logo
How 2 guaranteed income programs have taken hold in Minnesota

How 2 guaranteed income programs have taken hold in Minnesota

Fast Company12-05-2025

Artists and cultural workers are falling through the cracks of our economy at a time when their work has never been more needed in society. Their ability to exist and thrive is threatened by the cost of living and housing affordability crisis, our increasingly precarious economy, and cuts to grant funding under the new administration.
Many exist in a structural grey area between independent gig workers and small business owners. Their work is often episodic, making them easily left out of safety net programs like unemployment and healthcare—this is especially true for artists from historically marginalized communities.
To address these challenges, we need new systems and solutions to increase economic equity and ensure that our communities have access to creativity and culture. One such area we've seen a wave of interest and experimentation around the potential of in recent years is guaranteed income.
What is guaranteed income? It refers to unrestricted recurring cash payments that people can use however they see fit to cover their basic needs and reach their personal and professional goals. Guaranteed income programs can be focused geographically on specific cities, on specific communities—for example young people, entrepreneurs, or parents—or a mix of both.
At Springboard for the Arts, we've been delivering one of the longest running guaranteed income programs in the country since 2021, focusing on both urban and rural artists and creative workers in Minnesota. Our 100 recipients to date include painters, sculptors, hip‑hop artists, singers, composers, teaching artists, performers, and writers who are receiving $500 a month over a five-year period.
This has given us the opportunity to reflect on what we've learned and what insights we can offer to others thinking about doing this work.
Adapt each program to the historical, cultural, and economic extractions in that community
At its best and most effective, guaranteed income is a tool for justice and repair by supporting populations who have been exploited by social, cultural, and economic systems in America. These programs should be tailored to a community's needs by considering the connection points between the economics, culture, and physical design of our cities and the impact of policy and planning harms from the past.
Both cities and rural places bear the generational impact of economies based on the extraction of natural or cultural resources including redlining, land theft, the interstate highway system, and placement of industrial infrastructure, like trash burners, that has caused generations of environmental harm and adverse health impacts. The results of these policy decisions fall disproportionately on American BIPOC communities and neighborhoods, particularly Native and Black communities.
For our work in Saint Paul, we've focused our efforts in Frogtown and Rondo—two neighborhoods that are culturally vibrant, resilient, and community oriented, yet that continue to be disproportionately impacted by historical disinvestment, discrimination, and extraction. Rondo, for example, is a historically Black neighborhood whose cultural and business corridor was destroyed in the 1950s and '60s by highway construction, causing generational economic and cultural harm that residents deal with to this day.
Our rural work is focused in Otter Tail County, in West Central Minnesota. This community, like many rural areas across the U.S., is in the midst of economic transformation, including the loss of major employers, lack of affordable housing, and increase in predatory businesses like dollar stores and payday lending. Here, guaranteed income can be a tool for attracting and retaining the creative people these communities will need to imagine a different future.
The focus on artists and creative workers is rooted in the idea that, like caregiving and community work, cultural work is a form of labor that communities depend on to be healthy but is not adequately valued by our current economy.
Use artists to help change the narrative about guaranteed income programs
While the idea of guaranteed income is gaining traction across the country, there are still embedded cultural and political beliefs that limit how far economic justice policy change can go. These are often harmful tropes like: 'Do people deserve it? How do they spend the money? Why don't they just get a job?'
One of the most effective ways of countering these questions is for people to experience the stories of these programs on a human level, which can transform pervasive narratives about inequality and poverty into belief systems of belonging, deservedness, and inherent self‑worth. In this way, artists—particularly those participating in guaranteed income programs and who are locally rooted in their communities—have a unique role to play in guiding and delivering a narrative shift around guaranteed income.
With this in mind, we created a project within our wider guaranteed income work, collaborating with a cohort of artists on Artists Respond: People, Place, and Prosperity. In this program, artists created public projects highlighting the root causes that lead to the need for guaranteed income, and its impact on families and communities. (These projects were supported separately and outside of artists' participation as guaranteed income recipients.)
Artists have designed projects that range from podcasts and coloring books, to postcards, a public installation, and a collaborative performance/dance meditation made available on YouTube, all of which use messages that are reflective of their local communities. A billboard on rural Highway 210 by artist Kandace Creel Falcón looked at guaranteed income's connection to rural values, with the message 'In Rural We Tend to the Herd' as a way to root messaging in the collective values of that community and counter individualistic narratives that attempt to malign safety net programs.
Cross-sector investment and collaboration are key
Our original pilot was a cross-sector partnership—designed in collaboration with the City of Saint Paul's People's Prosperity Pilot guaranteed income program and supported by local and national funders including the McKnight, Bush, Surdna, and Ford Foundations. We recently announced the expansion of this work, which includes extending the Saint Paul pilot and adding additional participants to the pilot in Otter Tail County, Minnesota, totaling 100 artists across both locations and committing to five years.
The majority of the pilots taking place across America have been 12 to 18 months, in part because that's the amount of time that cities were able to raise and access relief funds during the pandemic. These are a great start, but to have the kind of longevity that will allow us to make a meaningful—not just temporary—impact requires bringing more and different kinds of partners on board and moving from pilots to policy.
This is an area where philanthropy has an opportunity to be a true partner by seeding longer-term pilots in more geographies and by supporting advocacy and policy work.
Research and evidence matters
When it comes to expanding the reach and impact of guaranteed income, research and evidence matters. Groups like Mayors for a Guaranteed Income, led by Saint Paul Mayor Melvin Carter, are integrating learning and research from local pilots into state and federal policy recommendations. Springboard for the Arts is working with the University of Pennsylvania Center for Guaranteed Income Research to collect data through community-led participatory research in both rural and urban locations, allowing us to understand what's working and how people are using these funds.
Emergent themes from this research are compelling, with monthly income contributing to general financial stability; participants' ability to do longer term planning toward healthcare, savings, business ownership and housing; and increasing financial security so artists can generate creative work for their community and stay in their neighborhoods. This money is going toward rent and supplies but it's also being put to everyday expenses like fixing a car so that an artist can get to their job or buying snow boots for their children.
Being able to point to these tangible impacts allows us to bring in more partners and more effectively advocate for policy. Even if it feels tedious, having a growing body of data will bolster all of our efforts for both individual programs and the movement as a whole.
The experience with our pilot has shown us that guaranteed income works as a tool for supporting both an individual's economic security and their ability to contribute to their communities in creative ways. As our economy becomes even more stratified, there is an urgent need to advocate for policy innovations, like guaranteed income, that offer more Americans the freedom to take care of their families and communities and imagine and build a better future.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Belen city council votes yes to new permit for solar panel farm
Belen city council votes yes to new permit for solar panel farm

Yahoo

time39 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Belen city council votes yes to new permit for solar panel farm

BELEN, N.M. (KRQE) – It's considered the hub city for renewable energy in the southwest. Belen city councilors voted to continue that momentum, allowing a major energy company to construct another solar farm on 395 acres. There are thousands of undeveloped acres of land that Belen city councilors want to see filled up. 'For a long time, Belen has looked to try to find ways to grow, we always fall just a little bit short,' said Mayor Robert Noblin during a city council meeting Monday. A proposed project for a major solar farm located west of I-25 between Los Lunas and Belen. It was presented before Belen's city council for a special use permit with promises of 250 construction jobs for locals and economic growth. 'We had an economic impact study done, and for GDP, roughly $16.9 million would come to the city of Belen,' said Ashley Sgaliardich, Project Director, NextEra Energy Resources. Belen man accused of trying to rob Albuquerque McDonald's with lighter This latest development, called 'The Starlight Energy Center,' will be neighboring an already existing solar panel farm managed by the company NextEra Energy Resources. City councilors agreed during Monday's meeting that the land needs to be used. 'It's been a long time [and] nothing's come. I understand several years ago, we had a development that was going to go out there, and it just went away,' said City Councilor Steven Holdman. While the meeting was open to the public, no one came up for comment, but one resident KRQE spoke to on Saturday said the existing panels are an eyesore. 'It is because if you look at it before the solar panels, Los Lunas hill was just farmland, you know it was a hill now, walk there, all you just see is solar panels and just metal stuff and like that,' said Rayven Garcia. The company said their next steps are to apply for an industrial revenue bond, which helps finance the project. Construction is expected to start this December and be completed by December 2026. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Tesla shareholders face staggering new hurdle after company enacts controversial policy: 'A formidable barrier'
Tesla shareholders face staggering new hurdle after company enacts controversial policy: 'A formidable barrier'

Yahoo

time40 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Tesla shareholders face staggering new hurdle after company enacts controversial policy: 'A formidable barrier'

Tesla raised the bar for shareholders to sue the company board or executives for breach of fiduciary duties. The change took effect May 15 and requires an investor or group of investors to hold 3% of the electric vehicle maker's stock "to institute or maintain a derivative proceeding," CNBC reported. Tesla's market cap is $1.123 trillion, so a plaintiff would have to own shares worth $33.7 billion. "Obviously, for a company of Tesla's size, that would be a formidable barrier to anyone bringing a lawsuit for breach of fiduciary duty," Tulane Law School's Ann Lipton told CNBC in an email. The change was enabled by a Texas law that "allows corporations to limit shareholder lawsuits against insiders for breach of fiduciary duty," the outlet added. With shareholder approval, Tesla moved its incorporation site from Delaware to the Lone Star State in June 2024. An investor who owned nine shares of Tesla stock sued the company in 2018, and CEO Elon Musk's $56 billion compensation package was revoked in January 2024. Musk is by far the richest person on the planet, and his wealth makes him nearly untouchable. He helped to pioneer the EV movement by becoming an early investor in Tesla in 2003, and the company has been known for innovative technology and industry-leading breakthroughs. Recently, however, the South African has drawn criticism for straying into American and European politics, including spending lavishly on the U.S. presidential election campaign of Donald Trump, leading government spending cuts as the head of the U.S. Department of Government Efficiency, and supporting the far-right Alternative for Germany party. Activists have protested these actions, and Tesla charging stations, vehicles, and dealerships have been vandalized. Sales have plummeted, and Tesla stock spiraled downward, too, though it has regained much of its value. This upheaval and the larger perception change of Musk from groundbreaker to villain could stifle the uptake of EVs, which is one of the many things necessary to slow the rapid rise of global temperatures caused by the burning of fossil fuels for energy. It would take a massive coalition of shareholders to fight back against this move by Tesla, though companies are generally amenable to public pressure — especially when it comes to consumers' spending power. Tesla, for example, is shifting its focus from EV manufacturing to a robotaxi service and robotics to stabilize its future. Musk has a history of not delivering on outlandish promises, but it has not significantly slowed the company or deterred its supporters. What do you think of Tesla and Elon Musk? Elon is the man Love the company; hate the CEO I'm not a fan of either I don't have an opinion Click your choice to see results and speak your mind. Join our free newsletter for good news and useful tips, and don't miss this cool list of easy ways to help yourself while helping the planet. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Stillwater News Press to hold open house for new location
Stillwater News Press to hold open house for new location

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Stillwater News Press to hold open house for new location

On Thursday, Stillwater News Press will host an open house to the public. The open house will take place from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the News Press building located at 502 S. Duck Street. The open house will take place from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. The building is new to the press but not to Stillwater. Built in 1908, the 2,900-square-foot building was originally a home before hosting many commercial interests. Known locally as the Berry House, it was built by James. E. Berry, who would go on to serve at Lt. Governor. It was entered into the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. The modern day Stillwater News Press is a successor of the merger of many other newspapers. The News Press dates back to the weekly Stillwater Advance as well as the Stillwater Daily Democrat. Stillwater Advance was established in 1892, 15 years before Oklahoma became an official state. Stillwater Advance held up against other newspaper competitors. Adding to the early success, I.O. Diggs purchased the Daily Democrat and combined the two papers, which gained much traction. Shortly after, Diggs sold the papers and migrated west to California. One of Diggs' successors was G.R. Gould, the father of "Dick Tracy" creator Chester Gould. After three different purchases of the paper after Diggs, the name was changed from Stillwater Advance to Payne County News. After an ownership change once again, in 1929 E.E 'Hook' Johnson became the new publisher of the paper. C.R. Bellatti and R.M. Bellatti became part owners. The Bellattis and Johnson combined the Stillwater Daily press and the Stillwater Daily news to make what is now Stillwater News Press. C.R. Bellatti was the publisher of Stillwater News Press for a long period. The Bellatti family was dedicated to pushing out news to the north-central part of the state for many years. The Bellatti Family had much success for over 50 years. In 1997, Stillwater News Press was sold by the Bellatti family to Community Newspaper Holdings Inc., a local news provider in 1997. Currently owned by CNHI, Stillwater News Press continues to carry on the legacy and history that transformed the way the north-central part of Oklahoma receives news today. Moving into a new location brings new adventure and opportunities to continue to tell stories of greatness and allows the community to be a part of a rich story that continues on throughout many generations.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store