
On the Media "Busted" #4: When the Safety Net Doesn't Catch You
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Jan 17, 2017 Margaret Smith is a Columbus mother of six whose life dramatically changed after her teenage son was shot. In a touching conversation, she shares her harrowing experiences with eviction, job loss, and the struggle for family stability following this tragedy. The discussion explores the failures of America's safety net, highlighting how many who need help the most fall through its cracks. Smith's story is contrasted with powerful insights from anti-poverty advocates like Linda Tirado and Matthew Desmond, revealing systemic flaws in welfare and the high cost of being poor.
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Asset Caps Create Perverse Incentives
- Asset caps force poor people to spend or forfeit gifts and savings to qualify for aid, creating perverse incentives.
- The rules can push recipients to reject community help or exhaust savings to retain benefits later.
GoFundMe Can Trigger Benefit Loss
- Dameka Gilmore raised over $15,000 on GoFundMe for her daughter's cancer but was told keeping it would cost her food and medical benefits.
- She declined to keep the funds because accepting them would strip essential government aid during treatment.
Ideology Shapes Weak Welfare Design
- Ideology, not data, often shapes welfare policy to keep aid minimal and stigmatized.
- Experts argue a data-driven net would catch people earlier and offer more realistic help.






