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Texas worst in U.S. for homeless kids, report says

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout: Debate & Discussion' started by yo, Mar 20, 2009.

  1. yo

    yo Contributing Member

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    http://www.suntimes.com/news/nation/1469038,w-texas-homeless-kids-031009.article

    Texas worst in U.S. for homeless kids, report says

    DALLAS---- Larry Canady took his family to a homeless shelter three weeks ago, no longer able to make ends meet after he and his wife were laid off from their jobs.

    The family of five was already living from paycheck-to paycheck. They went from renting a four-bedroom brick home in a south Dallas suburb to sharing one room in a dormitory-like shelter.

    "No one knew the economy was going to crash so hard like it did," said Larry Canady, 38, now at the nonprofit Family Gateway facility in Dallas. "It caught us off guard."

    The Canady family's story is a familiar one and in no place more so than Texas. A study by the National Center on Family Homelessness released Tuesday placed Texas 50th -- last of all states -- in how homeless children fare.

    The ranking considered four areas: the percentage of homeless children; their overall well-being; risk factors for homelessness, such as poverty and foreclosure rates; and what the state is doing to address the problems.

    Dr. Ellen Bassuk, president of the national center that produced the report, said the child poverty level in Texas is 23 percent, compared to 18 percent nationwide.

    "You're a big state, you've got a significant problem," said Bassuk, who also is an associate professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. "Texas needs to respond."

    The report defined as homeless any child age 18 or younger living with at least one parent or caregiver in such places as emergency shelters, motels, cars, or campgrounds due to economic hardships or losing their own homes. It did not include runaways or abandoned children.

    The center estimates that 1.5 million children nationwide experienced homelessness at least once in 2005-2006. The states that fared best were Connecticut, New Hampshire, Hawaii, Rhode Island and North Dakota. At the bottom were Texas, Georgia, Arkansas, New Mexico and Louisiana.

    Texas has more than 337,000 homeless children -- just over 5 percent of all kids living in the state, according to the study. It noted, however, that number may have been temporarily inflated by families who lost their homes during the hurricanes Rita and Katrina in 2005.

    Bassuk said that while Texas has a trust created to provide low-income housing -- something a lot of states don't have -- it has no statewide plan in place to address homeless issues.

    Across the U.S., the study found that one of every 50 kids are homeless each year. The rate in Texas is probably a bit higher.

    State officials and advocacy groups differ on the number of homeless children in Texas -- estimates range from 55,000 to 250,000 -- but all agree that the numbers are increasing.

    Michael Gerber, Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs' executive director, said there's no doubt more people are in poverty.

    "We're really needing to think long and hard about how we integrate our social service system because homeless kids are truly the most vulnerable among us," Gerber said.

    Gerber said the Texas Interagency Council for the Homeless, which coordinates the state's homeless resources and services, hopes to release a comprehensive plan to battle homelessness next month.

    Ken Martin, executive director of the Texas Homeless Network, an information clearinghouse for more than 250 organizations that help the homeless, said there are signs that the problem is being taken seriously.

    Still, he called the percentage of Texans without health care insurance, the lack of affordable housing and high poverty rates a "recipe for disaster."

    "At the other end of the scale are people who are way over their heads in houses they can't afford," Martin said. "When they lose their jobs or have a health care crisis, they're out on the street and they take their kids with them."

    For the Canady family, newly relocated to a shelter, their children, ages 13, 11, and 6, appear to be adjusting to their cramped but clean quarters and new inner-city schools.

    "I can only thank God they've been OK," said Linesa Canady, 35, a former risk analyst for a bank. "They've been very understanding."

    Eleven-year-old Tyra said she doesn't want people to pity or look down on her.

    "Just because you live in a shelter doesn't mean you have to be treated any different," she said, explaining that she's still the same girl who dreams of being a veterinarian, pediatrician or actress someday.
     
  2. Artesticle

    Artesticle Member

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    So Yo, how many people have you taken into your home?
     
  3. yo

    yo Contributing Member

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    Article made you feel uncomfortable so you try to take a personal shot at me? Nice one. :rolleyes:

    Waiting for intelligent people to show up and discuss.
     
  4. Artesticle

    Artesticle Member

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    What is there to discuss? If you don't like them being homeless then give them a home.
     
  5. yo

    yo Contributing Member

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    We have this thing called a government, whom we pay lots and lots and lots of money to in order to help deal with these issues. Perhaps their role in this is cause for discussion.

    So, are you going say anything intelligent? I'm not holding my breath.
     
  6. JuanValdez

    JuanValdez Contributing Member

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  7. Artesticle

    Artesticle Member

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    So you are just here to point fingers at the government for not doing anything when you wont? Maybe that in itself is the problem.
     
  8. glynch

    glynch Contributing Member

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    A strong case can be made that Texas, despite frequent church attendance, is the most selfish state in the US.

    On almost all social welfare indicators, food stamps, aid to low income families, aid to the r****ded etc. Texas is usually anywhere from 50 to 45 th. Unlike the other benighted states that are usually down there with Texas, (Mississippi, So. Carolina, Alabama etc. )Texas is not among the very few poorest states and is more in the middle range in per capital income
     
  9. insane man

    insane man Member

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    its the government. it works for the people. if we 'point figures' at it by voting for people who care, raising concern over such issues, that is DOING something.
     
  10. RudyTBag

    RudyTBag Contributing Member
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    Way to kill a decent thread man.

    Reading your posts is like dropping the soap, welcome to ignore!
     
  11. insane man

    insane man Member

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    only in texas
     
  12. Mr. Clutch

    Mr. Clutch Contributing Member

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    I guess government welfare is the #1 indicator in "selfishness"
     
  13. Artesticle

    Artesticle Member

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    Cuba is the least selfish country. Everybody gives everything, everyone is equal and nobody is homeless.

    [​IMG]
     
  14. Mr. Clutch

    Mr. Clutch Contributing Member

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    Don't forget Venezuela, they just elected a leftist government so they aren't selfish at all.
     
  15. Artesticle

    Artesticle Member

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    You have a strange way of ignoring people.
     
  16. Artesticle

    Artesticle Member

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    http://stuffwhitepeoplelike.com/2008/01/23/18-awareness/

    #18 Awareness

    An interesting fact about white people is that they firmly believe that all of the world’s problems can be solved through “awareness.” Meaning the process of making other people aware of problems, and then magically someone else like the government will fix it.

    This belief allows them to feel that sweet self-satisfaction without actually having to solve anything or face any difficult challenges. Because, the only challenge of raising awareness is people not being aware. In a worst case scenario, if you fail someone doesn’t know about the problem. End of story.

    What makes this even more appealing for white people is that you can raise “awareness” through expensive dinners, parties, marathons, selling t-shirts, fashion shows, concerts, eating at restaurants and bracelets. In other words, white people just have to keep doing stuff they like, EXCEPT now they can feel better about making a difference.

    Raising awareness is also awesome because once you raise awareness to an acceptable, aribtrary level, you can just back off and say “Bam! did my part. Now it’s your turn. Fix it.”

    So to summarize - you get all the benefits of helping (self satisfaction, telling other people) but no need for difficult decisions or the ensuing criticism (how do you criticize awareness?). Once again, white people find a way to score that sweet double victory.

    Popular things to be aware of: The Environment, Diseases like Cancer and AIDS, Africa, Poverty, Anorexia, Homophobia, Midde School Field Hockey/Lacrosse teams, Drug Rehab, and political prisoners.
     
  17. insane man

    insane man Member

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    ecuador but i wouldn't expect your right winged childhood education to teach you geography.
     
  18. weslinder

    weslinder Contributing Member

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    El Salvador
     
  19. insane man

    insane man Member

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    :(

    ouch.
     
  20. Mr. Clutch

    Mr. Clutch Contributing Member

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    Public school isnt right winged childhood education
     

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