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

Day: October 9, 2013

Food Deserts – Wichita, KS

Wichitans face 44 square miles of ‘food deserts’ in low-income areas, By Beccy Tanner, October 7, 2013, Wichita Eagle: “Wichita has 44 square miles of food deserts – low-income areas where residents have little to no access to healthy foods such as fruits and vegetables, a study presented Monday by the Health & Wellness Coalition of Wichita showed. In an urban area, a food desert is defined as an area more than one mile from a full-service grocery store. Here, those areas are concentrated in south, central, north and parts of west Wichita…”

ACA and Health Insurance Coverage

  • Uninsured find more success via health exchanges run by states, By Robert Pear and Abby Goodnough, October 8, 2013, New York Times: “Robyn J. Skrebes of Minneapolis said she was able to sign up for health insurance in about two hours on Monday using the Web site of the state-run insurance exchange in Minnesota, known as MNsure. Ms. Skrebes, who is 32 and uninsured, said she had selected a policy costing $179 a month, before tax credit subsidies, and also had obtained Medicaid coverage for her 2-year-old daughter, Emma…”
  • Oregon’s low-income health plan primed for growth under reform law, By Nick Budnick, October 3, 2013, The Oregonian: “Bruce Lovan makes no bones about it, he’s a member of the working poor. He sleeps on a mattress on the living room floor of his father’s La Grande duplex and lives on food stamps while pulling a couple of graveyard shifts a week as a $9-an-hour security guard. He’s also one of more than 200,000 low-income Oregonians who will newly qualify for the Oregon Health Plan starting in January, as its waiting list and lottery to enroll become a thing of the past…”
  • One Maine family’s struggle for health care, By Sandy Butler and Luisa Deprez, September 27, 2013, Bangor Daily News: “The Daniels-Perez family is, like many Maine families, struggling to make do despite full-time employment. Samarali ‘Sam’ Daniels, her husband Ramon Perez, and their two children, Hector, 5, and Marrianna, 3, live in Augusta. Ramon works 40 hours a week at Sam’s Club, walks two miles to and from his job every day, as they do not own a car, and makes about $11 per hour. That’s more than the state minimum wage of $7.50 but far less than the $17.15 calculated by the Maine Department of Labor in 2010 as a livable wage for a family of four…”