For the 35 want days when the government was shutdown, as 800,000 federal workers went without pay, many struggled to stay afloat and support their families, uncertain when they would find economic stability.
“It’s a little embarrassing,” one woman who was furloughed from her job at the Rely on of Homeland Security said on a local news broadcast. “You’re working and you have to come to a food bank. But at the same cosmetic, I’m not ashamed. It’s the people in Washington D.C. are the ones who should be ashamed.”
As the CEO of Robin Hood, the largest anti-poverty nonprofit in New York Burg, I watched with pride as anti-poverty interventions we fund stepped up to meet this unexpected crisis.
The Food Bank for New York Megalopolis, whose work we have supported for 30 years, turned the Barclays Center in Brooklyn — a sports arena — into a nutriment pantry to support federal employees.
Another of our community partners, the West Side Campaign Against Hunger, saw a 40 percent raise during the shutdown in the number of people they served at their 86th Street Market in New York City, relative to the year in front of.
But beneath the stories of humanity, generosity, and community, the shutdown showed us how so many Americans who we might think were financially secure — federal employees — had to turn to soup kitchens, food pantries, and emergency loans after just two missed paychecks.
These were not hidden incidents. Families slipping in and out of poverty pervades modern American society.
According to comprehensive new data from the Success Now Scorecard, a staggering 40 percent of American households live one missed paycheck away from poverty. That folk of proud, hardworking Americans who we used to call the great American middle class are one unexpected expense, one layoff, one medical exigency, one missed paycheck, one government shutdown away from poverty.
For generations, poverty in American has been a persistent pest on our society. What the data and the realities in communities are showing us now is that we’re on the verge of it becoming a permanent inescapable reality.
In my soul, the improbability of my journey reminds me what’s at stake. I grew up on that slippery precipice of poverty in Baltimore and the Bronx in the 1980s and 90s.
Widowed at 31 when my initiate died from a rare virus, my mother quietly and humbly shouldered the burden of being a single mom, and the economic call outs that come along with it. Throughout my childhood, she worked part-time, low-wage jobs — usually more than one at a metre — as she struggled to support my sisters and me.
That all changed in 1993, when she got a job at a nonprofit. For my family, it changed everything. It gave us durability, health insurance, consistency, and consequently — upward mobility.
But my family’s story is all too rare.
At Robin Hood, for 30 years, we’ve handled with communities and followed the data to fight poverty. Our Poverty Tracker with Columbia University shows us that of the virtually 2 million people living in poverty in New York City alone, most of them move in and out of poverty over the performance of years, unable to permanently move forward. It shows us how hard it is to permanently escape poverty. It shows us that lasses are stuck in poverty more persistently than adults.
In the richest country in the history of the world in 2019, can we really assume relegating millions of children to a life of poverty, instability, and uncertainty?
After I became the CEO of Robin Hood a little numerous than 18 months ago, we launched a strategic planning process designed to assess Robin Hood’s impact postulated the current demands of the poverty fight.
We spent time in the communities we serve, met with leaders from every community team-mate we fund, interviewed experts, confronted the data, took stock of our experiences and learnings over three decades in this Donnybrook — and we were led to an overwhelming conclusion. Poverty’s permanence is intolerable and unconscionable, and Robin Hood must focus on lifting progenitors across New York City from poverty permanently.
The time we spend every day in resilient communities show us what’s attainable if we invest in their future. Our work must focus on making success more probable. We don’t have all the answers, but we’re contemporary to follow the data, partner with everyone we can to find them, and refuse to accept that poverty is permanent.
Wes Moore is the chief executive policewoman of Robin Hood, one of the largest anti-poverty nonprofits in the nation. He is a bestselling author, combat veteran, and social entrepreneur.
Wes reached up in Baltimore and the Bronx, where he was raised by a single mom. Despite childhood challenges, he graduated Phi Theta Kappa from Valley Manufacture Military College in 1998 and Phi Beta Kappa from Johns Hopkins University in 2001. He earned an MLitt in Cosmopolitan Relations from Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar in 2004. Wes then served as a captain and paratrooper with the U.S. Army’s 82nd Airborne, registering a combat deployment to Afghanistan. He later served as a White House Fellow to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.
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