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

Day: September 14, 2009

Poverty Measurement in the US

Fresh eyes for poverty guidelines, By Josh Gerstein, September 14, 2009, Politico.com: “Two academics who are vocal critics of the federal government’s antiquated system for measuring poverty have landed important jobs in the Obama Administration, though it’s unclear whether they can overcome the political inertia that has left the current system largely undisturbed for more than four decades. The two Obama appointees – Rebecca Blank, former dean of the public policy school at the University of Michigan, and Georgetown Law professor Mark Greenberg – are part of a dedicated band of scholars who have argued for years that the Federal Poverty Guidelines are a badly warped yardstick for poverty because they are derived solely from food costs and don’t take account of a wide array of valuable benefits lower-income Americans get from federal and local governments…”

State Health Insurance Plans – Iowa, Alabama

  • Rule limits reach of Iowa health program, By Nigel Duara (AP), September 14, 2009, Des Moines Register: “A state program offering health care to low-income adults without children is serving thousands of people who have never had health insurance, but more than half of those enrolling are from six Iowa counties. That’s because people seeking care through IowaCare can only go to the University of Iowa Hospitals in Iowa City. The exception are people who live in Polk County, who can request a waiver to seek treatment at a Des Moines hospital. The situation has frustrated some hospital administrators and legislators, who call it unequal treatment that hurts patients and hospitals…”
  • ALL Kids insurance program eligibility expands Oct. 1, By Phillip Rawls (AP), September 14, 2009, Montgomery Advertiser: “Many middle-class Alabama children will qualify for publicly funded health insurance starting Oct. 1 because the Legislature is expanding eligibility to cover families of four making up to $66,150 annually. ‘For so many middle-income families, it never entered their minds they would be eligible for a public program,’ Cathy Caldwell, who directs the ALL Kids health insurance program for the state Department of Public Health…”

State Reimbursement of Funeral Expenses – Wisconsin

In dour economy, more indigent burials get public funds, By Laurel Walker, September 8, 2009, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: “Recent elaborate funeral services for the likes of Sen. Edward Kennedy or Michael Jackson may grab the public’s attention. But among the ranks of the impoverished, the number of indigents who need publicly financed burials has been quietly growing. The Wisconsin Department of Health Services has recorded a nearly 15% increase in indigent burials qualifying for public subsidy between 2006 and 2008, when the number jumped from 3,169 to 3,629. Department spokeswoman Stephanie Smiley said the state spent just over $6.1 million in general purpose funds in 2006 to reimburse funeral homes and cemeteries for those services. The figure grew to $7.4 million last year. Through August of this year, the total is $6.1 million. Anecdotal evidence from news stories around the country, from California to West Virginia, suggests a common theme – that more people are needing government help to bury their loved ones…”