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Growing poverty haunts nation, DeKalb

Source: Georgia Dept. of Human Resources. FS=Food stamps

A report from the U.S. Census Bureau last week quantified the depth of the economic plight that plagues the nation. According to the bureau, 15.1 percent of Americans (or 46.2 million) lived in poverty last year.

Poverty, defined as a family of four that survives on less than $22,314 each year or a single person earning less than $11,139, claimed 3 million more individuals in 2010 than in 2009. Indeed, 2010 marked the fourth consecutive annual increase in poverty. And more Americans lived in poverty last year than in any other year since the bureau began to publish poverty estimates 52 years ago.

Many Georgia families struggled last year, as unemployment figures remained above the national average. Consequently, the state placed high on the bureau’s 2010 poverty index. Only two states (Mississippi and Louisiana) and the District of Columbia had a higher poverty rate than Georgia.

While the bureau has not yet reported 2010 poverty figures at the county level, there are indications that many DeKalb County residents continue to struggle financially.

According to figures from the Georgia Department of Human Services, a monthly average of 102,640 DeKalb residents received food stamps in fiscal year 2010. That figure represents an increase of 13,665 individuals compared to fiscal year 2009. The number of DeKalb residents relying on food stamps has increased each fiscal year since 2005, when 63,922 county residents needed assistance to purchase food—an increase of more than 38,000 individuals over the five-year period.

In 2009, more than 122,000 DeKalb residents lived below the poverty level. Perhaps most troublesome is that nearly 25 percent of those younger than 18 years old in DeKalb (or 43,482 minors) lived in poverty in 2009.

Many analysts say that high poverty rates will continue until significant numbers of the unemployed get back to work. According to the bureau’s report, median household income in 2010 was $49,445, a 2.3 percent decline compared to the 2009 median.

In Georgia, joblessness continues to remain high at 10.2 percent, well above the 9.1 percent national average. This continues to put a strain on the available resources to help families cope with difficult times.

There is perhaps a glimmer of hope for DeKalb residents struggling to make ends meet. The Georgia Department of Labor reported this month that initial unemployment insurance claims declined in August to 3,847 from 3,958 in July, that is a decrease of 111 new claims last month and 22.9 percent fewer than August 2009.


Comments (6)

Ed (Ned)
Said this on 9/29/11 At 08:12 pm
Garcia--
It's been nearly a week, and I know you've been on the Champion boards because you've commented on other stories.
So where are those examples of President Obama telling people they don't have to work?
The crickets are getting awfully loud
Linda
Said this on 9/25/11 At 10:49 am
We are quick to blame President Obama for the state that our Country is in today. America had a high jobless rate and we were living in poverty before he was elected. Yes, it is not getting better as fast as we would like..It took years to get in this mess and it will take years to get out.
(no matter who our President is)
Ed
Said this on 9/24/11 At 06:27 pm
Garcia--
Please edify all of us by providing an example of the president telling people they don't need to work.
Garcia
Said this on 9/23/11 At 11:20 pm
The reason food stamp usage has increased has been the message Obama has been sending - you don't have to work. The government will take care of you. Hopefully, a new Administration will cut these lazy leeches off the government dole.
Dundevil
Said this on 9/22/11 At 09:12 pm
I repeat the quote of former State Senator Steen Miles in an article entitled "The Downward Spiral" as published in the Champion July or August 2010:

"If things aren't reversed in DeKalb, in less than a decade, this county will be a bankrupt, crime-ridden wasteland with a plethora of poorly performing schools, churning out a bumper crop for the state's prison system."

Nothing has changed since then. It is even worse. Only 9 more years to go. A bankruptcy soon would be the best.
Bryce Farbstein
Said this on 9/22/11 At 04:55 pm
Years of a lack of innovative investment has left DeKalb vulnerable to such sad levels of poverty.

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