Posted on 08/30/2007 5:28:57 PM PDT by SwinneySwitch
The Census Bureau ranks Brownsville as the most impoverished city in the nation, according to the bureaus 2006 American Community Survey released on Tuesday. More than 40 percent of the citys 171,000 residents live below the poverty line, the bureaus figures show.
The bureaus poverty threshold for an individual is a $10,294 annual income. For a family of four it is $20,614.
Despite the last-place standing, there are slight gains being made in this area. In 2005, the poverty level was 42.6 percent, compared to 40.6 percent in 2006.
Median household income in Brownsville, the fourth lowest in the nation, is also inching north $26,017 last year, compared to $24,207 in 2005.
Weve got to get peoples attention on this, said Traci Wickett, president of United Way of Southern Cameron County.
United Way aims to reduce poverty in two ways, she said. Its first strategy is to improve educational attainment through initiatives such as Success by Six, which focuses on high-quality early childhood education.
The other strategy is to getting people stable financially by accessing the Earned Income Tax Credit, and other state and employer benefits available to them.
When we talk about poverty in our community, were not talking about people who are unemployed. We have a lot of hard working people in our community who live below the poverty line.
In the Brownsville-Harlingen metropolitan statistical area the unemployment rate was 6.5 percent in June, compared to 7.4 percent the year prior. Thats about 9,400 people.
Area-wide, the Census Bureau rated Hidalgo County as the poorest county in the nation, with Cameron County coming second to last.
Also on Tuesday, the bureau released another population report, titled, Income, Poverty and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2006.
According to that survey, Texas had the highest population of uninsured in the country, with 24.1 percent. That survey does not give more local data.
On the Web: www.census.gov
Poverty Ping!
If you want on, or off this S. Texas/Mexico ping list, please FReepMail me.
I just read recently here on F.R. that hundreds of Mexican kids cross the border every day to attend school in Brownsville and local officials say there’s nothing they can do about it.
I could be wrong here but it would appear there are conflicting statements
here they say Brownsville is among some of the poorest while the media in Brownsville is stating it like they are the poorest. Media Hype??? possible for sure
http://www.tmcnet.com/usubmit/2007/08/28/2893422.htm
If you allow your community to be overrun by poor people from a Third World hell hole, what do you expect? This story reads like the problems in Brownsville are solely the result of inadequate childhood education and access to Earned Income Tax Credits! But the real problem is, the national, state and local governments long ago abandoned any effort to maintain integrity and national sovereignty, rolled over and allowed Brownsville to be OCCUPIED AND COLONIZED by the very, very poor, without firing a shot or putting up a fight. Surprise! Brownsville is an abyss of of Third World poverty, and a mirror of what is happening in our entire country.
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