aegipan-omnicorn:

bitter-badfem-harpy:

tilthat:

TIL that the formula used to calculate the US’ poverty level is outdated. It is based off of the cost of living during the 1960’s when food was a family’s largest expenditure. If adjustments are made to the formula to reflect life today, then around 45.7 million Americans would be living in poverty.

via reddit.com

“Across the country, families typically need an income of at least twice the official poverty level to meet basic needs. In high-cost cities such as New York, it may take an income of over three times the poverty level to make ends meet, whereas in some rural areas, the figure may be under double the poverty level.”

And in today’s world, I fear there is little incentive to update the calculations.

aegipan-omnicorn:

[Image description: cropped screenshot of a tweet from Larry Hubich (@LHubich): I’m getting a litte fed up with people who pay themselves $2,500 per hour trying to convince people who make $25 per hour that people that make $12 per hour make to much. Description ends]

America’s Schools Are ‘Profoundly Unequal,’ Says U.S. Civil Rights Commission

thecringeandwincefactory:

dr-archeville:

“The federal government must take bold action to address inequitable funding in our nation’s public schools.”

So begins a list of recommendations released Thursday by the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, an independent, bipartisan agency created by Congress in 1957 to investigate civil rights complaints.  Thursday’s report comes after a lengthy investigation into how America’s schools are funded and why so many that serve poor and minority students aren’t getting the resources they say they need.

The 150-page report, titled “Public Education Funding Inequity: In An Era Of Increasing Concentration Of Poverty and Resegregation,” reads like a footnoted walking tour through the many ways America’s education system fails vulnerable students — beginning with neighborhood schools that remain deeply segregated and continuing into classrooms where too many students lack access to skilled teachers, rigorous courses and equitable school funding.

“This report excavates the enduring truism that American public schooling is, and has been, profoundly unequal in the opportunity delivered to students, the dollars spent to educate students, and the determinations of which students are educated together,” writes the commission’s chair, Catherine Lhamon.

History lesson

The first two-thirds of the commission’s report is essentially a history lesson on the decades-old fight over equitable school funding, so we’ll start there, too.  The fight arguably began in 1954 with Brown v. Board of Education and the Supreme Court’s decision that “separate but equal” schools for black and white students were anything but equal.

In 1965, President Lyndon Johnson waded into the debate, arguing that the federal government should send money to school districts that serve low-income families.  Congress agreed, creating Title I.  In the 2014-15 school year, states received more than $14 billion in Title I money.

To this day, though, states are all over the map when it comes to how equitably they spend their own money in schools.  The problem was baked into the system from the beginning, with local property taxes being an important driver of both school funding and of inequities in school funding.

“This is America,” writes Karen Narasaki, a member of the commission.  “Every child deserves a quality education that does not depend on their ZIP code.”

To make that happen — many states now use state tax revenue to try to even out those local imbalances, some more effectively than others.

The problem, according to the commission’s report, is that too many schools remain segregated along racial and/or socioeconomic lines with too much inequity in funding from state to state, district to district and school to school, especially when research shows that students living in poverty often show up to school needing extra help and extra resources.

The recommendations

After its 100-page history lesson, the new report arrives at a handful of big recommendations.  Among the highlights, the commission says Congress should:

  • “incentivize states to adopt equitable public school finance systems,”
  • “increase federal funding to supplement state funding with a goal to provide meaningful educational opportunity on an equitable basis,” and
  • “promote the collection, monitoring, and evaluation of school spending data.”

The first two points would likely lean heavily on those Title I funds we mentioned earlier.  That is because Title I is arguably the single strongest lever the federal government has to urge states into spending more of their own money.

The third recommendation may be the easiest to accomplish.

For decades, school spending has been opaque because districts have only had to report their spending at the district level, not on a school-by-school basis. That concealed important spending imbalances, especially within districts, which often spend more money on affluent schools because that is where the more expensive, veteran teachers are.

Well, the newest federal education law, known as the Every Student Succeeds Act or ESSA, will soon change all that.  It requires that districts publicly report what they spend, per student, at the school level.

“[This] will serve up a motherlode of never-before-available school-level financial data,” Marguerite Roza wrote last year.  She is an expert in education finance and director of Georgetown University’s Edunomics Lab.  “If we seize the unprecedented opportunity this data offers, we will be better equipped to tackle some of education’s most pressing issues — like the need for greater equity and productivity — and help schools across the country do better for their students.”

The promise of this increased transparency, Roza argues, is that it should be easier for administrators, teachers and researchers to connect a school’s spending with its student outcomes, making it easier to replicate successes and justify the spending they require — a potential game-changer.

Perhaps the commission’s most ambitious recommendation — and least likely to happen — is this:

“Congress should make clear that there is a federal right to a public education.”

The challenge inherent in this recommendation is that the U.S. Supreme Court has already made clear that there is no federal right to a public education.

In 1973, in San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez, the court shut down a father’s plea for his children’s district to get the same resources as the schools in a wealthier, neighboring district.  The court ruled that the U.S. Constitution does not guarantee equal school funding because the Constitution, believe it or not, doesn’t guarantee the right to a public education at all.

If Congress were to add such a guarantee to the Constitution, it would obligate the federal government to, among other things, wade back into the debate over inequitable school funding.  As such, it’s difficult to imagine the current Republican Congress acting on this recommendation.

While a majority of the commission’s members back these recommendations, the report does include a scathing dissent from commission member Peter Kirsanow.

“Fine,” Kirsanow writes.  “Spend more money.  Lots and lots of money.  Spew money into the educational air like you’re drilling for oil and just hit a gusher.  But it won’t matter.”

That is because, Kirsanow argues, the biggest challenge facing many students is not the funding of their schools but what he calls “the deleterious consequences of single parent families.”

Kirsanow closes his dissent with this:

“The thousands of hours of Commission and staff time spent on this report would have been better spent going door-to-door in poor and working class neighborhoods populated by people of all races and handing out pictures of rainbows and unicorns.  Because that would have done more to improve the world than this report ever will, even if the relevant authorities adopt every recommendation in it.”

Clearly, America’s school funding debate rages on.

-_-

What kind of society does this to children?

America’s Schools Are ‘Profoundly Unequal,’ Says U.S. Civil Rights Commission

bittersnurr:

chrisdigay:

weavemama:

lordpizzacat:

weavemama:

8. FUCKING. DOLLARS.

How is that even possible?!?

This article explains it all.

It’s pretty much an awful combination of black households owing more money than they make, top universities having little to no black students, the high unemployment rate amongst black people, and the city itself electing little to no black politians. It’s terrible. And not only that , but the gap between black wealth and white wealth is prominent nationwide.

This isn’t black people being bad with money, this is from people like trump actively targeting black communities for their vulnerability.

These are the scams that are not only legal but have just been reaffirmed in the new tax cut. Politicians don’t care about black, brown, gay, trans people they just care about their votes so they can stay in long enough to cash out.

We know this but to say 8 dollars is an average net worth. This alone is proof of extorting black resources. There’s literally no “pumping it back” into any system. It’s robbing blind
— until the numbers come out and there’s a ACTUAL negative 247,492 dollars in average gap.

And like I said, this recently passed tax cut is literally reaffirming the legality of this forever-scam.

This shit is why I get so angry when people act like this sort of thing is a republican only issue. This is a very liberal state, solid blue, has highly praised politcians like warren…

And it is REALLY FUCKING RACIST. Like uncomfortably so once you notice it even when you are white. A lot of suburban areas got a worrying amount of trump votes.

But everyone brags about how progressive they are. Mocks the south for being racist and then turns around to complain about brown people moving into town. People here really want to act like they are better then people in red states because we have more progressive laws but half of them vote against the progressive laws anyway.

georginasoros:

butchcommunist:

sungodsinexile:

berniesrevolution:

IN THESE TIMES


There are 14,321 Dollar General stores in America. It’s a chain that many shoppers have never heard of, yet it has more stores than Starbucks. According to the Wall Street Journal, the Dollar General company is worth $22 billion—far more than the nation’s largest grocery chain, Kroger, which has five times the revenue.

Sadly, however, Dollar General is thriving because, as the Journal puts it, “rural America is struggling.” The chain builds stores where folks are down on their luck, where 20 percent of customers receive government assistance, and where even Walmart won’t bother doing business.

I phoned several Dollar General stores and learned that none sells fresh meat or produce; the grocery aisles feature mostly canned and frozen goods. Many products, such as soft drinks, come in mini-sizes to keep unit prices low. And few locations had newspapers for sale.

Maybe that’s just as well, because headlines these days report that the stock market is remarkably high and unemployment is surprisingly low. But for rural America, news like that doesn’t hit home.

Things are looking up in Donald Trump’s America, except, of course, where they are not.

The administration’s proudest accomplishment is a tax bill that benefits millionaires and billionaires. The Joint Committee on Taxation finds that the Senate version of the bill would increase taxes on all Americans making less than $75,000 a year.

As Paul Krugman summarizes in the New York Times: “Everything this president and this Congress are doing on economic policy seems designed, not just to widen the gap between the wealthy and everyone else, but to lock in plutocrats’ advantages, making it easier to ensure that their heirs remain on top and the rest stay down.”

In rural America, where about 46 million people reside, employment and economic growth have not recovered from the last recession at a pace seen elsewhere in the nation. Childhood poverty—perhaps the most critical metric in determining a population’s well-being—is considerably higher in rural areas than in urban centers.

The crisis facing rural America is rooted in the fact that peak-level employment related to natural resources, such as mining and logging, is never coming back.

Rural America is mired in a permanent recession. Its problems are difficult to correct because of a sprawling landscape, scattered government support structures and what often seems to be federal indifference.

Many among the predominantly white rural population voted for Trump in 2016—a sign, perhaps, of utter desperation rather than considered opinion. But according to recent reporting by Politico, Trump now intends to make the most sweeping changes to federal safety net programs in a generation, using legislation and executive actions to target recipients of food stamps, Medicaid and housing benefits.

(Continue Reading)


When tens of millions of people–both rural and suburban–are forced to use Dollar Tree and Dollar General as grocery stores because Wal-Mart is too expensive, it’s safe to say the middle class is truly dead.

I love these “how do the poor live” type of articles because I’m a poor person who regularly buys things they need from the dollar store around the corner and it’s so funny to see people who are clearly upper middle class say things like “I phoned a number of dollar general stores to see if they sold fresh fruit”

Like, maybe get off the internet and stop writing articles and actually see how poor people live, you won’t catch something from going into a .99 cent store

The whole gist of this article is basically – can you believe there’s a place worse than wal mart to shop at and it’s like, yeah, I can believe it, I was there yesterday. Us poors can also use the internet

I do find it fitting that the guy who called up a Dollar General rather than just go find out and walk in would be named “Peter Funt.”

they always seem so shocked when they find places where poor people shop, as if they’ve discovered something that no one else knows about. i mean, of course those on a low income are gonna shop at discount stores.

ayeforscotland:

I know we’ve had a good Christmas but it’s important to remember that, in the UK, doctors are now proscribing food to people and are also treating children for rickets.

Luckily I’ve not heard about any Scottish doctors having to do it, but this shows where the UK is headed.

keltik45:

waennsch-daennscho:

shindetsuku:

captain-mistwolf:

I’m fairly certain America hinges now on propaganda that everything is okay and we’re still a first world nation when actually, our country is slipping further and further, and we’re really just. The best third world country out here. Not even comparable to most first world countries, so we fucking aren’t one anymore

Sounds like we live in a police state where the rich tax the poor not to feed or protect them but to fund programs and legislature that defunds their resources and encourages them to die. The rich get richer and the middle class shrinks and suffocates while the entire country falls apart because corporate power greed refuses to see the consequences of their actions.

I wish I had the faith to believe what goes around comes around, but I think it’s time to understand that we’re the ones that need to come around and take action. The rich aren’t going to do jack shit for us anymore. Even the rich that care about people on the bottom don’t have the courage to help people en masse

Economically speaking, one of the foundations of a 1st world country is a strong middle class (source, my BBA in Economics and International Business), and it’s been abundantly clear that America’s middle class has been shrinking.  Wages have been stagnant since pretty much the 1970′s, American CEO’s wage disparity is the highest in the world when compared to the average of their workers.  

Basically, the us *isn’t* a first world country anymore.  Our economy may still be one of the highest (I’m not sure if China has overtaken us yet), but our infrastructure is crumbling.  Roads and school and bridges are in dire need of repair, our education system is laughable when you see how much money we have available for it.  Military spending is out of control, often on things the military doesn’t even need or want.  All in the name of continuously soaring profits for the highest echelon of society, who never needed it to begin with.  

Here’s some expresses from a recent article about a UN official investigating poverty in the US:

A United Nations official investigating poverty in the United States was shocked at the level of environmental degradation in some areas of rural Alabama, saying he had never seen anything like it in the developed world.

“I think it’s very uncommon in the First World. This is not a sight that one normally sees. I’d have to say that I haven’t seen this,” Philip Alston, the U.N.’s Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights, told Connor Sheets of AL.comearlier this week as they toured a community in Butler County where “raw sewage flows from homes through exposed PVC pipes and into open trenches and pits.”


“Some might ask why a U.N. Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights would visit a country as rich as the United States,“ Alston said. “But despite great wealth in the U.S., there also exists great poverty and inequality.”

Alston also pointed out that the U.S. “has been very keen” on other countries being investigated by the U.N. for civil and human rights issues.

“Now, it’s the turn to look at what’s going on in the U.S.,” Alston said. “There are pretty extreme levels of poverty in the United States given the wealth of the country. And that does have significant human rights implications.


“The idea of human rights is that people have basic dignity and that it’s the role of the government—yes, the government!—to ensure that no one falls below the decent level,” he said. “Civilized society doesn’t say for people to go and make it on your own and if you can’t, bad luck.”


http://www.newsweek.com/alabama-un-poverty-environmental-racism-743601

This could be said for the UK too. Thank fuck we have the SNP in the Scottish government.

I don’t have the spoons to comment much on one recent Twitter thread that made its way over here. Other than that, from what I understand, the system isn’t nearly as good with longer-term disability. (What a surprise, right? 😒) Probably better than the UK or US, and I certainly hope so with prospect of ending up there.

Anyway, I thought I was going to choke at one of the right-wing talking points somebody felt compelled to trot out in notes.

As one of the worst specific examples possible.

I mean, my mother was joking years ago that at least Mr. C is in about the best position possible in terms of medication effects on people like him being understood, as an ethnic Swedish man. (In direct comparison to us, yes.) Given the amount of pharmaceutical R&D based in Sweden for a long time now. That’s one of their major exports.That commenter would likely be in one hell of a shape without Swedish pharmaceutical and medical research in general.

Also, going by some industry propaganda for a quick reference:

• Life expectancy in Sweden is increasing by one year every six years. One-third of this increase is attributed to new medical treatments.

• Sweden’s total expenditure for medicines has during the past decade increased much more slowly than health care costs in general. Over the past five years, drug expenditures per capita actually declined.

Compare to the US. Even more exasperating and darkly funny right on the heels of the recently reported second year in a row of life expectancy decline.

(Why Are So Many Americans Dying Young? Hint: Those conclusions have a lot more to do with inequality than moral panics. Other than the spectre of “Obesity” inevitably coming up.)

BHS homeless respond to Hull charity over ‘lucrative’ lifestyle

prochlorperazines:

noislandofdreams:

Bag of shite

If it’s better than the hostels which they’re apparenty turning down then you need to improve the hostels – not cut off their lifeline by not helping em on the street

right, and hostels aren’t free – or even cheap. £30 a week is a lot of money when you’re homeless, and it can be the deciding sum that means you can’t eat that week. so it’s no real surprise that a lot of them would rather be on the streets, where they at least have ties to the local homeless community and aren’t being patronised to by self-righteous do-gooders who care more about their image than the people they’re claiming to help.

A man who spends several hours each day beneath Hull’s former BHS canopy has defended accusations rough sleepers are refusing help from charities and hostels…

“It’s very controlling in the hostels. The one I was in had cameras everywhere and you were locked in your room.

"You feel like you get no privacy. They’re expensive as well. It’s £30 a week out of your benefits.

Tip: If people are preferring to avoid the "help” you have on offer, maybe it’s time to reconsider what you’re doing.

One pretty central problem with the charity model, though. It’s so much easier to insist the people you’re supposed to be helping are really undeserving ingrates if they don’t like it, than to actually try to provide respectful assistance they can use.

BHS homeless respond to Hull charity over ‘lucrative’ lifestyle