ALERT: NEW LEGISLATION THAT WILL
IMPACT HUNGER IN A MAJOR WAY:
| On
July 19th, the House Agriculture Committee approved by voice
vote a 2007 Farm Bill proposal that would increase funding for
the nutrition title by $4 billion over the next five years.
Included in the $4 billion increase, among other provisions, are
increases in mandatory funding for the Emergency Food Assistance
Program (TEFAP) food purchases from $140 million annually to
$250 million in FY 2008, and indexing this amount each year
thereafter to adjust for inflation, a $40 million annual
increase for TEFAP food storage and distribution costs, and an
increase in the minimum food stamp benefit. We are grateful for
these and other efforts on the part of the House Agriculture
Committee to help reduce hunger in America.
ACT NOW!
We need you to contact the House
leadership today to communicate the importance of securing an
additional $1.6 billion to cover the full cost of the nutrition
title of the Farm Bill. Please fax a letter today to the
offices of Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and Majority Leader Steny
Hoyer (D-MD) through the Hunger Action Center. Contact your
State Senator today and urge him or her to support these
important anti-hunger programs. You can use the Hunger Action
Center to make your voice heard.
Using the Hunger Action Center is
this easy…visit
www.hungeractioncenter.org
and register now using your HOME mailing address. The system
will take you to a draft letter that you may personalize if you
wish; simply click “send” and your letter will be sent to the
House Leadership.
SPREAD THE WORD
Be sure to spread the word with
friends, family, co-workers and others. You can simply forward
this email to other people, or you can visit the “tell a friend”
page on the Hunger Action Center
|
Severe Poverty Growing Rapidly
The percentage of
Americans living in severe poverty – with incomes less than half of the
federal poverty line – has reached a 32-year peak. A recent analysis of
2005 census data by McClatchy Newspapers found nearly 16 million
Americans living in deep or severe poverty, defined as a family of four
with income of $9,903 a year or less and an individual living on less
than $5,080 a year.
The analysis found that the number of severely poor people increased by
26 percent between 2000 and 2005, more than 56 percent faster than the
rise of poverty in the overall population during those years.
Significant increases in severe poverty were found in 28 states and 65
of the country’s 215 largest counties
Washington, D.C. had the highest rate of severely poor people at 10.8
percent, followed by Mississippi and Louisiana at 9.3 and 8.3 percent
respectively. Severe poverty was also prevalent along the Mexican
border. In raw numbers, California had 1.9 million severely poor
people, followed by Texas with 1.6 million, and New York with 1.2
million
Demographically, one
out of three severely poor people is under age 17 and almost two out of
three are female. A large share of the severely poor consists of
female-headed households with children. Nearly two-thirds (10.3
million) of the severely poor are white.
The McClatchy report
noted that despite economic expansion and increased worker productivity,
corporate profits so outstripped wages and salaries that household
income for working families declined every year in the five-year period
studied. “These and other factors have helped push 43 percent of the
nation’s 37 million poor people into deep poverty – the highest rate
since at least 1975,” the newspaper group reported. With the exception
of Mexico and Russia, the U.S. directs the smallest portion of its gross
domestic product to federal anti-poverty programs than any other country
in the world.
Consequently, one in
three Americans will experience a year of extreme poverty during his or
her adult life, said Mark Rank, a University of Wisconsin at Madison
professor who has done long-term research on poverty. “It would appear
that for most Americans the question is no longer if, but rather when,
they will experience poverty,” said Rank. “In short, poverty has become
a routine and unfortunate part of the American life course," Rank wrote
in a recent study. "Whether these patterns will continue throughout the
first decade of 2000 and beyond is difficult to say ... but there is
little reason to think that this trend will reverse itself any time
soon."
For more details on
the McClatchy analysis, go to:
http://www.realcities.com/mld/krwashington/16760690.htm.
Proposed
Legislation
Among bills recently
introduced in the 110th session of the U.S. Congress are the
following:
-
House Resolution (H.R.) 1163:
Introduced by Representative Nita Lowey (D-NY), the Stop Obesity in
Schools Act would help reduce childhood obesity by developing a
national strategy to address the problem, make grants to local
educational agencies to adopt wellness policies and other
anti-obesity initiatives, evaluate programs for the prevention of
obesity in children and adolescents, and abet the establishment of
healthy living and wellness coordinating council
- Senate (S.) 591:
Introduced by Senator Saxby Chambliss (R-GA) and five bipartisan
co-sponsors, the Food Stamp Personal Savings and Investment Act
would adjust for inflation the allowable amounts of financial
resources of eligible households in the Food Stamp Program and
exclude from countable resources certain retirement and education
accounts.
For
bill summary and status information, along with the text of legislation,
visit:
http://thomas.loc.gov and enter the bill num
The source for the preceding information is Foodlinks USA. |