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Serious Challenges Facing Carroll County

by: susanthe

Fri Nov 12, 2010 at 21:44:31 PM EST


( - promoted by Dean Barker)

this op-ed was published in the November 12, 2010 edition of the Conway Daily Sun newspaper.

The state of the economy and the recent mid-term elections got me thinking about the Reagan years, and what life was like for the average Josephine in Carroll County around 1989. There were few jobs available. Few employers provided health insurance. Housing costs were high, though toward the end of the Reagan years they decreased, and became more realistic. Looking at the help wanted ads provoked a revelation - the wage scale in this area hasn't changed since then.

 

susanthe :: Serious Challenges Facing Carroll County
According to Census data, 7% of the families, and 9% of the individuals in Carroll County fall below the federal poverty guidelines.  There are 450 families in this county earning less than $10,000 a year. Thirty-five percent of them are households led by female single parents.

As for housing, some 349 housing units lack complete plumbing. There are at least 311 housing units that lack kitchen facilities. Almost half (49.4) of the available housing in Carroll County is vacant. The average cost of a rental is between $750 and $1,000. According to a 2008 study by Universal Living Wage, in order to afford a 1 bedroom apartment in Carroll County, a worker needed to be earning $13.13 an hour. To afford a studio, they needed to be earning$12.44. Nearly half (44.7%) of the households in this county earn less than $50,000 a year. According to the 2008 Livable Wage Study done by the Carsey Institute, Carroll County has the fewest livable wage jobs in the state. We have the lowest average wages in the state. My non-scientific observation that the wage scale here hasn't changed in over 20 years seems to be correct.

A story run the Conway Daily Sun in August informed us that Carroll County has the highest number of homeless families in the state. We have no homeless shelters at all. The number of homeless in the county has doubled since 2005.  According to Families USA: In 2008, 24% of NH residents lacked health insurance. Of that group, 85% were members of working families. Carroll County has the highest number of uninsured residents in the state, at 17%.

The statewide unemployment rate is 5.5%. In Carroll County, the official number is 4.7%.  These numbers are not correct, any more than the national unemployment number of 9.7 percent is correct. The only people who are counted are folks who have filed unemployment claims. The people who were never eligible, who have run out of benefits, and the people who are underemployed are not counted. Doubling these numbers is likely to provide an accurate measure. That would mean that the real state and county numbers would be more like 10%, and nationally the number would be more like 20%. That's a lot more realistic than the artificially low numbers that are intended to lower the economic fear factor. During the last quarter of 2009, an estimated 12.5% of residents of the county were underemployed, discouraged workers. People who can only find part time jobs, who need to be working full time.

According to a study done by the Annie E. Casey foundation, NH children rank the healthiest in the nation, once again. The study also found that childhood poverty is on the rise.  Some 9% of NH children are living in poverty.  The number of families receiving food stamps in NH increased 61% during the last two years.

To summarize, in Carroll County, we have the lowest average wages in the state, the fewest number of livable wage jobs, the highest number of uninsured residents, and the highest number of homeless families. This should be of great concern to us all, especially our newly elected legislators, swept in on an especially toxic red tide.

This newly elected GOP majority ran on the same platform they've had since the Stone Age: Cut Spending, No New Taxes. They claim to be terribly concerned about families and jobs. That may even be mostly true up here, but in the southern part of the state a number of gibbering lunatics were elected, and their first priority is actually destroying the families created by the NH marriage equality law.  We can count on the fact that the Carroll County delegation will fall right into lockstep with them.  Al Baldasaro accused the state of selling babies to gay couples for $10,000, at a hearing I attended last year. Despite being obviously deranged, Baldasaro was overwhelmingly re-elected, and this bit of news went unreported by the far right biased media in our state.

They're all wound up about gay folks getting married, and women having abortions, neither of which have any negative impact on our state's economy. In fact, gay folks getting married have had a positive impact on a lot of small businesses: inns, hotels, florists, bakers, caterers, etc. Have gays and lesbians getting married caused you to lose your job? Your housing? Have gays and lesbians getting married caused your health insurance costs to increase dramatically? Have gays and lesbians getting married caused the price of gas, or home heating oil to go up? Have gays and lesbians marrying caused food prices to rise?  I didn't think so. Yet that's the priority of the Teabaglican lunatics who now comprise the majority of the Republican Party. The old-school moderate, reasonable, Republicans have been pushed out by the rabid right.

Newly minted State Senate Majority Leader Jeb Bradley wants to change NH's death penalty statute to make more cases eligible for the death penalty, which is estimated to add upwards of $5 million in costs to our annual state budget. This is hardly fiscally, or morally responsible. It would seem that while our new majority (both statewide and nationwide) love to talk about cutting spending and deficits, it's just that. It's all talk. These budget peacocks love to preen as they mouth slogans. Whether there's anything behind the preening remains to be seen. Carroll County families are in increasingly dire straits thanks to this economy. Let's hope our local legislators stay focused on that, as opposed to getting caught up in the goals of the faux-liberty nanny state politics of the far Teabaglican right.

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Heating assistance has been cut (4.00 / 1)
AP is reporting that:
the state is expecting $19.7 million for heating assistance this winter, down from $40.8 million last year.

Morin says there are an estimated 188,000 New Hampshire families that qualify for heating assistance, but only the first 25,000 to apply are guaranteed help.

I won't link to it, but the comments on the UL story about the cuts to LIHEAP are cynically misanthropic.

It's a round, round world - Stan Freberg



ah, who cares (0.00 / 0)
what happens in the north country? If we hang in there, winter will eventually be over.  

sanctimonious purist/professional lefty

[ Parent ]
Is this North Country specific? (0.00 / 0)
There is plenty of need for LIHEAP in the non-tropical counties below.

[ Parent ]
of course not (4.00 / 1)
but it does get considerably colder up here, and winter lasts longer.

Also, I wanted to snark on John Stephen.  

sanctimonious purist/professional lefty


[ Parent ]
9 months of winter, 3 months bad sledding. Put a sweater on. n/t (0.00 / 0)


"Physical concepts are free creations of the human mind, and are not, however it may seem, uniquely determined by the external world." A. Einstein

[ Parent ]
Human being should really be ashamed that some of them (0.00 / 0)
consider predating their own kind a virtue.  Predating in the interest of dominion doesn't even merit the justification of doing it to survive.  Depriving other human beings of the necessities of life is pure malice.
At a minimum, such evil needs to be called out and not be allowed to hide behind the shield of the money supply.

EVIL (0.00 / 0)
is exactly the right word and power is the goal.  Where are the religious?  Isn't evil their particular sphere of expertise?  Or am I simply not understanding that evil is in the eye of the beholder?  My gay friends are evil, I guess, while the rich man may now go through the eye of the needle with enough grease.
I appear to be suffering from a fit of anger.  I think that I tried to avoid the grieving process over this election, but as such things do, it caught up with me, and a good friend made the "mistake" of asking me, the ultimate town volunteer, if, since I was not going to be busy in Concord next year, maybe I would run for the planning board?  
To my surprise, I found myself answering his e-mail with the phrase:  I don't feel much like doing anything for the people of this town right now.  That's when I realized that, despite my repression of the feelings, I had reached the anger stage of grieving.  And I realized that I had been in denial, because I just kept forgetting that Carol lost.  That's painful enough in itself, because then you have to realize it over and over!

[ Parent ]
I am actively involved in homeless (4.00 / 1)
issues in Strafford County.  Our most active supporters are the local churches.  They are amazing in generosity, spirit, and initiative.

I am stunned to discover that there are no homeless shelters in Carroll County.  My wife tells me that most of the towns in Carroll send the homeless to us, almost never informing the families that each town is required by state statute to provide shelter.

Homeless fact of the day that might only interest me (emphasis mine):  "Studies comparing urban and rural homeless populations have shown that homeless people in rural areas are more likely to be white, female, married, currently working, homeless for the first time, and homeless for a shorter period of time."  (NCH Fact Sheet #11, National Coalition for the Homeless, www.nationalhomeless.org)



"Physical concepts are free creations of the human mind, and are not, however it may seem, uniquely determined by the external world." A. Einstein


[ Parent ]
We have three people living in our house who would be homeless, (4.00 / 1)
if they weren't living in our house.
Unfortunately, there are so many opportunities for doubling up that the home building industry which had been the "engine" of the economy is unlikely to revive for a long time.  The last figure I heard is that there are now 50 million people living in multi-generational households.  This I consider a good thing.  What I call the atomization of American society was a pernicious practice.

[ Parent ]
a former county commissioner (0.00 / 0)
in Carroll County once told me, smugly, that she didn't believe in shelters; "they're a band aid," she said. I pointed out that a band aid was better than a gaping wound.

She never liked me.

Unfortunately, the fastest growing segment of the homeless population are middle aged women.

I'm in touch with a homeless man in Las Vegas, who lives in a residence hotel full of middle aged people who can't find jobs.  

sanctimonious purist/professional lefty


[ Parent ]
Long periods of unemployment (0.00 / 0)
combined with decades-long declines in real wages are devastating to our communities.  It's simply not sustainable.  If you want to see the future, read this article about Detroit (not directly related to homeless, but the lessons are similar.)  You almost can't believe that this can happen in our country, but it is.

And those of you with good jobs and educations, don't think that you're insulated.  You're not.  It's happening to people who have good educations and used to have good jobs.  It might happen to me.

Once-unemployed professionals finding new jobs but missing that old pay

"Physical concepts are free creations of the human mind, and are not, however it may seem, uniquely determined by the external world." A. Einstein


[ Parent ]
I don't know what's better here: Sue's Column or Lucy's response (4.00 / 1)

When the rethugs aren't busy passing Jeb's hang em all bill, they'll be working on changing the NH Constitution.

Please never stop writing.


Carroll County demographics (0.00 / 0)
One of the problems in Carroll County is not just the scarcity of living wage work for younger workers and families (according to NHOEP, MacDonald's is one of the top ten employers in Carrol Co.) but the growing level of income inequality created by an influx of affluent retirees who tend to be partial-year residents. Carroll Co. also has the highest median age in the state - more than half of all residents are older than 47 - and because of successful social safety-net programs to reduce poverty in the aging population, poverty is concentrated among children, unmarried women under 65, and unemployed men under 65. And because Carroll Co. is a geographically large county with low population density, it's more difficult to centralize social service delivery (which is more cost effective for the state) without people in need falling through the cracks.

What's interesting to me is that Carroll County has the highest rate of voting participation in the state. That's consistent with the high median age of the population. But I've also wondered if there are a higher portion of voters in Carroll who are all set financially who vote for cutting public spending that would benefit their middle- and lower-income neighbors, because they are not long-time or full-year residents and they care more about keeping taxes low than creating a level playing field for working families.

Which does not at all diminish the argument that reductions in state spending - not just for social services but also spending that would create new jobs and efforts to abolish labor protections and cut the state minimum wage - is going to create a lot of human hardship in the North Country. It's not so much a North NH/Southern NH issue as it is a rural/non-rural issue; the Carsey Institute at UNH has a bunch of great research on the hardships of rural families in NH, and what to do about it. Which is not the direction our newly-elected slash & burn legislature is likely to favor.



How Unemployment Rate is Determined (0.00 / 0)
The rate is determined from a monthly household survey based on the two questions: Are you employed? and if that answer is No, would you like to be employed?

The total of both answers is considered to be the labor force. The unemployment rate is the number of those that would like to be employed (but are not) divided by the labor force total.

This is a measurement, but clearly it doesn't begin to tell the full story.



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