The Campaign to Cut Poverty in Half in Ten Years

Give Poverty the Attention it Deserves during Debate

It’s time we give poverty, particularly child poverty, the attention it deserves. A good place to start would be the first presidential debate in Denver on October 3. Were Jim Lehrer to ask the candidates how they would address child poverty as president, it would kick off a long-overdue dialogue on poverty in America.

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Ryan says private sector key to ending high poverty

Paul Ryan addressed poverty today in a speech at Cleveland State University - and said the key to stopping poverty is a robust private sector that both employs people and serves the poor. It is not controversial that creating good jobs is essential to addressing poverty. However, as far as the safety net - Melissa Boteach, the Director of the Half in Ten Campaign, says private charities have always played a role, but “if the Romney/Ryan plan for nutrition assistance were to go into effect, every church in the United States would have to raise $50,000 a year for the next 10 years just to replace the food assistance that would be cut for families struggling to make it in this economy.”

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High Prices Are Magnifying Congress’ Cuts To Energy Assistance

According to a new report from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), families will be spending more to heat their homes this winter. The EIA projects that families will need to spend, on average, “nearly 20 percent more on heating oil and 15 percent more on natural gas. Unfortunately, higher fuel costs could spell disaster for the nearly seven million Americans who receive help paying energy bills from the Low Income Housing Assistance Program (LIHEAP).

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Is personal responsibility the key to ending poverty?

Marketplace Commentary — Los Angeles, California

How do you fix poverty? It’s a question many people have struggled to answer. Poverty experts Charles Murray and Melissa Boteach have very different views.Murray, of the American Enterprise Institute, believes that making the right personal decisions is the key to curbing poverty in America. Boteach, director of Half in Ten: The Campaign to Cut Poverty in Half in Ten Years, sees the problem of poverty differently. She said that progressives and conservatives agree that personal responsibility — mixed with public and private initiatives to lift people up — is a key strategy in fighting poverty.

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