Smart investments can help reduce poverty among children

Tuesday, November 08th, 2011 | Author: Tracy

(Action for Children) A new report released by the U.S. Census Bureau Monday suggests more Americans are living in poverty than previously thought. The Supplemental Poverty Measure (SPM), finds 49.1 million Americans (16%) now live in poverty, a slight increase from the 46.6 million (15%) thought to be poor under the traditional measure of poverty.  

While the overall number of Americans living in poverty increases under the SPM, the number of children living in poverty actually drops from 16.8 million children (22.5%) to 13.6 million (18.2%) under the new measure.  This decline is due to differences in how the SPM calculates poverty.

While the traditional poverty measure examines only gross income, the SPM compares the bills families must pay, food, clothing, shelter and utilities, and the resources they have available to pay them.  The SPM excludes expenses that reduce resources, such as payroll taxes, transportation costs or medical expenses, and adjusts for differences in housing status and cost of living by geography.

The result is a more sophisticated picture of what it takes to make ends meet in America, and the resources available to help vulnerable children and families do just that. In 2010, the official poverty threshold for two adults and 2 children was $22,113, the supplemental threshold was $24,343.

These figures highlight the importance of anti-poverty programs in alleviating economic hardship among children.  According to SPM analysis, the Earned Income Tax Credit, a refundable federal income tax credit for low- and moderate- income working individuals, helps to reduce child poverty by 4.2 percentage points. The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, which helps low income families meet their food costs, improves the child poverty rate by 3 percentage points.  

Barb Bradley, President & CEO of Action for Children North Carolina, a statewide policy and advocacy organization dedicated to improving outcomes for children in North Carolina offered the following statement in response to the new poverty figures:

“While far too many children are considered poor, even under these new estimates, these data show what many advocates have been saying all along: smart investments can help reduce poverty among children. These findings are significant for a number of reasons. Research indicates that poverty is the single greatest threat to the well-being of children. The experience of poverty during childhood, particularly during the critical period between birth and age five, has been associated with poorer academic performance, reduced health and lower earnings potential later in life. 

While these estimates show the social safety net helps to lift many children out of poverty, they also indicate that child poverty is on the rise.  In 2009, the SPM estimated 17.3% of American children lived in poverty.  Last year, that percentage grew to 18.2%.

“Reducing poverty is good policy. Not only does it improve the health and well-being of our children in the short run, it bolsters the economic strength of our country in the long-run by helping us to create the healthy, well-educated workforce we need to keep the economy moving and to drive innovation.”

The supplemental poverty measure does not replace the official poverty measure, and will not be used to determine program eligibility or resource allocation.  Instead, the SPM helps improve existing knowledge by quantifying the impact of social safety net programs in reducing economic hardship for vulnerable children and families.

The Research Supplemental Poverty Measure: 2010 is available online at http://www.census.gov/prod/2011pubs/p60-241.pdf.

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2011 North Carolina Child Health Report Card

Thursday, November 03rd, 2011 | Author: Tracy

The 2011 Child Health Report Card, issued jointly by Action for Children North Carolina and the North Carolina Institute of Medicine, finds infant mortality in North Carolina has dropped to 7 per 1,000 live births — an all-time low for the state. 

This is the 17th annual release of the report card, which monitors progress for North Carolina’s 2.3 million children on 14 measures of health and safety, including access to care, preventive health, risk behaviors, and death and injury.  These data reflect the period before recent budget cuts to Medicaid and key prevention and intervention programs were made.

“Improvements in North Carolina’s infant mortality provide a clear cause for celebration,” said Barb Bradley, President and CEO of Action for Children North Carolina, a statewide research and advocacy organization that promotes child well-being.  “These gains reflect improvements in maternal and child health and are the direct result of multiple investments made by the North Carolina General Assembly and the sustained efforts of the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, the Child Fatality Task Force and nonprofit partners like the March of Dimes.”

Highlights from the 2011 Child Health Report Card include:

  • The proportion of children living in poverty increased for the second consecutive year.  One in four children in North Carolina now live in a family earning less than the poverty guideline, a significant challenge for child well-being.
  • Despite a continuing decline in employer-sponsored health insurance, overall coverage rates among children were bolstered by expansions in Medicaid and Health Choice.  One in nine children in North Carolina lacks health insurance coverage.
  • North Carolina continues to lags behind the nation in the initiation and duration of breastfeeding, a practice that has the potential to reduce both morbidity and mortality among infants.
  • The percent of children hospitalized for asthma continues to decline as service enhancements mean more children are being identified earlier and their care is being managed more effectively.

Recent budget cuts to the state’s nationally-recognized early invention program and other programs jeopardize hard-won gains in child health. “North Carolina succeeds in bringing dental care to more than half of all Medicaid-enrolled children,” said Pam Silberman, President of the North Carolina Institute of Medicine, “We need to ensure that changes in public policy do not impair access to dental care.” Tooth decay is the most common childhood disease. Research has linked early periodontal disease to reduced outcomes for children, including increased morbidity, more missed school time and reduced academic performance. 

As North Carolina faces daunting economic challenges and a sluggish recovery, both Bradley and Silberman stress the importance of prioritizing child health.  “These data show important gains have been made because of past efforts to improve the health and safety of children in our state,” said Silberman. “To protect these gains, and avoid declines in the future, it is critical that state health, policy, business and community leaders continue to pursue a vision of healthy, safe children.”

More Data on the Horizon

Action for Children North Carolina will release county-level data cards to supplement the Child Health Report Card once indicators for which new data were unavailable at the time of publication have been updated.  To view data for other indicators of health and safety for children in your community, visit the North Carolina state profile on the KIDS COUNT Data Center at datacenter.kidscount.org.

Visit www.ncchild.org to read the 2011 Child Health Report Card.

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Web-based Supports for QRIS: The Pennsylvania Experience

Friday, October 28th, 2011 | Author: Tracy

The QRIS National Learning Network and the BUILD Initiative are hosting a webinar, Web-based Supports for QRIS: The Pennsylvania Experience, on November 14th at 3:00 PM (ET).

Learn how Pennsylvania plans to use a web-based platform to help early care and education programs successfully participate in Keystone Stars, the state quality rating and improvement system (QRIS).

Over the past two years, Pennsylvania early care and education leaders have worked collaboratively to create a web-based platform aimed at helping early care and education providers work smarter. The platform includes links to a host of cost-saving opportunities, administrative tools and templates, an automated child management and billing software specifically designed to meet PA subsidy rules, marketing resources, an on-line staffing service, opportunities for networking and more.

A new module, designed to help providers identify and link to the tools and resources they need to succeed in Keystone Stars QRIS system, is now under development. This webinar will demonstrate the platform, describe benefits to participating providers, and discuss the many ways web-based technologies can be used to help QRIS participants, as well as the Technical Assistance staff that support them, work more effectively and efficiently.

Registration and Sign-Up: Register for this webinar. Call-in instructions will be e-mailed to you after you register. In order to maximize the value of the webinar, they invite you to send questions and topics in advance of the call, and ask that you use the registration form to do so.

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National Survey on Child Care Supply and Demand

Wednesday, October 26th, 2011 | Author: Tracy

The National Opinion Research Center will be conducting a survey on child care supply and demand: The National Survey of Early Care and Education (NSECE). It’s the first survey of its kind since 1990 and will provide a national picture of the current child care field.

According to the National Association of Child Care Resource & Referral Agencies (NACCRRA), the NSECE will update and greatly expand the information available on all forms of early care and education, the child care workforce for these programs, and families’ child care needs and patterns of use. Results of the NSECE will be used to develop child care and early childhood education policy, including policies that:

  • Support provider professional development and working conditions,
  • Help providers operate effectively within the marketplace and in ways that promote child development, and
  • Improve families’ access to care that meets their needs and is respectful of their preferences.

The NSECE will include a provider survey, a household survey, and a child care workforce survey, based on nationally representative samples.

The National Opinion Research Center, along with its partners, is conducting the NSECE on behalf of the Administration for Children and Families of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Many providers will be contacted to participate. Please encourage providers in your community to participate. NACCRA has officially endorsed the effort. Learn more at http://www.naccrra.org/policy/national-survey-of-early-care-and-education.php

More information about the survey is available at http://nsece.norc.org

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PreK-3rd Working in Washington State

Wednesday, October 26th, 2011 | Author: Tracy

A study by the Foundation for Child Development chronicles how The New School Foundation influenced primary education reform in Washington by creating one of the leading PreK–3rd programs in the United States.

“The PreK-3rd program was implemented in two of the lowest performing public schools in Seattle. After eight years encountering obstacles and resistance, the PreK-3rd program at South Shore School began to produce results. Now, not only is this program influencing other districts in Washington, but also PreK-3rd efforts in the rest of the country.”

Read the report.

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Class Sizes During Early Childhood Affect College Outcomes, Study Finds

Wednesday, October 26th, 2011 | Author: Tracy

From the Chronicle of Higher Education:

Students enrolled in smaller classes during early childhood have an increased probability of attending college, earning a college degree, and entering high-earning fields, according to a study published on Monday by the National Bureau of Economic Research. The likelihood of students’ attending college increased by 2.7 percentage points, and the effect was more than twice as large among black students. The odds of earning a degree increased by 1.6 percentage points over all.

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Dr. Donna Bryant talks about Smart Start program

Monday, October 24th, 2011 | Author: Tracy

Dr. Donna Bryant, a Senior Scientist at FPG Child Development Institute, tells Barlow Herget that early education works for children, especially poor, at rick children if they continue to receive a good education throughout their school years.  Hear what Dr. Bryant says about new research into childhood learning.

Listen to the interview.

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Ages and Stages: Questionnaire helps make sure youngsters are on right track

Thursday, October 20th, 2011 | Author: Vivian

The SalisburyPost.com featured a story about the Assuring Better Child Health and Development Program (ABCD) offered to medical offices by Smart Start Rowan. The prgoram promotes the use of an easy developmental screening tool to help identify developmental delays in young children while at their well-child checkups.

In the article, Dr. Paula Franklin of Cleveland Pediatrics says, “Regarding developmental delays, early intervention is the key.”

The Ages & Stages Questionnaire used by the program is filled out by parents, and then discussed by their child’s pediatrician during a well visit.

“It’s a little bit more extensive screening” than just a typical physical exam, Franklin notes.

The questions focus in five areas: communication, gross motor skills (arm and leg movements), fine motor skills (picking up small objects), problem solving and social skills.

Learn more about how ABCD is having an impact in Rowan County at SalisburyPost.com.

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NYT’s Kristoff Says “Occupy the Classroom”

Thursday, October 20th, 2011 | Author: Tracy

In yesterday’s New York Times, Nicholas Kristoff proposes that Occupy Wall Street needs to evolve to Occupy the Classroom. He writes:

Most of the proposed remedies involve changes in taxes and regulations, and they would help. But the single step that would do the most to reduce inequality has nothing to do with finance at all. It’s an expansion of early childhood education.

He quotes Kathleen McCartney, the dean of the Harvard Graduate School of Education who says, “This is where inequality starts.”

He quotes Nobel Prize-winning economist James Heckman who says, “Schooling after the second grade plays only a minor role in creating or reducing gaps.”

He concludes, “the question isn’t whether we can afford early childhood education, but whether we can afford not to provide it. We can pay for prisons or we can pay, less, for early childhood education to help build a fairer and more equitable nation.”

Economists, the Federal Reserve Chairman, military leaders, law enforcement, business leaders, and many others are recognizing that early childhood education is paramount to our country’s future. Yet many states have cut back on these investments, a move that will surely cost us more later.

UPDATE: Tim Bartik, economist and author of Investing in Kids, delves into the question, “How much can early childhood education do to reduce income inequality?” Read his blog post and find out the answer!

Read “Occupy the Classroom.”

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Report Finds Hunger Cost NC More Than $5.4 Billion in 2010

Wednesday, October 19th, 2011 | Author: Tracy

Hunger cost North Carolina more than $5.4 billion in lost productivity and reduced outcomes last year, according to a recent report from the Center for American Progress. These findings come on the heels of alarming Census data which show unemployment in North Carolina stalled above 10 percent for the second consecutive year and poverty is increasing across the state.

In 2010, 15.7 percent of North Carolina households — nearly one in six — went hungry or faced food insecurity at some point during the year. When considered in relation to the total population, the direct and indirect costs of hunger averaged $570 per North Carolina resident — about $1,452 per household.

North Carolina was one of just 12 states in which the estimated cost of hunger has increased by more than $1 billion since the start of the recession.

“These estimates are a gripping reminder that the social and economic implications of family economic security are far-reaching,” said Barb Bradley, President and CEO of Action for Children North Carolina, a statewide policy research and advocacy organization that tracks child well-being in North Carolina. “When families struggle to put food on the table, the effects ripple through the state economy, creating greater health costs, educational problems and reduced opportunities for our children.”

Research shows that children are disproportionately impacted by the experience of food insecurity — an effect which persists well into their adult years. Children who grow up in food insecure households are more likely to go without health care, have increased school absenteeism and face greater risk of early academic failure, including dropping out of school, than their food-secure peers. As those children age and transition into the workforce, they encounter diminished outcomes in the form of limited employability and lower lifetime earnings.

Nationally, hunger-induced losses in educational outcomes, earnings and health cost the country an estimated $167.5 billion last year, an increase of 33.5 percent since 2007.

The report notes that expansions to a key federal nutrition assistance program, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP-formerly food stamps), helped many families meet some of their household food needs. In North Carolina, one in five residents, more than 1.9 million people, received SNAP benefits in 2010. Forty percent of them were children under the age of 18. Bradley says in these tough economic times, SNAP plays a pivotal role in helping to preserve the fiscal health of our state economy.

“Every dollar of SNAP benefit generates $1.84 in economic activity,” said Bradley. “This means federal efforts to support families in tough times are not just good for individuals, they are critical for the state, keeping hunger-associated costs down, children in school and our workforce ready to drive the new economy. ”

Read Hunger in America: Suffering We All Pay For.

Thanks to Action for Children for sharing this press release.

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