Unemployment paralyzed the U.S.!

June 25, 2013 19:00
Unemployment paralyzed the U.S.!

Unemployment accompanied by homelessness paralyzed the U.S.!

Experts survey brought into prominence that undoubtedly things are getting worse. The Southwest has been hit particularly hard wherein 30 percent of New Mexico's children are living in poverty due to an overwhelming 23 percent rise in recession.

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Safe place: David Hutchinson and his daughter are an example of the tremendous toll the recession took on families, particularly in the Southwest, where Hutchinson lived under a bridge in Arizona as his family stayed in a shelter.

It was not seeing at the distant past that David Hutchinson spent a month sleeping under a bridge while his wife along with young daughter spent their nights at a domestic violence shelter. Yet this wasn't a case of domestic violence, that's due to the reason that the couple in actuality has no no alternatives. The prominent fact was there were just no shelters in Phoenix with room for another homeless family, at the same time their top priority was locate a safe place for their daughter. The family is one of many in the U.S. that have been attempting to raise children in the scenario of unemployment and homelessness.

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Hungry: Julie Morris stands with her three daughters while awaiting extras after the dining hall closed at the Family Gateway homeless shelter in Texas, where 337,000 children are homeless.

Furthermore, an annual survey published on Monday by the Annie E. Casey Foundation shows the number of children living in poverty increased to 23 percent in 2011, subsequent to the recession. It was known that the Southwest experienced precisely hard hit. New Mexico, for the first time experienced falling into worst in the nation when it comes to child well-being. Beyond 30 percent of children in the state were living in poverty in 2011 as well nearly two-fifths had parents who lacked secure employment, according to this year's Kids Count survey. Nevada is ranked No. 48, followed by Arizona. Mississippi, which has traditionally held last place, made slight enhancement in a course of action in childhood education while reading and math proficiency for some students elevated, putting the state at No. 49.

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Kim Posich, executive director of the New Mexico Center on Law and Poverty explained that including everything, the report revealed there have been gains in education and health nationally, yet since 2005, there have been serious setbacks when it comes to the economic well-being of children. There could be minimum doubt that things are getting worse. Apart from the fact the New Mexico economy has been so slow to turn around, the systems that generally serve people who are the working poor and suddenly lose their jobs or face greater

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Recession: Brian Morris was laid off from his construction job in April and the family was evicted from their Texas home when they could no longer make their rent payments. They now live in a shelter

hardship, all those systems have been affected beyond the maximum degree. Dana Wolfe Naimark of the Children's Action Alliance in Phoenix said that in Arizona, charities along with government programs were cut during the recession, making it more intensified for families to get by and rebuild. Dana expressed that so many things were violently stroked just when people needed it the most. That happens to be the key policy issue that they do have choices over an they can find ways to rebuild that investment. Therefore, it's not right thing to just throw up their hands and say they cant.

According to the Kids Count report, a lingering concern is the effect of unemployment on children, precisely long-term unemployment. Researchers discovered that beyond 4 million workers were unemployed for more than six months, and more than 3 million were without work for a year or more. David Hutchinson along with his family ultimately ended up in Albuquerque, a city in central New Mexico. He has been looking for work for months. Finally, he landed a job just this week with a contractor who installs fire suppression systems. He said that if he wasn't so deprived of injury, he would have been doing backflips pointing to the rod and pins in his forearm, an injury that ended his career in the U.S. Navy. Chelsea, who is his wife said she knows her husband is ready to put apart any pain due to the fact of the prospect of their family being able to move from Joy Junction, the shelter where they have been staying since December, considering to be dependent upon a regular income.

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Busy: Case worker Anastasia Nixon gives a tour to a new group of homeless women and children at the Family Gateway homeless shelter in Dallas, Texas

Elimar Roper explained that William and Elimar Roper are in the same boat who along with their four children have been at the shelter for about a year. William just landed a job in the kitchen and Elimar has graduated from the shelter's recovery program, which helps those addicted to drugs or alcohol.  The reason for their happiness is since they are upgraded from being homeless to something that can help them stabilize and it's the first step. William Roper served in the U.S. Army for nine years at the same time went for tours in Iraq as well Afghanistan. Subsequent to the military, he worked as a caretaker and then lost his job as a result the family's savings collapsed making them homeless.Curtis Skinner, director of Family Economic Security at the National Center for Children in Poverty expressed that the Kids Count report shows the percentage of children whose parents don't have secure employment has been exceedingly going high. Resulting beyond one-third of children in each of the four states at the bottom of the Kids Count list. Due to the fact of growing up in poverty, it just has these distressing repercussions at the same time they are able to experience these associations with much lower rates of high school graduation, lower performance overall in school, much lower rates of college attendance and the cycle perpetuates. Skinner said expressing that the center's research is showing a disturbing trend as an after effects of the recession. Poverty rates known to be intensely elevating in what used to be the middle class, in two-parent households as well as in families where parents have college educations. While there is a lag in the Kids Count data, officials in New Mexico, Arizona along with Nevada believe some of their numbers will commence to turn around in the coming years thanks to investments in education, particularly pre-kindergarten programs.

New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez has pushed for doubling pre-K funding at the same time concentrating greater amount of money to early literacy and high school graduation efforts. Enrique Knell, a spokesman for the governor stressed that while doing things clearly in the way they have always been done has not worked for their kids. Therefore reform efforts must be inclusive of concluding the practice of setting their children up for failure by passing them on to the next grade level when they can't read. The well-being of their children has been the motivating factor for both the Hutchinson and Roper families. They betterment for their kids, at the same time they say things are commencing to turn around.

Elimar Roper during the concluding stage said that the fact of existing to the point of stabilizing at the same time being able to get the kids out of this environment, that's a good feeling.


Image Source: daily mail UK

(AW:Samrat Biswas)

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