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Hunger in America – NewsHour Reports

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This is going to be a huge issue

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Good News on the Benefits Front

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The $24 billion economic package, which would also broaden tax breaks for businesses, cleared the House Thursday afternoon in a 403-12 vote and heads to President Barack Obama to sign into law. It passed 98-0 late Wednesday in the Senate.

Under the measure, the $8,000 tax credit for first-time homebuyers would be lengthened by seven months and expanded with a $6,500 credit for some prospective homebuyers who already own homes.

The nearly 2 million people who have lost or are in danger of running through their unemployment benefits before the end of 2009 would receive up to 20 weeks in additional benefits.

For those in states with unemployment rates above 8.5 percent, it would grant an additional six weeks on top of that. The extension is the fourth since last June, and could give some people up to 99 weeks of unemployment benefits, above the previous record of 65 weeks set in the 1970s, according to the Associated Press.

More after the jump – Source The NewsHour

Read the rest of this entry »

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History may not repeat but it does rhyme

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Monday on The American Experience: The 1930s:

Civilian Conservation CorpsIn March 1933, within weeks of his inauguration, President Franklin Roosevelt sent legislation to Congress aimed at providing relief for the one out of every four American workers who were unemployed.

He proposed a Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) to provide jobs in natural resource conservation. Over the next decade, the CCC put more than three million young men to work in the nation’s forests and parks, planting trees, building flood barriers, fighting fires and maintaining roads and trails.

Corps workers lived in camps under quasi-military discipline and received a wage of $30 per month, $25 of which they were required to send home to their families. This program interweaves rich archival imagery with the personal accounts of CCC veterans to tell the story of one of the boldest and most popular New Deal experiments, positioning it as a pivotal moment in the emergence of modern environmentalism and federal unemployment relief.

The five-part series, “The 1930s,” draws parallels between our current age and the Great Depression era, examining the political and cultural life of America during one of history’s most tumultuous decades.

Learn more about the series and watch films online here.

More from PRX on this here

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Pub Camp – The Virus Spreads – What will you do?

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Nearly 250 people attended Pub Camp in Washington recently to talk about how best to use social media in Pub Media

Here is a great summary by Andy Carvin with film footage by John Proffitt

PubCamp Sampler from John Proffitt on Vimeo.

Many stations will be having their own local Pub Camp soon

PubCamp 101 from John Proffitt on Vimeo.

What will you be doing?

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More than Content – Connection and Impact – What we are doing FTMC

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CPB have put our project on the front page of their site – Here is the link to the letter that Jack Galmiche sent on your behalf to Pat Harrison. In a quiet way, I think that we are making history. Proving to others and to ourselves how we can become a powerful agency for good in our communities.

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Ohio – No quick recovery here – Reinvention Needed I think

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Here is an excellent overview of how tough it is in Ohio right now from Laura Hertzfeld who is curating on Economystory.org at PRX. If ant state is to find the way home to a new kind of economy where regular people can make a legitimate living I think it will be Ohio – Why? Because reinvention is the only option. The old jobs are not coming back.

Ohio has one of the highest unemployment rates in the country – 11.2% in July. Federal Reserve chair Ben Bernanke said this morning that the recession is “technically” over, but it will be a long road to recovery in Ohio and other places in the country where the manufacturing sector has been hit particularly hard.

Help Wanted is a new series from WCPN in Cleveland, reporting on how people are coping with job loss and the economic climate overall. Today’s piece talks about the “ripple effect” — how one person’s layoff can affect dozens of businesses in a community.

John Kraizel was laid off from his engineering job in January.
“Kraizel cut expenses down to the essentials. No dinners out. Fewer haircuts. Definitely no lawn service. And the house cleaners? He pushes his own vacuum now.

All told, Kraizel estimates he’s cut about $1000 from his monthly budget. That’s $1000 out of the local economy.”

Listen to the full story here.

The series has also reported on people looking for jobs when they are over 50 and out of work, and areas where the job market is more promising, like teaching.

Why Ohio? This week I’m (Laura) in Cleveland for the Public Radio Program Directors Conference, and will be sharing some of the ideas I’m hearing from public radio folks from across the country.

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PRX have sites where you can share both Video, Text and Audio Stories on the Economy

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Here is the video sharing site – you can both use and add video here

Here is the main site with text and video.

This is much more than a simple repository – PRX use editors to search the universe and they add the best stories.

This project is a sister project funded by CPB

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Sesame Street – You Can Watch the Special – Families Stand Together – Here

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If you missed the show – you can find it here.

Here is an interview with the Rokers by WNET:

A new PBS primetime special, Families Stand Together: Feeling Secure in Tough Times is coming to THIRTEEN on Saturday, September 12th at 5 p.m. This hour-long special, hosted by Al Roker, Deborah Roberts and Elmo, aims to help families with children, ages two to eight, experiencing difficult economic circumstances by offering strategies and tips that can lead to positive outcomes for their children’s physical and emotional well-being during this tough economic climate. Roker and Roberts, who are married and have children of their own, spoke to Inside THIRTEEN about the program.

Q: Why did you do this special, “Families Stand Together,” with Sesame Street?

Roberts: I have been such a fan of Sesame Street and I have always looked enviously upon any celebrity that gets to interact with the Muppets. I thought the special was infinitely responsible and wise. I thought ‘Wow, this is a combo of great things, a primetime special that’s important at this moment, and a television show like Sesame Street that has such an impact.’ I thought there’s no way to not do this.

Roker: It’s Sesame Street. Who doesn’t love Sesame Street? It’s a chance to hang out with Elmo! It’s a great topic, lots of people are dealing with this, and if Deborah and I can help, we’re happy to do that.

Q. There are a lot of programs that offer strategies for adults who are trying to deal with the recession … what makes this show different?

Roberts: What makes it different is that it offers advice on a couple of levels, to children and parents. Children are dealing with this recession through their families; children are experiencing and worrying about it, and there’s great advice to help children weather the storm. There’s also advice to help parents to be there for their children. It’s not just geared to children, but also to families, to embrace these tough times and what they call for. There’s one family in the program who had to cut back; the father lost his job and his daughter loves to read. She had a great idea with her mother to sell her old books to buy new ones. Families can walk away from this program with a good image and good advice.

Q. What is the best advice you would give a parent who’s lost a job, or struggling with the recession?

Roker: Look for whatever help your community offers. Whether it’s church, financial assistance, therapy … you have to look for something. And you have to include your kids; you can’t do this without making sure the family’s involved. You also have to make sure that what you tell your kids is age-appropriate – don’t show them a budget, for example. But you can help them understand what’s going on. Hiding it is not the way to go.

Roberts: Number one, don’t underestimate what the children might think about it, and number two, to be creative — whether that means financially, or finding way to make the money go further and still have a good time. One military family has come up with movie night at their own home; they have popcorn, and the kids enjoy it. It’s not like they’re missing out on the experience of going to the movies — parents are finding ways to be creative, in a way that comes up positive for their children.

Q. You have children of your own — what did you take away from working on the show?

Roberts: Fortunately, we are not struggling yet in this economy, but there are ways that our children can enjoy what we have, and ways that we can incorporate what these families do on the special into our own family. There are ways that we can do things to be creative with what we have, and it’s fun to work on a project and activity. My husband and I thought that we can do that with our kids. We can have that atmosphere at home, and we’ve employed these ideas from the program in our home. The silver lining is that we get closer as a family, and we pull together.

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2 million on track to lose their homes in 2009 – No chance of saving any without help

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In a report by NPR today we see part of the problem. The scale and the complexity of the number of homes going into foreclosure is overwhelming. Without the help we offer, there might be no chance.

First of all the sheer scale of the challenge.

Tiffany Palmer, who works on the call center floor, says more and more homeowners are in trouble because they’ve had their hours cut at work or because a spouse has lost a job. With the recession, there are now a lot more middle-class people with decent credit who can’t pay their mortgages. Nationally, one-third of the people who are falling behind on their mortgages are in traditional “prime” fixed-rate mortgages.

Bank of America has 8,000 people working on the problem and gets about 2 million calls a month. BUT the process is still opaque and will only work if the applicant has a lot of help.

Economists, including Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, have repeatedly said that preventing foreclosures is good for the housing market and the whole economy. But, in many cases, loan modifications aren’t going through.

The U.S. Treasury Department has started issuing banks foreclosure report cards. The last one found that under the president’s plan, Bank of America had modified only 4 percent of loans that were more than 60 days delinquent. The bank says it has doubled that number in just the past month. The next report card is due Wednesday.

The last report card found that JPMorgan Chase extended loan-modification offers on 20 percent of its delinquent loans. CitiMortgage was at 15 percent and Wells Fargo had modified only 6 percent.

Janine Emlinger, a 48-year-old homeowner in Curtis, Ohio, says she’s been trying for a year to get a loan modification, but Bank of America keeps losing her documents. So she keeps falling further behind on her payments.

Our work may be just beginning.

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Every lost job or house is a family in crisis – Sesame Workshop Goes there Tonight

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How do you tell your kids that you have lost your job or that you are leaving your home? I don’t think that there is an answer – but we can learn from others’ experience.

Sesame Street will confront our greatest fears and sense of shame – of letting down our children tonight – full on. Don’t let Grover fool you. And by the way – have a full box of kellenx at hand.

Watch your local listings as the President’s speech on Health Care may alter the schedule a bit.

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