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The latest great Idea in microcredit via Poverty News Blog December 23rd, 2008 at 21:42

image Ah Ha!!! This guy is on to something. I now have another link to add to the "Get Involved Links" Curtis Stephen from the New York City paper City Limits introduces us to Darryl Penrice.Darryl Penrice likes to talk. His preferred topics of conversation can roam anywhere from the music of the late rapper Tupac Shakur and the murky underside of politics in America to the mechanics of microeconomics. But if there’s one subject that the 32-year-old Brooklyn resident and self-professed “ghetto prodigy” loves to discuss more than anything else, it’s a vision of a new way to fight poverty that he's obsessed with making real.For the past year, Penrice has been anything but silent about his proposal, meeting with an assortment of potential investors, city officials, nonprofit groups,...

Census figures round up: Part 3 via Poverty News Blog December 10th, 2008 at 22:15

image Here are some more localized stories on the nationwide census survey that was released yesterday. The data collected ranges from 2005 to 2007. Here are links to related stories from yesterday, part 1 and part 2.First we stop by Ohio, Dana Wilson and Jim Phillips filed this story for the Columbus Dispatch. Ohio University students might be short on cash, but the city probably is not as poor as the U.S. Census might lead one to believe.Athens is atop the list of the nation's poorest towns and cities that have at least 20,000 people, according to newly released figures from the U.S. Census.Numbers from the census' American Community Survey released yesterday say that on average for the period of 2005-2007, 52.3 percent of the city's residents were living below the federal poverty level.The...

Toy for Joy helping provide Christmas in buffalo via Poverty News Blog December 4th, 2008 at 17:16

image Here is a pretty good profile of a charity that has a Christmas toy drive in the Buffalo, New York area. "Toys for Joys" expect nearly 4000 children will come to their toy giveaway event on December 20th. The number dwarfs any from previous years, another indication that needs are greater during this time of recession in the States.Emma Sapong of the Buffalo News introduces us to a parent who is seeking help from the toy drive. Christmas was on its way, and Tracey Mullen was unprepared. The mother of two was jobless with no means to buy gifts for her daughters and stepgrandson.“It was really a concern,” said Mullen, a Buffalo resident. “When you are not working, you just don’t feel like you are part of anything. It’s hard to explain, but you feel awful.”Mullen turned to...

Video: Read to Succeed in Buffalo via Poverty News Blog November 10th, 2008 at 16:37

image The Buffalo News has a great video today about an educational program that helps poor children get a head start on reading. Read To Succeed Video...

Religious groups target poverty via Poverty News Blog September 26th, 2008 at 19:48

image from the Buffalo News By Harold McNeilMembers of the three Abrahamic faiths and other religious traditions broke bread together and endeavored to collectively address local poverty during an event Wednesday in the Islamic Society and Mosque, 745 Heim Road, Getzville.The third annual "Tent of Abraham" coincides with the Muslim observance of Ramadan, a monthlong period of daily fasting. The aim, according to Dr. Khalid J. Qazi, president of the Muslim Public Affairs Council of Western New York, is to invite those of other faith traditions to join local Muslims in collecting nonperishable food items and cash donations for distribution to the area's needy through the Food Pantry of Western New York and Viva La Casa."The Muslim Public Affairs Council of Western New York started this two years...

As Food Costs Rise, So Do School Lunch Prices via Poverty News Blog August 27th, 2008 at 21:18

image from the New York Times This article explores the effect that rising food prices are having on school lunches. School officials point out that what kids are getting for a dollar or two in the cafeteria would cost 6 to 7 dollars at a restaurant. - KaleBy WINNIE HUGas pumps, grocery stores, and now school cafeterias.Prices on some school lunch lines are going up this fall as school officials, like many others, struggle to pay higher prices and delivery fees for staples like bread, milk, fresh fruit and vegetables. The price increases, generally about 25 cents a meal, come as school districts in New York and across the country try to eke more out of already tight budgets, with some switching to four-day schedules to reduce utility and busing costs, and others asking more of their students...

Albany cuts funds in half to Rochester poverty fighter via Poverty News Blog August 21st, 2008 at 15:11

image from the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle The state government in New York cut funds to a children's poverty fighter. The organization called the Rochester Surround Care Community Corp. will see it's budget slashed by 2 million dollars. - Kaleby David AndreattaThe significance of the reduction is difficult to overstate for the fledgling social services organization, which has faced a string of setbacks and false starts in launching its grand vision to revitalize the impoverished northeast section of the city.As of last week, the organization had received just $700,000 of its original state Department of Education grant but had committed to disburse over $1.1 million to local nonprofit agencies, according to financial records examined by the Democrat and Chronicle.The agency is designed...

Rochester’s poverty levels more concentrated than Buffalo via Poverty News Blog August 16th, 2008 at 15:22

image from the Buffalo NewsHere is another story on the Brookings Institution report that is focused on New York StateBy, Jonathan EpsteinA new study by the liberal-leaning Brookings Institution shows that the concentration of low-income working families in high-poverty areas is significantly higher in Rochester than in the Buffalo-Niagara Falls area.According to the Brookings report, to be released today, about 21 percent of Rochester's low-income working families lived in ZIP codes where at least 40 percent of all taxpayers get the federal Earned Income Tax Credit. Low-income families were defined as those who receive the EITC.In fact, Rochester had the eighth-highest concentration of poverty in the country, among the 58 largest cities studied by Brookings. And it had the fourth-highest...

Seeking Common Ground via Poverty News Blog July 30th, 2008 at 13:34

image from MPN Now Women in New York State are more likely to live in poverty then women nationwide. This story profiles an organization that help women in New York. - KaleBy Julie SherwoodWomen in the state fare worse economically than they did in 1989, according to a report by a New York City-based philanthropic organization that helps women overcome poverty.In addition, women in the state are more likely to live in poverty than their national counterparts, the report notes, with 15.2 percent living in poverty here compared with 12.7 percent nationwide.The report was compiled by the Institute for Women’s Policy Research, a nonprofit organization that researches policy issues of importance to women.“We are deeply troubled by the growing gap between the rich and poor in our state,” said...

‘Real responsibility, real work’ via Poverty News Blog July 19th, 2008 at 14:46

image from The Watertown Daily Times Summer time is when kids are out of school, and they have time to taketrips and lend a helping hand. This one is for building houses in Mexico. - KaleMEXICO MISSION: Local teenagers brave variety of challenges to build houses for the poorBy GABRIELLE HOVENDONThe 10 adults and 34 teenagers who signed up for the fifth annual Watertown First Presbyterian Church Mexico Mission Trip found themselves faced with poverty and tough conditions when they arrived in Tijuana, Mexico, on July 1.The group, led by the church's associate pastor, the Rev. Matthew D. Schultz, partnered with a San-Diego based organization called Amor Ministries to build three houses for Mexican families.The ministry was founded in 1980 and has built more than 12,000 homes in poverty-stricken...

Waterford market expands its sources via Poverty News Blog July 14th, 2008 at 16:06

image from the Troy Record By: Tom Caprood WATERFORD - Visitors to the Waterford Harbor Farmers Market Sunday were greeted by the addition of a new Ballston Spa vendor in honor of the market's focus on the many benefits of fair trade.Mango Tree Imports at 2124 Route 50 in Ballston Spa was represented by the shop's owner, Kim Anderson, who was on hand to sell some of her store's wares, as well as answer any questions about the Fair Trade Federation that people had."Fair trade is basically an attempt at poverty alleviation in the developing world through sustainable business practices rather than just through charity," said Anderson, who noted that her shop was one of roughly 300 nationwide members of the Fair Trade Federation.Anderson explained that her shop offers items from over 55 countries...

Access to activities limited via Poverty News Blog July 1st, 2008 at 13:41

image from The Albany Time Union Anti-violence advocates say summer programs fail to serve poor children By TIM O'BRIEN, Staff writerALBANY -- Young people in the city's poorest neighborhoods are cheated out of access to summer programs that would get them away from streets plagued by violence, a group of church, civic and governmental leaders said Monday.They said most of these seasonal recreation and educational activities are concentrated outside the neighborhoods where they are most needed.The Inner City Youth and Family Coalition formed was last summer after the murder of 15-year-old Shahied Oliver in Arbor Hill. Its efforts gained renewed emphasis after 10-year-old Kathina Thomas was killed last month by a stray bullet outside her home in West Hill. On Monday, the group urged the city...

Poverty addressed at forum via Poverty News Blog June 26th, 2008 at 16:25

image from Mid Hudson News KINGSTON – It is summer and the humidity may be an annoyance. Or thoughts center for some on a vacation.But winter already has a lot of people thinking about the cost of survival since fuel oil has nearly doubled since last year and the minimum fill-up may approach more than $1,000 for 250 gallons of fuel oil.“I have greater fear for the coming winter than I have ever had for the people of Ulster County,” said Michael Berg, the executive director of the Family of Woodstock.He was one of the featured speakers during a panel discussion on poverty in Kingston and Ulster County at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation.Berg sat on the panel with Rev. Darlene Kelley, of the Clinton Avenue United Methodist Church, which runs a soup kitchen in midtown Kingston, and...

Ossining teen takes on poverty via Poverty News Blog June 21st, 2008 at 15:26

image from Lower Hudson dot com Kevin ZawackiOSSINING - When asked on a college application what he felt strongly about, Ossining High School senior Omar Herrera thought of some of the people struggling to live and get by in one of the wealthiest places in America."The issue of poverty leapt to mind," explained Herrera. "Many don't realize that, according to the Westchester Food Bank, an estimated 200,000 people are hungry in Westchester County."Herrera, who is working as summer intern for state Assemblywoman Sandy Galef, D-Ossining, had those thoughts in mind when he decided to organize a community forum on poverty. He promoted the Wednesday night event by sending fliers home to every parent in the Ossining public schools, putting up posters throughout the village and speaking about it the...

State Programs Add Safety Net for the Poorest via Poverty News Blog May 12th, 2008 at 19:55

image from The New York Times By RACHEL L. SWARNSLITTLE ROCK, Ark. — For years, state welfare offices like the one alongside Interstate 30 have drawn the unemployed. But these days, the red-brick building here is also attracting poor, working parents with an unexpected offer: $204 a month in cash.Shelly Thomas, a stockroom clerk and single mother, is using her windfall from the State of Arkansas to tune up the old Chevrolet she drives to work. Talia Greenwood, a day care worker with four children, spends the money on gas, diapers and baby formula.The women are pioneers in an emerging social experiment as states across the country try to go beyond simply moving people off welfare. Over the last two years, officials in Arkansas and at least a dozen other states have announced plans to extend...

Poverty experiment eye-opening for leaders in Buffalo via Poverty News Blog May 9th, 2008 at 16:50

image from MSNBCBy CAROLYN THOMPSONBUFFALO, N.Y. - Maria Whyte's two-day experiment living at the poverty level left her with debt, a parking ticket and probably a few gray hairs."I was so stressed out!" the Erie County legislator said Thursday as she joined a call for the city to address its census ranking as the nation's second-poorest big city.Whyte and other community leaders spent the past few days trying to make ends meet on $9.25 a day. If they factored in the daily cost of a car, health care, cell phone and cable television, they were in the hole before breakfast.It was an exercise in solidarity, organizers said, for the 29.9 percent of Buffalo residents the U.S. Census Bureau says are living in poverty — well over the 13.3 percent national rate. The federal poverty guideline is an...

County poverty: Education helps provide a way out via Poverty News Blog May 6th, 2008 at 14:55

image from The Ithaca JournalThere is no yellow brick road on the path out of poverty.Anyone who read The Journal's yearlong series about poverty in Tompkins County could appreciate how hard it is for folks to climb out of the financial basement and up the ladder to make ends meet above the federal government's poverty threshold, $21,200 (“Finding a path out of poverty,” May 3).For all the success stories, such as Jessica Brown, 26, who is no longer dependent on social services as she was nine years ago, there are many others who are struggling.As with many issues confronting our nation, the truth in helping people find a way to get financial stability in their lives lies somewhere in the middle of diametrically opposite opinions. But while partisans argue their cases in the court of...

Councilman Eric Gioia poor-mouths food stamp diet via Poverty News Blog May 3rd, 2008 at 14:01

image from the New York Daily NewsBY ADAM NICHOLSQueens City Councilman Eric Gioia shops at Sunnyside market to see what week's worth of food stamps will buy. (Hint: Not as much as last year.) DelMundo for NewsQueens City Councilman Eric Gioia shops at Sunnyside market to see what week's worth of food stamps will buy. (Hint: Not as much as last year.)Rocketing food prices are slimming down the Eric Gioia poverty diet.The Democratic city councilman from Queens struggled to survive last year when he spent a week living on $28 - the average food stamp allowance for a single recipient.This year, the same allowance would leave him starving."Last year, I lasted five days and I was out of food," he said. "I had to go to a food pantry to get through the week."This year, I'd last three days."With last...

Finding a path out of poverty via Poverty News Blog May 3rd, 2008 at 14:05

image from the Ithaca Journal Success attributed to a range of factors, from family to pure luckBy Krisy GashlerAt 17, Jessica Brown was living in a subsidized efficiency apartment above a liquor store in Trumansburg with her newborn baby.Now 26, she is out of poverty, no longer dependent on social services and living with her daughter and fiancé in their own home in Ithaca.Brown doesn't call herself a success story, and she doesn't credit her escape from poverty to the five semesters she spent at Tompkins Cortland Community College, the 45 hours a week she works or the friends who supported her through bad times.It's all luck, she says, and many people aren't so lucky.While Brown credits luck, other Tompkins County residents who have faced poverty and escaped say the path out for them was...

Faith leaders call for political action on poverty via Poverty News Blog April 30th, 2008 at 20:54

image from NewsdayBY RHODA AMONrhoda.amon@newsday.com11:20 AM EDT, April 30, 2008For the one in five Long Islanders trapped in poverty, life could get better with some concerted political action by the religious community, faith leaders say.The call to a political agenda came at a conference of 225 faith leaders Monday at the Adelphi University School of Social Work in Garden City. That does not mean partisan politics, said Richard Koubek of Catholic Charities, a coordinator of the conference and a founder of MICAH, an interfaith coalition to end poverty and hunger on Long Island."We're asking the faith community to go beyond feeding and clothing the poor and to help get at the root causes of poverty," Koubek said.Some of the causes were identified at workshops on segregation, underfunding of...

Middle class Long Islanders turning to food pantries via Poverty News Blog March 31st, 2008 at 13:08

image from NewsdayBY ELLEN YANellen.yan@newsday.com9:23 PM EDT, March 30, 2008These days, food pantries aren't just for the jobless or homeless.Tapping such free resources has turned into a survival tactic for some working members of the middle class as they struggle with an economy that has put them in a bind.A father of three, Bill makes more than $70,000 a year. But after his mortgage rate reset in October, hiking his payments from $3,300 to $4,300, he began going to his church's food pantry."I sat here at home and argued with my wife about who's going," said Bill, a Nassau County employee who asked not to be identified further. "I tried to go to work that day. ... It's very embarrassing."Here I'm making a decent salary. I'm a professional, but I can't even feed my kids."More and more...

Glens Falls students work toward ending poverty via Poverty News Blog March 27th, 2008 at 12:49

image from Capital News 9Sorry for the ad that proceeds this story... - Kale...

Medicaid Soars, Covering 1/3 Of New Yorkers via Poverty News Blog March 21st, 2008 at 19:12

image from the New York SunBy E.B. SOLOMONTAmid a "historic" increase in statewide Medicaid enrollment, nearly a third of New York City residents are now on the state's rolls, with 1 million joining between 2000 and 2005.A report published yesterday by the United Hospital Fund documents a 55% increase in statewide Medicaid enrollment, which reached 4.3 million in 2005, up from 2.8 million five years earlier. New York City residents account for 66% of the state's Medicaid program; 2.8 million were enrolled in the program in 2005, up from 1.8 million in 2000."It was definitely a major increase," the report's author, Michael Birnbaum, a senior health policy analyst at the United Hospital Fund, said. "Expanding eligibility among adults was one major reason."Medicaid is the state health benefit...

Famine event lesson in hunger, poverty via Poverty News Blog March 18th, 2008 at 12:54

image from the Times Herald RecordWARWICK — From noon March 7 until 6 p.m. March 8, 32 youths and four adults participated in the 30-Hour Famine at Warwick United Methodist Church.The event is organized by World Vision, a Christian humanitarian organization that works with children, families and their communities to tackle the causes of poverty and injustice. They created the 30-Hour Famine project not only to raise money, but also to educate kids on how they can make a difference for people all over the world.The Youth Groups from Warwick United Methodist Church and Warwick Valley Church of the Nazarene united to raise more than $2,000 to battle hunger and poverty. The churches are also trying to promote the sponsorship of individual children and families through the World Vision...

Combat poverty with a regional approach via Poverty News Blog March 15th, 2008 at 14:40

image from the Albany Time UnionBy CHARLES MOOREMoving the regional economy in the right direction is a common theme in our local news these days. Local leaders understand the competition involved in luring a company here and the importance of offering strong incentives.As regional investments abound, we must be careful not to miss the opportunity to address the equally prominent and important local news stories of neglected city neighborhoods, crime, poverty and failing urban schools.Local advocates for low-income families cite Austin, Texas, where poverty indicators actually worsened following the high-tech boom. We can learn from Austin's mistakes.A hollowed-out urban center benefits no one. In fact, it has been well established that any decline in the inner city has a profound effect on...

More fall into spiral of poverty via Poverty News Blog March 4th, 2008 at 15:28

image from the Albany Times Union From poor to working poor: Between 2001 and 2005, 14,000 Capital Region residents fell below poverty line By JIMMY VIELKIND, Staff writerTROY -- Terry Behan is used to living in poverty. The 38-year-old father of three young boys ran away from home at age 15, living hand to mouth and fix to fix on the streets of Troy for the next few years. He did time, but straightened out when he met Shannon Brayman, the mother of his children.They doubled up with Brayman's twin sister in a Halfmoon trailer, as Behan and Danny Dunham, his soon-to-be-brother-in-law, worked full-time but still struggled. The family had made the transition from poor to working poor.Between 2001 and 2005, 14,000 Capital Region residents fell below the poverty line -- a slow but consistent rise...

As LI economy slides, the newly poor seek assistance via Poverty News Blog February 20th, 2008 at 01:53

image from NewsdayBY MICHAEL AMONmichael.amon@newsday.comLong Island last month saw sharp increases in applications for government assistance and a surge of people seeking food from overwhelmed charity providers, developments that county officials and economists blame on a lagging economy.Suffolk County reported a 39-percent increase in food-stamp applicants and a 26-percent increase in welfare applicants last month, compared with 2007's monthly averages, according to the Department of Social Services. Emergency applications for assistance with utilities also shot up 39 percent, even though January was unusually mild.In Nassau, there were 37 percent more food-stamp applicants and 12 percent more welfare applications, compared with the same time last year, officials said. The county's known...

Illiterate children are poor beyond words via Poverty News Blog February 12th, 2008 at 21:26

image from The Buffalo NewsFuture success cloudedby lack of opportunity nowBy Charity Vogel Andre Vernor is only 10, but he’s got a big dream.He wants to open up a barber shop of his own someday.The only problem is, if that’s going to happen, Andre needs to learn how to read and write and handle money.And right now, he’s struggling with that. His dad used to teach Andre how to count out change: nickels, dimes, dollars. But his dad is in jail.A family friend who owned a Ferry Street barbershop, and let Andre work a few hours a week sweeping up hair and chatting with customers, was killed in a shooting on the West Side.But still, he keeps trying. “I don’t like reading, but if I have to, I do,” says Andre, a fourth-grader with a cherubic smile and a bent for mischief. “I can’t wait...

County poverty: Housing is just 1 factor via Poverty News Blog February 12th, 2008 at 14:58

image from the Ithaca Journal“You can't look at housing in isolation.”That's what Cornell University professor Joe Laquatra told our reporters for the latest installment of our Touched by Poverty series, and we agree with him.The housing issue in Tompkins County touches all walks of life. Finding affordable good housing is a problem many people here have faced, not just those on the lower rungs of the financial ladder.The latest installment of our poverty series ran Saturday. And for many people in this community, the words probably hit home. People like Jaime Clemens admit they made some mistakes that ultimately cost them a roof over their heads. We were happy to read Clemens is back on track and recently found an apartment. Others, like Valerie Wilson, needed the help public housing...

THOUGHTFUL TEENS: Starving for a taste of poverty via Poverty News Blog February 10th, 2008 at 15:56

image from Lockport Union-Sun & JournalBy Caitlin Murray/murrayc@gnnewspaper.comGreater Niagara NewspapersTOWN OF TONAWANDA — Anna Auernhamer, a ninth-grader at Newfane High School, hadn’t eaten in about 26 hours. To make matters worse, she was just informed she’s blind.Luckily for her, it was just an exercise.Nearly 75 students from Lockport and surrounding communities participated this weekend in a 30-hour famine to experience the hardship of living in a developing country.The short span of food abstinence was just a small taste of the struggles for those starving, though.“Thirty hours is trivial compared to what these people go through. They don’t eat for days,” said participant Emily DeSoto, an 11th-grader at North Tonawanda High School.The group of teens stopped eating Friday...