iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

The New Face Of American Poverty Is Often A Child's

American Poverty

First Posted: 10/13/2011 11:18 pm EDT Updated: 12/13/2011 5:12 am EST

By G. Jeffrey MacDonald
Religion News Service

OAKTOWN, Ind. (RNS) Eleven-year-old Sarai Camacho of Donna, Texas, tears up when she tells why her mother let go the baby sitter for her and her younger sister this summer. It's the same reason her father brought the family to Indiana so he could work the melon fields for a season.

"Last December, my mom didn't get paid for one month, and we started having problems," said Sarai, at Oaktown First Christian Church, which hosted free classes for children of migrant workers. "My mom said for us to come here (to the church) so she doesn't have to give money to the baby sitter because we're running out of it."

For churches, it's become an all-too-familiar sight: working families that aren't able to make ends meet. As household resources get tapped out, churches are often the first to see the changing face of poverty -- and it's often a young one.

"We're seeing younger families come in," said Ken Campbell, food coordinator for Lazarus House, a Christian ministry to help the needy in Lawrence, Mass. "They're coming forward because one member in the household got laid off or had their hours cut, and now they're just barely making it."

Across the United States, rising numbers of children are coping with the stressors of economic hardship:

  • Child poverty rates reached 22 percent in 2010, up from 20.7 percent in 2009 and 16.2 percent in 2000, according to a September report from the U.S. Census Bureau. Between 2000 and 2009, the number of children living in poverty increased from 13.1 million to 15.5 million, according to the Annie E. Casey Foundation.

  • The Casey Foundation also reported that 4 percent of American children had been affected by home foreclosures since 2007, and 11 percent had at least one unemployed parent in 2010.

  • Catholic Charities USA, which serves about one in four Americans who live in poverty, served 2.7 million children in 2010, up from 2.4 million in 2006. The steepest increase came in food-related services, as Catholic Charities fed 56 percent more children (935,000) in 2010 than in 2006 (600,000).

As families cycle in and out of poverty, faith-based service programs tend to catch people who fall through the cracks of other
safety nets, according to Robert L. Fischer, co-director of the Center on Urban Poverty & Community Development at Case Western Reserve University.

When emergency needs arise, people often turn to churches first.

"The most disadvantaged families oftentimes don't go to formal settings to receive services, but they will go into a church," said
Taniesha Woods, senior research associate at the National Center for Children in Poverty at Columbia University. "Churches can provide information and reach families and children who wouldn't know about (public) services otherwise."

On the front lines, religious workers see signs of growing desperation. Four years ago at Torrente De Cedron Pentecostal Church in Lynn, Mass., the weekly food pantry stayed open for two hours as about 75 families came through for a few days' worth of groceries. Today the line begins forming hours before the pantry opens, according to Senior Pastor Oscar Ovalles, as more than 200 families come from city neighborhoods and affluent suburbs alike. Even with smaller bags to stretch supplies, everything is gone within 30 minutes.

"Families are in crisis," Ovalles said. "What used to be saved for a rainy day is now the main course because dad lost his job or mom is no longer working."

Similar signs of stress are visible in nearby Lawrence, Mass. The overnight shelter at Lazarus House is always filled to capacity,
Campbell said, and needs for food continue to increase. In early 2010, the weekly pantry gave a few days worth of groceries to about 300 individuals who were, in most cases, picking up for families with children. This fall, the weekly pantry is serving about 800 on average.

Many who now need help aren't used to receiving any sort of church-based assistance. Sarai's family, for example, until recently had lived stably on income from her mother's teaching job and her father's work in agriculture and food processing. Now they depend on the church's help with child care to make ends meet.

"Because of what we're going through right now with money, I would love to help my family," Sarai said. "I would love to go to college," she said, and earn enough afterward to support her parents.

To meet growing needs, religious groups are trying to be resourceful despite slumping donations in uncertain economic times. This summer, for example, Catholic Charities enlisted more of its local agencies to participate as distribution sites for federally subsidized summer food programs for children. After starting the program last year, Catholic Charities in Chicago this summer served more than 300,000 kids.

Still, meeting needs in lean times remains an uphill challenge.

Torrente De Cedron used to run its pantry on $3,000 raised from parishioners' donations, but now the congregation can't afford the $10,000 that's needed to run the program. This fall, the church began hosting regular fundraisers, including an upcoming yard sale, to sustain the pantry.

"The food pantry is no longer just something that we want to do on a volunteer basis for the community," Ovalles said. "Now it's a mandatory thing that we have to have because of the need that we can see in these families and in these kids."

FOLLOW HUFFPOST RELIGION

By G. Jeffrey MacDonald Religion News Service OAKTOWN, Ind. (RNS) Eleven-year-old Sarai Camacho of Donna, Texas, tears up when she tells why her mother let go the baby sitter for her and her young...
By G. Jeffrey MacDonald Religion News Service OAKTOWN, Ind. (RNS) Eleven-year-old Sarai Camacho of Donna, Texas, tears up when she tells why her mother let go the baby sitter for her and her young...
Filed by Jahnabi Barooah  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 81
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3  Next ›  Last »  (3 total)
12:09 AM on 10/28/2011
This is so true and sad. In my churches town there are children that we bring to the church and feed them breakfast cause most likely that's all they'll get to eat. They come from poor homes where literally if you sat in the driveway you could see right through the house and walls. But so many live off of welfare! These kids are taught by their parents you don't have to work, and they're not taught good morals just dad drinks and mom's failing to get us through. A kid came to our church and told one of them men that pick the kids up in the bus that he wishes that he was his father..It's sad when it comes to that. They've even said things like Dad's drunk all the time, your a good dad.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CMR64
u hurt my feeling
12:06 PM on 10/21/2011
don't forget where you came from ...
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
06:43 PM on 10/16/2011
If all the people who attended church/considered themselves Christians tithed as we are commanded, then God would bless that giving and multiply it:

Malachi 3:10
New International Version (NIV)

10 Bring the whole tithe into the storehouse, that there may be food in my house. Test me in this,” says the LORD Almighty, “and see if I will not throw open the floodgates of heaven and pour out so much blessing that there will not be room enough to store it.
12:12 AM on 10/28/2011
Omg! You made my day. At my church we're having the 3:10 fund! lol.
It's to help raise money for our missionaries in the Philippines, pay off church debts, and get a bus for our church. And no one would give like you said if only they would tithe. And guess what our preacher announced that he was getting worried that we would have the extra money for a bus for the poor kids that their parents won't bring them, and he said but God proved him wrong. An anonymous donor gave the church a brand new bus!!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rhonnybay
Be well. Love well. Do well.
09:49 AM on 10/16/2011
women and children are not valued in this country. We think we do a better job than other so called religious nations but if you have 1 in 3 girls being sexually abused before the age of 18, more children incarcenrated than any other country, etc, starving children fits perfectly. America is so blinded by its so called greatness and refuses to look at its own messes. We can't be the greatest nation with so many people living in poverty. I work in social service and the current system truly keeps people living in poverty and dependent.
07:30 PM on 10/15/2011
The more starving children in the USA the happier Republicans and Tea Baggers are.
07:01 PM on 10/15/2011
And everyone of the gop candidates is a self declared Christian !!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
behavingbadly
lovingly crafted artisanal comments
09:33 AM on 10/15/2011
This is where trickle-down, greed-based, crony-capitalist economics has taken us:

http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/more-americans-chinese-t-put-food-table-132752601.html
photo
MIKEBC
Old school Roosevelt democrat
10:17 PM on 10/14/2011
Thank some of their dumbell parents and other adults that keep voting for the pro-rich american conservative party.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
08:58 AM on 10/15/2011
probably because the pro-rich american conservative party loves God and Country
;-)
09:26 PM on 10/14/2011
I read most of the post you people deserve to starve,food stampers.
photo
MIKEBC
Old school Roosevelt democrat
10:15 PM on 10/14/2011
GOP motto: I got mine and thats all that matters to me.
photo
Cory111
Life is truly good...
12:46 AM on 10/15/2011
I knew you would not come out from behind your keyboard and do a one-one-one video with me. There is no way you would want anyone to see what you actually look like away from your keyboard you are just all talk, classic cyber-persona.
photo
djh6721
Sic gorgiamus allos subiectatos nunc:
04:20 PM on 10/14/2011
These kids need to pick themselves up by the bootstraps. With the new GOP child labor proposals these kids could be out making a living rather then doing something unproductive like school. They have little hands, that makes it easier for them to clean in small places. The conservative paradise, Granny dead, dad and mom in a private prison and the kids using those essential traits, small size (and they don't eat much) to grease the wheels of capitalism..
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jimdavis11
Protect and promote the middle class.
02:00 AM on 10/15/2011
What goes around comes around----unless American's wise up.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
09:13 AM on 10/15/2011
in the movie Schindler's List, the children are needed because their small hands can polish inside the 9 millimeter shell..... practical
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fishnetdiver
God hates facts!
04:12 PM on 10/14/2011
is this the point where we all chant 'USA! USA! USA!'?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
09:16 AM on 10/15/2011
while they play the song "God Bless The USA" by Lee Greewood

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eFcuR34Gg-o&feature=fvst
04:02 PM on 10/14/2011
The best way to break the cycle of poverty and homelessness is with quality early childhood education, proven to save society $17 for every $1 invested. Programs like Head Start, and more locally in Boston, Horizons for Homeless Children, provide low-income children with the educational foundations they need (and deserve!). www.horizonsforhomelesschildren.org
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gmikejake
resist evil
01:25 PM on 10/14/2011
These are some of the same churches that many conservatives, like Cain, believe will effectively manage our "safety net" when they remove government from "welfare" provision. If Cain, and others, are successful there will be no federally sponsored "safety net."
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
10:45 AM on 10/14/2011
Think of all the good the millions of dollars NOM, Focus on Family, AFA, etc. could do if they were funneled to help the poor, the homeless, the hungry. But no, it's more important to dictate marriage, religion and what a woman can or cannot do with their body. To heck with the less fortunate. Xitans are so unlike the christ they profess to be following.
09:52 AM on 10/14/2011
But these children are are poor because their parents are lazy under acheivers that simply did not try hard enough. They live in America the land of opportunity. They are part of that 47% of the population that pay no taxes and are muching off of hard working americans. If you would just stop overtaxing the wealthy sooner or later they would create jobs for these poor people. Of course they do have to wait their turn, they may first have to get the rest of the world in order. Do you know there are people in parts of the world that do not beleive in demoracy or capitalism and we can't have that. So please just stop complaining, how bad can it be. It will trickle down someday just have Faith and vote Republican. 9-9-9 all the way to the bank lol
But seriously, one big problem is that when people do climb the ladder of success often the first they do is turn around and kick the ladder away.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gmikejake
resist evil
01:32 PM on 10/14/2011
Someday. The ranks of poor children have been growing steadily in this nation since about 1980. So far the "trickling" has been up as our middle class disappears and income and wealth inequality continues to grow. We have cut taxes to some of the lowest rates in many decades.
Please explain how the rest of your post has any relationship to your first sentence .... over taxing, yet paying no taxes, believing in democracy and/or capitalism, "trickling down," having patience, complaining, voting Republican, etc. leads to an increasing number of lazy under achieving parents who do not try hard enough?