30 Issues Day 17: Poverty in NYC
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
David Jones, president and CEO of the Community Service Society and Brenda Beal, a leader of Community Voices Heard, an East Harlem organization advocating for the needs of poor people, measure the success of Bloomberg's anti-poverty initiatives and weigh how Bill Thompson’s approach would differ.
Comments [14]
I agree, you are right
@JOHN...no point in trying to address what amounts to a moral issue, when there are children to be fed!
Has anyone checked out the cost of baby sitter these days? How about a gallon of milk or a loaf of bread? So when you tell the welfare recipient to go work for minimum wage you are not making sense to them..they cannot earn enough to cover the price of a baby sitter in one week!
it's hard enough getting a good nanny without the government making me pay for the perks for the help.
And the mayor has raised the basic "fees" (won't call them taxes)--mass transit, supported rent increases for stabilized apartments, city university--that poor and working-class people need.
They are damned 6 ways from Sunday.
If people are too poor to live here, isn't the logical solution for them to move? I have friends who left NYC to live in other parts of the country because they found this area to be too expensive.
I grew up in williamsburg in the 60's and saw whole families on welfare, grand parents, parents and their children.
When does personal responsibility come in for the signel mother, with multiple children. As long as the state replaces the father, we will have these problems
I hope you ask your guests about Bloomberg forcing privately run homeless shelters to shut down and what Thompson's position is.
I'm sorry, but just because you don't want to do a job, doesn't mean that you should continue to stay on food stamps or welfare. If you are able to do a job, you should do it period.
Plus he consolidated afterschool programs, forcing poor people to travel farther to pickup children, and to travel to multiple places to both drop off (preschool) children and pickup the afterschool kids when they have multiple children.
And to get children into good schools, parents have to jump through multiple hoops, visiting individual schools--which poor and working-class people do not have the time to do if they're working multiple sub- and minimum-wage jobs. So their kids get worse-quality educations.
Can the guests define what they consider to be a "good job?"
What is she talking about, she keeps changing the flow of the conversation.
Stop asking her questions Brian
The mayor insists that poor and working poor families simultaneously work sub-minimum wage jobs, so-called training jobs, and participate in their children's schools, including staying at home with them and working on homework etc., and attending parent teacher meetings, and go out of their ways to find healthy foods, and get exercise ... The burden that Bloomberg puts on poor and working-poor people is one even he could not meet.
Poverty is defined as a family of 4 who live at or under $26,000 a year.
Poverty does not end there in NYC.
The problem is a family of 4 who live at $30,000 and who do not qualify for benefits that the family of 4 who live at or under $26,000 a year receive.
Or the family of 4 who live at $50,000 and have student debt over $100,000 and who do not qualify for benefits that the family of 4 who live at or under $26,000 a year receive.
Or the single person who lives at $50,000 pays half of their earnings to student loans and the other half to rent and does not qualify for food stamps, medical insurance or low income housing.
We are hungry, uninsured and can only pray. What about us?
Leave a Comment
Register for your own account so you can vote on comments, save your favorites, and more. Learn more.
Please stay on topic, be civil, and be brief.
Email addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments. Names are displayed with all comments. We reserve the right to edit any comments posted on this site. Please read the Comment Guidelines before posting. By leaving a comment, you agree to New York Public Radio's Privacy Policy and Terms Of Use.