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University of Wisconsin–Madison
Poverty-related issues in the news, from the Institute for Research on Poverty

Day: September 2, 2009

Low-wage Workers and Wage Violations by Employers

Low-wage workers are often cheated, study says, By Steven Greenhouse, September 1, 2009, New York Times: “Low-wage workers are routinely denied proper overtime pay and are often paid less than the minimum wage, according to a new study based on a survey of workers in New York, Los Angeles and Chicago. The study, the most comprehensive examination of wage-law violations in a decade, also found that 68 percent of the workers interviewed had experienced at least one pay-related violation in the previous work week. ‘We were all surprised by the high prevalence rate,’ said Ruth Milkman, one of the study’s authors and a sociology professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, and the City University of New York. The study, to be released on Wednesday, was financed by the Ford, Joyce, Haynes and Russell Sage Foundations. In surveying 4,387 workers in various low-wage industries, including apparel manufacturing, child care and discount retailing, the researchers found that the typical worker had lost $51 the previous week through wage violations, out of average weekly earnings of $339. That translates into a 15 percent loss in pay…”

Health Care Access and Immediate Care Clinics

A Milwaukee clinic fills a need but faces failure, By Kevin Sack, September 1, 2009, New York Times: “Like many low-income neighborhoods, the north side of Milwaukee has seen a gradual depletion of its primary care doctors over the last two decades. One by one, they have retired or surrendered to financial reality, rarely to be replaced. At the few remaining practices, the wait for an appointment can make it almost purposeless to seek one. When Martha Brown’s 3-year-old daughter, Loverree, woke up with a runny nose last Thursday, her doctor’s office told her it would be a week. ‘I couldn’t wait,’ Ms. Brown said. ‘I had to see what was wrong with my baby. I think she’s got an infection.’ Rather than heading to an emergency room, Ms. Brown took her three children to the Milwaukee Immediate Care Center, a small nonprofit clinic that has treated the north side’s largely African-American community since 1986. The clinic, which keeps hours at night and on weekends, is the only full-time operation in the neighborhood that provides urgent care, luring patients with a sign that reads, ‘When You Need a Doctor Today…'”

Healthy Indiana Plan

Healthy Indiana Plan to reopen to childless adults, By Ken Kusmer (AP), September 1, 2009, Indianapolis Star: “Indiana wants to enroll more childless adults in its state-funded medical savings account program and will reopen enrollment for them in the future, a state consultant told lawmakers Tuesday. The federal government, when it approved the Healthy Indiana Plan, said the state could enroll no more than 34,000 childless adults, consultant Seema Verma told the Medicaid Oversight Commission. However, HIP has proven most popular among such non-caretaker adults, and the Family and Social Services Administration closed the program to that group in March. At the end of July, they made up more than 26,000 of the nearly 46,000 people enrolled, Verma said. The program, partially funded by the Medicaid program for needy and disabled people and a state cigarette tax increase, was designed to enroll a total of 130,000 people, mostly parents…”