World Day of the Poor reminds us to help the needy in our neighborhoods
A few months ago, the front page headline of the Sun-Times read simply: Hope Lost.
Photos of men, women, and children who had been shot lined the page. That headline and those images stayed with me. Yet I believe that as a city, we can come together and change that headline to: Hope Found.
Every day we see the effects of poverty, whether it’s violent crime and the headlines we grow numb to about the number of shooting victims, or the vacant lots that riddle our neighborhoods, strewn with garbage and surrounded by barbed wire. We see men and women seeking jobs and a hand up, not a handout.
Nov. 18 is World Day of the Poor, a day Pope Francis calls on us to search for ways to alleviate the burden of poverty on our neighbors.
We must provide services for job-seekers whose skills do not match today’s job market. Without investment in job training, we will continue to see those who desire to lift themselves and their families out of poverty move further behind.
We also must address the growing lack of affordable housing. It is astounding to me that there is not a single place in the U.S. where a fulltime worker earning minimum wage can afford to rent a two-bedroom apartment. Government, banks and other financial institutions must work with the social service sector to create more affordable housing and offer homelessness assistance. A groundbreaking study by the Wilson Sheehan Lab for Economic Opportunities, conducted with Catholic Charities, found that those who receive short-term housing assistance are 65% less likely to enter a shelter.
We know social safety net programs work, moving people out of poverty and onto a path of self-sufficiency. For any program or idea to succeed, though, we must integrate it with other programming and work with partners to address the holistic needs of each person: jobs, education, food, and housing.
On this World Day of the Poor, let’s pledge to work together as “Good Samaritans” to change the headlines. We know that in Chicago, hope can be found.
State lawmakers must protect smallbusiness owners from the rising healthcare costs that would result if the Illinois market is flooded with junk, short-term health insurance plans. Legislators must override Gov. Bruce Rauner’s veto of a bill that would limit these short-term plans to six months and provide strong consumer protections alongside the plans.
The bill is needed to counteract a Trump administration rule authorizing the expansion of short-term plans, allowing them to last up to 364 days and to be renewed for up to three years. If this rule is not blocked by the bill, Senate Bill 2388, many people will be lured away from the Affordable Care Act (ACA) marketplace by low-quality, cheap health plans. These plans may look like a good value, but in reality, they cover almost nothing, including pre-existing conditions. They also can charge more based on your health, age and gender, and exclude essential services like mental health care, hospital care and prescription drugs.
If a significant number of younger and/ or healthier people abandon the ACA marketplace, it will be very bad news for the entrepreneurs and small-business employees who depend on the marketplace for quality, affordable insurance. Without healthy people paying for good plans, to offset the costs of caring for older or sicker people, ACA premiums will rise drastically, and many small-business owners, employees and low-income people will be priced out of the market. Send letters to letters@suntimes.com. Please include your neighborhood or hometown and a phone number for verification purposes.