Except that the cost of living up there is very high.
Section 8 is closed right now in New York. You could go to a shelter, or try to connect up with a not-for-profit (ie, charity) that can help you out. New York City offers income-based subsidized housing for people with low income but it’s on a lottery system because there is much more need than availability (and, you would still be expected to pay about $500/mo for a studio on income of $28,000/yr, or $800 for a 1BR).
Then you are “working poor.” Welcome to a lot of people’s real lives.
If you’re curious, you can screen a hypothetical New York City-residing you for eligibility for benefits here
A single person, renting, living alone, no dependents, not disabled, not pregnant and not a veteran. I make $12,000 yr (gross).
I am eligible for:
food assistance
Emergency heating assistance in the winter (so they don’t shut off my utilities)
Job search assistance
Public health insurance Healthy NY at a minimum of $280/mo
I am eligible for Section 8, but as noted it is closed. I am NOT eligible for a current Housing Lottery, because my income is too low.
Does being college-educated have any effect on how much welfare a person is eligible for?
Also, it seems advantageous, from the perspective of collecting welfare, to not be able-bodied. What’s the least uncomfortable disability that someone could intentionally acquire for the sake of collecting welfare?
Do all of us on Social Security Disability a favor and DO NOT call it WELFARE. I worked for 20 years before I broke my back on the job. I PAID INTO THE SOCIAL SECURITY PLAN for each of those twenty years. When I became disabled I COLLECTED my Social Security Disability Benifit that I paid for, much like an insurance policy.
I don’t mean to get so sensitive about it, but I don’t sit at home leeching off of the taxpayers, I paid my share and unfortunately got to collect it. I would trade with anyone and take their job, but I have to stay at home everyday most of the time not getting off the couch because a high dose of morphine to control the chronic pain does that.
Not medicaid. I know, - I looked into it. You need to have children, be over 65, blind or disabled. Even if you’re dropping tumors.
::checks Kiz’s profile:: I knew it.
Can men without children get welfare (specifically TANF)? I was under the impression that it was nearly impossible for childless people to qualify.