By CHRIS POWELL
Anyone following the news in Connecticut might wonder if people are still expected to support their own children, or if a great wave of impoverishment and exemption from responsibility is sweeping the state.
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It is said that half the households with children in Connecticut can’t afford diapers, so state legislators want to appropriate $1 million for a program distributing free diapers to households with incomes of $62,000 or less.
New Haven Mayor Justin Elicker’s city budget proposal is being criticized for omitting an appropriation of $400,000 for groups distributing free food in the city. The city’s Coordinated Food Access Network says 37% of New Haven’s residents are getting free food from local food charities quite apart from the money they receive from the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP).
The General Assembly is advancing legislation to extend free breakfast and lunch to all public school students. The other day WTIC-AM1080 talk radio host Reese Hopkins noted a claim being made in support of the legislation: that free meals in school are the only meals thousands of Connecticut children get. So, Hopkins asked: If children aren’t being fed at home, isn’t that child neglect or abuse? And where are the corresponding complaints to the state Department of Children and Families?
Advocates of the free school meals bill don’t seem to have made any.
In January, celebrating Connecticut’s having indexed its minimum wage to inflation so it will rise automatically every year — it’s now at $16.94 per hour — state Labor Commissioner Dante Bartolomeo said thousands of single women in the state support their families on minimum-wage jobs. Of course they don’t do it on minimum wage alone; many also receive SNAP benefits, state medical insurance, and housing vouchers, as well as free diapers.
But where do people get the idea that, while contraception and abortion are also essentially free for those who can’t afford them, they should be having children they can’t support themselves, and having them without a father or other partner in their home? Such children are overwhelmingly the ones who, because of lack of sufficient parenting, develop learning disabilities and behavioral problems, require costly “special education,” and do poorly in school — and then in life.
Poor people aren’t necessarily stupid. Like everyone else, they respond to incentives and disincentives from government. Taking care of widows and orphans, victims of misfortune, is one thing. Lowering the general cost of living is another thing, an objective with which Connecticut fails terribly, particularly in regard to housing, electricity, and taxes.
But subsidizing people to do what they shouldn’t — to overextend themselves, sink themselves in poverty, and impose profound costs on society — is national suicide.
Where do people get the idea that they are not obliged to support their own children? They get it from the government itself, which, with its perverse incentives, essentially manufactures poverty.
Since inflation has risen sharply in recent years, “affordability” has become a theme with politicians of both parties in Connecticut. But most of what they are doing in the name of “affordability” is not making the state more affordable at all.
Real affordability would reduce costs, as by making government more efficient and effective, stripping out the inessential, and facilitating housing construction. But most policies being pursued in the name of “affordability” don’t reduce costs at all but just increase government subsidies.
Tax cuts, rebates, and refunds — much proposed at the state Capitol lately — in effect constitute mere borrowing against state government’s long-term pension obligations unless they are financed by spending cuts, few of which seem to have been proposed by either Democrats or Republicans. Any tax cuts, rebates, and refunds this year also are likely to be nullified by contractual or inflation-induced spending increases next year.
No one in authority seems to be going through the budget to identify many things that could be foregone, not even the political patronage grants. Instead it seems to be assumed that any tax cuts, rebates, and refunds can be undone once November’s state elections are safely past.
Chris Powell has written about Connecticut government and politics for many years. (CPowell@cox.net)