure intended to help families that took pandemic-related hits to their finances.

Notably, the payments are projected to cut the child poverty rate in half, and anti-poverty groups say the program will do more to close racial equity gaps than any single policy in decades. In particular, children of color, who are disproportionately impacted by hunger and poverty, stand to benefit the most, said Sergio Mata-Cisneros, domestic policy analyst for Bread for the World, a Christian-based, anti-poverty group in Washington, D.C.

“It really is historic,’' Mata-Cisneros said. “People are having this extra inflow of cash will be able to buy groceries and pay bills, while families whose parents have two jobs and the second job is really crappy may be eligible to quit and spend more time with their children.”

There’s little debate about the impact of a tax program that delivers monthly payments to families in need. Nearly half a million Georgia children live in poverty — one in every five children — federal estimates show.

But policy experts caution that there is no quick-fix to the poverty dilemma. Over the long term, it’s unlikely that the six monthly payments will be able to sustain families, said Francine Lipman, a tax law professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, who serves as a Nevada tax commissioner.

To make a lasting impact, other factors must be addressed, such as the availability of housing, food, transportation and healthcare.

“We’ve got to realize if it’s going to mitigate poverty, it’s going to take belts and suspenders and all hands on deck, and really trying to come up with different strategies,” said Lipman, who specializes in access to justice in tax.

Another challenge to the program’s success will be how well the IRS can deliver on the monumental task. In its role as the nation’s tax collection agency, it is already overburdened and plagued by limited resources, tax policy experts said.

Now, it’s being asked to determine eligibility and deliver benefits to an estimated 39 million households, including some of the most transient populations in the nation. Low- and moderate-income families tend to move more often and experience more changes in life circumstances than the general population.

“If they are able to pull this off, and I have a very optimistic outlook that they will, it will be quite an amazing thing,’' said Mark Steber, chief tax information officer at Jackson Hewitt, the nation’s second-largest tax preparation service.

Others warn that many of the nation’s very poorest families may be left out altogether. Parents that haven’t filed federal tax returns because their income is too meager can sign up through a non-filer tool that the IRS has created.

“We've got to realize if it's going to mitigate poverty, it's going to take belts and suspenders and all hands on deck, and really trying to come up with different strategies."

But not all will have access to the Internet or to a computer. That will make it more difficult for the agency to obtain current information on families’ marital status, child custody arrangements, the birth of a child and other circumstances that can impact eligibility.

“It’s difficult to imagine how all the qualifying families will be able to receive their share,” said Paul Sundin, an Arizona-based CPA.

Meanwhile, Onebo, the Decatur mom, said once she receives her check, she will head to the grocery store.

“I’m always just trying to keep food in the house,’' she said.

Most families qualify

The original child tax credit program — implemented in 1997 — provided a credit of $2,000 per dependent child under 17. But it was not fully refundable, and parents had to wait until they filed their tax returns to collect it. Those who didn’t file taxes weren’t eligible.

The expanded child tax credit provides annual payments of $3,000 per child ages 6 to 17, and $3,600 per child for children ages 5 and younger. There is no minimum income limit. And instead of making taxpayers wait until spring to receive the payment in a refund, the the $1.6 trillion economic stimulus package passed by Congress in March allows parents to get half of the amount in monthly payments through this December. Parents will receive the remainder when they file taxes next year.

Not only low-income families will benefit. Also eligible for the full payments are individual taxpayers earning up to $75,000 a year and married couples filing jointly and earning up to $150,000. Above those amounts, the payments start to phase out.

Russ Story, a financial adviser in Douglas, said many people aren’t aware of the sizeable payments. So he is trying to raise public awareness by providing information about the credit on his website.

He said he is expects some couples will try to set aside some of the payments for the benefit of the child to help pay for their education, including college or a technical school.

“The folks that are higher up in the echelon, in the middle and upper-income brackets, this gives them an opportunity to further that child’s potential success,” he said.

For children of the poor, however, the money may not have a lasting impact.

“The folks that are higher up in the echelon, in the middle and upper-income brackets, this gives them an opportunity to further that child's potential success."

- Russ Story, a financial adviser in Douglas

Researchers at the Center on Poverty and Social Policy at Columbia University projected that the American Rescue Plan would lift more than five million children out of poverty this year. But that could only be done as part of a combination of policy elements of the Rescue Act that reached beyond the expanded child tax credit.

Those provisions include the extension of two key federal assistance programs for needy families: the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly known as food stamps; and the distribution of one-time direct payments of $1,400 for eligible adults and children.

ajc.com

Credit: Alice Onebo

icon to expand image

Credit: Alice Onebo

Another option that would make a big impact on needy families is to to make the expanded credit a permanent provision in the tax code, said Allison Johnson, a national activist for the Washington, D.C.-based parent advocacy group, ParentsTogether Action, which has members in Georgia.

“We’re doing a lot of work on just getting parent voices out there,’' Johnson said. “We want to let everyone know why these payments need to continue past December.”

One Georgian who would like the payments to continue is Kakena Jones, who has six children, four of them between the ages of eight months and 12 years. The family lives in Nicholls, an agricultural community of 3,800 people in southeast Georgia, where 40% of households live in poverty.

She has worked for more than 17 years at a mental health group home. But recently, she had to get an evening job at Lowe’s to pay for childcare for her 4-year-old and eight-month-old. When the tax credit payments run out in January, she will be back to making do with less.

“It hurts, it hurts really bad when you hear your 4-year-old say, ‘Mom, I want you here with me,’ but you have to go straight to a second job,” Jones said. “And, by the time you get home, they’re asleep.”