From Tulsa's Community Action Project. . . If you go to their website, www.okpolicy.org , there is a link to a PDF version of this article with some graphs illustrating the statistics discussed below. RMW
August 29, 2006
Census Bureau Shows State Poverty Rate at Ten-Year High
High Rates of Poverty, Uninsured Show Many Being Left Behind
New data released today by the U.S. Census Bureau reveals an alarming increase in the number of Oklahomans living in poverty, according to a press release issued by Community Action Project (CAP).
The annual "Poverty Day" data released by the Census Bureau reveals that:
+ Over the period of 2005-06, an average of 15.4% of Oklahomans lived below the federal poverty level. This is up sharply from 13.2% in 2004-05 and 11.8% in 2003-04;
+ Oklahoma's rising poverty trend differs from the nation's as a whole; nationally, poverty rates have declined modestly the past two years;
+ At 15.4%, Oklahoma's most recent poverty rate is at a ten-year peak;
+ An average of 537,000 Oklahomans have been living in poverty the past two years;
+ County-level data reveals that Oklahoma County is suffering the worst concentration of poverty of the state's metropolitan counties, with 22.1% of the county's residents falling below the poverty line in 2006;
+ Median household income in Oklahoma in 2006 was $38,276, which is $10,175, or 21% below the national median household income;
+ The Census Bureau today also released data on health insurance coverage revealing that an average of 650,000 Oklahomans, or 18.7%, were without health insurance for the period from 2004-06.
These numbers should sound the alarm that our economy, while continuing to show signs of overall strength, is leaving far too many Oklahomans behind. We hope that state policymakers will ask the tough questions about why families are failing to earn a decent living and will undertake an aggressive effort to bolster assistance and expand opportunities for low- and moderate-income families.
CAP Press Release: Census Data Shows Poverty Soaringin Oklahoma
National Trends and Data
Nationally, the Census Bureau found a modest 0.7% rise in median household income and a 0.3% decline in the poverty rate. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities notes that in 2006, the poverty rate remained higher, and median income for non-elderly households remained $1,300 lower, than in 2001, when the last recession hit bottom. It is virtually unprecedented for poverty to be higher and the income of working-age households lower in the fifth year of a recovery than in the last year of the previous recession.
Perhaps of greatest concern, the number of Americans without health insurance increased by 2.2 million in 2006, and the number of uninsured children jumped by more than 600,000. The steady progress of recent years in reducing the number of uninsured children stalled in 2005 and began to reverse in 2006, in part because funding for the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) grew scarcer.
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities Analysis of Census Report
U.S. Census Bureau - Income, Poverty and Health Insurance Information
email: dblatt@captc.org
phone: (918) 382-3228
web: www.okpolicy.org Community Action Project is a Tulsa-based comprehensive anti-poverty agency whose mission is to help individuals and families in need achieve self- sufficiency. CAP’s public policy department aims to promote policies that will benefit low- and moderate- income Oklahomans through research, education and advocacy.
Community Action Project | 4606 S. Garnett | Suite 100 | Tulsa | OK | 74146
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