Posted on 11/17/2014 7:40:05 AM PST by Uncle Miltie
The number of homeless children in the U.S. has surged in recent years to an all-time high, amounting to one child in every 30, according to a comprehensive state-by-state report that blames the nations high poverty rate, the lack of affordable housing and the impacts of pervasive domestic violence.
Titled Americas Youngest Outcasts, the report being issued Monday by the National Center on Family Homelessness calculates that nearly 2.5 million American children were homeless at some point in 2013. The number is based on the Department of Educations latest count of 1.3 million homeless children in public schools, supplemented by estimates of homeless pre-school children not counted by the DOE.
The problem is particularly severe in California, which has one-eighth of the U.S. population but accounts for more than one-fifth of the homeless children with a tally of nearly 527,000.
Carmela DeCandia, director of the national center and a co-author of the report, noted that the federal government has made progress in reducing homelessness among veterans and chronically homeless adults.
The same level of attention and resources has not been targeted to help families and children, she said. As a society, were going to pay a high price, in human and economic terms.
Child homelessness increased by 8 percent nationally from 2012 to 2013, according to the report, which warned of potentially devastating effects on childrens educational, emotional and social development, as well as on their parents health, employment prospects and parenting abilities.
The report included a composite index ranking the states on the extent of child homelessness, efforts to combat it, and the overall level of child well-being. States with the best scores were Minnesota, Nebraska and Massachusetts. At the bottom were Alabama, Mississippi and California.
Californias poor ranking did not surprise Shahera Hyatt, director of the California Homeless Youth Project.
The crux of the problem, she said, is the states high cost of living, coupled with insufficient affordable housing.
People think, Of course we are not letting children and families be homeless, so theres a lot of disbelief, Hyatt said. California has not invested in this issue.
Hyatt, 29, was homeless on and off throughout adolescence, starting when her parents were evicted when she was in 7th grade. At 15, she and her older brother took off and survived by sleeping in the tool sheds, backyards and basements of acquaintances.
These terms like couch surfing' and doubled-up' sound a lot more polite than they are in practice, she said. For teenagers, it might be exchanging sex for a place to stay or staying someplace that does not feel safe because they are so mired in their day-to-day survival needs.
Near San Francisco, Gina Cooper and her son, then 12, had to vacate their home in 2012 when her wages of under $10 an hour became insufficient to pay the rent. After a few months as nomads, they found shelter and support with Home & Hope, an interfaith program in Burlingame, California, and stayed there five months before Cooper, 44, saved enough to be able to afford housing on her own.
It was a painful time for my son, Cooper said. On the way to school, he would be crying, I hate this.
In mostly affluent Santa Barbara, the Transition House homeless shelter is kept busy with families unable to afford housing of their own. Executive director Kathleen Baushke said that even after her staff gives clients money for security deposits and rent, they go months without finding a place to live.
Landlords arent desperate, she said. They wont put a family of four in a two-bedroom place because they can find a single professional who will take it.
She said neither federal nor state housing assistance nor incentives for developers to create low-income housing have kept pace with demand.
We need more affordable housing or we need to pay people $25 an hour, she said. The minimum wage isnt cutting it.
Among the current residents at Transition House are Anthony Flippen, Savannah Austin and their 2-year-old son, Anthony Jr.
Flippen, 28, said he lost his job and turned to Transition House as his unemployment insurance ran out. The couple has been on a list to qualify for subsidized housing since 2008, but they arent counting on that option and hope to save enough to rent on their own now that Flippen is back at work as an electrician.
Austin, due to have a second child in December, is grateful for the shelters support but said its rules had been challenging. With her son in tow, she was expected to vacate the premises each morning by 8 a.m. and not return before 5 p.m.
Id go to the park, or drive around, she said. It was kind of hard.
The new report by the National Center on Family Homelessness a part of the private, nonprofit American Institutes for Research says remedies for child homelessness should include an expansion of affordable housing, education and employment opportunities for homeless parents, and specialized services for the many mothers rendered homeless due to domestic violence.
Efforts to obtain more resources to combat child homelessness are complicated by debate over how to quantify it.
The Department of Housing and Urban Development conducts an annual one-day count of homeless people that encompasses shelters, as well as parks, underpasses, vacant lots and other locales. Its latest count, for a single night in January 2013, tallied 610,042 homeless people, including 130,515 children.
Defenders of HUDs method say its useful in identifying the homeless people most in need of urgent assistance. Critics contend that HUDs method grossly underestimates the extent of child homelessness and results in inadequate resources for local governments to combat it. They prefer the Education Department method that includes homeless families who are staying in cheap motels or doubling up temporarily in the homes of friends or relatives.
Fixing the problem starts with adopting an honest definition, said Bruce Lesley, president of the nonprofit First Focus Campaign for Children. Right now, these kids are sort of left out there by themselves.
Lesleys group and some allies have endorsed a bill introduced in Congress, with bipartisan sponsorship, that would expand HUDs definition to correlate more closely with that used by the Education Department. However, the bill doesnt propose any new spending for the hundreds of thousands of children who would be added to the HUD tally.
Shahera Hyatt, of the California Homeless Youth Project, says most of the homeless schoolchildren in her state arent living in shelters.
Its often one family living in extreme poverty going to live with another family that was already in extreme poverty, she said. Kids have slept in closets and kitchens and bathrooms and other parts of the house that have not been meant for sleeping.
Read more here: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2014/11/17/3492765_child-homelessness-at-historic.html?rh=1#storylink=cpy
Would these “homeless children” be those million that Obama gave the green light to from El Salvador, Nicaragua and Guatamala?
But ...... but .. but the gay agenda is much more important.
The press is not allowed to talk about homelessness when a Democrat is pResident!
It’s because of the damn meth that’s why.
Nah, only when Republicans are presidents does homelessness of any kind suddenly appear. Democrats take it away just as drastically.
Somebody is going to get fired. Don’t they know only to run stories about homelessness when a Republican is in the White House?
I am LOVING the implosion of Obama!
Obama, I mean Obola is making W Bush look better every day ! As each day goes by and Obola has to in the end adopt W's policies... W looks like a genius and Obola like an armature in way over his head.
Wow - it’s amazing the liberal mindset can read this article and focus on the wrong issue. For example:
“The crux of the problem, she said, is the states high cost of living, coupled with insufficient affordable housing.”
No - the crux of the problem is people that can’t afford to support themselves having children that they also can’t support (note the story further down about the family having a second child while they are currently homeless). And the number of out of wedlock births in this country, where there aren’t a mother and father to raise the child. Of course - we aren’t allowed to judge anyone over this, so we just let it happen.
The reaction to this by many is to increase welfare subsidies and the number of people that are eligible. What no one seems to look at is the result. By subsidizing people to have children they can’t afford, the problem just grows exponentially worse - those children will most likely do the same thing in a few years. Until society collapses on itself.
Exactly.
“President Obama wants to end homelessness by the year 2020”
LOS ANGELES, Nov. 16 (UPI) —
At an event in Los Angeles on Saturday, the new Housing and Urban Development secretary, Julian Castro, said President Obama wants to end homelessness.
“President Obama has set a goal of effectively ending homelessness by the year 2020 and ending veteran homelessness by the end of 2015,” he said. “The folks who have served our nation should never go homeless.”
http://www.breitbart.com/system/wire/upiUPI-20141116-202903-6981
“We are ending homelessness”
In 2010, the Obama Administration launched Opening Doors, the nations first comprehensive strategy to prevent and end homelessness, and since then the number of persons experiencing homelessness is declining. The Plan seeks to connect housing, health, education, and human service programs together so that they are engaged and coordinated to prevent and end homelessness. This is an audacious strategy but one that government at every level is serious about. - See more at: http://blog.hud.gov/index.php/2014/11/12/homelessness-2/#sthash.NeN4VSYv.dpuf
>homeless people that encompasses shelters, as well as parks, underpasses, vacant lots and other locales
Democrat city problem brought about by creating serfs and paying them to pinch off new welfare children as fast as they can procreate. And they keep bringing in more wasted youth.
It’s obvious we haven’t spent enough money on the problem.
More taxes are the only solution.
the crux of the problem is people that cant afford to support themselves having children that they also cant support
Yep. Whenever the subject of poverty comes up, I always remember this quote from Hugh Price, President of the National Urban League: "There are three things black parents must persuade their teen-agers to do. First, get their high school diploma. Second, get married before having their first child. Third, hold off on having their first child until after they turn 20 themselves.... Only about 8 percent of children raised in households that follow these rules experience poverty. By contrast, 80 percent of the youngsters in households that ignore these rules end up poor."
I suspect a fair percentage of that eight percent, the parents have divorced or the family has otherwise broken up. As Martin Luther King, Jr. said, Nothing is so much needed as a secure family life for a people to pull themselves out of poverty.
Family ties -- parents with each other and with their children, but also aunts, uncles, grandparents, cousins, etc. -- are crucial for survival in hard times. I know a few people whose church provided them a temporary home of some sort as well, but family support is by far the most common. From what I can see, people without that safety net are more likely to end up homeless than anyone else but the mentally ill.
Don’t use the term ‘serf’.
An actual serf gave 25% of his harvest back to the king, and he allowed one of his sons to be trained for the defense of the realm.
I aspire to serfdom. Can you imagine paying a flat, single tax of 25%?!
It would be amazing.
It would be a GOP talking point: “Aspiring to Serfdom”
It’s been in the making for about 40 years.
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