Kalamazoo resident Vicki Sayman (left) gets her hair cut at Project Connect Wednesday. Sayman is on disability. In addition to the new hairdo, she also got help finding a way to get her dentures and a broken pair of glasses fixed.
Hundreds of volunteers in neon yellow t-shirts handed out winter coats and hats, helped answer specific questions and enroll people in dozens of assistance programs that already exist.
48-year old George McCree lives in Kalamazoo, but he doesn’t have a permanent job or home right now. He got help finding temporary shelter at the Project Connect event last May. That inspired him to start volunteering at a soup kitchen in town.
Stereotypes of people living in poverty are persistent.
But Alan Berube of the Brookings Institution says these stereotypes are becoming less accurate.
A report released today by the Institution shows poverty is growing and affecting many it didn’t touch before.
Some highlights from the report:
Concentrated poverty rose in Midwestern cities, but the number of people living in very poor neighborhoods is rising faster in the suburbs.
Poverty still affects communities of color in the inner cities. But, over the last decade poverty has grown among the number of well-educated white people living outside cities.
In the last decade concentrations of poverty have crept back up. That's where 40 percent of the people in a particular neighborhood live below the federal poverty line. These kinds of concentrations were on the decline up until 2000.
These concentrations of poverty almost doubled in the Midwest over the last decade.
It was a cool morning in Lansing, but scores of people stood in line for a free meal and a chance to get some help from social service agencies that work with people who are homeless or at risk of becoming homeless.
Michigan’s rising poverty rate took on a human face in Lansing today as a few hundred people waited outside in the morning cold for a special event to help the capital city’s homeless. Dozens of social service agencies took part in the event on Lansing’s south side.
Patricia Wheeler is with the Greater Lansing Homeless Resolution Network. She says more and more Michiganders are either homeless or at risk of becoming homeless. Wheeler says this event is intended to lend them a hand.
A lot of people are worried about what’s been going on in the stock market. I guess I should be, too. To the extent I have any retirement savings, they are tied up in stock-heavy mutual funds.
But what bothers me much more is what’s going on with poverty in this state. A week from today, we are ending cash welfare assistance to something close to twelve thousand families.
That means close to thirty thousand children will suddenly be utterly dependent on the kindness of strangers. And their numbers will grow, every month.
New census data show more Michigan residents are living in poverty.
The 2010 numbers from the American Community Survey released Thursday show the poverty rate rose from 16.2 percent in 2009 to 16.8 percent in Michigan. The percent of children under 18 in poverty in Michigan rose from 22.5 percent to 23.5 percent.
In Detroit, 37.6 percent were in poverty and 53.6 percent of children.
Median household income fell more than 1 percent from 2009 to $45,413 as more people worked in the lower-pay service industry than in manufacturing.
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