For Nancy Cordiero, a plan by the Biden administration to provide her family with a monthly allowance is more than just about money she sorely needs. It's also about restoring something she's lost at times during the pandemic: her pride.

"When you have to go to the food bank, there's a lot of pride at stake and people are suffering from that," Cordiero said. "They're getting depressed over that, because all that weight is on them, just like it is on me."

The Middletown, Rhode Island, mom of a four-year old has kept her job with a heating and cooling company, but her husband, who does home renovations, has been unable to work during the pandemic.

For a while, their daughter's pre-school was closed, so the child had to tag along with Cordiero to the office. Fixing three meals a day plus snacks was a drag on the family's grocery budget.

Some of that weight is about to be lifted. Included in President Biden's $1.9 trillion relief package is a provision that provides many American parents an allowance of $250 a month for each child and $300 for kids under six.

Although set to last only through this year, many experts see it as a potentially game-changing initiative to fight poverty in America and lift the income of lower-income families.

The federal government already offered a limited tax break for parents, but the new law expands that in a number of important ways.

First, it vastly expands the amount of money provided to families – 50% to 80% more for each child.

Second, it's designed to be given out monthly, like an allowance, rather than just once a year. And third, parents with little or no income still qualify for the full amount.

That's a departure from the existing tax break, which is less generous to low-income workers and gives the poorest families nothing at all.

"This is landmark legislation that would really slash child poverty and target benefits to the lowest-income families that need them the most," says Kris Cox, deputy director of federal tax policy at the left-leaning Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

For Cordiero, the allowances will make it easier to catch up on some bills and fill the refrigerator.

"It's a huge financial help because that takes away some of the burden of, 'What do I pay?'" Cordiero said. "Do I pay the rent? Do I pay the utilities? Do I pay day care? Or do I get my daughter some new clothes and new shoes for school?'"

Jessica Ricciardelli knows that feeling. She's a single mom in Fairfield, Maine, who makes just over $15 an hour.

"My budget before the pandemic came around was on a shoestring," she said.

Ricciardelli has faced some unexpected bills this past year, including a wi-fi upgrade so she can work from home and a car to replace her old one, which failed to pass inspection.

Ricciardelli said news of the new allowance gives her and her five-year-old daughter Izzy some breathing room.

"It was the first time I've ever felt like I was going to be positively impacted by a decision that our government had made. In a huge way," she said.

"$300 is a third of a paycheck for me," Ricciardelli added. "That means that I'm not one small disaster away from not being able to pay my rent."

Congressional Democrats are already hoping to make the child subsidy payment permanent. Cox, from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, says there's ample evidence kids who get that kind of early support are healthier, do better in school and earn more money as adults.

"Many wealthy countries around the world have a child allowance where the government provides regular income support to parents throughout the year," she said. "So in many ways, this is the U.S. catching up to the rest of the world and recognizing the importance of investing in children."

That investment does not come cheap. Extending the child subsidy would cost about $100 billion a year.

Still, financial help for parents and kids has traditionally enjoyed support from Republicans, who tend to see such measures as "family friendly."

Several GOP Senators have backed an even larger child subsidy.

But Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., draws the line at paying benefits to families with no income, seeing it as a disincentive to find work.

"That is not tax relief for working parents," Rubio said in a statement. "It is welfare assistance.

Cordiero acknowledged she'd welcome the chance to work a little less and spend more time with her daughter.

"Even if it's just to take her to the zoo for a day — just to give her something of a treat," Cordiero said. "We don't really get to do that, because I have to work."

She might get that chance this summer. The new child allowance payments are set to start in July.

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