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Elizabeth Softky couldn't work during cancer treatments and was evicted from her home of 14 years.
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A guaranteed-income program gave her $500 for six months, which helped her get permanent housing.
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The program paired her with a volunteer "buddy," and Softky says the "social support" was valuable.
When the doctors at Stanford Medical Center showed Elizabeth Softky images of her tumor, she said it felt like she was in a movie.
"The first thing I thought was, This is going to be really bad," she told Insider.
And it was: News of the tumor in her colon set off a chain of events that derailed the 59-year-old's life. She had to shutter the educational nonprofit she founded after 20 years of teaching, chemotherapy treatments ate up her savings, and she couldn't pay her rent. As a result, she was evicted from her home of 14 years. She had to complete chemotherapy while staying in a homeless shelter.
Things began to turn around for Softky when she was chosen to participate in Miracle Money, a Bay Area guaranteed-income pilot started by the nonprofit Miracle Messages. The program's $500-a-month payment, for six months, put her back on track to find permanent housing by May of last year.
Guaranteed-income programs like Miracle Money have been surging in popularity over the last two years. They offer no-strings-attached payments, meaning that recipients can spend the money however they like. In December, Insider found that there were at least 33 active or recently active guaranteed-income programs in the US.
Research shows that these programs offer long-term stability to participants, who are more likely to secure full-time employment and see greater financial, physical, and emotional health. The Miracle Money team found the same to be true for its first cohort, which included Softky and 13 other participants. The group also reported that of the nine participants who were homeless at the beginning of the program, six found permanent housing by the end of it.
Diagnosed with cancer, evicted, and unable to work — all in one year
When Softky was diagnosed with colon cancer in early 2019, she had a few months of savings to work with. She'd only been running her educational nonprofit, Jump Into Writing, for four years, but had to shut it down — she couldn't teach while doing chemotherapy because the procedure weakens the immune system.
"One of my kids could have killed me," she said. "I was especially vulnerable."
Without a source of income and with what she describes as "underfunded" health insurance, she hemorrhaged funds quickly. Her landlord wasn't sympathetic, taking Softky to court — and she was on the street six weeks later.