A new report on the senior population found a majority of elderly women, blacks and Latinos are precariously close to poverty, according to the nonpartisan Economic Policy Institute report released Thursday.

The report comes as lawmakers are considering making changes to Social Security and Medicare. The proposed changes, the report's authors warn, would make 41 million American seniors economically vulnerable, defined as having an income less than two times the supplemental poverty threshold.

Nearly half of the elderly population is just one economic mishap away from falling into poverty, according to the study.


But elderly women, ages 65 and older, are more likely to be vulnerable to economic calamities. Nearly 53% of elderly women are "economically vulnerable," compared to 42% of men of the same age range.

"After working hard their entire lives, millions of our elderly are struggling to pay for basic needs like food, medicine and housing, even with Social Security and Medicare," said the report's co-author Elise Gould. "As such, policymakers should consider the dire consequences proposals to restructure these programs would have on our parents and grandparents."

The researchers relied on the U.S. Census Bureau's supplemental poverty measure. Formed in 2009, the metric is an experimental poverty measure that defines income thresholds and resources different from the official poverty metric, according to the Census Bureau.

Among other findings:

-- Nearly 64% of elderly blacks are defined as economically vulnerable.

-- The rate for elderly Latinos is six percentage points higher at 70%.

-- In comparison, 44% of elderly whites are considered economically vulnerable.

-- The older elderly -- people age 80 and older -- have a far higher rate of economic vulnerability: 58% compared to those between age 65 and 79, 44%.

Researchers said most elderly Americans subsist on meager retirements and live on a fixed income.

Changes being proposed to Medicare by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) would make seniors more vulnerable to economic mishaps, according to the report.

"We can dispel the myth that most seniors are 'greedy geezers' with lavish retirements," said co-author David Cooper. "Almost half are either in poverty or close to it."


 
http://www.teensopposingpoverty.org/
Helping Young People TurnCompassion Into Action Every day, millions of people in the United States struggle to survive. Many have no place to call home. Others must choose between food, shelter and medicine.Often the struggle is dehumanizing and breeds hopelessness. 

Meanwhile, a generation of young people filled with compassion and a powerful sense of justice are hungry for an opportunity to make a difference in their world. 

They don’t want to wait until they become “adults” to have an impact on others—and they don’t need to.

Through TOP, the lives of youth and the people they serve are forever changed.  TOP is about so much more than its programs.  Youth and the people they serve make real connections and form real relationships.  Unlikely friendships are formed, hearts are changed, and the love of Christ is shared in a real and powerful way.

 
This video is part of "Undroppable," a documentary project from@Jason_Pollock that tells the stories of young people who have overcome significant obstacles to graduate from high school.

After a deadly tornado ravaged her hometown of Joplin, Missouri, high school student Jade Roeper and her father moved into a storage shed without running water or heat while he tried to rebuild their house. Two months later, overwhelmed by the stress of her living situation combined with the everyday pressures of school, Jade moved out of the shed and into a homeless shelter.

Jade is now on her own in a program for independent living, paying her rent with the $600 per month that she receives in surviver benefits from her mother's death. Although her current situation is a step up from the shelter, Jade has found it challenging to focus on school when the difficulties of living by herself feel overwhelming.

'I've grown up a lot faster than everyone around me," she says. "In the last two months I've missed a lot of school because I don't have someone to help me get up in the morning and actually push me to go to school. Everything going on in my life is so overwhelming."

But Jade has grown up and she's on track to graduate high school. The budding detective knows exactly what she wants to do when she's finished. Jade plans to earn her bachelor's of science at Missouri Southern State University, and then go on to Florida State University for her master's in criminology. One day, she hopes to work for the FBI.

Watch the video above to hear Jade tell her story, and visit the "Undroppable" YouTube channel for more videos.

HuffPost Live will be taking a comprehensive look at the persistence of poverty in America Sept. 5 from 12-4 p.m. EDT and 6-10 p.m. EDT. Click here to check it out -- and join the conversation.

 
Dubai youngsters paint a clear picture of rights for every child
Vivian Nereim

DUBAI // Ishrat Razia thought of the plight of her young compatriots in Bangladesh when asked to draw a picture about children's rights.

"Bangladesh is a country where poverty is really usual so children don't get their rights," said Ishrat, 16. "I would like everyone to help these kids to have a better education."

The Grade 10 pupil at Pristine Private School drew a colourful tableau of children working in the street and studying.

Her art won third place in her age category in an emirate-wide competition that encouraged students to think critically about children's rights.

Sponsored by the Community Development Authority (CDA), the second annual Human Rights Student Contest included 88 government, private and special-needs schools in Dubai.

The competition was divided into an arts section - with painting, calligraphy and photography categories - and a literature section, for short stories and articles in Arabic.

The CDA received 504 entries and picked 40 winners.

"This is a huge number," said Ayesha Al Marri, director of international cooperation and studies at CDA.

"We've done a lot of work to finalise who will win. We were thinking about giving instead of three places maybe five places, because we've had a lot of very, very good artwork."

Ms Al Marri said she was especially impressed by the work of special-needs pupil Abdulla Ismail, from the Dubai Centre for the Care and Rehabilitation of the Disabled.

Abdulla won two prizes: one for a painting with the words "no to violence against children", and the other for a photograph of a distraught child with an adult's hand clasped over his mouth.

"When I see this picture I feel that I will cry," Ms Al Marri said. "I know a lot of people with disabilities have been in this kind of situation."

The contest focused on children's rights partly because of the upcoming debate on Wadeema's Law, the UAE's first federal child-protection law, said Omar Al Shamsi, chief executive of the CDA's human rights division. The draft is before the FNC.

"We expect the child law will be issued at the end of this year," Mr Al Shamsi said.

The CDA wants to help children understand the law's meaning before then, he said.

Some of the winning images showed happier scenes.

Safa Zakariya, 15, a pupil at Al Rashid Al Saleh Private School, won second place in her category for a watercolour vision of a mother and child in a quiet moment.

"This is the real picture of a mother holding her baby," said Safa, who wanted to show a caring relationship.

Other winning entries were dark.

Zachary Huang, 17, a hearing-impaired pupil at the Westminster School, won second place in his category for a painting of a crying boy with tape covering his mouth and a horn by his ear.

Shamsa Hassan, a pupil at Princess Haya Bint Al Hussein Girls School, painted a girl crouching in a corner with bloody scratches on her legs. A man's shadow looms in the hallway behind her.

The contest enabled students to examine "pressing issues in society", said Padma Unnam, head of information, communication and technology at Pristine Private School.

"It really enhances the thinking skills of students, especially this kind of topic, human rights," Ms Unnam said. "These are the future citizens of the world and they are going to build the nation next."

While some children in the UAE lead charmed lives, it is important that they learn about the needs of others, said Shagufa Kidwai, head of the senior school.

"This gives them a platform to think about the underprivileged," Ms Kidwai said.




Read more: http://www.thenational.ae/news/uae-news/education/dubai-youngsters-paint-a-clear-picture-of-rights-for-every-child#ixzz2VCDc6u3k 
Follow us: @TheNationalUAE on Twitter | thenational.ae on Facebook
 
New report reveals LGBT “poverty gap”Contrary to dominant media narratives about gay affluence, data shows a vastly different economic realityBY KATIE MCDONOUGH

new report from the Williams Institute reveals that LGBT Americans are more likely than straight Americans to live in poverty, and that women, African-Americans and children are particularly vulnerable to economic hardship.

Contrary to dominant media narratives about gay affluence (the “New Normal,” “Modern Family” and others spring to mind), the data on wealth, sexuality and gender identity portrays a vastly different reality shaped by a nexus of gender, sexuality, race and geography.

The differences between certain groups are nuanced, but significant to track, advocates say. For example, the poverty rate for women in same-sex couples is 7.6 percent compared to 5.7 percent for women in different-sex couples. Poverty rates vary considerably between white gay men and gay men of color, with African-American men in same-sex couples six times more likely to live in poverty than their white counterparts.

Significantly, the children of gay couples are twice as likely to grow up in poverty than children of married straight couples, a fact that has nothing to do with the quality of gay parenting and everything to do with access to fair employment and federal benefits, among other factors, as lead researcher M.V. Lee Badgett told NBC News during a recent interview:

It’s always shocking to me to see these figures for kids, and the higher poverty rates for the households that have kids. The burden that seems to happen for African-American same-sex couples and their kids is very troubling. It could very well be because of where they live. A lot of those families live in areas with high poverty rates, in the South in particular. African-American people in same-sex couples earn less than white people in same-sex couples, and they earn less than married different sex couples across the board. Those are the things I think are most likely to explain it.

The issue of kids comes up all the time, and we do worry that it will be seen that same-sex couples aren’t good parents, aren’t fit parents, or that African-American same-sex couples aren’t good parents or fit parents. The economic situations that people find themselves in don’t reflect their fitness at being parents. It just reflects how hard it is for them to raise their kids and shows there’s a need for support, including the right to marry and to strengthen their family’s economic situation or to make it more secure by being able to tap into all the benefits that come with marriage.

Badgett went on to explain the value of such a report in a culture that often renders poverty among LGBT people invisible, and how tracking and sharing this data can help to shape policy that can improve people’s lives:

The biggest surveys that the Census Bureau does have asked no questions about sexual orientation or gender identity. Every survey has questions about race, about marital status, about disability, about ethnicity, about whether people have kids – all these things that matter in people’s lives and influence people’s vulnerability to poverty – but they don’t ask whether you’re lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender in most surveys…

The [Williams Institute report] findings also suggest that there are other kinds of things to prevent poverty that need to be addressed. For instance, we don’t have any protection against discrimination against LGBT people at the federal level. Only 21 states outlaw discrimination for sexual orientation and 16 states for gender identity. People who lose jobs because of discrimination are very likely to run into problems with poverty. If they don’t have incomes, they will be a whole lot poorer. So, nondiscrimination laws are very important.

Katie McDonough is an assistant editor for Salon, focusing on lifestyle. Follow her on Twitter @kmcdonovgh or email her at [email protected].MORE KATIE MCDONOUGH.

 
San Jose: Teen runaway rescued during two-day prostitution stingBy Robert Salonga [email protected]
Posted:   02/19/2013 10:47:10 AM PST
Updated:   02/19/2013 04:19:06 PM PST



SAN JOSE -- A 16-year-old girl who has reportedly spent a third of her life working as a prostitute was rescued during a sting last week that netted 14 arrests of alleged prostitutes and johns, according to the San Jose Police Department.

"This type of operation is so important because, unfortunately, it's not uncommon for us to come across juvenile prostitutes," said Sgt. Jason Dwyer. "Without a sustained effort to rescue them, they could get sucked into that type of work for life."

Aided by federal grant funds, the San Jose Police Department Human Trafficking Task Force conducted the two-day operation last Wednesday and Friday along Monterey Road, considered by police to be the city's worst area for prostitution. A high concentration of motels combined with heavy vehicle traffic make the issue especially rampant on a stretch of Monterey.

Police launched an undercover sting last Wednesday in which a female officer posed as a prostitute, resulting in the arrests and citations of eight people alleged to have solicited the officer.

Two days later, plainclothes officers conducted surveillance in the same area and arrested and cited four suspected johns and arrested two women on suspicion of prostitution.

They also found a 16-year-old girl who they identified as an East Bay runaway. She told officers she had been forced to work as a prostitute since she was 11 years old. The girl has been placed in protective custody.

"These officers conducting these operations ... know they're helping and rescuing victims who are more helpless than an adult would be," Dwyer said. "They're helping someone who can't help themselves."

Acting police Chief Larry Esquivel said the sting sends a message to sex traffickers working in San Jose.

"This type of activity will not be tolerated in our city," Esquivel said in a statement. "We will continue to look at similar enforcement actions and partnerships to address this problem."

 
KQED’s Forum: Hunger in the Bay
Area

Wendy Goodfriend |
November 27, 2010
| 0 Comments


Hunger
in the Bay Area
originally aired on KQED Radio’s Forum 88.5FM
Fri, Nov 26, 2010 — 9:30 AM


In San Francisco, one of every five children is at risk of going hungry and
the numbers are similar in other Bay Area counties. As the holiday season
begins, food bank and soup kitchen operators are reporting a spike in the number
of families that are seeking food. We talk with officials from several Bay Area
food agencies about the need they’re seeing and how people can help.


Host: Dave Iverson


 
 
Twelve Things You Can Do To Fight Poverty NowMay 12, 2013
by Greg Kaufmann, The Nation
We’re proud to collaborate with The Nation in sharing insightful journalism related to income inequality in America. The following is an excerpt from Nation contributor Greg Kaufmann’s “This Week in Poverty” column.

In this March 29, 2013 photo, women walk past blighted row houses in Baltimore. The U.S. Census Bureau puts the number of Americans in poverty at levels not seen since the mid-1960s, while $85 billion in federal government spending cuts that began last month are expected to begin squeezing services for the poor nationwide. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)
This is a tough moment in the fight against poverty.

Sequester is the latest chapter in a time-honored tradition of kicking the poor when they are down. A do-nothing Congress certainly isn’t going to do something about poverty without pressure from the grassroots. And it seems that the only way most of the mainstream media will pay attention to the more than 1 out of 3 Americans living below twice the poverty line — on less than $36,000 for a family of three — is if their lives make good fodder for tabloid television or play out in a courtroom drama.

That said, there are still plenty of people and groups fighting for real change, and plenty of ways you can get involved or stay engaged. I reached out to a handful of folks who dedicate their lives to fighting poverty in different ways. Here is what they asked people to do: 



1.From Sister Simone Campbell, Sisters of Social Service, Executive Director of NETWORK: “Support an increase in the minimum wage to more than $11 per hour.”

What people don’t know is that a large percentage of people living in poverty are workers who support their families on very small salaries. In fact, 57 percent of individuals and family members below the official poverty line either worked or lived with a working family member in 2011.

Pope Francis said on May 1, 2013, that all workers should make wages that allow them to live with their families in dignity. Contact your senators and representative and urge them to vote for a minimum wage (that is more than $11 an hour) and tipped minimum wage that reflect the dignity of ALL people.




2.From the Coalition of Immokalee Workers: “Tell Publix: Help end sexual harassment, wage theft and forced labor in the fields — join the Fair Food Program today.” 

Until very recently, Florida’s fields were as famous for producing human rights violations — with countless workers suffering daily humiliation and abuse ranging from wage theft to sexual harassment and even forced labor — as they were for growing oranges and tomatoes.

Today, however, there is a new day dawning for farmworkers in Florida’s tomato fields. The CIW’s Fair Food Program is demanding a policy of zero tolerance for human rights abuses on tomato farms, and it’s working. The program sets the highest human rights standards in the fields today, including: worker-to-worker education on rights, a 24-hour complaint line and an effective complaint investigation and resolution process — all backed by market consequences for employers who refuse to respect their workers’ rights.

The White House recently called the exciting new program “one of the most successful and innovative programs” in the world today in the fight to uncover — and prevent — modern-day slavery; and just last week United Nations investigators called it “impressive” and praised its “independent and robust enforcement mechanism.”

As the veteran food writer Barry Estabrook put it, thanks to the Fair Food Program, the Florida tomato industry is on the path “from being one of the most repressive employers in the country… to becoming the most progressive group in the fruit and vegetable industry” today.

But we need your help to complete this transformation.

One of the country’s largest supermarket chains, Publix Super Markets, is refusing to support the Fair Food Program. Publix continues to buy tomatoes from growers in the old way, where workers have no access to the Fair Food Program’s proven protections. Rather than step up to the highest human rights standards, Publix continues to turn its back on the workers whose poverty helps fuel its record profits.

Tell Publix Super Markets CEO William Crenshaw to join the fight against human rights abuses in the U.S. tomato industry.




3.From Ralph da Costa Nunez, President and CEO, Institute for Children, Poverty and Homelessness“Make a Personal Commitment to Helping Homeless Families”

More than one-third of Americans who use shelters annually are parents and their children. In 2011, that added up to more than 500,000 people. Since 2007, family homelessness has increased by more than 13 percent. Indeed, there is a growing prevalence of child and family homelessness across America.

While it is important to track the federal, state and local policies that impact homelessness, we can’t forget about getting involved on a personal level with the growing numbers of families that are struggling since the Great Recession.

You can visit a local shelter, meet a homeless family and see first hand the damage poverty is doing to young mothers and children. Then, become a big brother or sister, a role model for these young families to help them dream again. You are meeting an immediate need while also helping to stem generational poverty.

You can also contact your local department of social services, United Way, or religious organization to find out where the need is in your community. Also, speak with thehomeless liaison at your local school to see what needs they have identified in your neighborhood. There are many ways that you (and your children) can help families right in your community. Here are a few other ideas.




4.From Dr. Deborah Frank, Founder and Principal Investigator, Children’s HealthWatch: “Fund the federal Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) at the maximum authorized level”

Research by Children’s HealthWatch has shown that energy insecurity is associated with poor health, increased hospitalizations and risk of developmental delays in very young children, and that energy assistance can be effective in protecting children’s health.  The Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) provides low-income households with assistance in paying their utility bills — particularly those that must spend higher proportions of their income on home energy. To be eligible for LIHEAP, families must have incomes at or below 150 percent of the federal poverty level — less than $35,000 annually for a family of four.

When Children’s HealthWatch compared children in families that do and do not receive LIHEAP assistance — after controlling for participation in SNAP and WIC — we found that children in families that received LIHEAP were less likely to be at risk of growth problems, more likely to have healthier weights for their age and less likely to be hospitalized when seeking care for acute medical problems.

As pediatricians and public health researchers, we at Children’s HealthWatch know that LIHEAP matters for the bodies and minds of young children. Even in these tough economic times, we believe it is critical that President Obama and Congress make a funding commitment that meets the heating and cooling needs of America’s youngest children.

But the president has proposed reducing funding for LIHEAP to $2.970 billion in his FY 2014 budget, down from $3.5 billion for the current fiscal year. (Even funding at the current level has left millions of households without the aid they need to cope with their home energy costs.) Please join the National Fuel Fund’s call to fund LIHEAP at $4.7 billion in FY2014. Although that level is insufficient to meet the full needs of vulnerable households, it will enable states to end a trend over the last few years of needing to reduce the number of households served, cut benefits, or both. Contact the president and your members of Congress today.




5.Sarita Gupta, Executive Director, Jobs with Justice/American Rights at Work and Co-Director, Caring Across Generations: “Support of a living wage and basic labor protections for home care workers”

Caring Across Generations is a campaign that unites people to change the long-term care system that supports each of us, our family members and our neighbors, to live and age in our own homes and communities. One of the key ways we can strengthen this system is to protect the 2.5 million people working as care givers in the United States. With a projected future demand for an additional 1.3 million workers over the next decade, home care workers make up one of the largest occupations in the nation, yet many of them make below minimum wage.

In December 2011, at a White House ceremony surrounded by home care workers, employers and people who rely on personal care services, President Obama announced plans for new regulations that would at long last guarantee federal minimum wage and overtime protections for most home care aides. The moment capped decades of effort by advocates to revise the “companionship exemption,” which lumps professional care workers with teenage babysitters, excluding most home care aides from the basic labor protections that nearly all other American workers receive.

Following the White House announcement, the U.S. Department of Labor published draft regulations in the Federal Register. During the public comment period, the proposed rule received 26,000 comments with almost 80 percent in favor of providing home care workers with basic labor protections like minimum wage and overtime pay. But today, over a year after the public comment period closed, we are still waiting for a final rule to be announced.

Join Caring Across Generations and all of our partner organizations in the effort to push for basic minimum wage and overtime protections for care workers, and help us in our final push to ensure that the Obama Administration issues this long-awaited regulation to give 2.5 million care workers a path out of poverty. Visit www.caringacross.org to get involved with the campaign.




6. From Judith Lichtman, Senior Advisor, National Partnership for Women & Families: “Urge Congress to pass the Healthy Families Act (H.R. 1286/S.631) and a national paid leave program”

More than 40 million workers in this country — and more than 80 percent of the lowest-wage workers — cannot earn a single paid sick day to use when they get the flu or other common illnesses. Millions more cannot earn paid sick days to use when a child is sick.

For these workers and families, paid sick days can mean the difference between keeping a job and losing it, or keeping food on the table and going hungry. Nearly one-quarter of adults say they have lost a job or been threatened with job loss for needing a sick day. And, for the average worker without paid sick days, taking just 3.5 unpaid days off is equivalent to losing a month’s worth of groceries for their family. To make matters worse, the majority of new parents cannot take any form of paid leave of any length to care for a child, pushing many into debt and poverty. The United States is one of only a handful of countries that does not have a national paid leave standard of some kind.

In a nation that claims to value families, no worker should have to lose critical income or be pushed into poverty because illness strikes or a child or family member needs care.

Urge members of Congress to support the Healthy Families Act, legislation that would guarantee workers the right to earn paid sick days. And sign this petition calling on Congress to take up the national paid leave program workers and families urgently need.




7. From Tiffany Loftin, President, United States Student Association (USSA)“Increase regulation of private student loans and hold Sallie Mae accountable for its role in the student debt crisis.”

Throughout the Great Recession, only one type of household debt grew: student debt.

In April 2012, student debt surpassed the $1 trillion mark, and now students owe on average nearly $27,000 by the time they graduate. As student debt and student loan defaults escalate at an unsustainable pace, private student loan lenders continue to increase their profit margins.

Sallie Mae is the largest private student loan lender and one of the chief profiteers off of student debt, yet it faces minimal public scrutiny and accountability. With their sky-high interest rates, highly profitable government loan servicing contracts and predatory lending practices, they play a major role in keeping the American Dream out of reach for millions of borrowers.

Join USSA, the Student Labor Action Project (SLAP), Jobs with Justice/American Rights at Work, Common Cause, the American Federation of Teachers and others at the Sallie Mae shareholder meeting on May 30 in Newark, DE.

We’ll introduce a shareholder resolution asking Sallie Mae to be more transparent and accountable about its lobbying efforts, affiliations and executive bonus structure — all part of a corporate strategy to increase their bottom line at the financial expense of borrowers. Sign up to attend the join the shareholder action here.




8.From Elizabeth Lower-Basch, Policy Coordinator, the Center for Law and Social Policy (CLASP): “Support Pathways Back to Work”

Even as the economy recovers, too many unemployed workers and individuals with low education and skill levels face a difficult job market. Nearly two out of five unemployed workers have been jobless for six months or more. 6.7 million youth are both out of work and out of school.

Subsidized and transitional jobs are a proven way to give unemployed workers the opportunity to earn wages, build skills and connect to the labor market, while also giving businesses an incentive to hire new employees when they might not be able to do so otherwise.

President Obama’s FY14 budget blueprint calls for the creation of a $12.5 billion Pathways Back to Work Fund that includes: investments in subsidized employment opportunities, support services for the unemployed and low-income adults, summer and year-round employment opportunities for low-income youth and other work-based employment strategies with demonstrated effectiveness.

Please share this letter with nonprofits, businesses or other organizations and ask them to sign on to  join us in thanking President Obama for his support of subsidized and transitional jobs in the FY2014 budget, and asking the President and Congress to work together to ensure that the Pathways Back to Work Fund becomes law!  (This sign on letter is only for organizations, but individuals are also encouraged to ask their Members of Congress to support the Pathways Back to Work Fund — click the “reintroduce” buttons here and here.)




9.From Marci Phillips, Director of Public Policy and Advocacy, National Council on Aging“Invest in the Older Americans Act”

The Older Americans Act encompasses a range of programs that enable seniors to remain healthy and independent, in their own homes and communities, and out of costly institutions.  Services include healthy meals, in-home care, transportation, benefits access, caregiver support, chronic disease self-management, job training and placement and elder abuse prevention.

Funding has not kept pace with the growth in need or numbers, and recent cuts before the sequester hit have further eroded investments in key services. About 10,000 people turn 65 each day, and those over 85 are the fastest growing segment of the aging population.

One in three seniors is economically insecure. Social Security accounts for at least 90 percent of the income of more than one-third of older adults, and there has been a 79 percent increase in the threat of hunger among seniors over the past decade. The average duration of unemployment for people 55 and older is almost 50 weeks — longer than any other age group. Over 75 percent of all older adults have at least two chronic conditions, and the average Medicare household spends $4,500 on out-of-pocket health care costs.

There is a real need to increase funding for Older Americans Act programs like Meals on Wheels and in-home care. Please share your stories of cuts affecting seniors, so we can share them with Congress and the Administration and protect investments in the Older Americans Act.




10.From Rebecca Vallas, Staff Attorney/Policy Advocate, Community Legal Services

“Tell Congress NO CUTS to Social Security and SSI through the Chained CPI”

While the “chained CPI” is often referred to as just a technical change, in truth it’s a benefit cut for millions of seniors, people with disabilities and their families who rely on the Social Security system to meet their basic needs. Social Security retirement, disability and survivors benefits and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) serve as a vital lifeline, making up a significant percentage of total family income for many workers and families.

The average yearly benefit for the lowest quintile of earners receiving retirement benefits in 2010 was $10,206 — and that represented 94 percent of their family income. Social Security Disability and SSI benefits are incredibly modest as well. The average SSDI benefit is about $1,100 per month in 2013, and the average SSI benefit is less than $550 per month. And for most disabled workers receiving Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) and Supplemental Security Income (SSI), their benefits make up most or all of their income. Even the maximum SSI benefit ($710 in 2013) is just three-fourths of the federal poverty level for a single person, and a quarter of SSDI beneficiaries live in poverty.

The amount a person gets in Social Security or SSI benefits is adjusted annually based on the Social Security Cost-of-Living Adjustment (COLA). The chained CPI would slow the increase in the Social Security COLA, cutting benefits and eroding the purchasing power of seniors, people with disabilities and their families. Cuts under the chained CPI add up significantly over time. Since the effect of the chained CPI is cumulative, it would be especially hard on people with disabilities, since they typically begin receiving benefits at a younger age than retirees.

The chained CPI is not a more accurate measure of inflation for seniors and people with disabilities. It is based on a concept called the “substitution effect” — which assumes that when the price of one good goes up, a consumer will substitute a lower-cost alternative in its place (e.g., when the price of steak goes up, a person will buy hamburger instead). For Social Security and SSI beneficiaries who are struggling to make ends meet as it is, there’s no room for substitution — and no room for benefit cuts. Benefit cuts under the chained CPI would push beneficiaries to make impossible choices such as not paying the gas bill to afford the water bill, taking half a pill instead of a whole pill, or eating two meals per day instead of three to afford the cost of a copay on a needed medication.

Low-income seniors and people with severe disabilities are already struggling and can’t afford cuts. Send this email to Congress to tell them NO on the chained CPI, and to keep Social Security cuts out of any budget plan. For AARP’s chained CPI calculator, click here.




11.From Jim Weill, President, Food Research and Action Center:

“Tell Congress: Increase, Don’t Cut SNAP (Food Stamp) Benefits”

SNAP is a great program — boosting food security, health and nutrition and lifting millions out of poverty and millions of others out of deep poverty. But as a National Academy of Sciences Institute of Medicine expert committee just found, for most families benefits simply aren’t enough to afford a healthy diet for the month. This means that the program isn’t doing as much for food security, poverty reduction, child development, disease prevention and health care cost containment, as it could. And despite a series of Pinocchio-inspired political attacks on the program in the 2012 election season and in this year’s run-up to SNAP reauthorization as part of the Farm Bill, public support for the program is high: 73 percent of voters believe the program is important to the country; 70 percent say cutting it is the wrong way to reduce government spending; and 77 percent say the government should be spending more (43 percent) or the same (34 percent) on SNAP. This support crosses parties, demographic groups and rural, urban and suburban lines.

Here’s what you can do: Tell your representative and senators that the right course for the nation is to improve food stamp benefits (and support at least the temporary benefit boost the President has proposed) and that they must oppose any SNAP cuts being considered by the Agriculture Committees in the “Farm Bill.”




12.From Debbie Weinstein, Executive Director, Coalition on Human Needs:

Tell Congress to stop harmful cuts to anti-poverty programs now”

Across the country, federal “sequestration” cuts (aka mindless automatic reductions) are closing Head Start programs weeks early and canceling summer programs for poor 3 to 5 year old children; some Head Start centers are closing altogether or dropping children. Seniors are losing home-delivered meals or homemaker services that allow them to remain at home instead of being pushed into nursing homes. The long-term jobless are losing 10 to 20 percent of their meager benefits; in Maine, they decided to cut all unemployed people off of assistance 9 weeks early. 140,000 fewer families will get rental housing vouchers, despite waiting for help for years, which will contribute to rising family homelessness. Education is being cut, from pre-school to the Federal Work-Study Program (formerly “College Work-Study”) that helps students finance college through part-time employment. In Michigan, they are eliminating a $137 back-to-school clothing allowance for 21,000 poor children.

These cuts are wrong and foolish any way you slice it — they keep people poor, cost jobs and stall economic growth for everyone.

 
Training the courts to protect children’s rights

Tripoli, 22 April 2013:

Libyan prosecutors have been finding out more about the best ways to uphold children’s rights.

The four-day training course, for 25 prosecutors, is the second stage of a scheme aimed at preparing a solid basis for building a juvenile judicial system in Libya.

The programme has been organised by the Ministry of Social Affairs, the Libyan Higher Judicial Institute and the United Nations children’s fund UNICEF.

“These trainings are only the beginning of a long cooperation between the Higher Judicial Institute and UNICEF,” said Judge Bakkar from the Higher Judicial Institute (HJI).

The project has also included a three-day consultation on drafting a Juvenile Justice Law, led and hosted by the HJI.

A recent study of Libya’s existing laws, supported by UNICEF, showed that the country already has some regulations in place dealing with child protection. The death penalty is prohibited for under-18s and the legal age for marriage is 20. Corporal punishment in schools is also forbidden, although evidence suggests that, in some institutions, this rule flouted.

According to UNICEF, work is still needed, however, to bring the country’s legal system into line with international standards and provide adequate protection for children.

“Children in contact with the law need to be given different treatment than adults all the way from initial contact, detention, and release,” UNICEF Country Director, Carel de Rooy, said at the opening of this week’s training session.

“You, as judges, play a critical role in putting in place systems that protect minors, especially girls, so that they are given the special care and attention they deserve,” he added.