Out of Sight, Out of Mind
In our minds, the suburbs are the most unlikely places to find real suffering. To be sure, the entertainment industry has populated those leafy landscapes, tucked away between rural poverty and urban blight, with the anxieties of desperate housewives, unfaithful husbands, lonely children and disappointed dreams – but not the anguish and fears of the desperately poor.
But a new report by the Brookings Institution reveals that “the largest and fastest-growing population of poor people in the U.S. is in the suburbs.” Overall, the report showed that from 2000 to 2008, the number of poor people in the U.S. grew by 5.2 million, reaching nearly 40 million, 15.4 percent increase. That still does not include figures from 2009, when joblessness and foreclosures skyrocketed.
But the key finding: “Suburbs gained more than 2.5 million poor individuals, accounting for almost half of the total increase in the nation’s poor population since 2000.” (See Bob Herbert in The New York Times, “<a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/23/opinion/23herbert.html?ref=opinion">They Still Don’t Get It.</a>”)




