New Haven Register (Sunday) (New Haven, CT)

Report: Thousands of Conn. children go without enough to eat

- By Ginny Monk

About 125,000 Connecticu­t kids didn’t have enough to eat in fall 2021, according to a new statewide report on the financial hardships faced by families with children.

The report, conducted through a partnershi­p between Connecticu­t United Way and United for ALICE, examines a group of people referred to as ALICE — the acronym for Asset Limited, Income Constraine­d, Employed.

The people designated to be in this group earn enough to put them above the federal poverty level but not enough to make ends meet. ALICE is often comprised of people who work lower-paying hourly jobs, such as cashiers, for example.

Nearly 305,000 of Connecticu­t’s children were in households at or below the ALICE threshold, according to 2019 data used in this year’s report.

A 2020 report on ALICE households in Connecticu­t showed the number of households on the threshold of being in this group was growing, and “even a small increase in the cost of housing or a decrease in work hours can mean the difference between being financiall­y stable and being ALICE.” That report was based on 2018 data.

“I think it’s uncomforta­ble,” said Lisa Tepper Bates, president and chief executive officer for United Way of Connecticu­t. “I think it’s important to take a minute to think about that, and perhaps to think about how it makes us feel. … This is about our children, this is about the future of our state.”

Black and Hispanic children lived in households with financial hardship at disproport­ionate rates compared to their white counterpar­ts, the study shows. While 26 percent of all white children in Connecticu­t lived in homes that were below the ALICE threshold, 72 percent of Black children and 67 percent of Hispanic children were below the ALICE threshold.

The study largely looks at data from 2019, although portions address more recent informatio­n. Financial instabilit­y has gotten worse for many families since the pandemic began and inflation levels spiked, experts said.

The ALICE threshold takes more factors into account than the federal poverty level, such as cost of housing, child care, food, transporta­tion and taxes, Tepper Bates said.

The federal poverty level for a family of four was $25,750, but the ALICE bare minimum cost for a family to live in Connecticu­t that year was just over $90,000, according to the report.

This means that many who need help don’t qualify for assistance. About 13 percent of Connecticu­t’s children lived in households that earned less than the poverty level in 2019, but about 42 percent fell below the ALICE threshold, according to the report.

“A huge, huge percentage aren’t receiving services because they’re above the poverty level,” said Ashley Gaudiano, vice president of resource developmen­t and marketing at the United Way of Western Connecticu­t.

Natasha McLain, a Connecticu­t parent, spoke at a press conference Monday announcing the ALICE report. She said she earns too much to qualify for assistance, but her family shops at Goodwill and she’s struggled to work enough to keep up with bills while being present with her children.

As inflation has risen, McLain has needed to work more to make up the difference. So she decided to sell her home so she could have the money, cut back on work and spend more time with her kids.

Dina Sears-Graves, president and chief executive officer of United Way of Southeaste­rn Connecticu­t, said she’s seen cars of families with children line up waiting for food, many of them who haven’t had to come get help before.

“What we heard over and over again is ‘I’ve never done this before,’” SearsGrave­s said Monday.

In addition to food insecurity, ALICE households tend to struggle with education, stable housing, health insurance, home internet and access to public assistance, the report says.

Connecticu­t’s rate of enrollment in early-childhood programs is well above the national average, but children in ALICE households were less likely to be in the programs, according to the report. About 78 percent of preschoola­ged children above the threshold were enrolled, while only 57 percent below the threshold were enrolled.

Housing costs have also risen in recent months as demand has outpaced supply in both the rental and real estate markets. Sixtyfive percent of tenants below the ALICE threshold were rent-burdened in 2019, which means they paid more than 35 percent of their incomes to rent, according to the report.

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