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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tuesday, Sept. 3, 2002
Jeannette Warnert
UC Ag and Natural Resources
(559) 241-7514
jwarnert@uckac.edu
UC
study reveals some low-income families aren't getting services intended
to help them
Rural
low-income families are not taking full advantage of support and
assistance programs that are known to improve families’ financial
situations and increase children’s well being, according to
UC Cooperative Extension (UCCE) consumer education researchers taking
part in a 15-state study that looks at the impact of welfare reform
in rural America.
In
California, 40 mostly Latino low-income families in Madera and Kern
counties are being tracked over the course of three years.
"We
focused on Latino families in California to give them a voice,"
said Nancy Lees, a professional researcher based at UC Riverside
who is the project manager. "Latinos are underrepresented in
most nationwide studies."
The
first year, researchers found that 75 percent of the California
families eligible for food stamps were not enrolled in the program.
Just 19 percent of the eligible Latino families used food stamps.
More than 36 percent of the Latino children had no health insurance
coverage.
"Some
families have a lot of pride and don’t want to receive public
assistance," said Martha López, nutrition, family and
consumer sciences advisor for UCCE in Ventura County. "Sometimes,
the families just don’t know they qualify for government-funded
health care programs, reduced utility and telephone rates, the federal
tax Earned Income Credit or food stamps."
Suspicion
of the system, fear of deportation for undocumented immigrants and
reports of unpleasant experiences in social service agencies may
also contribute to the lower enrollment of Latino families in these
programs.
Lees
and López are working on the project with Human Resources
Program Leader Karen Varcoe, the principal investigator. The California
study is funded by the UC Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources.
USDA and the National Research Initiative Competitive Grants Program
are funding the 15-state data analysis.
As
part of the study, participants are surveyed annually about income,
work status, money management, health care, nutrition, food security
and transportation. The results are studied collectively. The families’
individual situations are confidential.
"I’ve
been very surprised and grateful the participants are so willing
to share the personal dimensions of their lives," said Lees,
who is conducting about a third of the interviews.
López,
who conducts the remainder of the interviews, said that the study
is beginning to reveal surprising effects of poverty.
"Some
people don’t have enough money to get groceries at the end
of the month, yet we’re seeing an increase in overweight and
obesity in children and adults," López said. "We’re
not sure about the relationship, but we’re starting to believe
if people don’t always have access to food, when it is available,
they eat too much."
In
some cases, the researchers have found ironies in a family’s
money management strategy.
"Financial
decisions are often made on emotions and without counsel,"
López said. "A family might need transportation and
buy a brand new car. They will have huge car payments, but live
three families to an apartment."
Each
year, the researchers are providing helpful information to participating
families, such as toll-free numbers for government programs, budgeting
manuals, nutrition guides, etc. In Madera County, a nutrition and
parenting skills seminar was offered to research participants.
Just
being part of the study is having a positive impact on the lives
of some participants. López tells of one woman who, the first
year of the study, said she wanted to go to school, but didn’t
have a driver’s license. By the second year, she had a license,
job training and was working as a certified nurse assistant. What
made the difference, she related to López, was being asked
at the end of the survey what she would like to see happen in the
next three years.
"I
was so impressed with her," López said. "She told
me, ‘If it wasn’t for you asking me what my dreams were,
I probably wouldn't have given it much thought.’”"
Lees
is analyzing the project’s second-year data and she and López
are conducting the final round of interviews. At the completion
of the project, the California statistics will be combined with
information from the other states to give decision-makers an idea
how policies and programs affect the lives of low-income rural Americans.
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