Poverty Reduction Initiative
 
According to a front page article in the Detroit Free Press, over 31,000 Michigan students experienced homelessness during the 2010-2011 school year. Click here to read the story by Jeff Seidel.

The number of homeless students in Kalamazoo County and a across the state is likely to keep growing, thanks to the continued foreclosure crisis and the recently enacted cap on cash welfare assistance. 
 
 
_Over 11,000 Michigan families lost cash welfare assistance last month, and as time goes on, more and more people will lose benefits as they run up against the newly enacted 48-month lifetime cap.

Lester Graham and Michigan Watch explored the human cost of this policy in a story which aired on Michigan Radio, December 13th:
http://www.michiganradio.org/post/kicked-cash-assistance-bureaucrats

The series is looking to report on affected families throughout the year.  If you or someone that you love is losing cash assistance, please consider sharing your story:
https://www.publicinsightnetwork.org/form/changing-gears/1e08cae9b228/do-you-somebody-who-is-losing-cash-assistance

The online magazine Bridge is also working to tell the stories of individuals affected by the cap:
http://bridgemi.com/2011/10/11000-michigan-families-confront-the-unknown/#.TuuhEfLNmJ4

A recent opinion piece by Jack Lessenberry of Michigan Radio questions if the new policy will even save the state money in the long run:
http://www.michiganradio.org/post/four-year-cap-welfare-benefits-costing-more-it-saves

 
 
Education is a keyfactor in ending poverty, but not everyone can afford to continue classes beyond high school. 

On Saturday, December 3 the Kalamazoo Gazette published a thought provoking article by Julie Mack about the high cost of higher education.

Click here to read "Who really has entitlement issues?"

 
 
_The following article by Denise R. Crawford, president and CEO of the Family Health Center Inc. and board member of the Kalamazoo County Poverty Reduction Initiative, was published in the Kalamazoo Gazette on November 30, 2011:

MiHealth Marketplace would benefit State

The Affordable Care Act created health insurance marketplaces  ̶  or exchanges  ̶  through which individuals and small businesses can purchase health insurance coverage beginning Jan. 1, 2014.  It’s estimated that between 517,000 and 730,000 people will gain coverage through Michigan’s health insurance exchange.

Senate Bill 693, introduced by Sen. Jim Marleau in September, would create the MiHealth Marketplace  ̶  Michigan’s health insurance exchange.  This competitive marketplace gives individuals and families more control, quality choices and better protections when buying insurance.

The MiHealth Marketplace establishes an easy-to-use website similar to Travelocity or Orbitz  ̶̶  as well as a toll free call center  ̶  that allows people to make real comparisons between plans so they can find the one that best meets their needs and budget.

This common-sense legislation would create a marketplace designed to foster competition among health insurance carriers, benefiting individuals and small businesses that lack the purchasing power of big businesses when it comes to health insurance.  The MiHealth Marketplace would help contain costs and maintain quality coverage while expanding access to health care.

Gov. Rick Snyder rightly called for quick action, urging the Legislature to approve this important marketplace to protect Michigan’s health care system from unnecessary federal intervention.  And, no matter how you picture the development of the MiHealth Marketplace, everyone can agree that maintaining control of it within Michigan is essential.

If Michigan fails to create this resource, the federal government will create one for us.  All 50 states are now federally mandated to establish a health care marketplace.  So here’s our choice: stakeholders here can work together to create the best marketplace for Michigan, or we can let the federal government create one for us.
Michigan also stands to loses millions of dollars in federal grants if the state continues to delay in establishing this new marketplace.


These funds are vital in allowing the state to properly design the MiHealth marketplace and integrate the technologies necessary to make the exchange run properly for consumers.  A MiHealth Marketplace in Michigan also means jobs in Michigan instead of somewhere else.

A tremendous amount of work is yet to be done to enroll hundreds of thousands of uninsured Michiganders who could be looking to access coverage through the MiHealth Marketplace.

This important and time-sensitive legislation is pending, and I urge our legislators to do the right thing for Michigan and pass the bill without delay.

 
 
What: The Poverty Reduction Initiative has three AmeriCorps VISTA positions available beginning in November 2011. VISTA volunteers are paid a poverty level stipend, and are also eligible for a post service stipend or education award. Visit AmeriCorps.gov on the web for info.

The work: We have three positions available:
1. Event Coordinator is responsible for producing Poverty Simulations, Coordinating workshops, directing lectures and other events which relate to poverty reduction activities.

2. Communications/Public Relations Coordinator is responsible for our web presence and blogs, shooting and producing videos, editing and publishing our newsletters, maintaining our membership and contact data base, taking minutes of meetings, issuing and producing press releases and press conferences and other communications

3. Resource Development Coordinator is responsible for grant writing and grant maintenance, for PRI and other poverty related organizations and other forms of fund raising. The position also assists with our Bank On and Project Connect activities.

All three positions work together on a variety of other related projects as they arise.

How to apply: go to: http://www.americorps.gov/ and click on VISTA, follow the instructions. If you have further questions please contact Jeff Brown PRI Executive Director at (269) 615-1027 or email
director@haltpoverty.org

When: We are accepting applications through Sept 6, 2011, interviews Sept 7-12, 2011 selection Sept 13-14, PSO required training (all costs paid) Oct 31-Nov 3, 2011; start date Nov 4, 2011.
 
 
We've moved our website onto the Weebly platform. You'll find some information has moved around and some new pages have been added. This is to make it easier for PRI's future volunteers and staff to add and update information. If something is missing or if you find a broken link, please email the webmaster at webmaster@haltpoverty.org.