Poverty in America

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Single Moms Just As Good

Published September 30, 2009 @ 09:00AM PT

In a non-news flash for those of us who have succeeded despite growing up in the dreaded den of broke-a** dysfunction that is the female-headed-household, i.e., with a single mom, a new study of 5,000 families reveals that "Family stability -- regardless of whether it's a one- or two-parent household" is what's key for children to thrive. Yet, the research shows that for black children alone there were clear differences on math and reading test scores for those kids in 2-parent families.  I, like so many activists, scholars and proud kids of single moms, am trying to figure out why this racial difference persists.

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Successfully Mixing Incomes in Greenwich

Published September 27, 2009 @ 11:08AM PT

Don't be fooled by the misleading statement in this NYT piece about public housing in Greenwich, CT, one of the wealthiest towns in the nation, where the Housing Authority manages 750 units, including 300 for the elderly:

"In many ways, the housing in Greenwich mirrors modern trends in public housing — low-rise, small-scale structures — even though most of it was built years ago."

The majority of the more than a million units of public housing in the U.S. is in developments with less than 500 units, and half of all our public housing is in developments with less than 100 units.  Contrary to the high rises that capture our ire and imagination, most public housing is smaller scale and more unassuming than even these model projects in Greenwich - which offer low-income families, many former workers of the wealthy families in town, playgrounds, picnic and BBQ areas and comfortable, mostly well-maintained if aging homes.

The key to success of low-income housing like this is yes, de-concentration, but by that I mean not putting it only in low-income neighborhoods.  It's not the low-income population in the projects and their lack of resources that's the problem when we think about public housing, but the limited overall resources of the surrounding communities and authorities in cash-strapped cities and neighborhoods (think New Orleans, Detroit, Memphis; Roxbury (MA), South Boston, etc.).  When public housing is situated in place like Greenwich, or the South End in Boston, the natural "mixed-income" benefits of better schools, safer neighborhoods, and more amenities kick in for public housing residents in a much more effective way than demolishing units and trying to import middle-class residents.

As we prioritize more affordable rental housing, and try to desegregate wealthy communities (still in 2009!), we could use more favorable, realistic coverage of public housing like this from the media.

(Families enjoying life in Greenwich, CT; photo by WalkingGeek)

Victory: Hyatt Workers Given New Jobs

Published September 25, 2009 @ 02:23PM PT

Hyatt announced today that the 98 workers it "unceremoniously" laid off last month will be given new jobs in Boston at their previous rate of pay - the positions will be through the staffing agency that employs their replacements.  This is a good but qualified victory: their current pay is guaranteed through the end of 2010, and Hyatt has extended their health benefits through March 2010.  For workers who opt instead to go through a career retraining and placement program, they will receive their previous wages through March 2010 or until they secure new employment, whichever comes first.

Many thanks to those that joined the boycott against Hyatt; it was a small but important movement here at Change.org, and part of a much larger response in Massachusetts and beyond.

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Our Broken Child Support System

Published September 25, 2009 @ 05:05AM PT


My morning coffee discussion with a friend went from scoffing about an upcoming wedding of a friend's nephew that was going to eat up $100k to the fact that at least 50% of marriages end in divorce to the hot topic of the child support system. My take is that it's broken. Many, on both sides of the system, will agree, with differing opinions on who's to blame.

This week in rain-soaked Atlanta is a premiere of a documentary, "Support? System Down," focusing on

the fundamental flaws in America's Family Courts regarding the Divorce and Child Support System. The film explores the problems through over 38 interviews with both custodial and non-custodial parents and the attorneys, judges and county employees on both sides of the paradigm.

The system's failures can spill out in violence, as in a recent fatal shooting in a trailer court in GA allegedly over child support. Hopefully the film will generate attention on a hot, neglected, issue--one that causes poverty and homelessness, often for moms and kids, but sometimes dads too.

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NYT Stands With Mississippi

Published September 23, 2009 @ 01:27PM PT

Last April, we featured a campaign here called "I Stand With Mississippi," started by the MS Center for Justice, to protest Governor Barbour's plan to decline federal stimulus funds.  Yesterday, the NY Times stood with Mississippi - expending editorial capital on the almost four-year fight by social justice advocates to compel the MS government to to appropriately and fairly spend federal disaster recovery funds on affordable housing for affected low-income populations.

The STEPS Coalition, an umbrella group of MS-based advocates such as the MS Center for Justice, is named in the editorial for a report it released at the anniversary of Katrina, documenting the state's poor performance in rebuilding destroyed affordable housing relative to its post-storm projections and compared to Louisiana.  We've documented here the most egregious example of Barbour's misplaced priorities - taking $600M allocated for housing redevelopment and using it to expand the port of Gulfport. Only 20% of all the money meant for low-income households has been spent on them; 50% has gone to wealthier homeowners.

Mississippi is the poorest state in the nation, and a state with poverty and inequality so dire that even Louisiana, hardly a progressive bright spot on the map, easily surpasses them in affordable housing recovery.  This post is sort of meta... it seeks to highlight the on-going progress and battle the STEPS Coalition and others are waging to bring all affordable housing back on-line to the thousands of state residents still displaced - in trailers and out-of-state.  But it also highlights the coverage this struggle is finally getting - national attention it's long deserved.  It's like someone on the NYT editorial staff finally had a chance to read that random Katrina report someone recommended last month.

Show your support for housing and social justice advocates in Mississippi: Check out the MS Center for Justice, the MS NAACP, and the Gulf Coast Fair Housing Center, the STEPS Coalition, and their allies. There is a tremendous amount of social justice work happening and a tremendous progressive community in the U.S. South.  Get involved today.

(Photo of farmers' market at Point Cadet Plaza in Ocean Springs, MS, a few weeks before Katrina hit in August 2005; Taken by Ken Roberts Photography)

Incomes Up 14% through Opportunity NYC

Published September 22, 2009 @ 10:03AM PT

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is hosting the Organization of American States today to discuss anti-poverty initiatives in the Americas.  Featured at the meeting with be the City of New York's Opportunity NYC, a program of conditional cash transfers to low-income families to reward them for specific behaviors: attending school, attending doctor's appointments, working full-time, etc.  The Bloomberg Administration, which launched the initiative as one of many anti-poverty programs managed collectively through its Center for Economic Opportunity, has renewed the program for a third year.

The program is both promising and controversial for providing what many deem paternalistic incentives that isolate behavior as the reason households are poor.  I agree.  But let's face it: Opportunity NYC is increasing annual household incomes by as much as 14% per year.  Do we really want to condemn such a result?

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Target Takes Food Stamps

Published September 21, 2009 @ 06:00AM PT

So many Americans are now using food stamps that more and more chain stores have begun accepting them, rather than lose these customers to economic hardship. New or expanded recipients include Target, CVS, 7-11, Costco, BJ's and Sam's Club.

Food stamp use was up 22% this summer from 2008, with more than 35M Americans using them. Food stamps now come on a card identical to a debit or credit card, offering discretion and privacy for Americans self-conscious about relying on public assistance. For businesses, Costco finds that food stamp users spend an additional $50 or so on purchases not covered by the benefit.

There's a message in here about economic hardship becoming mainstream, becoming normal.  I'm trying to generalize it to an ideal world where one is not punished for being poor, where a low-income parent can stand in line at the grocery store without a sense of shame - that she's even at the better grocery store rather than an overpriced bodega or food bank is an accomplishment.  (Of course, see the original link above to understand transportation issues.)

Expanded food stamp acceptance at more stores is one of these situational responses that becomes permanent. From the sound of it, businesses have to invest in some degree of technological or process change to accept these cards.  These are likely not upgrades that will be rolled back once the recession really lifts.   As anti-poverty activists, we should be thinking about emergency services and about long-term changes we can push through during moments of crisis.  Yes, we've got to expand eligibility for food stamps so all the many million more bellies don't go hungry, but if there was ever a moment to update the poverty measure to reflect the costs of housing, health care or decline in wages - It's Now.

(Photo "Coupon Time at Target" by cote)

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