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Published byEgbert Horn Modified over 8 years ago
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The Challenge Why Kalamazoo Needs a Well-Coordinated Strategy to Promote Shared Prosperity Prepared by Tim Ready Lewis Walker Institute Western Michigan University August 27, 2015
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Poverty in Kalamazoo: 2000 and 2013 * Child poverty data depicted by the red columns are for the three-year period of 2011-13
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Child Poverty in Kalamazoo:* Percentile Ranking among All US Cities with at Least 65,000 People % PoorNational Percentile Rank for Poverty All Children: 46%96 th Percentile White Children 33%95 th Percentile Black Children 64% 93 rd Percentile Hispanic Children 43% 79 th Percentile * American Community Survey, 2009-2011. ** Although poverty rates appear to be decreasing slightly in some parts of the community, Kalamazoo continues to have a higher child poverty rate than nine out of ten cities in the U.S.
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Percent of Kalamazoo Adults, 25 to 64, who Are Employed, by Educational Attainment, 2013
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Work Status of Kalamazoo Residents, Age 16 and Older
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Percent of Kalamazoo Adults in Poverty by Employment Status, 2011
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Why Are So Many Men in Kalamazoo Not Working?
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High Poverty Neighborhoods Concentrated Poverty (not just individual and family poverty): – Is hazardous to health – Undermines education outcomes – Increases the risk of involvement in criminal justice system 12 of 25 Kalamazoo Census Tracts Have Concentrated Poverty (At Least 30 Percent of Residents in Poverty)
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Top to Bottom Ranking of Kalamazoo County Public Schools by Percentage of Economically Disadvantaged Students, 2013 In Percent Percentile Ranking among Michigan Schools The percentage of economically disadvantaged students in a school accounts for 76 percent of the variation among Kalamazoo County public schools in the Michigan Department of Education’s 2013 Top-to- Bottom Ranking of all of the state’s public schools R =.872 R 2 =.760
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Child Poverty as Related to the American Ideal of Equal Opportunity for All Source: Greg Duncan, Stanford University Pathways, winter, 2011
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More Broadly Shared Prosperity Our Challenge and Our Opportunity
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