If you bring a baby into the Hurley Children鈥檚 Center clinic in downtown Flint, Michigan, will find you. The pediatrician, who gained national prominence for helping uncover the city鈥檚 water crisis in 2015, strode across the waiting room in her white lab coat, eyes laser-focused on the chubby baby in the lap of an unsuspecting parent.
鈥淗i! I鈥檓 Dr. Mona!鈥 she said warmly. 鈥淎ny chance you guys live in Flint?鈥 She learned the family is from neighboring Grand Blanc.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 so sad!鈥 Hanna said. 鈥淵ou should move to Flint! And have another baby! And you could be part of the Rx Kids program!鈥 The parents chuckled politely. But the doctor was not kidding.
Billed as the first-ever citywide cash aid program for pregnant moms and babies, gives Flint residents $1,500 mid-pregnancy, and $500 each month for the baby鈥檚 first year. There are no strings attached. No income limits. And it鈥檚 universal; nearly every baby born since the program launched in January is enrolled.
Parents who bring their babies in for checkups at this clinic rattle off the ways the money has helped, from the cribs, diapers, clothes, and wipes they鈥檝e bought to how it鈥檚 鈥渒ept them afloat鈥 during maternity leave or provided crucial income when a spouse died.
But the true goal of Rx Kids goes far beyond Flint, as Hanna acknowledged, scooping up one of the Rx Kids babies in an exam room. 鈥淒o you think we should do this for babies everywhere? What do you think?鈥 she asked, cooing. The baby gurgled happily, smiling. 鈥淭hat was an affirmative yes.鈥
Cash Payments as a Tool To Reduce Child Poverty
Many , including , , , , , Ireland, , , and the , already offer a . The U.S. essentially did, too, during the coronavirus pandemic: The 2021 expanded child tax credit gave low- and middle-income families (including those previously excluded because of insufficient income) hundreds of dollars per kid in direct, monthly payments for six months.
The child poverty rate fell to a . But the expanded program and Congress did not renew it. The child poverty rate went .
For , director of the Poverty Solutions initiative at the University of Michigan鈥檚 Ford School of Public Policy and a longtime advocate of child cash benefits, it was 鈥渢he most brutal day鈥 of his career.
Soon after, he got an email from Hanna asking if he wanted to collaborate on the program that would become Rx Kids. The program鈥檚 goals go beyond cash aid for Michigan families: It is also aimed at getting donors, lawmakers, and voters excited about how child cash benefits could help their communities.
The list of the recently converted includes Republican state , who has become for expanding Rx Kids. Referring to himself as 鈥渁 pro-life person,鈥 Damoose said, 鈥淚 sure as heck better be concerned about making it easier for mothers to make the decision to have their children.鈥 He said the Republican Party needs to get serious about supporting programs like Rx Kids. 鈥淲e’ve been accused for years about being pro-birth, not pro-life. And I think that’s not without merit. We need to put our money where our mouth is and support these children and support their mothers.鈥
Already, what once seemed like a moon shot is gaining traction: Shaefer and Hanna say their communications with Vice President Kamala Harris鈥 presidential campaign helped shape Harris鈥 . President-elect Donald Trump鈥檚 campaign also supported expanding the child tax credit.
Meanwhile, Michigan has budgeted some $20 million in state Temporary Assistance for Needy Families cash to partially fund an expansion of Rx Kids to a short list of communities, if those areas can raise local matching funds. Those areas include rural communities like Michigan鈥檚 remote eastern Upper Peninsula, part of which is in . 鈥淲e want to make the tent as big as possible,鈥 Hanna said.
But some Upper Peninsula health officials were initially wary. Each new Rx Kids community will need to raise millions of dollars in private donations to start and sustain the program in their community. 鈥淚t could be a good thing,鈥 Leann Espinoza, maternal-infant health program manager for the eastern Upper Peninsula, said in August. 鈥淏ut I鈥檓 not getting my hopes up. I know that sounds terrible.鈥

Upper Peninsula Families 鈥楩all Through the Cracks鈥
In the wood-paneled rec room of the Clark Township Community Center, Espinoza broke the news to her team this summer: Rx Kids is not a program the eastern Upper Peninsula will be able to fund on its own.
It鈥檚 about 鈥$3 million that we would need to raise,鈥 she said, looking at three other staff members.
Tonya Winberg, the public health nurse for Mackinac County, looked stunned. 鈥淚t’s just, where does that $3 million come from?鈥 Winberg asked. Other potential Rx Kids expansion sites, , have wealthy private foundations that can fund the program. The eastern Upper Peninsula does not.
鈥淎nd how do we sustain it?鈥 Espinoza added. 鈥淲e hate to start programs, and then the funding is gone and we have to tell people, 鈥業t’s not here anymore; we can’t do it anymore.鈥欌
The ruggedly beautiful and densely forested Upper Peninsula is used to feeling forgotten. There鈥檚 a running joke about how often it鈥檚 on maps. It has about , but just 3% of its residents. The sheer scale and sparse population mean options for food, housing, and child care are limited. Poverty rates are in much of Espinoza鈥檚 territory, and the region has some of the of in the state, according to the state health department.
At the community center, Espinoza and her colleagues start listing all the ways Rx Kids would be a lifesaver for families in the Upper Peninsula, many of whom have some income and some resources but 鈥渄on鈥檛 make enough to make it,鈥 Espinoza said. 鈥淭he fall-through-the-cracks families. And those are the ones that I really, really, really think this program would benefit, especially up here.鈥
Espinoza鈥檚 next meeting was with one of those families. Jessica Kline and her 18-month-old daughter, Aurora, live in Munising, a tourist town on Lake Superior. 鈥淪he鈥檚 got a big personality, and her hair is red, so she came with a warning label,鈥 Kline said of her daughter, laughing.
Aurora is a tiny force, speeding around the family鈥檚 apartment, unfazed by the nasal tube that connects her to an oxygen machine. She was born early, at just 24 weeks gestation, weighing less than 2 pounds. No hospital in the Upper Peninsula was equipped to care for a preemie that young. So Aurora and her parents spent seven months at a hospital in Ann Arbor, five hours south of their home. 鈥淲e didn’t have a reliable vehicle,鈥 Kline said. 鈥淲e didn’t have a source of income.鈥 Hospital social services provided $19 a day for food, which Kline would save up to buy supplies for Aurora.
When they finally got Aurora home to the Upper Peninsula, their house had been vandalized, the copper pipes stripped out. Espinoza鈥檚 team helped them find housing, and drove them to get groceries. Every day is a series of small battles, from finding the medical supplies Aurora needs to figuring out how to get to a revolving door of specialists hundreds of miles away. Still, Aurora鈥檚 dad has a job in town. They鈥檝e got family nearby. They鈥檙e making it work, Kline said.
But having a program like Rx Kids could have made a huge difference in her daughter鈥檚 first year. 鈥淔ive hundred dollars a month would have been enough to actually be able to get ourselves on our feet,鈥 she said.

After Espinoza left Kline鈥檚 apartment, she drove south to her office in Manistique. It was late. Everyone else had gone home. Espinoza sat at her desk, trying to be pragmatic. She knows Rx Kids would not magically solve the lack of child care and housing and all the other things you need to break the cycle of poverty. But it would fix Kline鈥檚 car. It would help.
There will undoubtedly be critics, Espinoza said 鈥 people who believe parents will just use this money to buy drugs. 鈥溾榃hat did they do to earn it?鈥欌 she imagined them saying. 鈥溾榊ou’re just giving them free money, and they didn’t do anything to get it?鈥 Because they don’t understand. They don’t understand the barriers. They don’t understand that sometimes the choice isn鈥檛 always yours. Like, I’ve talked to moms who desperately want to go to work, and they want to support their family, but there’s no child care. And so they have no other choice.鈥
Espinoza recently got an update from Rx Kids鈥 Hanna: Largely because of private foundations outside the Upper Peninsula, the program has raised enough money to fund a 鈥減erinatal鈥 version of Rx Kids for five counties in the eastern Upper Peninsula. The perinatal program would provide the $1,500 payment mid-pregnancy, plus $500 a month for a baby鈥檚 first three months, rather than the full year. 鈥淏ut the goal really is the full program, so we are still raising money,鈥 Hanna said via email.
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 fantastic if we even just get the perinatal version to start,鈥 Espinoza said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 more than we had before.鈥
This article is from a partnership that includes , , and 麻豆女优 Health News.