Suburbanization of Poverty

Poverty in the USofA is generally regarded as an urban phenomenon.  This belief has very long roots that go back to our origins as a largely agricultural nation where cities grew primarily with immigration – people who had nothing but a strong back and a desire to work.  Constant growth and government policy maintained this situation until very recently, but that is changing.

In 2008 the Brookings Institution found that suburban poverty was increasing at an alarming rate across the nation.  In many urban areas the suburban poor outnumber those in the inner city – and suburban poverty rates are growing at five times the urban average.  In the Minneapolis-St Paul urban area, 54% of the poor lived in suburbs as of 2008 and this trend is growing.

There are deep social and political changes that can be expected from this change, which should only continue.

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Climate

Every morning the sun comes in a little earlier, a little brighter.  It’s the time of year when hope of spring washes over all of us at high latitudes just a bit more every day.  But the sun is still a bit brittle on these clear days, shining over a planet that is naked to the vastness of the universe.  Cloudless days are cold days as the heat of the previous day radiates back out into space while we sleep under a pile of blankets, waiting.

A few weeks ago we woke up to –15F, but 36 hours later the temperature was 45F as a warm patch drifted over us.  That’s life in the middle of a vast continent, and it wears on people.  When you don’t even know how to get dressed in the morning it’s hard to feel confident about anything, even on a glorious warm day.  Our world is cranky, sullen, and a bit detached.  That’s life in the middle of a vast continent like North America waiting for Spring.

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Snow Daze

How snowy is it?  It’s so snowy that … I’m not in a mood to joke.  The Midwest in general has seen more snow than any of us would like.  As of today the official total for the season at the MSP Airport is over 72 inches, putting us on a pace as the second snowiest Winter ever (behind 1981-82 by just under 4 inches).  That’s six feet of snow, about two meters.  Once it’s taller than I am, I give up.

The record total, set in 1983-84, is 98.4 inches total.  That’s over 8 feet. It took a very snowy March that year to give them the record.  How snowy is March?  Last year, for the very first time, we had … no snow at all.  So you never know in the middle of a big continent.  Follow the link to this and more information than you could possibly ever want on weather for nearly 200 years here.

But could this mean anything?

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Pledge Drive!

It’s Pledge Drive time at Minnesota Public Radio!  This Winter’s pitch for bucks comes at the same time Congress is (once again) looking to slash funding for public broadcasting.  That means one thing to me – I better get my own Pledge Drive in while I can.

Welcome to the first ever Barataria in-blog Pledge Drive!  There’s a survey at the end where you can tell me just what you think anonymously and easily, whether you give or not.

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Saint Paul’s Community School Plan

Saint Paul Public schools, like just about every school district in the US, is in a bit of trouble.  Budget cuts, declining enrollment, and the K-12 funding “delay” in Minnesota are all taking their toll.  They’re responded with a plan called “Schools at the Heart of the community” that addresses this and a lot more of their lingering problems all in one grand strategic plan.

Does this plan work?  I think it does.  There are a few questions and suggestions that I have outstanding, but overall this shows what a dedicated group of public servants can do under extraordinary circumstances.  They also appear to be listening to the public as they shop this plan around, meaning it will probably only get better.  I’m impressed and I want to add what I can to both the thanks and the suggestions.

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