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OneGrassRoot

(22,920 posts)
Wed Aug 17, 2016, 10:54 AM Aug 2016

Important piece on suburban poverty from TalkPoverty.org

The suburban poor face a unique set of challenges, because suburbs simply do not have sufficient infrastructure for handling poverty. Those struggling to get by in suburban communities can have a difficult time accessing public transportation to travel to work, reliable childcare for unpredictable work schedules, or even a soup kitchen.

Even as the numbers of suburban poor climb, awareness of their existence is minimal. The suburbs still conjure images straight from a 1950s sitcom, complete with soccer moms, family dinners around a table, and perfectly manicured lawns. And while these things still exist in the suburbs, it is shockingly easy to ignore the rising tide of poverty there.

The suburban poor themselves may help to exacerbate to these stereotypes by hiding behind them. Looking presentable and fitting in are made easier by hand-me-downs and thrift stores that sell nice clothes for cheap. Poor suburban children may be able to attend highly-rated suburban schools alongside the children of affluent families, their classmates and teachers none the wiser. And once proud middle-class citizens, now unable to pay for rent or food, may struggle with guilt or shame and opt not to share their stories or even seek out help.

The family next door succeeded in blending in, but they were not alone in their financial struggles—not in our neighborhood and certainly not in our larger suburban region. I don’t know if they realized that. Life in the suburbs can be isolating, especially when there is pressure to hide your circumstances from friends and acquaintances. If everyone who is experiencing poverty hides it, then all of those people end up thinking they are alone.



https://talkpoverty.org/2016/08/17/house-next-door/

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Important piece on suburban poverty from TalkPoverty.org (Original Post) OneGrassRoot Aug 2016 OP
That's my world ghostsinthemachine Aug 2016 #1

ghostsinthemachine

(3,569 posts)
1. That's my world
Wed Aug 17, 2016, 11:27 AM
Aug 2016

Suburban poor. We are everywhere. The parks are packed, the libraries are packed and someone is flying a sign on every corner. Jobs pay nothing. Construction jobs pay less now than they did in the 80's, and are usually located in the outskirts of the region where transit don't go.

Drug testing also figures into the equation.

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