EPI Report details four transformative and equity-centered ways Rhode Island can invest ARPA funding
By Economic Progress Institute
As Rhode Island lawmakers are engaged in final negotiations over the FY2023 state budget, the Economic Progress Institute (EPI) has published a report outlining how Rhode Island can shift expenditures of some American Rescue Program Act (ARPA) State Fiscal Recovery Funds (SFRF) as proposed in the Governor’s recommended budget to items that both embrace transformation and center equity.
“We stand at a crossroads,” said Weayonnoh Nelson-Davies, executive
director for the EPI. “With eight areas of focus and over fifty proposals, many
further subdivided, the Governor’s overall plan for spending $1.2 billion of
ARPA SFRF between FY2022 and FY2026 risks spreading the federal aid too thinly
to spark transformative change and meet our greatest challenges.”
EPI has identified close to $300 million in spending
on projects not focused on equity and/or transformation among the
Governor’s budget proposals, including some that can be funded through other
sources. The report outlines four areas in which new or enhanced investments
should be made, many in line with the recommendations made in the Rhode Island
Foundation’s October 2021 Make It
Happen: Investing for Rhode Island’s Future report.
“The Economic Progress Institute and the Rhode Island Public Expenditure Council played an integral part in developing the equity-centered recommendations in the Make It Happen: Investing for Rhode Island’s Future report, issued by the Foundation late last year,” said Neil Steinberg, president and CEO of the Rhode Island Foundation. “We stand by those recommendations and emphasize the need to invest in transformative efforts – rather than spreading funding too thin.”
The EPI report proposes increasing expenditures on Behavioral Health to at least $130 million, from $42.4 million proposed in the budget, to pay for growing and diversifying the workforce, investing in preventive services, and upgrading community facilities.
The report recommends also increasing expenditures on Affordable Housing to accelerate
the pace of housing development and expand access to permanent supportive
housing. To target assistance to lower-income workers, many of whom are people
of color, the report recommends funding for ‘workforce housing’ for workers
with lower-paying jobs and increasing down-payment assistance for first-time
home buyers living in qualified census tracts.
The report proposes two new areas of
investment: Adult Education
($11M) to expand access to foundational-skills programs that
prepare Rhode Islanders for jobs in ‘in-demand’ industries including healthcare
and hospitality, and Neighborhood
Trusts ($50 million) to support local decision-making, allowing
people who know the most about the needs of their own neighborhoods to allocate
project funds.
The report can be found here.
About The Economic Progress Institute: The Economic Progress Institute is a nonpartisan
research and policy organization dedicated to improving the economic well-being
of low- and modest-income Rhode Islanders. For more information, visit www.economicprogressri.org.