Showing posts with label Kids. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kids. Show all posts

Thursday, July 23, 2015

California ranks 38th in kids' well-being

Parents struggling to earn a living, the effects of poverty and astronomical housing costs all drag down California's children to the point that an annual national survey ranks the Golden State 38th in the nation in overall child well-being.

And, the benefits of the economic resurgence aren't evenly filtering down, leaving the state's children 49th in the nation in economic well-being, according to the 2015 Kids Count Profile released late Monday by the Annie E. Casey Foundation.


"That's really alarming for the future of our state," said Jessica Mindnich, director of research for the Oakland-based advocacy group Children Now, which analyzed California data for the survey.


Nearly one in four children, or 23 percent, lives in poverty. And the toll may be even higher in Silicon Valley. Even three minimum-wage jobs together would fall $10,000 short of what it takes to support a family of three in the valley, said Dana Bunnett, director of the San Jose-based advocacy group Kids In Common.


The same disparity appears in the Kids Count rating for education, where California landed 38th among the states. It ended up in the bottom quarter in part because in 2013, 54 percent of the state's eligible children were not attending preschool, a 2 percentage point decline from 4 years earlier. And on national tests, nearly three-quarters of California fourth graders had not reached proficiency in reading, and nearly the same proportion of eighth graders lacked proficiency in math.


However, in one bright spot, the survey found that in 2012, the percentage of high school students who did not graduate on time fell to 18 percent, compared with 29 percent four years earlier.

While some of the data may not be the latest available in the state, the Kids Count survey chose the most recent year for which all states had data.


The most encouraging development the survey found was in health -- a vast improvement that surveyors attribute to the state's early and full embrace of the Affordable Care Act.

The percentage of California children without health insurance fell to 7 percent in 2013, a four percentage-point drop in five years. Likewise the rate of child and teen deaths fell, from 24 per 100,000 to 20.
Mindnich credits that to California embracing the federal Affordable Care Act and moving toward insuring all children.
She believes that education similarly will improve, with the state projecting it will reach pre-recession funding levels for schools soon. "I think we are well-positioned to see kids doing better five years down the road."

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Report: 3 million more children in poverty under Obama, 22% of all kids

Ever since President Obama took office, the poverty rate among children has soared to 22 percent, with three million more children living in poor conditions, according to an authoritative new report released Tuesday.
The 2015 "KIDS COUNT" report from the Annie E. Casey Foundationsaid that the percentage of children living in poverty jumped from 18 percent in 2008, the year Obama was elected, to 22 percent in 2013. It added that the rate dropped from 2012 to 2013, in line with the improving economy.
Among minority children and in some states, especially the South, however, the situation is dire. The report said, for example:





The rate of child poverty for 2013 ranged from a low of 10 percent in New Hampshire, to a high of 34 percent in Mississippi.
• The child poverty rate among African Americans (39 percent) was more than double the rate for non-Hispanic whites (14 percent) in 2013.
The report also explained that a lack of jobs or good income above the poverty rate of $23,624 was the reason more children have grown up in poor families.
• In 2013, three in 10 children (22.8 million) lived in families where no parent had full-time, year-round employment. Since 2008, the number of such children climbed by nearly 2.7 million
• Roughly half of all American Indian children (50 percent) and African-American children (48 percent) had no parent with full-time, year-round employment in 2013, compared with 37 percent of Latino children, 24 percent of non-Hispanic white children and 23 percent of Asian and Pacific Islander children.

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