Report says Virginia not doing enough for poor

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POVERTY IN VIRGINIA: Has the state's safety net failed?

Even during the good times, Virginia isn't doing enough to meet the needs of its poorest residents.

That's the message from the Commonwealth Institute for Fiscal Analysis, which released a report yesterday suggesting that more needs to be done to help those who live in poverty.

The report found that despite a 122 percent increase in unemployment between December 2007 and February 2009, the number of people seeking food stamps rose just 18 percent during that time, and those seeking Temporary Assistance to Needy Families went up by 9.8 percent.

The report pointed out that in 2007, the number of children enrolled in the TANF program was more than 50,000. Yet more than 233,000 children were then living at or below the federal poverty level, which is defined as a household income of $21,000 for a family of four.

Those are "key signals that our safety net programs are not responding as they should," said Michael Cassidy, executive director of the Commonwealth Institute.

The report will likely be part of the discussion today at Virginia's Summit on Poverty and Economic Opportunity at the Omni Hotel in Richmond. Gov. Timothy M. Kaine will deliver opening remarks to nearly 100 businesses, community and nonprofit leaders, as well as legislators and state agency representatives, who have convened to create and implement a sustainable plan to fight poverty in Virginia.

The institute's report says the state's strict eligibility requirements for programs like TANF or Medicaid are barriers for many people.

The report suggests that the state should take advantage of stimulus money to create new initiatives and improve insurance assistance for unemployed Virginians.

Virginia could increase the minimum wage, the report says, and expand public health insurance for working parents. The report said currently parents earning more than $6,000 a year likely don't qualify for Medicaid coverage.

Another suggestion was to eliminate unnecessary asset tests, and raise the income test, for those seeking food stamps. Other options called for making the state's earned income tax credit refundable, and overall, doing a better job of reaching out to individuals and families so they're aware of the services available to them.



Contact Holly Prestidge at (804) 649-6945 or .

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by r u kidding me? on May 08, 2009 at 2:02 pm

Poverty and cognitive development -

http://www.pnas.org/content/106/16/6545.full.pdf+html

A peer reviewed study published by the National Academy of Sciences.

I don’t expect true-believers to be persuaded, but here it is anyway.

Flag Comment Posted by r u kidding me? on May 08, 2009 at 1:45 pm

bholl - thank you. that’s the point I was trying to make.

Flag Comment Posted by bholl on May 08, 2009 at 1:43 pm

Wow, $7.15 per hour and no takers.
Sean Hannity’s relatives all have work, I presume. 

Lets see…thats almost three gallons of gasoline!

Oh my, this predator could find no labor in Northeastern PA. How can an aspiring corporate titan make his 10 million a year paying a livable wage to the help?

If he really exists, I’ll bet he’s looking for real estate in the illegal immigrant rich Great Southwest!

Flag Comment Posted by Will on May 08, 2009 at 1:07 pm

“So Will now you think you know what business can and can not succeed.“

I do know that a businessman whose company is short 22,000 workers and is too incompetent to hire a single hone is an unsuccessful businessman. Of course since I think we’re talking about a truthiness factoid—I started to skip CNN and just go straight to Rush Limbaugh’s website—it doesn’t much matter.

Flag Comment Posted by bholl on May 08, 2009 at 12:43 pm

Appalachia is not the urban north nor are the people parasites.  They are hard working people who have no options. Furniture factories gone, Textile plants gone, Farming ruined by cheap imports and Corporate farms. These are the Scotch-Irish people who built this country and who, in huge numbers have fought and died for this country. They make up a large percentage of the poor in America.  They are neither urban nor ethnic.

Got a problem with helping them out, too?

Flag Comment Posted by r u kidding me? on May 08, 2009 at 10:55 am

Perhaps instead of relying on rumor and myths, some of you could read the Federal Reserve’s report on poverty and then come back and see if you still claim it’s all lazy scammers (i.e. urban blacks) who are poor.

http://frbsf.org/cpreport/docs/cp_fullreport.pdf

Flag Comment Posted by Jer1234 on May 08, 2009 at 9:18 am

“Given the prevailing wages in NE Pennsylvania anybody who thinks he could hire 22,000 at $7.15 an hour is too stupid to succeed.“
So Will now you think you know what business can and can not succeed.  Who said anything about “middle-aged investment bankers” being the only ones out of work.  Guess I have a better idea of who is out of work and who is not.

“I’m not as outraged as you..“
Maybe if more people would show their outrage at what is going on and what is planned then things might get better.  The last 12 years have been a tax, spend and hide by all aspects of our government.  this seems Ok with most of the citizens of our country becasue they give approval by their silence on what is going on.  I will remainoutraged and if it gets just one person a day to think and act then we will regain control of a government that seems bent on taking over every aspect of our daily lives.  Look at the article today on what the government is going to use the polar bear fro an excuse to do. Do politicians really think these things through?

Flag Comment Posted by Will on May 08, 2009 at 7:33 am

Jer1234: “Hey Will, article was posted for 2 days on the CNN website about 2 weeks ago.  An employer in NE pennsylvania said he could hire 22K people yet no one wanted to apply because they were minimum wage jobs for his business,“

I searched the CNN website. No story. But even assuming they took it down, I guess this fellow will have to go out of business, and I’m glad. Given the prevailing wages in NE Pennsylvania anybody who thinks he could hire 22,000 at $7.15 an hour is too stupid to succeed. $286 a week doesn’t go far in Northeast Pennsylvania, and I’m not as outraged as you are that unemployed middle-aged investment bankers weren’t jumping for joy at this man’s offer.

Flag Comment Posted by Jer1234 on May 08, 2009 at 7:25 am

Cochese, I am what I am.  To bad for you I guess.  No change needed here.

Flag Comment Posted by nonsheeple on May 08, 2009 at 2:49 am

Perhaps the poor could do more for themselves in good times , we have people in NoLa whining because the government trailers are being taken away. Excuse me but it is three and one half years later: time to get off the dole, my sympathy for you has been exhausted.

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