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Report: Poverty In Williamson County Tripled (Texas)
KEYE TV ^
| Aug 1, 2013
| Fred Cantu
Posted on 08/03/2013 3:16:20 PM PDT by bgill
The U.S. Census finds that the number of people in poverty in Austin's suburbs more than doubled in the last decade -- up a whopping 142 percent. Meanwhile, Williamson County started off with 11,735 people living in poverty in 2000 and ended up with 34,069 by 2010.
That figure includes a lot of working poor. People who perhaps accepted a limited time offer of a job and a place to live. And others lost their job altogether in the economic downturn of 2008.
(Excerpt) Read more at keyetv.com ...
TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: economy; jobs; poverty; texas
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Thanks to the open border and this administration's economy.
1
posted on
08/03/2013 3:16:20 PM PDT
by
bgill
To: bgill
I wonder how many section 8 vouchers have been sent to Williamson County?
2
posted on
08/03/2013 3:17:55 PM PDT
by
GeronL
To: bgill
Census finds that the number of people in poverty in Austin's suburbs more than doubled in the last decade And here we're told the Texas economy was doing fantastic...
Had a friend move to Texas about 4 years ago, he can't find a full time job paying over 15 bucks an hour...He was making that in the late 90s...
3
posted on
08/03/2013 3:21:16 PM PDT
by
dragnet2
(Diversion and evasion are tools of deceit)
To: GeronL
How many Katrina refugees and non-citizens are accounted for in the population increase?
4
posted on
08/03/2013 3:28:25 PM PDT
by
sarasmom
(The obvious takes longer to discover for the obtuse.)
To: dragnet2
Isn’t Austin the liberal section of Texas?
5
posted on
08/03/2013 3:28:45 PM PDT
by
Jim Robinson
(Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God!!)
To: Jim Robinson
It is the San Fransicko of Texas, a small part extends into Williamson I guess, but that county was supposedly more conservative
... 2004 President George W. Bush won 68% of the vote in Williamson County while garnering only 42% in neighboring Travis County. John McCain received 55% of the vote to Barack Obama's 42% in the 2008 election. In 2012 Republican Mitt Romney defeated President Obama by a total of 59% to 38%.
6
posted on
08/03/2013 3:33:21 PM PDT
by
GeronL
To: Jim Robinson
7
posted on
08/03/2013 3:34:02 PM PDT
by
dragnet2
(Diversion and evasion are tools of deceit)
To: Jim Robinson
I do believe that it is. My question: why haven’t these libs invited the poor into their homes?
8
posted on
08/03/2013 3:34:19 PM PDT
by
HotKat
(Politicians are like diapers; they need to be changed often and for the same reason. Mark Twain)
To: Jim Robinson
I do believe that it is. My question: why haven’t these libs invited the poor into their homes?
9
posted on
08/03/2013 3:35:03 PM PDT
by
HotKat
(Politicians are like diapers; they need to be changed often and for the same reason. Mark Twain)
To: Jim Robinson
Yes Austin is liberal. The suburbs are more conservative. Houston is booming. The construction going on is astounding, road building, strip centers, highrise buildings, houses of all price ranges. New stores and business everywhere you look. Amazing!
10
posted on
08/03/2013 3:35:25 PM PDT
by
Ditter
To: Jim Robinson
Isnt Austin the liberal section of Texas?
Austin, Houston, and Dallas. All have Democratic mayors and went for Obama, although Houston has a lesbian mayor, so they are apparently a little more "progressive" than the rest.
To: bgill
How much did the poverty line benchmark move from 2000 to 2010...
Considering wages have not risen much in the last 10 years...
Pretty easy to see a huge increase
12
posted on
08/03/2013 3:39:12 PM PDT
by
Popman
To: dragnet2
Had a friend move to Texas about 4 years ago, he can't find a full time job paying over 15 bucks an hour...He was making that in the late 90s... I was in Austin all last week. Surprised me to see a lot of "Help Wanted" signs in front of restaurants and fast-food places along the roads. Many with the pay posted on the signs. However, they were $10 to $12 per hour. Restaurants in the better areas all busy with customers, doing great. Malls seem busy enough.
13
posted on
08/03/2013 3:39:24 PM PDT
by
roadcat
To: dragnet2
It is wicked hot here too.
My advise to people from other states is to stay out.
14
posted on
08/03/2013 3:39:53 PM PDT
by
mylife
(Ted Cruz understands the law, and he does not fear the unlawful.)
To: af_vet_rr
I have a cousin in Lubbock who is politically astute and he says Texas could become a Blue State in 20 years or less.
15
posted on
08/03/2013 3:43:30 PM PDT
by
laplata
(Liberals don't get it .... their minds are diseased.)
To: Ditter
The suburbs are more conservative. Houston is booming. The construction going on is astounding, road building, strip centers, highrise buildings, houses of all price ranges. New stores and business everywhere you look. Amazing!
I can't speak for the other large cities, but Austin is definitely booming - 80-90% hotel occupancy rate year-round, constructions business is going crazy, real estate business is going crazy. A major event or two basically every weekend. I keep thinking everything is a bubble, but well over a thousand people are moving into the area every week. I'm not complaining too much, the houses I own keep going up in value, and realtors are constantly bugging me to sell them (with their assistance of course).
And it helps that we just had a $400 million racetrack for auto and motorcycle racing put in, which has an impact of well over $300 million every year.
The only thing I don't like is they are turning Central Texas into another Houston/Dallas, with lots of the same old strip malls and boring highrises, and horrible traffic.
To: mylife
17
posted on
08/03/2013 3:45:22 PM PDT
by
dragnet2
(Diversion and evasion are tools of deceit)
To: mylife
It is wicked hot here too. Yeah, but it's a wet heat right?
18
posted on
08/03/2013 3:46:05 PM PDT
by
dragnet2
(Diversion and evasion are tools of deceit)
To: roadcat
The guy getting 15 an hour in 1992 probably came from the north east or california.
19
posted on
08/03/2013 3:46:26 PM PDT
by
JCBreckenridge
("we are pilgrims in an unholy land")
To: Popman
Poverty line: Two adults with two persons under age 18
2000: $17,603
2010: $22,314
Percent increase: 26.7%
20
posted on
08/03/2013 3:48:40 PM PDT
by
Popman
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