Six governors and nine lieutenant governors have come and/or gone since 1986, when Minnesota last gave a raise to the poorest of this state's poor parents and children via the Minnesota Family Investment Program (MFIP). Session after session, monthly cash grants have been stuck where they were set in 1986. For a one parent/one child family, that's an inflation-depleted $348.
Why should this year be any different? The answer boils down to two words: Peggy Flanagan.
It's a sure bet that Minnesota's DFL lieutenant governor will be at the end-of-session negotiating table when MFIP's 2020-21 budget is set.
That's how the Tim Walz-Peggy Flanagan gubernatorial team rolls — in tandem. In her first three months in office, Flanagan has been more conspicuously engaged in gubernatorial activity than any other lieutenant governor in memory. Not even Tina Smith, the first-term chief of staff who became Gov. Mark Dayton's second-term lieutenant and now serves in the U.S. Senate, was more often seen at her governor's elbow.
"The governor and I are really clear: We are partners," Flanagan said of her working relationship with Walz. "I am his top adviser. We complement one another in life experiences."
Flanagan's life experiences. That — more than her close-to-the-throne position in this administration — is why advocates for the poor are more hopeful about an MFIP increase than they've been in many a year. The 39-year-old lieutenant governor's history includes two childhood stints as a recipient of the state's predecessor program to MFIP. She was in first grade the last time the monthly awards were increased.
Flanagan remembers. She wore saddle shoes that clicked as she walked down the long hallway of the Ramar Building, a Hennepin County welfare service center in Minneapolis, with her mother, a single parent. The little girl was aware that she was part of the reason they were there. Peggy had severe asthma and had missed a great deal of school. The need to care for a sick daughter contributed to Pat Flanagan's job loss. For low-wage workers like her — then and now — welfare functions as de facto unemployment compensation.
"It was everything," Flanagan says now about the government help she and her mother received during two lean spells. "It was the food on my table, the clothes on my back." In addition to a monthly state check, the little household qualified for food stamps (today's SNAP), a Section 8 federal housing subisidy, and later, a child care subsidy through the state/federal Child Care Assistance Program (CCAP).