Poverty spikes in the land of the tech billionaires - WaPo [View all]
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For the first time in more than a decade, the Bay Areas poverty rate is rising significantly, jumping by more than 4 percent in less than a year, according to an analysis released Wednesday by Tipping Point Community, a San Francisco-based anti-poverty nonprofit organization founded 20 years ago by the man who is now the citys mayor.
More than a million Bay Area residents live in poverty an income of about $28,000 or less per year for one adult and about 800,000 others are near the line, according to the study. It relies on data through 2023, the most recent numbers available. The spike of poverty across the region, which includes six counties that ring San Francisco Bay, outpaced the statewide increase and widened existing racial and educational disparities.
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Even as San Francisco appears to undergo a resurgence with crime rates falling, optimism rising and money from the booming artificial intelligence industry pouring in the analysis suggests the reality is far more complicated. By one count, the Bay Area is home to more billionaires than any other metro area, but rising prices are driving more people into poverty, making the region one of the most visibly unequal in the country.
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Even tech workers are getting crunched. Layoffs at some of the regions largest companies have left thousands of people newly unemployed, as firms restructure and embrace AI. The market for new openings is fierce... Researchers say the trends outlined in the Tipping Point Community report should compel governments and philanthropies to shore up the social safety net before the crisis worsens. San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie, who took office in January, said his administration has sought to address some of the issues outlined in the analysis.
When the White House refused to cover Americans food assistance during the government shutdown, Lurie announced the city would send its residents preloaded cards to fill the gap. And he is pushing zoning changes that would allow thousands of new homes to be built.
https://wapo.st/4ojg9Pj
free, I hope