[Occupymendocino] MORE THAN 1 MILLION KIDS HOMELESS

Richard Karch rkarch at mcn.org
Sat Sep 15 23:15:18 PDT 2012


Over One Million U.S. Kids Are Homeless

by Piper Hoffman
September 14, 2012





More than one million students in this country are homeless.

The number of homeless children is actually much higher. The U.S. Department of Education, which released the one million figure this June, included only “children enrolled in U.S. public preschools and kindergarten through 12th grade for the 2010-2011 school year,” according to the Orlando Sentinel. As the Sentinel points out, that excludes “infants, toddlers, preschool-aged children who aren’t enrolled in public programs and homeless children who are home-schooled.” It also excludes homeless teenagers who are not enrolled in school. The National Center on Family Homelessness estimates that the true number of homeless children in the U.S. is closer to 1.6 million.

Since the recession began in 2007, the number of homeless kids “in public schools nationwide has increased 57 percent,” the Sentinel reports. It may be that part of this increase is a result of efforts to  enroll more homeless children in school (as required by a federal law called the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act), though undoubtedly the lion’s share is due to increases in the number of homeless people in our country. Counting the members of a population as transient (and often hidden) as the homeless is notoriously difficult and a perennial bone of contention between public authorities and advocates, but one estimate, by the National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty, posited a number of 3.5 million homeless individuals in 2009.

As a former professional advocate for policies to end homelessness, I learned about the challenges homeless youth face. Children enrolled in school are often forced to transfer schools if their shelters are in different school districts than their homes were. Already suffering from the disruption of becoming homeless, these students enter a school full of children and teachers they don’t know and may face the stigma of being “the homeless kid.” (The McKinney-Vento Act guarantees homeless children the right to remain in their original school, as the National Education Association notes, but it is not always enforced and “has never been fully funded.”)

Most shelters are not suitable places to study. Families tend to sleep in one room, which is rarely furnished with a desk and is often filled with the student’s family members. Quiet spaces are rare. Some homeless students do their homework on the bus or train to school, if they manage to do it at all.

Other homeless children are “doubled-up” in the homes of extended family rather than staying in shelters. Together with siblings and parents, they crowd in with relatives who may be near poverty themselves. Some children live with their families in their cars or all together in one motel room. Again, these conditions rarely afford students a quiet place to concentrate on their homework.


Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/over-one-million-u-s-kids-are-homeless.html#ixzz26bvJAL46
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