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US Homelessness and Poverty Rates Skyrocket While Billions
are Spent Overseas on Occupation By: Jay
Shaft---Coalition For Free Thought In
Media 7/30/03 As I watch far
away images of body bags being filled,
I see much closer images of bodies. I
went by a local park the other day and
it looked like a concentration
camp crossed with a mass murder scene. There were people in
rags and covered with filth lying
scattered all over the place. At least
twenty people were on crutches, had
parts bandaged, or with open wounds
not even covered. They were all hungry
and a large majority was sick. All around this city
I live in, and nationwide, the level
of homelessness and poverty is growing
alarmingly. From the last counts and
estimates nation wide, there has been
at least a 35-45% increase in
homelessness and poverty. The
increases have come over the last two
years with the biggest increases being
in 2002 and especially in the first
six months of 2003. Add to that the
barely subsisting or borderline
homeless/poor and we start to see
a very alarming trend that shows no
sign of going away. Over 30% of
Americans are on the borderline of
poverty. A lot just do not quite make
the cut to receive food stamps or some
kind of benefits and live on a razor
edge of desperation and
starvation. I have talked
to people that run food banks, soup
kitchens, and homeless shelters.
Places like Day Star, Catholic
Charities, St, Vincent De Paul, and
many other major support agencies.
They all tell me they have seen a vast
increase in people that would starve
or be without clothes if not for their
services. The most shocking
sight to see is homeless and starving
children, living right near some
of the richest neighborhoods!!!!!
Right here in
"humanitarian" America, home
of the worlds largest
"humanitarian" and
"liberating" force (or is it
FARCE?). This country is
putting more and more of our
citizens on the brink of
homelessness and desperate poverty. In
addition, it seems that we have pushed
countless others over the brink and
into the bottomless pit of despair and
need. All you have to do is look
around, open your eyes, and you will
see the vast sea of hungry and
destitute. I have seen more and
more children and families out on the
street or in feeding centers and at
food handouts. To think that the
world’s richest country allows
this to happen is Sickening! To
think that we turn a blind eye to
starving children because it is easier
to tolerate than do
something about it! We cannot afford
to hire teachers, build new schools,
or even maintain the ones we have. Our
children slip farther into the void of
illiteracy and neglect. We are the
lowest among the industrialized
"first" world nations in
literacy scores! Many
"third" world countries now
have higher literacy rates than the
U.S. We are setting
ourselves up to turn the world’s
richest country into a third
world quagmire. This country is
sinking into a swamp of drowning poor
and so-called "Economically
Challenged!” The rich meanwhile buy
bigger S.U.Vs (self indulgent
ubiquitous vulture mobiles), and
bigger gated houses to keep out the
flotsam and detritus of the
cast aways. Homelessness
Reaches New Levels 3.5
million people, 39% of them children,
currently experience homelessness
every year. 60% of all new homeless
cases are single mothers with
children. Recent
studies suggest that the United States
generates homelessness at a much
higher rate than previously thought.
By its very nature, homelessness is
impossible to measure with 100%
accuracy. More important than actually
knowing the precise number of
people who experience homelessness is
how to go about ending it. A
growing number of cities, including
Los Angeles, Seattle, and Atlanta, are
criminalizing activities of the
homeless, according to the National
Coalition for the Homeless. More than
60 cities are introducing measures to
make it illegal to beg or sleep on the
streets, to sit in a bus shelter for
more than an hour, or to walk across a
parking lot if the person doesn't have
a car parked there. In
2002 the US Conference of Mayors
reported a 19% increase in shelter
requests due to homelessness in 25
surveyed cities. Requests for shelter
by families increased by 20%. On
average 30% of all requests for
shelter went unmet in 2002, with 38%
of requests by families going
unmet. In 60% of the reporting cities,
emergency shelters had to turn away
families due to lack of resources,
with 56% reporting they had to turn
away other homeless people. People
are remaining homeless for at least 6
months on average with 82% of cities
reporting an increase in the length of
time people are homeless. There
has been a 40% increase in the
Berkeley, California homeless
population over the last two years.
New York City has reported a 42%
increase over the last two years,
Boston a 37% increase, Los Angeles, CA
a 47% increase, San Diego, CA 41%,
Washington, D.C. 39%, Seattle, WA.
43%, Portland, OR 36%, Chicago, IL
47%, St. Louis, MO 34%, Atlanta,
GA 40%, Tampa, FL 46%, St. Petersburg,
Fl 45%, Miami, FL 49%, New Orleans, LA 41%,
Phoenix, AZ a staggering 56%, with
most other major cities reporting at
least a 25-30% increase over the last
two years. 41%
of all homeless are single males, 41%
families, 13% single females, and 5% being
unaccompanied minors. The homeless
population is estimated to be 50%
African American, 35% white, 12%
Hispanic, 2% Native American, and 1%
Asian. An
average of 23% suffer from mental
illness, 38% suffer from substance
abuse, 10% are veterans, and 22% are
employed. Over
40% of homeless persons are eligible
for disability benefits, but only 11%
actually receive them.
Most are eligible for
food stamps, but only 37% receive
them. Most homeless families are
eligible for welfare benefits, but
only 52% receive them. Published
reports suggest that most homeless
families with children are headed by
single women between the ages of 26
and 30 who have never been married and
have two children. According to one
study, homeless women are
significantly more likely to have low
birth weight babies than are similar
poor women who have housing. Lack
of affordable housing leads the list
of causes for homelessness, with
mental illness and lack of needed
services, substance abuse, low paying
jobs, domestic violence,
unemployment, poverty, prison release,
down turn in economy, limited life
skills and cuts in public
assistance being the other top
reported causes. The
average wait for public housing was 19
months; the average wait for Section 8
certificates and vouchers was 21-23
months. 45% of cities have stopped
taking public housing applications in
at least one assisted housing program
due to extensive waiting lists. The
other group sometimes considered
homeless is the precariously
housed population. People who are
precariously housed are in danger of
becoming literally homeless because
they have no place of their own to
live or their current housing
situation is tenuous. This group
includes, among others, people who are
doubled up... those who are living for
short periods of time with friends or
relatives and thus lack a fixed,
regular nighttime residence. Children
often appear among the precariously
housed population because parents who
become homeless may place their
children with friends or relatives in
order to avoid literal homelessness
for them. Because some individuals and
families choose to share housing as a
regular, stable, and long-term
arrangement, distinguishing the
precariously housed from those in
stable sharing arrangements is
difficult. President
Bush claimed that his FY2004 budget
"helps America meet its goals
both at home and overseas." Yet,
upon examination of the budget
numbers, the goals of many Americans
appear not to have been included.
At
a time when unprecedented numbers of
families and individuals are homeless
or at risk of becoming homeless, the
President proposed no new resources to
meet their needs. His budget maintains
funding levels for most homeless
assistance programs; levels so
woefully inadequate that each year
record numbers of people are turned
away from life-sustaining services.
In
releasing his FY2004 budget, President
Bush claimed "human compassion
cannot be summarized in dollars and
cents." Neither, can the untold
suffering of the 1.35 million children
whose lives will be disrupted by loss
of housing and health care this year,
or the sorrow of their parents, who
struggle against the odds to provide
stability and hope, or the frustration
and pain of those who work but cannot
afford housing, or the fear of those
whose health conditions, coupled with
lack of housing, threaten their very
survival.
In
particular, the President's Medicaid
proposal threatens to leave many more
families and children uninsured,
dramatically increasing their risk of
becoming homeless due to illness or
injury. Children are especially
vulnerable to losing coverage under
the proposed merging of Medicaid and
the Children's Health Insurance
Program.
Hunger
and Starvation Increasing, Especially
For Children
In
2001, the USDA reported that the
number of Americans who were food
insecure or hungry or at risk of
hunger was 33.6 million. In the last
year it is estimated that there has
been an additional 5-10 million
additional people who are now in
jeopardy of hunger and starvation. The
government has a benign description of
this situation, calling the hungry and
starving "Food Critical.” The
2002 survey of 25 cities by the US Conference of
Mayors recorded a 19% increase in
the requests for emergency food has
risen by 19% in 2002. 100% of the
cities reported these increases.
Requests for food by families
increased by 17% while requests for
food by the elderly increased by 19%.
48%
of people requesting food were
families with children. 38% were
currently employed at the time of the
request. In
2002, 16% of all food requests went
unmet due to lack of resources. 14%
of families did not have their
requests met adequately. The
leading reason for hunger was high
housing costs, along with low paying
jobs, unemployment and other
employment related issues, economic
downturn, medical and health costs,
homelessness, poverty or lack of
income, substance abuse, reduced
public benefits, child care costs, mental
health problems, and limited life
skills being cited as the other
leading causes of hunger. I
have talked to various groups doing
feedings, both in fixed locations and
out on the street. All the groups I
talked to said they had experienced a
30-50% increase in the amount of
people seeking food and nutritional
resources. According
to America’s Second Harvest, a group
dedicated to ending hunger and
starvation, one in every four people
in feeding lines are children. Over 9
million children are the recipients of
food from a pantry, kitchen, or
shelter within the network of
America's Second Harvest. A
survey of America's Second Harvest
affiliates in late 2001 and early 2002
found that 86% had seen an increase in
requests for food assistance during
the past year. I contacted them
recently and they said the level of
food requests has risen even more in
2002- mid 2003. New
York City's soup kitchens and food
pantries fed 45% more people in 2002
than in 2000. In the one year
following September 11, 73% of the
agencies fed more children, with 39%
saying the number of children they fed
increased "greatly." America's
Second Harvest's Hunger
in America 2001 report found
that 23.3 million people sought and
received emergency hunger relief from
the network of charities in 2001. 23
million people receiving emergency
food assistance is equivalent to the
combined populations of the 10 largest
U.S. cities: New York, Los Angeles,
Chicago, Houston, Philadelphia, San
Diego, Phoenix, San Antonio, Dallas,
and Detroit. According
to some surveys and partial reports
for the first six months of 2003, the
figure is now over 40 million
people in America that have to seek
some form of daily feeding or
nutritional supplementation Poverty
and Unemployment Growing at Alarming
Rate Between
2000 and 2001, poverty rose to 11.7%
of the population, or 32.9 million
people, up from 11.3% and 31.6
million. The
poverty rate for 2002 was 13.9%
equaling about 35.1 million Americans living
in poverty with over 14 million of
those being children. In 2003
the poverty rate is expected to
average 14.2% or 35.8 million people. (US
CENSUS BUREAU) 18%
of American children, almost 15
million, live in poverty, meaning
their parents' income is at or below
the federal poverty level. This is
about the same number of children who
lived in poverty in 1980. 8% of
America’s children, 6 million,
live in extreme poverty. This is a 19%
increase from 2000. The parents of
these children make half the federal
poverty level, or $8,980 for a family
of four.
39% of American children, 28
million, live in low-income families.
This is a 3% increase from 2000. According
to the newest figures released by the
Labor Department on 7/3/03, 9.2
million people are now unemployed by
adjusted figures and if you include
the unemployed who are not receiving
any assistance like unemployment
compensation or Workman's Comp, the
figure is 13.9 million. Average
unemployment rates in the past 2 years
have risen: in 2001, the rate was
4.8%, but jumped to 5.7% in 2002, and
to 6.5% in 2003. (US BUREAU OF LABOR
STATISTICS)
57%
of African American children are
low-income (down 3% from 2000), 64% of
Latino (up 7%), and 34% of white
children (up 3%) are low-income. As
low-income families increase their
earnings, they rapidly lose
eligibility for assistance such as
childcare subsidies and health
benefits.
It
is not until a two-parent family of
four reaches roughly $36,000 a year in
income that parents can provide the
basic necessities for their children.
That’s double the federal poverty
level. 68% of all workers receiving help under the Temporary Emergency Unemployment Compensation program have exhausted their unemployment benefits before finding another job.
A
survey by National
Employment Law Project,
"Unemployed in America,"
conducted April 17-28, 2003
also
found that more than half of all
unemployed workers had cut back on
spending on food and more than half
had also postponed medical or dental
care.
A
January 2001 report by the Department
of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
found that 4.9 million low-income
American households had worst case
housing needs, paying more than 50% of
their income on rent, while HUD
estimates that this figure should be
no more than 30%. Following
years of decline, participation in the
food stamp program has been on the
rise over the past two years. In
December 2002, the last month for
which data are available, 20.5 million
people participated in the food stamp
program. October 2002 was the first
month since March 1998 in which the
number of food stamp participants
exceeded 20 million. Since its
recent low point in July 2000,
participation has increased by 3.6
million people, or 22 percent. According
to the National Bureau of Economic
Research, the current recession began
in March 2001. Between that date
and December 2002, food stamp
participation increased by 3.3 million
people, or 19 percent, nationally.
Participation increased between March
2001 and December 2002 in 47 states
and the District of Columbia. More
than 35 states have made cuts in
programs funded with TANF and
childcare block grant funds, and most
of these cuts are in programs that
promote the goals of welfare reform. The
cuts reflect both the exhaustion of
many states’ surplus TANF funds from
prior years and the large budget gaps
many states face. With
many single mothers losing their child
care, they cannot find work or
maintain adequate employment and are
in extreme danger of losing their
housing. 4
Billion a month to occupy Iraq, 1.9
billion to occupy Afghanistan America
is bleeding money into foreign
occupation, while cutting back on the
programs that provide a safety net for
America's poorest citizens. The
military budget is expected to top
$450 million for the fiscal year 2004.
The
costs of occupying and improving
conditions in Iraq and Afghanistan are
not even factored into the latest
military expenditure proposals. The US
is pledged to rebuilding Iraq's
electrical and water infrastructure at
estimated costs of $10 Billion
for the electrical grid and $500
Million to rebuild the water system
and supply clean water to the
population of Iraq. While
the US is committed to at least two
years of occupation in Iraq and
possibly up to ten years, our own
people slip into further poverty and
starvation. If
the US spent just three months
occupation costs, they could wipe out
hunger and homelessness completely for
ten years. However, it does not seem
like feeding and sheltering our own
citizens has a very high priority. If
the US took just 25% of their annual
military budget, it could go a long
way to wiping out hunger and
homelessness around the world. Just
10% of our military budget spent
yearly on America could give every
high school graduate a college
education for four years. It
seems like it is not a priority to
protect our children from starvation
and living on the streets. Our
education system is crumbling and the
school breakfast and lunch
programs are being slashed
mercilessly. Increasingly
in America, private foundations and
organizations are stepping in to take
up the slack that the government fails
to adjust for. Most charities are
reporting budget shortfalls due to the
government cutting their funding and
resources. If
this crisis continues, we are in
danger of actually having worse hunger
and homelessness than some third world
countries. The military expansion and
occupation must stop so that we can
salvage our future before it is too
late to stop the landslide of poor and
starving. We
must put our priorities in line with
the welfare of all our citizens. We
cannot afford to neglect the children
or any citizen any longer. There must
be a call of reckoning to stop this depriving
of anyone their basic needs to exist. Jay
Shaft, editor, Coalition For Free
Thought In Media Coalition
For Free Thought In Media home: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/coalitionforfreethoughtinmedia/
The
following websites were used to
research this article. They contain a
wealth of information on the current
problems faced by America and the solutions
that can be taken. http://www.nationalhomeless.org/index.html
http://www.nlchp.org/
http://www.secondharvest.org/whoshungry/current_stats.html
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