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May 17, 2008 - 11:49pm

Women News Feed

March 22, 2007 - 9:18am

The following articles are fed through PovNet from outside mainstream and independent news sites, advocacy organizations, non-profits and government sites with the keywords poor women, women's poverty, women in poverty. These stories are not moderated and do not necessarily reflect the views of PovNet.

New York Neighborhoods Need Fresh Food


Courtesy of New York Times

The NYT reports that "Big Apple" residents can't find supermarkets in walking distance from their homes, and they are, consequently, spending their food budgets in drug stores where no fresh foods are available.

A continuing decline in the number of neighborhood supermarkets has made it harder for millions of New Yorkers to find fresh and affordable food within walking distance of their homes, according to a recent city study. The dearth of nearby supermarkets is most severe in minority and poor neighborhoods already beset by obesity, diabetes and heart disease.

All over the city and not even just low-income neighborhoods, the community's food crisis is also a labor problem. As grocery stores close, as many as 100 workers could be left without jobs.

At stake at the Bronx store are more than 100 jobs, many of them filled by local residents, including teenagers and single mothers. Some of the employees more or less grew up in the business, starting as teenagers with part-time, unionized jobs. The pay and benefits have helped them support their families, and even prosper.
Read more [Race Wire Blog]

Welfare Reform is Like Soup


Imagine a dinner party for which I hire a caterer who I tell exactly what to cook, give my favorite soup recipe and stand over in the kitchen making sure that they prepare it exactly as I say. When the food comes out and my guest’s spoons go into their mouths, their faces contort, noses scrunch and conversation ends. There’s just way too much salt. I go huffing into the kitchen to yell at my caterer for making the food to salty and return talking about what an incompetent and contrary company I’ve hired.

Today’s New York Times reports that Hillary Clinton, who supported her husband in signing 1996 welfare reform legislation and continues to extol its virtues, says she tried to pass legislation as a Senator to remedy some of its failings but was unable to do so because Republicans would not let her. It's like when I hypothetically yelled at the caterer. Clinton is blaming the Republicans for screwing over poor people while it was she and her husband who were responsible for the job in the first place.

Clearly it's not a perfect analogy, as the Clintons passed welfare reform under great pressure from the right, but its not that far off. And it begs that we have a memory longer than the last 36 hours. Bill Clinton gutted welfare, abandoning scores of poor women and families of color, all with Hillary Clinton’s sometimes active and sometimes tacit support.

Making matters worse, the article quotes Barrack Obama announcing his support for the Clinton era welfare reforms as well.
“Before welfare reform, you had, in the minds of most Americans, a stark separation between the deserving working poor and the undeserving welfare poor,” Mr. Obama said in an interview. “What welfare reform did was desegregate those two groups. Now, everybody was poor, and everybody had to work.”

But welfare reform actually let poor people languish and it passed with white people’s support. White people's racist resentment made poor whites act against their own self interest. Obama suggests that the solution to this white resentment about undeserving Black poor people was found in welfare reform by abandoning poor people altogether. Is this what he meant when he talked about ending the racial stalemate in his race speech?

Clinton and Obama will need to match their policies to their words when it comes to ending poverty and racial inequity. Welfare reform is a perfect model of what happens if they do not.


Read more [Race Wire Blog]

Poor, rural women bear brunt of Aids

Poor, rural women bear the brunt of South Africa’s HIV pandemic as they face sexual abuse and discrimination, rights body Amnesty International said on Tuesday, urging government action.

A new report said rural women were disproportionately affected by poverty and unemployment and continued to suffer subjugation at the hands of men — increasing their risk of contracting HIV/Aids.

With about 5,5-million out of 48-million South Africans believed to be HIV-positive, the victim profile has changed from gay, white males to poor women living in rural settings, said the report.


Read more [Left News]

Single moms see gains: study

OTTAWA -- Employment rates and earnings for single mothers in both Canada and the United States rose between 1980 and 2000, a new study reports.
Read more [Times Colonist News Feed]

Single moms earning more in U.S., Canada but reasons differ

Single mothers in the U.S. and Canada have seen their employment and income rise between 1980 and 2000 by about the same rates, but the causes are different, a Statistics Canada report released Friday says.
Read more [CBC - Top Stories]

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