Homelessness in the United States
The homeless population in the United States is far from invisible. It is impossible to walk down a street in any city without encountering someone sleeping in a doorway, pushing a shopping cart filled with personal belongings, or approaching a passerby for money. The homeless are no longer the skid-row white males roaming the countryside by hitching rides on freight trains and working for handout meals. Today, the faces of the homeless are a myriad of ages, genders, and races.
Homelessness is inextricably linked to poverty. The poor are not able to afford housing, health care, education, food and often child care (National pg). Because housing constitutes such a large portion of income, many are forced to drop that expense in order to simply supply the necessities of existence, such a food, clothing, and health care. Unfortunately, homelessness is simply a paycheck or illness away for the many of the population (National pg). According to a 2000 report, 31.1 million people or 11.3% of the U.S. population live in poverty, with 39% living on less than half the poverty level of incomes and over forty percent of that population being children (National pg).
Due to the declining skid row population and declining poverty rates, the urban renewal efforts of the 1960's and 1970's led to the typical skid row housing being torn down (Wasson 212). This optimism led many to believe that homelessness was a problem of the past, however, today, the homeless population has never been greater since the Great Depression (Wasson 212). Declining wages and job opportunities during the last two decades have made affordable housing impossible for many which now requires more than minimum wage for a simple one or two bedroom apartment at Fair Market Rent (National pg). In fact, according to the National Low Income Housing Coalition in 2001, a minimum-wage worker has to work 89 hours per week to afford a two-bedroom apartment, at the federal definition...
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