[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 142 (Thursday, September 22, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H6352-H6353]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
POVERTY IN AMERICA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Lee) for 5 minutes.
Ms. LEE of California. As founder of the congressional Out of Poverty
Caucus, I rise today to continue sounding the alarm about the tide of
poverty sweeping across this country.
Last week, the United States Census Bureau released its annual
report, Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage in the United
States: 2010. It revealed a disturbing but unsurprising spike in the
poverty rate--from 14.3 percent in 2009 to a staggering 15.1 percent in
2010.
In 2010, 46 million people lived in poverty in America. That is
essentially the populations of California and Michigan combined who are
living in poverty in America. It's really a moral outrage that in the
richest country in the world so many Americans are facing or are living
in poverty, lacking economic opportunity and economic security.
Shamefully, our children bear the greatest burden. In 2010, 22
percent, or one in five children, lived in poverty. That's in America.
Poverty continues to hit communities of color much harder, as the facts
show. In 2010, the poverty rate for whites rose to 9.9 percent. The
poverty rate for African Americans rose to 27.4 percent. The poverty
rate for Latinos rose to 26.6 percent. For Asian Pacific Americans, the
2010 poverty rate of 12.1 percent remained the same.
This massive poverty crisis we are facing didn't happen overnight.
Poverty rates began to rise during the Bush administration as 8 years
of failed economic policy wiped out all of the gains made during the
Clinton years. The cochairs of the Out of Poverty Caucus saw this day
coming, and while little attention has been placed on the poor, we are
determined to prick the conscience of this Congress and to act to stem
the tide of poverty across America.
The members of the congressional Out of Poverty Caucus sent a letter
asking the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction, more commonly
known as the supercommittee, to stay in line with prior deficit
reduction agreements of the past by not cutting programs that provide
basic human services--the safety net. Of course, now more and more
Americans need this safety net. We must not balance the budget on the
backs of the most vulnerable. Unfortunately, now middle-income people
are falling into the ranks of the poor. As many of us know, millions of
people are just one paycheck away from poverty.
We really can turn the tide on poverty. The solution to boosting this
stagnating economy, reducing our long-term deficits, and lifting
Americans out of the crisis of poverty is really the same. We must
invest in creating more stable, living wage jobs. In fact, the most
effective anti-poverty program is an effective jobs program. That is
why Congress must immediately pass the President's American Jobs Act to
begin the work of creating jobs, reducing poverty, and jump-starting
our economy.
Poverty rates have increased in rural and urban communities
throughout the country. The American Dream has turned into a nightmare
for millions. This is a crisis, but we must turn the tide, and we must
start today. So I urge my colleagues on the other side of the aisle to
stop playing politics and to act on jobs now. We can and we must act
urgently to turn the tide of poverty sweeping across the Nation--a
tide, really, that knows no party affiliation.
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