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

Day: February 3, 2012

State Minimum Wages

  • Minimum wage rates may climb this year, By Paul Davidson, February 2, 2012, USA Today: “At least 17 states recently raised the minimum wage or are considering doing so in 2012, the most in at least six years. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney broke with GOP conservatives this week, renewing his call for automatic federal minimum wage increases to keep up with inflation. President Obama has backed raising the U.S. basic wage from its current $7.25 an hour to $9.50 and indexing future automatic increases to inflation. Many economists cite a growing divide between rich and poor. The federal minimum wage rate applies everywhere except in states that set higher minimum rates…”
  • Washington state bills targeting minimum wage die, By Jonathan Kaminsky (AP), January 31, 2012, Seattle Post-Intelligencer: “Washington state lawmakers have shelved a series of bills that would lower wages at the bottom of the income scale in an effort to spur private-sector hiring.  The five Republican-sponsored bills failed to come up for a House committee vote Tuesday ahead of a key deadline.  Rep. Cary Condotta, R-East Wenatchee, said his goal in sponsoring the bills was to encourage employers to hire more workers, particularly in struggling areas of eastern Washington. ‘The little guys are what’s getting hurt,’ said Condotta. ‘They can’t push the prices up any more. They can’t complete.’ Among the bills was one to implement a tip-credit allowing restaurant owners to pay waiters and other tipped employees less than the minimum wage…”

State Medicaid Programs – Louisiana, Kentucky

  • Louisiana Medicaid overhaul begins its first day in operation, By Bill Barrow, February 1, 2012, New Orleans Times-Picayune: “The first leg of Gov. Bobby Jindal’s Medicaid overhaul goes live today, with more than 180,000 southeast Louisiana residents, most of them children, being shifted from the state-run insurance program to private insurance networks. Jindal’s signature health care initiative, the Bayou Health rollout involves the south shore of Lake Pontchartrain from St. Bernard Parish to Jefferson Parish, and the north shore parishes of St. Tammany, Washington, Tangipahoa, St. Helena and Livingston…”
  • Medicaid managed care system draws sharp complaints, By Deborah Yetter, February 2, 2012, Louisville Courier-Journal: “Complaints about the state’s new Medicaid managed care system boiled over Wednesday at a legislative meeting, where a top Medicaid official acknowledged major problems since the state hired three outside companies to provide services. ‘It is a drastic change to the system,’ Neville Wise, the state’s acting Medicaid commissioner, told the Senate Health and Welfare Committee. ‘We didn’t expect the level of issues that we had.’ Lawmakers voiced growing dissatisfaction with managed care, citing complaints about lack of payments for medical services, difficulty in getting patient medications approved and delays in authorizing services…”

Homeless Families – New York City

Homeless families, cloaked in normality, By Alan Feuer, February 3, 2012, New York Times: “On the sixth day she was homeless, Tonya Lewis overslept. She woke in the dark, in Room 6E at the 93rd Avenue Family Residence, a privately run shelter in Jamaica, Queens. It was 4:45 a.m. She was already running late. Rousting her children – Unique, 15, and Jacaery, 2 – from their beds, Ms. Lewis got them dressed and started shoving DVDs and diapers into two bulging tote bags. When the boys were ready – sleepy, sullen, hoodied, backpacked, in hats and winter jackets – she pushed them out the door (‘Come on, we gotta go!’) to begin their daily routine…”