Our Issues

The Half in Ten campaign advocate for tested policy solutions – at the Federal, State, and even Local level - that will increase opportunity and cut poverty. Full List of Policy Solutions

Register for a Webinar on Job Creation

Half in Ten is co-sponsoring a webinar on what the federal government can do to address the jobs crisis on Thursday, January 28th at 3:00 pm EST.

Click here to register and hear from the experts on what steps Congress can take to create employment opportunities in low-income and minority communities.

Speakers

  • Larry Mishel, President, Economic Policy Institute
  • Deepak Bhargava, Executive Director, Center for Community Change
  • Alan Charney, Campaign Director, Jobs for America Now
  • Deborah Weinstein, Executive Director, Coalition on Human Needs, Moderator

There are 6.4 jobseekers for every unfilled job - and that gap is growing. Two-thirds of Americans are close to someone who is out of work. And joblessness is worst for communities of color, youth, and women who head households. The private sector does not have the capacity to rebuild employment on its own. While the investments made through the federal economic recovery legislation have created or saved over 1 million jobs so far, the recession is so deep that more federal action is urgently needed.

Congress and the Obama Administration are working on job creation plans. What should they do? How can we build support for job creation that does not leave the poorest people behind? Register for the webinar and find out.

Tell the Senate to Create Over 2 Million Jobs in Low-Income Communities

The Senate is considering legislation to spur job creation, but it isn’t clear if the bill will include policies to create jobs for the communities that have been hit the hardest in this recession. There are three provisions that can create or save over 2 million jobs in low-income and minority communities while helping the economy overall and lifting up all Americans.

Call your senator today at (202) 224-3121 and ask them to support a jobs package that includes:

  • extension of unemployment benefits and the COBRA health insurance subsidy through the end of 2010 by February 19.
  • investment in direct job creation that addresses long-neglected needs in communities.
  • aid to states and localities to prevent further job losses and service cuts.

Read more »

Half in Ten Applauds Obama’s Support for Unemployment Insurance and Aid to States, Urges Congress to Invest in Job-Creation Strategies

The Half in Ten Campaign applauds President Obama for supporting key job creation policies including extending unemployment insurance and COBRA health insurance benefits for the unemployed, and providing additional aid to state and local governments to save jobs, spur demand, and importantly, help, the most vulnerable weather this recession.

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act was a critical step to help us avert another Great Depression, and is already projected to have saved or created approximately 1.6 million jobs. Yet even as the economy turns the corner, economists are predicting prolonged periods of high unemployment. President Obama’s speech included strategies to tackle the jobless rate by helping small businesses, investing in infrastructure, and growing clean energy jobs.

In addition to these kinds of investments, however, we can and we must enact policies to ensure that job creation efforts lift up all Americans, including those in low-income communities that were in crisis even before the Great Recession of 2007-2009 began. While the average unemployment rate is 10 percent, jobless rates are disproportionately high among women heads of households (11.4 percent), Hispanics (12.7 percent), and African-American men over 20 (16.9 percent).

To that end, the Half in Ten Campaign is urging Congress to act urgently to create jobs through:

  • Aid to states and localities to save jobs and prevent cuts to needed services.
  • Investments in work supports and safety net programs. Investing in programs such as unemployment insurance, SNAP/Food Stamps, refundable tax credits, and childcare/early Head Start programs not only helps the most vulnerable but also helps all Americans by spurring economic demand that will ripple throughout the economy to create jobs.
  • A program to create public-service jobs that meet community needs, such as childcare and weatherization, while offering employment opportunities to marginalized communities.
  • Strategic investments in our national service programs to offer job opportunities to young workers while strengthening the capacity of nonprofits to respond to growing poverty.
  • On-the-job training and other programs that provide incentives to train and hire low-income workers.

The Half in Ten Campaign encourages the Obama administration and Congress to act now to create jobs for all Americans, including those who have traditionally been left behind during economic recoveries. Without a focused government effort on including traditionally excluded communities, poverty rates will remain unconscionably high as will disparities by race and gender.

A strategy to create decent-wage jobs and ensure that low-income workers have the opportunity to access them will be at the heart of both comprehensive poverty reduction efforts and rebuilding our economy to ensure shared prosperity for all. Half in Ten looks forward to working with Congress and the Obama administration to promote job creation that reflects these principles.

Originally Posted at: americanprogressaction.org

Half in Ten and CAP Action: Congress Must Act Quickly to Extend Help to the Unemployed

Alexandra Cawthorne of Center for American Progress and Melissa Boteach of Half in Ten write for the The Hill’s Congress Blog about the importance of extending Unemployment Insurance Benefits as soon as possible.

Another week passes and still no up or down Senate vote to extend unemployment insurance. This is no time to play politics. This is no time for “dithering.”

According to the National Employment Law Project, every day 7,000 additional workers are running out of unemployment benefits. That means that since the House passed its bill to extend unemployment insurance on September 22, approximately 266,000 workers have been left high and dry while the Senate continues to delay a vote on this crucial legislation—and 7,000 workers yesterday, 7,000 workers today, and 7,000 workers every day that the Senate puts off this vote are being pushed closer and closer to this brink. Read more »

UI Reforms Reach Workers in 34 States

This January, Half in Ten joined with the National Employment Law Project, NELP, to urge Congress to include urgent reforms to the Unemployment Insurance system in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, or ARRA. The antiquated unemployment insurance system had failed to ensure equal benefits for low-wage workers, part-time workers, workers who left work due to “compelling family reasons,” and long-term unemployed individuals. Low-wage workers are only one-third as likely to collect unemployment benefits, even though they have double the chances of being unemployed. For this reason, UI reform was one of the 12 steps that the Center for American Progress Task Force on Poverty identified to cut poverty in half in ten years.

Congress listened to advocates, and included unemployment reform in ARRA, allocating $7 billion for the project. And these reforms have begun to reach unemployed workers across the country. Earlier this week, the National Employment Law Project (NELP) released a report (PDF) detailing the “unprecedented wave” of unemployment insurance reforms that has swept across the country since the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) became law on February 17th, 2009. Read more »

CHN: Congress Passes Budget Outline; President Fills in the Blanks

From Coalition on Human Needs, a Half in Ten partner:

When Congress passed its Budget Resolution on April 27, it generally endorsed the President’s priorities. The Budget Resolution only answers some of the year’s policy-making questions: what, and, at least as far as the annual appropriations bottom line is concerned, how much. Advocates were pleased with the “what” answers: Congress committed to grapple with comprehensive health care reform and climate change, two of the President’s top priorities. The Budget Resolution also commits Congress to many other legislative tasks, including reauthorizing child nutrition programs, making student loans cheaper by reducing the role of private lenders, and creating a home visiting programfor new parents, as the President proposed.

Read more »

Green Jobs/Green Homes: Expanding Energy Efficiency and Creating Good Jobs in a Clean Energy Economy

Building efficiency retrofits serve the triple benefits of mitigating global warming emissions, reducing energy bills, and creating good, local jobs. Residential buildings alone account for 21percent of total U.S. greenhouse gas emissions, and substantial efficiency savings are obtainable through easy and proven techniques. Yet if energy-efficiency retrofits offer such obvious environmental, economic, and employment benefits, why have they been so slow to materialize? The answer lies in a host of market failures, and developing viable, scalable solutions has proven challenging—until now.

On Friday, May 15, Half in Ten joined the Center for American Progress and the Center for Working Families to release a report that provides a policy roadmap for New York State to achieve mass-scale, energy-efficiency retrofits of 1 million housing units over the next five years.

Download the report (pdf)

Download the executive summary (pdf)

Watch the event

Landmark Legislation Raises Kansas Minimum Wage

In accordance with federal standards, Kansas has just passed into law SB 160, raising the minimum wage - formerly the lowest in the country - from $2.65 an hour to $7.25. The wage increase goes into effect January 1, 2010. To read more about this and reactions from the Governor’s and State Minority Leader’s offices, click here.

Bloomberg’s Innovative Antipoverty Blueprint

As poverty in the United States continues to affect millions of people across the nation, city and state governments are finding themselves in an ongoing battle trying to unearth the right answer to an already growing problem. One city’s initiative to create new, and innovative antipoverty projects that will help its residents, can serve as a model not only to other urban areas across the country trying to fight poverty, but the nation as a whole. New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg examined the city’s efforts in establishing programs designed to combat poverty at a recent event hosted by the Center for American Progress.


New York City’s Crusade Against Poverty

LCCR Action: Tell Your Representative to Stop Foreclosures and Help Our Economy

From the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, a Half in Ten partner -

Take Action Now:
Call 202-224-3121 and urge your representative to support the Helping Families Save Their Homes Act (H.R. 1106), which would assist in stabilizing our economy by letting homeowners modify their mortgages in bankruptcy court and reduce foreclosures.

As early as this Thursday, March 5, the House of Representatives could vote on a broad package of initiatives in the Helping Families Save Their Homes Act (H.R. 1106). This bill is designed to help end our financial crisis by reducing the massive number of families losing their homes to foreclosure. It is estimated that 6,600 families are losing their homes to foreclosure every single day. Last week, President Obama announced his support for these initiatives.

A critical component of H.R. 1106 would provide homeowners with a final option to prevent foreclosure through the Chapter 13 bankruptcy process by setting up realistic and affordable mortgage payment plans. This last resort gives homeowners, local communities, and the economy an opportunity to recover from this current crisis, without cost to taxpayers.

We can’t end the financial crisis without stemming the rising tide of foreclosures. Call 202-224-3121 and urge your representative to support the Helping Families Save Their Homes Act (H.R. 1106), which would assist in stabilizing our economy by letting homeowners modify their mortgages in bankruptcy court and reduce foreclosures.

Click here to find out more information about H.R. 1106.