|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
US mayors report chronicles rising hunger and homelessness
By Debra Watson
27 December 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
A record number of citizens in US cities were forced to look
for emergency food and shelter this year, according to the United
States Conference of Mayors. Their annual report, The Status
Report on Hunger and Homelessness in Americas Cities,
was released December 18 in Washington DC. It shows an increasing
percentage of the population of US cities are unable to afford
either shelter or adequate food.
In cities across America in 2002, according to the mayors
report, the demand for emergency shelter jumped 19 percent, the
biggest rise since 1990. In 2001 and 2002 the demand for emergency
food increased by 23 percent and 19 percent respectively, the
highest increases since the recession of the early 1990s.
The demand for emergency food and shelter has increased by
double-digit amounts nearly every year since 1987. The report
chronicles the two-decade campaign on the part of big business
and their representatives in the Democratic and Republican parties
to reduce a substantial section of the working class in the United
States to penury.
Hunger from coast to coast
This year, for the first time, every city participating in
the survey reported an increased demand for emergency food. In
every city, emergency food assistance facilities were relied upon
by families and individuals both in emergencies and as a steady
source of food over long periods of time. Families with children
made up 54 percent of those requesting food assistance in Miami,
95 percent in Charlotte, North Carolina, and 70 and 80 percent,
respectively, of emergency food applicants in Los Angeles on the
West Coast, and Philadelphia in the east. Miami had a 50 percent
increase in demand for emergency food and a 50 percent increase
in demand by families for food assistance in 2002.
Requests for food from pantries, which comprise the bulk of
charity and non-federal food assistance, are up throughout the
country. In Minnesota, food banks served 892,285 individuals in
300,000 households in 2001. By the third quarter of 2002, 982,000
individuals in 325,000 households had been served.
However, the pounds of food distributedabout 21 millionremained
nearly the same. Food banks have been forced to reduce the amount
of food in emergency boxes in many US cities this year, due to
a combination of increased need, decreased government funding
and/or decreased private donations. According to the mayors
report, in one-third of cities surveyed, food assistance facilities
turned people away due to lack of resources.
Besides the general slowdown in the economy leading to decreased
donations, Nashville reports a major cause in the loss of food
donations, noted by other cites in last years report. The
city noted: Second Harvest [a food bank] reports that although
volunteers have increased, the agency has lost approximately 2
million pounds of food; this loss is a result in a shift in management
at a major grocery chain, which has typically donated food to
Second Harvest, but is now selling to the secondary market.
Second Harvest had to shelve plans to open two new food distribution
sites because of falling donations.
It is remarkable that over the last decade the percent of the
homeless population consisting of families with children has climbed
from 32 percent to more than 40 percent. Two thirds of the US
homeless population consists of families with children or single
women and unaccompanied youth. More than one in five of the homeless
are working, many in full-time jobs that do not pay enough to
rent an apartment. People remain homeless an average of six months,
and four out of five of the cities surveyed said the length of
time people are homeless increased in the last year.
Construction of new public and affordable housing has been
neglected for decades. In two thirds of cities surveyed, waiting
lists for public housing are a year or longer. The wait is three
years in Los Angeles and seven years in Miami. Public housing
and rent certificates and vouchers meet less than half of low-income
housing needs in every city but three of those surveyed.
A homeless memorial
An extraordinary memorial service was held in Minneapolis,
Minnesota on December 19, the day after the mayors report
was released. Advocates for the homeless, community members, and
homeless people themselves gathered to remember 94 homeless people
who died in Minnesota in 2002.
The 2002 deaths surpassed the record of 85 in 2001. In the
recession of the early 1990s aid workers estimate about a dozen
homeless people died in the state. The causes for the deaths this
year ranged from childhood disease to the ailments of old age
(a baby and an elderly man in St. Paul, Minnesota), several homicides
and some who froze to death in the winter elements. The life expectancy
of a homeless man is estimated at about 47 years.
The number of homeless in the state of Minnesota has doubled
since the last recession. At the same time, emergency money the
state used for homeless for the past three years is being cut
back, reducing state funding to 1999 levels. That year the homeless
numbered about 5,000. In 2002 the number is estimated to be 7,000
on a typical night. Livestock and dogs are not expected to survive
a cold Northern Minnesota night out-of-doors, but on a typical
night about a thousand human beings are turned away from shelters
in the state due to lack of space.
No room in the shelters
The mayors report included no similar count of homeless
deaths for the nation as a whole. And while there is ongoing controversy
over the actual number of homeless in the US, some idea of the
extent of the problem can be gleaned from the tally of shelter
beds and other temporary housing arrangements included in the
report.
A few examples: Chicago, with a population of 2.9 million,
has 6,500 shelter beds and 3,500 family shelter beds. Phoenix,
population 1.3 million, has 1,500 shelter beds, 880 family shelter
beds, 3,500 transitional units and 2,200 family transitional units.
St. Paul, Minnesota, with a population of 290,000, has 313 shelter
beds, 91 family shelter beds, 200 transitional units and 245 family
transitional units. In addition, there are 300 single room occupancy
units (SROs) in the city.
The Mayors Report for 2002 finds that in more than half
of cities surveyed homeless people are regularly turned away from
existing shelters. In the US on average 30 percent of emergency
housing needs went unmet in 2002.
The 2002 report does not address the issue of city and state
funding, which makes up a sizable portion of funds for the homeless.
With budget shortfalls projected in almost every state this year,
there is little likelihood that additional, much less sufficient,
funds will be forthcoming.
The primary reference to public funding for hunger and homeless
assistance in the report is in an appeal for more help from the
federal government. But before the new year has even begun, President
Bush has cut home heating assistance, citing the need for sacrifice
to pay for the war on terror and the military buildup.
In 2000 the mayors were split over whether the strong
economy would help the homelessness and hunger problem, leading
to improved conditions. Two years later every city surveyed
expected the demand for emergency food and shelter to increase
next year.
City officials completing the survey cited high housing costs
most frequently as a major cause of hunger. It is not unusual
for a low-income family to spend half its income on housing, leaving
little money for food, medical care and other necessities. The
next most frequent cause was low paying jobs, which had topped
the list in 2001 as the most frequently cited cause of hunger
in cities.
The list of causes for hunger also included unemployment and
other employment-related problems, economic downturn or weakening
of the economy, medical or health costs, homelessness, poverty
or lack of income, substance abuse, reduced public benefits, childcare
costs, mental health problems and limited life skills. Changes
and reductions in federal Food Stamp benefits were included in
the list in 2000 and 2001.
Lack of affordable housing led the list of causes of homelessness
in 2002. Other causes cited, in order of frequency, included mental
illness and the lack of needed services, substance abuse and the
lack of needed services, low paying jobs, domestic violence, unemployment,
poverty, prison release, downturn in the economy, limited life
skills, and changes and cuts in public assistance programs.
Reports from the different cities describing the causes of
hunger and homelessness add up to a catalog of social ills resulting
from two decades of falling wages for workers, rising social inequality,
and sweeping attacks on welfare and other social programs.
Despite official insistence that the recession is over, the
unemployment rate in every city surveyed was higher than it had
been in October 2000, reflecting the breadth and persistence of
the current downturn. In Cleveland, Miami and Trenton, New Jersey
the unemployment rate was recorded at over 10 percent in October
2002, when the The Status Report on Hunger and Homelessness
in Americas Cities was being compiled.
Not included in the mayors list of the causes of hunger
and homelessness, but also not an unlikely result of an imminent
war in Iraq, is a spike in prices of gas, heat and food. Any rise
in the cost of such necessities will drive tens of thousands more
who are already in a precarious financial situation into the ranks
of the destitute.
See Also:
Unemployment benefits running
out for over 3 million US jobless
[2 November 2002]
US welfare reform
forces more children to separate from their parents
[14 August 2002]
Youth commits suicide in New
York City homeless shelter
[13 August 2002]
Millions of poor US families
face utility shutoffs
We live in America ... but its like a Third World
country
[12 July 2002]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |