Tuesday

USA:Friends Services Committee - New census poverty figures mandate closer look at proposed federal budget cuts.

Eliminating Safety-net Programs for the Poor in Favor of Tax Cuts for the Rich -- while 37 million live in poverty -- is immoral, Group Says Philadelphia, PA — August 30 — Responding to the release of new Census Bureau poverty figures today, the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC), an international social justice organization, calls on Congress to adopt a moral budget that helps people meet their basic needs. In its Current Population Survey, the Census Bureau reports that over one million more people lived in poverty in 2004 than in the previous year. Data also show that nearly six percent of the U.S. population lived in extreme poverty, defined as below 50 percent of the poverty threshold. “Today’s Census Bureau report should be a wake-up call for our nation,” said Roberta Spivek, AFSC’s national representative for economic justice. “At a time when at least one in every eight people in our country lives in poverty, Congress is poised to cut $35 billion from survival programs like Food Stamps and Medicaid. At the same time, it is considering $70 billion in tax breaks that will mainly benefit the most affluent households.” African Americans, Native Americans, and indigenous peoples of Alaska had the highest extreme poverty rates of people surveyed. People who were foreign born were more likely to live near the poverty threshold or in extreme poverty than were those who were native born. Nationwide, 37 million people, including 13 million children, live below the official poverty line of $9,643 for one person and $19,311 for a family of four. Nearly one in five U.S. children is poor. AFSC is conducting a Save Our Services (SOS!) campaign that calls attention to inequities in the federal budget. The campaign urges Congress to avoid cutting essential services and to reject tax cuts that benefit a few, when it completes its work on the fiscal year 2006 federal budget this fall. “How our nation responds to poverty is a moral issue,” emphasizes Kathryn Kurtz, associate director of the AFSC community relations unit. “Congress can either adopt tax and budget policies that will increase income inequality and poverty, or it can choose policies that promote the common good and the values of dignity and equality.” “Many experts believe the official poverty threshold is too low, and seriously underreports the true extent of U.S. poverty,” Spivek adds. The Service Committee is also campaigning for an increase in the minimum wage and working to keep Social Security a public, not private, program. Social Security is widely regarded as one of the most effective U.S. anti-poverty programs. For information on AFSC’s Campaign see, SOS! The Census Bureau report is available at www.census.gov

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