Gov. Tim Walz has made a simple — but ambitious — pledge in his second term: to put an end to children living in poverty in the state of Minnesota.
The DFL governor's inaugural promise aims to lift roughly 139,000 children in the state above the poverty threshold and keep others from falling below that level, a change that experts say could be transformational for the trajectory of their lives and have wide-ranging benefits for the state.
"We can't have this be aspirational," Walz said in an interview with the Star Tribune. "It's that dignity of each family, it's the dignity of each child and the benefits that I think we get from that being a state that cares."
Walz has pitched reorganizing state government to create a new agency focused exclusively on children and families, while proposing billions out of the $17.5 billion budget surplus on a suite of tax credits and direct payments that he hopes will lift families in poverty and on the edge into stability.
It's a daunting task, involving an ever-changing population of Minnesotans and is something other states are working toward, but none has so far managed to accomplish.
"Getting kids out of poverty isn't enough, that's a far cry from getting their parents to economic stability. That's the floor," said Debra Fitzpatrick, policy and research director with the Children's Defense Fund of Minnesota. "But this idea that we can have that as a mandate, that's super bold and exciting and is something that we could track as a state."
Roughly 1.3 million children under 18 live in Minnesota, and 11% are in households that fall below the federal poverty threshold. A family of two adults and two children was below the poverty threshold in 2021 if their annual household income was less than $27,479.
The number of children living in poverty in Minnesota has dropped dramatically over the past several decades, down from more than 20% in the 1990s. But racial disparities have persisted despite the declines, and many more families live at the margins of that threshold, at risk of dipping into poverty suddenly if one parent loses a job or another child is added to the family.