More Than Half of US
Public School Students Live In Poverty,
Report Finds
Problem is growing, especially among
children, as report finds the majority of
public school students in nearly half of US
states live in poverty
By Jana Kasperkevic
January 18, 2015 "ICH"
- "The
Guardian"
-
Want to know the real state
of the US economy? Visit a local public
school and find out how many student qualify
for free or reduced-price lunches.
A new report found that,
at 51%, the number of children who qualified
for federal programs for free or
reduced-price lunches is the highest in at
least 50 years,
according to the Southern Education
Foundation. In other words, in 2013,
more than half of the students attending
public school lived in poverty.
Those numbers are
representative of the growing problem of
child poverty in the US. Overall,
one in five US children live in poverty.
It has only recently been dropping, with
14.7 million US children living in poverty
in 2013, down from 16.1 million in 2012. In
2012,
out of 35 economically developed countries,
only Romania had a higher child poverty rate
than the US.
The Southern Education
Foundation found that with each passing
year, an increasing number of states are
seeing needy children in their classrooms.
In 2013, 21 states
reported that the majority of students in
their public schools came from low-income
families. That’s a huge jump from 2011, when
17 states reported such majorities. Ten
years ago, it was only four states.
There is a geographical
element to poverty. Thirteen of those states
with a majority of low-income students in
their schools are located in the south, six
in the west. Mississippi is faring the
worst, with 71% of its public school
students coming from low-income families. In
Texas, that number is 60% and in Alabama
58%.
In 19 other states,
including New York, low-income students made
up between 40% and 49% of the states’ public
school enrollment,
the report found.
To deal with the number of
US children that tend to go hungry, many
food banks have added child nutrition
programs. Despite the conservative politics
of many southern states, there is a
consensus that children need proper
nutrition and assistance.
“Even the toughest,
hard-nosed, anti-government-funding person
would say: ‘Well, kids ought to be able to
eat good,’” Dave Reaney, who runs a food
bank in Theodore Alabama,
told the Guardian. “We try to make sure
that they understand that whether you like
it or not, [food stamps] help kids and kids
can’t help themselves.”
The growth of American
poverty is drawing interest from
policymakers. To be more in touch with the
people left behind by the current recovery –
the “low- and moderate- income populations”
– the Federal Reserve board of governors
announced on Friday that it is
creating an advisory council.
The Center for Popular
Democracy cheered the Fed’s move away from a
focus on the demands of banks and the stock
market, saying: “The decision-making process
within the Fed has, for too long, been
dominated by the priorities and voices of
banks and corporations. ... It is essential
that the Council include genuine
representatives of working families and
communities of color across the country.”
As local public schools
struggle to educate America’s low-income
children on limited budgets, the future of
working families is at stake.
The US must make improving
educational support for low-income students
a priority, insist the researchers at the
Southern Education Foundation. Otherwise,
“the trends of the last decade will be a
prologue for a nation not at risk, but a
nation in decline.”
It is unacceptable to slander, smear or engage in personal attacks on authors of articles posted on ICH.
Those engaging in that behavior will be banned from the comment section.
In accordance
with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material
is distributed without profit to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving the
included information for research and educational
purposes. Information Clearing House has no
affiliation whatsoever with the originator of
this article nor is Information ClearingHouse
endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)