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‘Fast Car’ is having a moment, but will escaping poverty grab the spotlight too?
'Fast Car' had a standout moment at the Grammy's Sunday night, bringing the entire audience to their feet. It's a song about escaping poverty.
Inequality Insights
A weekly dose of informed analysis, commentary and news items on the persistent issues of poverty and inequality in California

Good morning, Inequality Insights readers. I’m CalMatters reporter Wendy Fry.

By now, you’ve probably seen the standout Grammy moment from last Sunday when Tracy Chapman performed her 1988 hit “Fast Car” live with country singer Luke Combs. It’s a song about escaping poverty. Thirty-five years after winning a Grammy for best female pop vocal performance, Chapman returned to the stage with her poignant narrative about someone looking to break free from low-wage jobs, family issues, addiction, and unfulfilled dreams:

“You got a fast car / I got a plan to get us out of here / I’ve been working at the convenience store / Managed to save just a little bit of money.”

It was her first performance since 2020, and before that 2015. The standing ovations and viral replays show the song still resonates as much today as it did three decades ago.

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Maybe some things haven’t changed much since Chapman’s song was first released in 1988. Back then the U.S. poverty rate was about 13%. Today that rate has slightly decreased to around 11.5%

Chapman lives in the Bay Area but grew up in a predominantly Black low-income neighborhood in Cleveland, the daughter of a single mother. Already a gifted musician, she got a scholarship to a small, private, K-12 prep-school through a minority-placement program called A Better Chance

Founded in 1963, the national scholarship organization has provided some 18,000 students of color and other disadvantaged youth with access to competitive middle and high schools, steering them toward college. "Our mission is to increase substantially the number of well-educated young people of color who are capable of assuming positions of responsibility and leadership in American society," its website states.

Last year’s U.S. Supreme Court decision to gut affirmative action thrust into jeopardy programs like A Better Chance that feed into the college admissions process.

But in California, a group of lawmakers wants to amend the state’s Constitution to allow the state to fund programs “for the purpose of increasing the life expectancy of, improving educational outcomes for, or lifting out of poverty specific groups based on race, color, ethnicity, national origin, or marginalized genders, sexes, or sexual orientations.”

The proposed constitutional amendment is part of a slate of bills to implement ideas from the state’s landmark reparations task force. Read our in-depth coverage of their years-long work. 

We’ll be covering their efforts in the coming weeks. 

Stars like Taylor Swift and Oprah Winfrey jumped out of their seats as Chapman and Combs sang the chorus “I had the feeling that I could be someone, be someone, be someone” in perfect harmony

It's an emotion that resonates across generations, income levels, and races. That feeling of possibility and belonging is exactly what we aim to cover here on the California Divide — the only team of reporters dedicated to covering inequality across the state.  

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  • California Contrast. The Legislative Analyst’s Office finds Black and Native American men continue to face great barriers to economic mobility. California is home to some of the richest people in the world, while at the same time over 10 percent of the state’s population lives in poverty, the LAO report states. Another key stat: The top 1% of earners make up 25% of all state income.
  • Housing Exodus. A lack of affordable housing is the number one reason people cite for leaving California, according to the Public Policy Institute of California. Since 2014, California has experienced net losses of almost 700,000 adults who say housing is their primary reason for packing up and moving away. The PPIC Statewide Survey finds that 34% of Californians have seriously considered leaving the state because of high housing costs.

  • Safety Scrutiny. California lawmakers are pushing for stricter labor enforcement for farmworkers and other workers, CalMatter’s Jeanne Kuang reports. Assembly Labor Committee Chairperson Liz Ortega plans to request an audit of Cal/OSHA following testimony from farmworkers about severe working conditions and slow responses to safety violation reports. This would be the second audit of a state labor enforcement agency in two years, following last year’s probe into the Labor Commissioner’s Office over delayed wage theft claims.

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  • Digital Divide. Los Angeles has become the first city in the U.S. to ban digital discrimination, which is when internet service providers offer worse or more expensive internet services to low-income or minority neighborhoods. The measure was inspired by a Markup investigation in 2022 that revealed how AT&T and other ISPs were charging the same price for slow and fast internet speeds in different parts of the city. LA will now investigate complaints of digital discrimination and collect data on the digital divide. CalMatters reporter Alejandra Reyes-Velarde has also written about the lack of broadband access in underserved regions
  • Community Care. The Affordable Care Act has increased the number and role of community clinics in California cities, especially for Medi-Cal enrollees, the Public Policy Institute of California writes. Data from the California Department of Health Care Access and Information shows visits to community clinics have grown steadily since the ACA implementation — with Medi-Cal visits accounting for most of that increase. There is regional variation in Medi-Cal patient visits to community clinics, which is something to watch as the state works to ensure adequate access to health care for low-income Californians.

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The California Divide Team

California Divide is a statewide media collaboration to raise awareness and engagement about poverty and income inequality through in-depth, local storytelling and community outreach. The project is based at CalMatters in Sacramento with a team of reporters deployed at news organizations throughout California.

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