Daily Press (Sunday)

Lift kids from poverty

After a sharp decline during the pandemic, children in hardship is soaring again

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When the COVID pandemic cast its dark cloud over the United States, there was an unexpected silver lining: Child poverty was all but wiped out. Sadly, though, that great achievemen­t didn’t last. Census Bureau figures released in September show that in 2022, the percentage of America’s children living in poverty had jumped dramatical­ly and is now higher than before the pandemic took hold.

That high level of child poverty should not be acceptable, especially not in our advanced, industrial­ized nation. Children in the United States should have a decent standard of living. They deserve to grow up with a reasonable chance of becoming healthy, happy and productive adults.

We — representa­tives in Washington, voters, citizens — should act now to return to the strategies that we know lifted millions of children out of poverty, at least for a while. We need to look back only two years to see what can be done.

The first full year that we struggled through the disruption­s of COVID, 2021, turned out to be a great year in terms of reducing the number of children living in poverty. The year before, 9.7% of America’s children lived in poverty, according to the federal Supplement­al Poverty Measure. In 2021, that percentage fell dramatical­ly, to 5.2%. Millions were lifted out of poverty.

The reason is obvious: The improvemen­t was due to emergency measures by the federal government to ease the financial burdens caused by the pandemic. Leading the list was the enhanced version of the Child Tax Credit (CTC) program, designed to help parents deal with financial problems caused by disruption­s to schools, childcare programs and jobs. The new tax credit program gave parents a yearly tax credit of up to $3,600 per child, some of which could be paid upfront monthly rather than waiting for taxes to be filed the next year.

Other emergency relief programs — stimulus checks, increased unemployme­nt insurance, increased Supplement­al Nutrition Insurance Program (SNAP) payments — also helped cut the child poverty rate to 5.2% nationally.

But as the pandemic eased, Congress allowed the enhanced CTC and other emergency measures to end. At the same time, extra federal funding for childcare is ending and Medicaid coverage is shrinking. It doesn’t help that inflation is driving up the costs of food and nearly everything else.

Census Bureau figures for 2022 show that as those programs ended, the child poverty rate in the U.S. more than doubled, to 12.4% — representi­ng about 9 million children. We successful­ly lifted millions of children out of poverty, only to plunge them back in. We saw what we needed to do, but then we stopped doing it.

Those numbers are not just statistics. The past has made it painfully clear that living in poverty negatively affects children in many ways. They are more likely to have poor nutrition and health problems. They often struggle in school and participat­e in few activities. Poverty increases the chances that a child will be homeless or a victim of abuse or neglect.

After one year of marked improvemen­t, the U.S. is back to having one of the worst percentage­s of child poverty among all the world’s democracie­s with market-based economies. It doesn’t have to be this way.

Here in Virginia, the child tax credit and other pandemic measures cut child poverty in half, but advocates believe the numbers are quickly going back up here too.

What are our priorities? Surely helping children to have minimally decent lives — and chances for better futures — should be high on our lists. There may be legitimate discussion­s about minor adjustment­s to the Child Tax Credit program, but there should be no question that reducing child poverty is a goal all Americans support.

What happened in 2021 should make us determined to alleviate child poverty. We now know that we can do it, we know how, and we know that as a nation, we can afford it. What we can’t afford is to let millions of America’s children continue to live in poverty.

 ?? ALEX WONG/GETTY ?? Cara Baldari and her 9-month-old daughter Evie, left, and Sarah Orrin-Vipond and her 8-month-old son Otto join a rally in front of the U.S. Capitol on Dec. 13, 2021, in Washington. ParentsTog­ether Action held a rally with parents, caregivers and children to urge passage of the Build Back Better legislatio­n to extend the expanded Child Tax Credit.
ALEX WONG/GETTY Cara Baldari and her 9-month-old daughter Evie, left, and Sarah Orrin-Vipond and her 8-month-old son Otto join a rally in front of the U.S. Capitol on Dec. 13, 2021, in Washington. ParentsTog­ether Action held a rally with parents, caregivers and children to urge passage of the Build Back Better legislatio­n to extend the expanded Child Tax Credit.

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