College graduation gap widens for low-income Kentuckians, By Linda B. Blackford, July 9, 2012, Lexington Herald-Leader: “More Kentuckians are getting college degrees, but a troubling trend has emerged in who receives them. According to a new report, the gap between graduation rates for low-income college students and moderate- to high-income students jumped 8 percentage points between 2008 and 2010. In those two years, the graduation rate of low-income Kentucky students fell from 46 percent to 35 percent, according to an annual accountability report from the Council on Postsecondary Education. In comparison, the graduation rate of moderate- to high-income students dropped four percentage points, from 57 percent to 53 percent. The gap between graduation rates for rich and poor students increased from 10 percentage points to 18. The gap is connected to a bad economy, higher tuition rates and less state aid, and it’s a big problem, according to one expert on the economy and higher education. . .”
Author: irpstaff
Summer Food Programs
Summer food programs seeking new ways to assist children, By John McAuliff, July 1, 2012, USA Today: “Summer food programs aiming to keep U.S. children from going hungry have grown 25 percent in the last five years amid a nationwide push by local food banks to change the way they serve food to needy people. Summer food programs aiming to keep U.S. children from going hungry have grown 25 percent in the last five years amid a nationwide push by local food banks to change the way they serve food to needy people. Food banks say the rise in numbers is because of a push to find more creative ways to bring food to an estimated 19 million hungry U.S. children. . .”
More on the Health Care Ruling and Medicaid
- Court’s decision could widen Medicaid gap, By Noam N. Levey, June 29, 2012, L.A. Times: ” President Obama, in his drive for a national healthcare overhaul, strove to provide a new guarantee that all Americans, no matter where they live, would have basic protection against sickness and disease, ending decades of variation among states. The Supreme Court did not dismantle that guarantee Thursday. But while upholding the Affordable Care Act, the court opened the door to something the president and other champions of the law sought to avoid — widening disparities between red and blue states in who gets healthcare. Under the court’s ruling, states will be free to elect not to cover all of their poor residents through their Medicaid programs. That may mean liberal states that have embraced the healthcare law such as California, Illinois and Maryland will effectively offer all of their residents health coverage. . .”
- Health Care ruling clears path for Colo. exchanges, By Ivan Morenokristen Wyatt, June 29, 2012, Businessweek: “Colorado Republicans who decried Thursday’s health care ruling said the state did the right thing by beginning to create insurance exchanges required under the law, rather than waiting for the federal government to create one. Democrats said that the decision clears the path for Colorado’s health plans and that Colorado more than other states would have been tripped up if the health law had been axed. State lawmakers last year created the Colorado Health Benefit Exchange, which forms a virtual marketplace to allow individuals and groups the ability to purchase health insurance at discounts like those in larger risk pools. About 13 percent of the state, or 656,000 state residents, had no health insurance as of 2011. . .”
- U.S. Supreme Court health care ruling leaves Medicaid expansion up to individual states, By Bill Barrow, June 28, 2012, New Orleans Times-Picayune: “In a defining moment in U.S. Supreme Court history, Chief Justice John Roberts joined the court’s liberal bloc Thursday to announce a 5-4 decision upholding the most hotly debated provision of President Barack Obama’s 2010 health care overhaul. To do so, the Roberts majority framed the requirement for all Americans to purchase health insurance, along with an IRS penalty for not complying, as a tax, not the argument the administration preferred but enough to leave in place the linchpin of the insurance market changes. . .”