Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 4
Albuquerque Touts 26% Savings Gain in Cannabis Tax-Funded Income Pilot as Critics Push Legal Challenges
Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 4

Albuquerque Touts 26% Savings Gain in Cannabis Tax-Funded Income Pilot as Critics Push Legal Challenges

1 articles · Updated · Fox News · Jun 4

Summary

  • Albuquerque officials said their guaranteed basic income pilot lifted participants’ household savings by an average 26% and moved 18 people into higher credit-score tiers.
  • The city funded the program entirely with recreational cannabis tax revenue, giving 42 young people — many single mothers, homeless, food-insecure or formerly incarcerated — unrestricted monthly cash support.
  • Mayor Tim Keller said the no-strings model worked because it cut bureaucratic barriers; one participant receiving $750 a month said it covered children’s healthcare, dental care and sports fees.
  • City leaders now want recurring municipal funding to make the program permanent, even as most participants reportedly earned under $40,000 and the pilot had no baseline income requirement.
  • That expansion push faces a tougher national climate: Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has challenged similar taxpayer-funded programs under state gift-clause rules, and other red states are advancing bans.

Insights

Albuquerque’s basic income pilot is a success, but funding was cut. What is the future for families who depend on it?
Guaranteed income programs are changing lives, but do they pose a hidden economic risk to the cities that adopt them?
Is 'no-strings-attached' cash the best path to stability, or do new models requiring financial training offer a smarter investment?