Monday, February 19, 2007

Suburban Poor

I received an email from a member of a progressive group I belong to. The contents was an article from our local paper, The Daily Herald, about the Suburban Poor. There have been many indications of this but, until recently, it went unreported. Here are excerpts of this article along with the link:


Poor among plenty
For the first time in history, more poor people are living in the nation's suburbs than in the cities. Soon that may be true in the Chicago area; the number of those living in poverty in the collar counties has risen dramatically since 1999.

BY MARNI PYKE
Daily Herald Staff Writer
Posted Thursday, February 15, 2007

More and more suburban residents are barely scratching out a living, a report on Illinois poverty indicates.

More than 386,000 people in the collar counties of DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry, Will and suburban Cook are among the have-nots, the study by the Mid-America Institute on Poverty of Heartland Alliance indicates.

And the number of those in need in the suburbs grew by 25 percent between 1999 and 2006, a rate that surpasses Chicago's rate of 8 percent.

"Poverty is a reality, not an urban phenomenon," said report researcher Amy Rynell of Heartland Alliance, a Chicago-based charitable organization.

In Illinois, the numbers of the poor come to 1.48 million, while in Chicago the tally is 573,486.

Heartland uses federal guidelines to define poverty as one person earning less than $10,210 a year or a family of four with an income of less than $20,650.

Experts say the poor are seniors, people with disabilities, domestic violence victims, young adults trying to make it on their own, single-parent families, new immigrants, individuals with health problems, and the unemployed.

They're also people with jobs, say social workers on the front lines.

"They're working hard, holding down two jobs and trying to find child care," explained Victoria Bran, director of the Rolling Meadows Police Neighborhood Resource Center.

The Illinois report echoes a national study by the Brookings Institution that found - for the first time in history - more of America's poor are living in the suburbs than in cities, a total of 1.2 million people in 2005.

snip

Other findings were that nearly 24,000 households a month use food pantries in Kane, Will, DuPage, Lake and McHenry counties and that a growing number of people in the Chicago region are paying more than one-third of their income toward rent.

State officials, meanwhile, say that in spite of the grim news, employment is increasing. Between 2005 and 2006, the unemployment rate went from 5.4 percent to 3.9 percent, Illinois Department of Employment Security economist Norman Kelewitz said.

U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin says yes, maybe more people have jobs, but they're not necessarily well-paying jobs.

"Incomes are not rising and the cost of living continues to go up," he said. "Costs for education, energy and health care are continuing to go up."

That's a sentiment shared by Maureen Murphy, association division manager at the Lake County branch of Catholic Charities.

The agency serves between 25,000 and 27,000 people a year and has noticed a dramatic increase in need.

Job losses and a high cost of living are hurting Lake County residents, Murphy said.

"If you work for a minimum wage in Lake, you have to work 133 hours a week to afford a two-bedroom apartment.

We are told daily that the economy is good, we have low unemployment. But the jobs aren't the same. Many subrbanites are having to get two jobs to afford the basics when 6 years ago one job sould suffice. And the cost of health care has risen so fast that people have no healthcare Insurance or policies that don't cover much.

38 comments:

Jenise said...

morning, tonid. hope you are doing well.

think i'll hang out here for a while if you don't mind. to be honest, all the sniping - from both the trolls and the regulars - about sam and the blog is starting to get to me.

any news about dar? or chubby?

re: the suburban poor, have you seen this documentary?



THE END OF SUBURBIA: Oil Depletion and the Collapse of The American Dream

http://www.endofsuburbia.com/

air-ono said...

re: dar

this from shell's myspace...

25 Dec 2006 10:50 PM

Hey Alice, Just wanted to Wish you a Merry Christmas and let you know I am thinking of you. I kinda lost interest in the MRR blog Wado's war talk was weighing on me.

[....]

Love
Dar (bluecat) Prrrrrrrrr

air-ono said...

re: chubby

waiting on s.j. to get the lowdown

air-ono said...

p.s. don't mention it

it's what i do...

i help people with terribly long noses

: )

Jenise said...

hello there, air-ono. i will thank you anyway. but i'm confused as to whether you're referring to the nose on my face, which is in fact terribly long, or saying that i'm a busy body.

you probably know kelvin mudzuri. he just emailed me asking for my email address. he wants to transfer 6.8 million US dollars to my secret bank account. you want to split it with me? ;)

air-ono said...

1st paragraph: see smilie

2nd paragraph: yes, please

air-ono said...

i hung on to hear if sam had anything to say about the state of the blog

(he gave it about 10 seconds)

so i'm clocking off;

knowing that when i wake i'll be...

RICH!!

Jenise said...

it's in the mail, air-ono.

he just needs our bank account and social security numbers, i think.

sweet dreams of all your money...

Cat Chew said...

From SEDER's blogspot:

Sunshine said...
heard from CB,
in for a while, possible work/study next summer.
shooting him a few bucks today.
February 19, 2007 10:27 AM

Unknown said...

the Al Franken bloggie has had it's last post... RIP!

was some fine people there, hope they show up in my future again.

i posted throughout, from #1 to #5149.

made a hundred or more friends there and had many a good rant and yak with them.

gonna miss em all. they were an outstanding political community.

toniD said...

Sorry Jenise. I'm not ignoring you I was at work early this AM.

I'll open a new thread so there is plenty of room to post.

toniD said...

Tribune sues Fox News over 'Red Eye' Sat Feb 17, 9:25 PM ET

LINK

Tribune Co. has filed a federal trademark infringement lawsuit to block Fox News Channel from using the name "Red Eye" for its late-night talk show.

Tribune, which publishes the Chicago Tribune and RedEye, a free weekday tabloid aimed mostly at readers in their 20s and 30s, wants Fox News to stop advertisements and other promotions that contain the Red Eye name.

Tribune also wants unspecified damages, according to the complaint filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Chicago.

News Corp.-owned Fox News launched Red Eye with host Greg Gutfeld, blogger and former editor of Stuff magazine, on Feb. 6.

The paper and the program both feature current events, politics and pop culture. Because of the similarities, television viewers "are quite likely to assume that Fox and the RedEye products owned by Tribune are collaborating, thereby causing confusion," the lawsuit states.

Tribune has spent nearly $4 million since 2002 to promote the RedEye brand, the lawsuit says. The paper has a daily circulation of about 150,000.

A Fox News spokeswoman declined to comment. A Tribune spokesman did not immediately return a telephone call Sunday from The Associated Press.

Tribune has two federal trademark registrations related to RedEye in the "newspapers for general circulation" category. One is for the word RedEye and the other is for a RedEye design, the lawsuit says.

The company submitted applications to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office on Feb. 7 for RedEye for the Internet and television.

toniD said...

Hey NC!!

Sorry I was searching for news. Missed this AM because I was working.

You're right. The businesses moved to the suburbs and from there out of the country.

toniD said...

Chris Mathew just called McCain John McBush on Hardball!

Heh!

He's going to hear about that I bet!

toniD said...

NC, my friend Rita used to work for IBM back in the 80's. She was laid off. Ever since she's had a difficult time findong a job to equal her job at IBM.

Her layoff was due to the other computer companies competing with the IBMs.

I am sure it is that way for the many that will lose their jobs in this latest pullout you described.

This country is going to hell. If they do not reistitute manufacturing here in this country, we will have a hard time of it and eventually our economy will show it.

toniD said...

Columnist: Authoritarianism can happen in United States Michael Roston
Published: Monday February 19, 2007

In an excerpt from his forthcoming book, Salon columnist Joe Conason says that the changes in political power set in motion by President George W. Bush have brought the United States closer to a future in which authoritarianism is possible. Conason warns that for the first time since Nixon, Americans have "reason to doubt the future of democracy and the rule of law in our own country."

The excerpt comes from Conason's new book It Can Happen Here: Authoritarian Peril in the Age of Bush. Conaston states up front that the idea of an American slide into authoritarianism is not based in any paranoia, but comes because the current president "has repeatedly asserted and exercised authority that he does not possess under the Constitution he swore to uphold."

Conason says there is growing public anxiety and anger about the Bush administration's use and abuse of power. Two events that have particularly raised public concern are "the misbegotten, horrifically mismanaged war in Iraq [and] the heartless mishandling of the Hurricane Katrina disaster." He notes that "we do not know the full dimensions of the scandals behind Iraq and Katrina, because the Republican leaders of the Senate and the House of Representatives abdicated the traditional congressional duties of oversight and investigation."

Their unwillingness to take on the President on these issues was due to an acquiescence with authoritarianism, he writes. He says the "style" of the Bush regime is seen in its "almost casual contempt for democratic and lawful norms; an expanding appetite for executive control at the expense of constitutional balances; a reckless impulse to corrupt national institutions with partisan ideology; and an ugly tendency to smear dissent as disloyalty."

LINK

toniD said...

NEWS CONSUMER" said...
"Big Blue began shedding
space during its convulsive
cutbacks of the early 1990s"
That's about when my friend lost her job there.

And AT&T is now trying to rebuild the ma Bell they were told to sell off. We had manopoly laws back then.

toniD said...

XM and Sirius satellite radio companies strike a merger deal
Updated 2/19/2007 6:12 PM ET
By Laura Petrecca, USA TODAY
Satellite radio giants XM (XMSR) and Sirius (XMSR), once fierce rivals, announced on Monday that they will combine forces in an all-stock merger.
The deal is structured as a "merger of equals" with XM stockholders getting 4.6 shares of Sirius common stock for each share of XM stock. XM and Sirius shareholders will each own 50% of the new company.

On Friday, XM closed at $13.98 a share and Sirius closed at $3.70.

Sirius CEO Mel Karmazin will become CEO of the combined entity, which does not yet have a name. XM Chairman Gary Parsons will be chairman.

PRESS RELEASE: Sirius and XM deal

The companies didn't say what position XM CEO Hugh Panero would have going forward. A joint statement only said that Panero "will continue in his current role until the anticipated close of the merger."

Pending regulatory approval, the merger should be completed by the end of this year.

Karmazin and Parsons will join the new board of directors — which will have a total of 12 members. XM and Sirius will each pick four independent board representatives. One representative from General Motors and one representative from Honda will also join the board.

LINK

toniD said...

(manopoly - Freudian slip, ha!)

Hah NC!! What a good excuse for a typo. Heh!

Maybe it was a freudian slip.

Jenise said...

Regarding the Pain of Others: The Photography of Farah
Nosh

What's absent from Farah Nosh's series of images taken in
Iraq in early 2006 is just as important as what she shows
us. Included in the exhibition Inside Out currently
showing at the Gage Gallery at Chicago's Roosevelt
University, Nosh's series is comprised of stark
black-and-white portraits of Iraqi amputees, all of them
injured as a result of the war. In her deceptively simple
images, viewers are first confronted with what is
obviously absent and then made to associate more abstract
notions of "missing." Nosh's subjects stand or sit in
sparely decorated rooms, most of them looking at the
camera as they would in a studio portrait.

http://electroniciraq.net/news/2909.shtml

Jenise said...

hey, tonid. i figured you were working or out partying or something. ; p

NC, the directors of the End of Surburia aren't arguing that the suburbs, the place, will end. they're talking about after peak oil ends and oil depletion begins and all petroleum products from fuel to pesticides to plastics are no longer readily available. they're arguing that the people in the suburbs will be hit hardest and the way of life will have to change completely.

what about gentrification? it's happening in lots of places, isn't it? williamsburg, san francisco, etc.

Jenise said...

What the Bush Administration Owes Iraq's Refugees

Finally acknowledging the momentous crisis of Iraqi
refugees in the Middle East, the US government has
announced it will accept 7,000 Iraqi refugees in the
coming year. There are an estimated 750,000 Iraqis living
in Jordan alone, with more than one million believed to be
living in Syria. Electronic Iraq Amman correspondent Noah
Merrill critiques the US pledge and offers a sobering
glimpse at a rapidly growing crisis. "In the absence of a
real commitment to an internationally supported, truly
inclusive political process," Merrill writes, "the
situation in Iraq will continue to get worse and Iraqis
will continue to hemorrhage out of their homeland. We know
where this path leads: a recent statement by the
International Organization for Migration predicts that one
million more Iraqis will be displaced in the coming year
if the trend continues."

http://electroniciraq.net/news/2910.shtml

toniD said...

Hi Jenise.

I was listening to something today about the oil situation. Can't remember which show. But they were saying that the Saudis said that oil would cost 300-400 dollars a barrel. The oil shortage would be around 2030. The reason I remember this is that I was trying to determine how old I would be in 2030 if I were still alive.

Then my thought went directly to my grandchildren.

This could have been avoided to some extent had the world listened to Jimmy Carter and worked on alternative fuel about 30 years ago.

Jenise said...

"This could have been avoided to some extent had the world listened to Jimmy Carter and worked on alternative fuel about 30 years ago."

tonid, i've been thinking lately how frustrated carter must be at this point.

that film talks about oil hitting the $400/barrel point. i kept trying to figure out what it would mean here. on the one hand, japan's nearly entirely dependent on imports for resources, but on the other, public transportation is really good here and about 1/3 of electricity (i think that's right) is nuclear. the family down the street owns rice paddies - i should probably try to get in good with them ; )

Jenise said...

At 2/19/2007 09:53:00 PM , "NEWS CONSUMER" said...

and the same thing is happening in parts of L.A. and in most of the bay area. and i imagine it'll only get worse as less and less fossil fuel is available.

(also, the countryside in japan is hollowing out and people are moving to the cities. but the rich-poor gap is a lot less stark here)

Jenise said...

i woke up with an upset stomach, and now i realize why. cheney arrives in tokyo today : (

Jenise said...

okay last one for the moment. have to get to work...

Japan anger at US sex slave bill

both sides of this piss me off. the fact that the US congress thinks it has a leg to stand on at this point in telling ANY country it should apologize. and the fact that the japanese government would choose this issue as the one thing they'll oppose the US government on.

toniD said...

Cheney's aura is black and seems to spread.

I'm disapponted with the Dems. They are still allowing these idiot repubs to dictate terms. Maybe they forgot how to be nasty and we need someone that can be nasty right now.

There has to be a way to overcome these (use any adjective you want) neocons.

Jenise Sunny Jim posted that Riverbend has a new post. I read it and it nauseated me.

http://riverbendblog.blogspot.com/

Jenise said...

i read the john doe article when you posted it before, NC. tragic. happens more than you'd imagine in tokyo, too. body parts showing up in sewer ditches in the city.

Jenise said...

tonid, your comment about the democrats reminded me of what janeane used to say all the time about today's republican party giving people an excuse to be a dick. (i don't think i've ever told you, but my first job out of college was assistant to dennis miller's manager. dennis miller was an ass back then, too.)

hard to figure out how to deal with someone who's an ass, i guess - especially all these demented ones. but we need to figure it out - and quick.

riverbend is hard for me. i worry about her when she doesn't post. what is happening to these people is nauseating...

Jenise said...

i think crimes are tragic, NC. they reflect the environment they are committed in.

toniD said...

Krugman on Hillary: The country doesn't want another leader with an infallibility complex

From Kevin's blog - Free Democracy

toniD said...

There's some good stuff on Americablog. Lots on the Vets and Walter Reed. Post after post.

http://americablog.blogspot.com/

toniD said...

Just checked in on Sam's blog. Not really much happening there.

I'm going to tell him to start a new blogspot blog and he can at least have a comments section like this without the word verification.

Jenise said...

i like jazz, NC. i like mine with a bit of a bite. love sonny rollins and max roach. i've collected your links. my sister-in-law was supposed to play on alice coltrane's last album, but then she died...

do you listen to jazz happening now? kneebody plays in new york sometimes. i like them a lot. groove-based jazz with a bite. young guys. if you go out to listen to music, you should check them out.

thanks for the rollins link.

toniD said...

I've been up since 3:30 AM and it is approaching 20 hours that I have not slept so I am fading fast.

Night all!

Jenise said...

good night, tonid. sweet dreams. thanks for setting this place up and keeping it going.

she is, NC ; ) a violist. let me know if you ever want to know how the younguns are trying to carry it forward.

gotta go. i'm going to go and try to interview the 84-year-old lady down the street. may take hours. have a good one, NC

Unknown said...

still can't post on on the MRR blog...