Connect with us

#NNPA BlackPress

Clyburn and Booker Introduce Sweeping Anti-Poverty Bill

NNPA NEWSWIRE — “For far too long, persistent poverty communities have suffered from neglect and indifference, leading to a lack of access to quality schools, affordable quality health care, and adequate job opportunities,” said Majority Whip Clyburn. “This legislation seeks to right this wrong by targeting much needed federal investments to areas that need them the most.”

Published

on

WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. House Majority Whip James E. Clyburn (D-SC) and U.S. Senator Cory Booker (D-NJ) today introduced a sweeping anti-poverty bill to better target federal grant dollars to high-poverty urban, rural, and tribal communities. The bill, titled An Act Targeting Resources into Communities in Need, expands the successful 10-20-30 anti-poverty formula, including a significantly larger group of struggling communities and broader universe of federal accounts by targeting funding into high-poverty census tracts.

“While genius is spread equally across zip codes, opportunity is not,” said Senator Booker. “This bill more strategically targets federal resources to where they are needed most, ensuring that families and communities long left behind are given a fair shot. In doing so, we can move to a smarter, more responsive government.”

“For far too long, persistent poverty communities have suffered from neglect and indifference, leading to a lack of access to quality schools, affordable quality health care, and adequate job opportunities,” said Majority Whip Clyburn. “This legislation seeks to right this wrong by targeting much needed federal investments to areas that need them the most.”

“The quality of life in our urban counterparts is directly linked to the health and vitality of rural America….the majority of our food, fiber and fuel are produced in these areas….this legislation continues to strengthen that link,” said Sam Wade, CEO of the National Rural Water Association. “We would also like to commend our partners at Rural Development, and we believe they are uniquely qualified and experienced to assist these communities, many of which, unfortunately, lack the human capacity and financial resources to move ahead without some assistance.  We at NRWA stand ready and able to work with Congress and our partners at Rural Development to further the health and prosperity in these rural communities.”

“In the United States, poverty is not equally distributed.  It clusters in specific regions, states, towns, and even neighborhoods,” said Minor Sinclair, Director of Oxfam America’s U.S. Domestic Program. “At Oxfam, we’ve seen states in the Gulf Coast working to pull people out of poverty, but struggling against formidable barriers, including a legacy of racism with roots in slavery, exacerbated incarceration rates, and elevated exposure to climate hazards such as hurricanes. The Clyburn-Booker bill is a critical step to ending the injustice of poverty. This bill would target resources in the communities that need it most, helping to mitigate the historical, social, and environmental factors that inhibit communities’ abilities to thrive.”

“The Housing Assistance Council has almost 50 years of experience working in persistently poor rural communities across the country,” said David Lipsetz, CEO of the Housing Assistance Council. “We know how challenging it is to direct federal funds to these high-need places. Without increased federal investment in capacity on the ground, high-poverty communities will continue to fall behind. We applaud Congressman Clyburn and Senator Booker for addressing this challenge with An Act Targeting Resources to Communities in Need, which will direct important federal funding and programs – like those of USDA’s Rural Development and the CDFI Fund – to the nation’s most persistently poor communities.”

“In 2017, over 12.8 million children in America lived below the official poverty level — $25,094 for a family of four, and nearly half lived in extreme poverty at below half the poverty level,” said MaryLee Allen, Director of Policy at the Children’s Defense Fund. “More than one in ten children spend at least half their childhoods in poverty and the longer a child is poor, the greater their risk of becoming a poor adult. An Act Targeting Resources to Communities in Need is an important step toward badly-needed investment in the persistently poor areas so many of our most vulnerable children and families call home.”

“Confronting and eradicating areas of persistent poverty will address educational imbalances, health disparities and economic inequities,” said Lou Tisler, Executive Director of National NeighborWorks Association. “National NeighborWorks Association supports instituting the 10-20-30 plan more broadly, as proposed by the Clyburn-Booker Act, which will prioritize and provide necessary resources, while creating impactful leverage and enduring strength in neighborhoods and communities across the country, as NeighborWorks organizations do every day.”

“Child poverty is not inevitable – we know firsthand from our work in rural communities across the country that investing in families and community supports can help break the pervasive cycle of poverty and ensure equal opportunity for all,” said Mark Shriver, senior vice president for Save the Children’s U.S. Programs and Advocacy. “Recently, the National Academy of Sciences released a landmark study confirming child poverty in the United States is a solvable problem if there is the political will to address it. I want to thank Congressman Clyburn and Senator Booker for focusing on one of the most pressing issues facing our country today.”

“Poverty is deeply related to place,” said Professor Trevon Logan, Economics professor at the Ohio State University. “That means we need solutions that target areas where poverty is entrenched and persistent. This bill expands on a proven policy of targeting federal expenditures to make sure that we do not overlook areas beset by persistent poverty. Bills such as this can move Americans out of poverty and move all of us towards economic prosperity.”

The 10-20-30 formula requires that a minimum of ten percent of federal funds of a particular federal program go to communities with “persistent” poverty, defined as a county where the poverty level has been 20 percent or higher over the past thirty years. This formula was successfully applied to three accounts in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, 15 accounts in the omnibus appropriations law of 2017, and 14 accounts in the omnibus appropriations law for 2018. This new bill expands this formula so that it applies to a larger universe of federal programs, ensuring that more high poverty communities are reached.

In order to ensure federal investment reaches all high-need communities, including pockets of deep poverty and those communities experiencing more recent economic downturns, preventing them from being defined as persistent, the bill would also require certain federal agencies and programs target resources to census tracts with poverty rates currently exceeding 20 percent.

Read a summary of the legislation here.

Read the text of the legislation here.

Continue Reading
2 Comments

2 Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

#NNPA BlackPress

LIVE! — HE SAID, HE SAID, HE SAID: APRIL FOR THE ARTS 2025, MARIA LANA QUEEN — FRI. 4.25.25 7PM EST

Tune in Friday, April 25, 2025 @ 7pm EST for another live new episode of “He Said, He Said, He Said Live!” A Look at the World …

Published

on

By


https://youtube.com/watch?v=kjPIugVQCAg&autoplay=0&cc_lang_pref=en&cc_load_policy=0&color=0&controls=1&fs=1&h1=en&loop=0&rel=0

Tune in Friday, April 25, 2025 @ 7pm EST for another live new episode of “He Said, He Said, He Said Live!” A Look at the World …

Continue Reading

#NNPA BlackPress

The Marathon

Headlines and Cory Booker. LET IT BE KNOWN NEWS | We amplify Black voices and headlines that reflect or impact the Black …

Published

on


Headlines and Cory Booker. LET IT BE KNOWN NEWS | We amplify Black voices and headlines that reflect or impact the Black …

Continue Reading

#NNPA BlackPress

Hot Topics and Headlines

The WHCA board has unanimously decided we are no longer featuring a comedic performance. Lonnie Bunch III is speaking out …

Published

on


The WHCA board has unanimously decided we are no longer featuring a comedic performance. Lonnie Bunch III is speaking out …

Continue Reading

Subscribe to receive news and updates from the Oakland Post

* indicates required

CHECK OUT THE LATEST ISSUE OF THE OAKLAND POST

ADVERTISEMENT

WORK FROM HOME

Home-based business with potential monthly income of $10K+ per month. A proven training system and website provided to maximize business effectiveness. Perfect job to earn side and primary income. Contact Lynne for more details: Lynne4npusa@gmail.com 800-334-0540

Facebook

Courtesy of California Governor Gavin Newsom’s Facebook page.
Activism1 day ago

Gov. Newsom Approves $170 Million to Fast Track Wildfire Resilience

Shutterstock
Activism1 day ago

California Rideshare Drivers and Supporters Step Up Push to Unionize

Shutterstock
Activism1 day ago

California Holds the Line on DEI as Trump Administration Threatens School Funding

Assemblymember Corey Jackson. File photo.
Activism1 day ago

Asm. Corey Jackson Proposes Safe Parking for Homeless College Students Sleeping in Cars

California for All College Corps
Activism1 day ago

Newsom Fights Back as AmeriCorps Shutdown Threatens Vital Services in Black Communities

iStock
Activism1 day ago

Four Bills Focus on Financial Compensation for Descendants of Enslaved People

Love Rita Book Cover. Courtesy of Harper.
Arts and Culture1 day ago

BOOK REVIEW: Love, Rita: An American Story of Sisterhood, Joy, Loss, and Legacy

Karen Lewis. Courtesy photo.
Activism1 day ago

Faces Around the Bay: Author Karen Lewis Took the ‘Detour to Straight Street’

Barbara Lee. File photo.
Activism1 day ago

Barbara Lee Accepts Victory With “Responsibility, Humility and Love”

(Left to right:) Dr. Akilah Weber Pierson. CBM file photo. Dr. Timnit Gebru is DAIR’s founder and executive director. Photo courtesy of Dr. Gebru. Judy Wawira Gichoya, MD, MS, is an associate professor in the Department of Radiology and Imaging Sciences at Emory University School of Medicine. Dr. Gichoya serves as co-director in leading the Healthcare AI Innovation and Translational Informatics (HITI) Lab. Trained as both an informatician and an interventional radiologist, Dr. Gichoya’s work is centered around using data science to study health equity. Photo provided by the Emory University Winship Cancer Institute.
Activism2 days ago

AI Is Reshaping Black Healthcare: Promise, Peril, and the Push for Improved Results in California

Dr. Adia Scrubb Photo provided by California Black Media..
Activism2 days ago

ESSAY: Technology and Medicine, a Primary Care Point of View 

Carletta Jackson-Lane, 21st Western District governor of the National Association of the Business and Professional Women’s Club, Inc. sits with honoree Carol E. Tatum the 2025 Sojourner Truth Award recipient of the NAB&PW, Inc. Photo courtesy of Sheryl Smith.
Activism2 days ago

S.F. Businesswomen Honor Trailblazers at 44th Annual Sojourner Truth Awards and Scholarship Luncheon

OEA President Kampala Taiz-Rancifer. Courtesy photo.
Activism2 days ago

Teachers’ Union Thanks Supt. Johnson-Trammell for Service to Schools and Community

Kyla Johnson-Trammell. File photo.
Alameda County2 days ago

OUSD Supt. Chief Kyla Johnson-Trammell to Step Down on July 1

Supporters of the Swim A Mile | Move A Mile campaign over the years. At left are swimmers from 2023 and from 2001 (?) at right. Courtesy photos.
Activism2 days ago

In 30 Years, Supporters of Swim A Mile | Move A Mile for Women with Cancer Raised $8 Million

Trending

Copyright ©2021 Post News Group, Inc. All Rights Reserved.