Economy
Bushwick: 'There are kids out there who are hungry besides us.'
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Lunchtime, Tuesday, September 13, 2011 at the Trinity Human Service Center.
Lunchtime, Tuesday, September 13, 2011 at the Trinity Human Service Center.
Governments are pouring money into job skills programs as a way of combating poverty. But what jobs are participants being prepared for?
Even as speculation mounts that Democrats will retrench in the face of historic Republican gains in the House, some immigrant youth plan to continue demanding greater rights.
Local Produce Link enables food pantries to get the same locally grown, farm fresh, and sometimes organic produce as posh Manhattan restaurants.
Innovative city programs have increased the number of low-income shoppers getting access to locally grown produce. But technology and upfront costs remain a barrier for many.
For young people born without that proverbial silver Spoon in their mouths, New York City has never been An easy place to grow up. It’s a tough love kind of city.For every person who has described a rather idyllic Childhood in old New York, there are many more who Remember a harsher one, going as far back as the days of Jacob Riis, the social activist and photographer who chronicled The lives of poor young people in Lower Manhattan in The late 19th century. What he saw and showed the world influenced attempts at making their tenement lives better. In How the Other Half Lives, he observed:“Bodies of drowned children turn up in the rivers right along in summer whom no one seems to know anything about. When last spring some workmen, while moving a pile of lumber on a North River pier, found under the last plank the body of a little lad crushed to death, no one had missed a boy, though his parents afterward turned up.”A contemporary of Riis’ in the late days of the 19th century did even more.
A USDA executive says the city and state policy of fingerprinting Food Stamp applicants costs too much and is ineffective.
Bloomberg’s final fiscal plan looks a lot like the “doomsday” preliminary budget he issued in January.
A day after the first White House director of urban affairs moved to HUD, the Obama administration said it will retain the post.
The lottery is more important than ever to state finances. But counselors and a lawmaker want more done to protect those who don’t have “a little bit of luck.”