Saturday, February 25, 2012

Kalamazoo County & KRESA Discuss Future of Head Start

Discussions are under way about the possibility of moving administration of Kalamazoo County Head Start, which has come under increased federal scrutiny, from the county government to the Kalamazoo Regional Educational Service Agency.

If the change is made, it could have significant implications for Head Start's 96 employees and for the 600-some families served by the program.

Kalamazoo County Head Start provides preschool and health services for 626 3- and 4-year-olds living in households with incomes below the poverty line. It is the county's largest and best-funded preschool program.

KRESA, which provides a variety of support services and specialized programs for Kalamazoo County schools and students, has expressed interest in running Head Start...

...The future of Kalamazoo County Head Start will be the topic of a "community conversation" from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday at the Kalamazoo Public Library, 315 S. Rose. The event is open to the public. It is being organized by the Great Start Collaborative, which is based at KRESA.

www.mlive.com/news/kalamazoo/index.ssf/2012/02/administration_of_kalamazoo_co.html

Friday, February 24, 2012

More than 1.4 million U.S. families live on $2 a day per person

The number of fam­i­lies living on $2 or less per per­son per day for at least a month in the USA has more than dou­bled in 15 years to 1.46 million.

That's up from 636,000 house­holds in 1996, says a new study re­leased by research­ers at the Uni­versity of Michigan and Harvard Uni­versity.


Govern­ment ben­efits blunt the impact of such extreme poverty, but not completely, says one of the research­ers, Luke Shaefer, a pro­fessor of social work at Michigan.

When food stamps are included as income, the number of house­holds in extreme poverty, de­fined as living on $2 a day, drops to 800,000, Shaefer says. That's up from 475,000 in 1996.

www.ongo.com/v/3421606/159/D249B350DDC38EC8/more-than-14-million-families-live-on-2-a-day-per-person

Thursday, February 23, 2012

The Neglect of Mental Illness Exacts a Huge Toll, Human and Economic

Mental health care is one of the biggest unmet needs of our time.  Nearly one in two people in the U.S. will suffer from depression, anxiety disorders or another mental health ailment at some point in their life, and about one in 17 Americans currently has a serious mental illness. Young people are especially prone to these troubles. Yet millions of people living with these conditions do not receive the care they require. In recent years the health system and state and federal governments have taken steps to right that wrong. Progress has been slow, and budget cuts and legal wrangling have now put many of these measures at risk. Doctors, insurers and politicians need to pick up the pace.

Mental illness strikes without regard for economic class, but the strain is acute for people with low incomes. About one in six adults living at just above the poverty line or lower has severe mental health problems. Without access to affordable treatment, many have a hard time holding down a job yet do not qualify as formally disabled, thus leaving them locked out from insurance coverage.  A recent large study in California found that only 32 percent of uninsured residents with mental illnesses received any treatment at all and that less than 12 percent got adequate help.

 www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=a-neglect-of-mental-illness

All mental health disorders should get insurance coverage, not just autism, coalition says

Legislation that would require insurers to cover autism treatments unfairly singles out one condition, says a coalition that wants coverage for all mental health issues.

Gov. Rick Snyder, who backs the autism legislation, and lawmakers are being urged today to adopt a state law that would improve insurance coverage for all neuropsychiatric disorders, including mental illness, addiction, autism and developmental disorders.

“Autism certainly ought to be covered. That’s not the argument,” said Michael Reagan, external relations officer of Cherry Street Health Services in Grand Rapids. “There are other neuropsychiatric disorders that can be just as debilitating and cause just as much of a problem as autism.”

“The governor and Senate leaders have announced a course that is discriminatory, stigmatizing, and problematic for the state,” said Mark Reinstein, president of the Mental Health Association in Michigan. He said the coalition supports a bill introduced by state Sen. Rebekah Warren, D-Ann Arbor, which assures equal coverage for all neuropsychiatric disorders when employers choose to include behavioral health coverage in their policies.

Michigan is one of only seven states that does not have parity legislation requiring insurers to provide the same coverage for mental disorders as for physical illness, says Michigan Partners for Parity, a coalition of 60 organizations.

www.mlive.com/politics/index.ssf/2012/02/all_mental_health_disorders_sh.html

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Mentally ill go it alone Most won't seek help, but those who do should try therapy first

A majority of Americans with mental disorders did not receive professional help in 2010, according to a major government study.

Although about 20 percent of American adults (45.9 million) reported any mental illness in 2010, only 39.2 percent of that group said they got treatment, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration report shows.


Mental illness is defined as having had “a diagnosable mental, behavioral or emotional disorder,” such as anxiety disorders or obsessive-compulsive disorders.


“People might be afraid they can’t do anything about it and don’t seek help,” says Peter Delany, director of the substance abuse and mental health administration’s center for statistics. “But if we take the view that mental health disorders are like physical health disorders, like diabetes or heart disease, we’d find treatment is
effective. People are going to get better.”

www.lansingstatejournal.com/article/20120222/LIFE/302220019/Survey-Mentally-ill-go-alone

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Bridges Out of Poverty Author Leading Workshop on Link Between Poverty, Poor Health & Rising Health Care Costs

The public can sign up for workshops on either Friday or Saturday to learn about poverty.

On Friday, the St. Joseph County Bridges Out of Poverty Initiative will offer a workshop on the link between poverty, poor health and rising health care costs and what can be done about it. This will be led by Terie Dreussi-Smith, co-author of the book "Bridges Out of Poverty." She's an expert in community alcohol and drug treatment and prevention.

 It will be from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. (registration starts at 8 a.m.) at the St. Vincent de Paul Society building at 520 Crescent Ave., South Bend, Indiana.   Cost is $50 for materials, refreshments and lunch. For questions, contact Bonnie Bazata at sjcbridges@gmail.com or 574-339-1232.

On Saturday, Dreussi-Smith will lead a workshop as an introduction to Bridges Out of Poverty at the same time, place and price.

Register for either event at www.unitedwayec .org/nrn-workshops.htm

From the South Bend Tribune:

www.southbendtribune.com/news/sbt-poverty-workshops-planned-this-week-20120221,0,7543532.story

Further information about Bridges Out of Poverty can be found at:

www.bridgesoutofpoverty.com/workshops/desc/bridges.html


Monday, February 20, 2012

Running a Successful Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Program

This is my sixth year in the Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Program (VITA) in Berrien County.  The last four of those years have been as the county's volunteer coordinator for the program.  Many of the VITA programs are sponsored by non-profit agencies:  United Ways, Community Action Agencies, even DHS offices.  Accountants and non-profits use different terminology.  I still like to call the folks we serve our "tax clients."   The non-profit organization that sponsors our volunteers often refers to our tax assistance as "clinics."   The latter term still sounds more like something a doctor or nurse does and little like what a financial person or accountant does.

In the last several years, the average federal adjusted gross income of the households we serve has hovered around $12,000 or $13,000 per year. Adjusted gross income does not include certain governmental benefits, such as, Supplemental Security Income (SSI), food assistance (Bridge Card), and for our lower earning clients does not include any Social Security or Social Security Disability.   Thus, the average household income might be slightly higher if it included these benefits.   My guess is that it would not be significantly higher, but only somewhat.   (These benefits are included in Household Income for calculation of Michigan homestead or renter's credit or Home Heating Credit.  Unfortunately, the tax software used by VITA sites does not readily lend itself to maintaining statistics on Michigan Household income.)

The non-profits which sponsor VITA programs are always anxious to serve more clients (i.e., to hold additional clinics.)   I concur with this goal.  Personally, I am always disappointed that we have to turn some clients away, especially early in the tax season when many folks want to get their tax refunds, since we do not have enough time nor volunteers to serve everyone.

On the other hand, I wanted to share some of my thoughts on how much more important it is to maintain a quality VITA site rather than just focusing on the numbers of clients served.  Please let me give you an anecdote or two to sharpen this point.

My first client six years ago was a young single mother with her two year old toddler in tow.  I arrived a little late at the tax site and volunteers had already started tax preparation an half hour or so earlier.  It was about 5:00.  So, I helped the young lady complete her Intake papers which provide basic financial information about her taxes:  demographic information as well as the client's income and expenses, deductions and credits.

We did not get to the young lady's tax return until after 9:00 that evening.  Mind you, she sat there with her little two year old the entire time.  The kid was probably better than most of the adults who were also waiting.  At just before 10:00 that evening, the custodian in the building where we were working came in and said we had 10 minutes to clear the building before the night alarm came on.  So, I was unable to complete the young lady's tax return.  I apologetically asked the young lady to come back in a few days for the next tax clinic and told her that she would not have to wait to complete her return.

I must have thought a lot about the young woman in the next few days.  It kept rolling over in my mind as to why she was not getting as big a refund back as one would expect.  I was determined to arrive early to check out her return to see if there was something wrong or incomplete.  Indeed, I had forgotten to check one box on the return which told the tax software that she qualified for the earned income credit (EITC).   One box unchecked would cost her a couple thousand dollars.  (I don't remember the young lady's income, but I am sure it was under $20,000, probably well under.  So, $2,000 is a huge amount to someone like her.)

Unfortunately, in the meantime, the inexperienced site coordinator had electronically filed her return.  The site coordinator was simply trying to follow IRS rules which say that returns should be e-filed within 48 hours of their completion.  The problem was the return was not complete.  But it was e-filed anyway.

A month or more later, the young woman returned to the VITA site and expressed frustration that her refund was much less than expected.  A couple thousand dollars less.  Being a newbie, I was not aware that the return had been e-filed.  The site coordinator was not aware that it had been e-filed before being completed. Thus, the only thing we could do for the young woman at that time was file an amended return.  The refund of her EITC was delayed by perhaps a couple months because of our error.

There are other examples that I could bring forward, but I hope you get the point as to the importance of training and appropriate site coordination of volunteers.

Here are some other tips that I would like to offer on running a quality VITA site:

1.   Give Adequate Time For Training

From my experience, the IRS's volunteer training takes 15-18 hours of class time with a competent, tax instructor before a volunteer is ready to complete tax returns:  basic tax returns or IRS form 1040A type returns. The 15-18 hours of training is probably a minimum.  Add several more hours of training if you want to ensure volunteers are trained at the intermediate level or higher and have training in the tax software and on state tax returns.

2.  Ensure Training Instructors Understand the Tax Software and the Types of Returns Being Prepared.

In my first year as a volunteer preparer, I had been a member of the Michigan Association of CPAs (MACPA) for something like 25 years.  Over the years, I had attended many MACPA tax workshops.  None of which prepared me to assist the clients we serve at VITA sites.  In CPA workshops, one discusses capital gains, depreciation, and all kinds of complicated tax situations which primarily relate to high earner clients.  VITA clients, by definition, are not high earners. CPAs for the most part focus their tax practices on wealthier clients who can afford their fees and not on lower earning clients who may not be as profitable

Over the year, I have learned more and more each year about the Tax Wise tax software that we use at VITA sites.  Each year, I learn something new.   Trust me.  Checking the EITC box on the tax software is very important to me.  In southern Berrien and Cass Counties, we serve quite a few tax clients who cross the Indiana/Michigan border to work for employers in Indiana.  The W2 information entered into Tax Wise does not properly flow to the Indiana 1040RNR tax return.  It has to be entered manually.  Otherwise, the return is not correct.   There are similar nuances on the Michigan returns.

The IRS Link and Learn training has NO training for Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, or any other state taxes.  It is solely federal tax training.

Fortunately, the metro-Detroit Accounting Aid Society has developed a training module for Michigan taxes.  If you are not using that, please ensure that your volunteer tax trainer has included a module on Michigan Homestead/Renter's credit, the Home Heating Credit and other unique aspects of Michigan returns.

3.  Make Sure Site Coordinators Are Experienced and Reviewing Returns

New VITA volunteers make mistakes.  Lots of them.  Even experienced preparers make mistakes.  Having an experienced site coordinator who is checking tax returns prepared by the volunteers is essential to a quality site.  In my opinion, a site coordinator should have at least two or more years of experience as a VITA volunteer and should be certified to complete at least intermediate level tax returns or higher.   (In Berrien County, about 75% of our tax returns are "basic" returns. Another 20% require someone with intermediate training.  The remaining 5% or so of returns need more advanced or specialty training (for instance, debt cancellation, foreign student or international income training).

In my sixth year of Volunteer Income Tax Assistance volunteering I am still learning.  But the one thing that I learned from my very first client is that we need to do a better job of treating every client with dignity and respect and ensuring that we provide them with a quality tax return that is prepared accurately and filed in a timely manner.

Saturday, we had a learning disabled client who was reduced to tears when her volunteer preparer told her that she and her newly wed husband were not going to get a refund this year.  In reviewing her return, I discovered that the volunteer, who is in his third year of volunteering and is not a newbie, had double entered her family's SSI.

I look forward to seeing this couple again next year.  I hope that she tells her friends that we took the time to listen and to get her return prepared accurately.

P.S.  Please feel free to call the United Way of SW Michigan, after tax season when we are not so busy, if I can offer any additional tips to your non-profit on running a VITA program. 

By the way, I never saw my first tax client again.  So let me say to the young lady, who happened to be Hispanic:   perdóname



Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Indifference and Complex Social Issues, Not Michigan, Are Breeding Poverty

Within the last week, we helped a woman with her annual filing of her income taxes.  As I was explaining her modest Michigan renter's credit and home heating credit, I noticed she was not following along on the return.  She reached into her pocket for a pair of glasses.  One of the temple arms (which holds the glasses on your ear) was missing.   The bridge which rests on the nose was taped together with what looked like masking tape.  As she put on her glasses, I stated something like "Looks like you need some new glasses."  Her response was "I got them at the dollar store" and implied that they are all she could afford at this time.

For privacy reasons, I can't go into the details of how little this woman (and her child) live on. I am not sure it would change anyone's mind about her anyway.   However, let me say that in completing taxes annually, I am at times humbled by how little folks can survive on.  When I complain to myself about not having enough money to buy a new car or to take a vacation in warmer climates, the poverty incomes of some of our neighbors can be less expensive than the cost of my desires.

The other day, I was shopping in a Dollar General.  Admittedly in a hurry, I apologized to a woman who was spending considerable time looking upward at the shelf in the aisle which contains over the counter antacids and stomach relief.  As I pulled down from the top shelf, the private label, Zantac ranitidine knock-off that I normally buy, she said:  "They're all so expensive.  I haven't taken any acid reducer for days." 

In hindsight, my guess is that she was unable to read the labels on the top shelf (which she also had a hard time reaching).   I wonder if she too had a problem with seeing without glasses?  Don't know, but she was grateful for my advice that the $3 bottle of acid reducer was "the best price that I've found in the area."

I am not sure why either of these two women find themselves struggling to pay for glasses or acid reducer.  What's the old saying?  "There but for the grace of God go I." 

On the other hand, I do know that I was more than frustrated earlier in the week when I read this editorial in the Detroit News.  Obviously, not everyone believes that as a society, or at least federal, state, or local government need to care for the less fortunate.  I must say that the political views expressed in this editorial do not jive with mine.  But I guess they show that we have along way to go before we agree on how best to care for the poor and near poor in our state.

The editorial was entitled:   "Michigan is breeding poverty."   It can be read in its entirety at:

http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20120212/OPINION03/202120303/Michigan-breeding-poverty







 



Sunday, February 12, 2012

Battle Creek Habitat for Humanity Works to Spruce Up Blighted Properties

Volunteers from River Walk Community Church in Battle Creek worked Saturday afternoon to give a more appealing look to a house at 657 Van Buren St., under a new effort to spruce up blighted properties in the city.

The initiative was launched last week by Battle Creek Area Habitat for Humanity, which is targeting abandoned houses to be boarded up, cleaned up and secured.


"There are over 600 abandoned houses in Battle Creek, many with broken windows and smashed doors," executive director Joe Konrad said in a new release. "They are accessible and they are dangerous."

 

www.battlecreekenquirer.com/article/20120212/NEWS01/202120312/Habitat-Humanity-brighten-blighted-areas

Economic Class: The Great Divide in American Education

Economic class is increasingly becoming the great dividing line of American education.

The New York Times has published a roundup of recent research showing the growing academic achievement gap between rich and poor students. It prominently features a paper by Stanford sociologist Sean F. Reardon, which found that, since the 1960s, the difference in test scores between affluent and underprivileged students has grown 40%, and is now double gap between black and white students.

 www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2012/02/occupy-kindergarten-the-rich-poor-divide-starts-with-education/252914/



Thursday, February 9, 2012

For battered immigrant women, fear of deportation becomes abusers’ weapon, but 2 laws can overcome that

Teresa Gomez, a Salvadoran woman in her 20s, and Margaret Ashong, a grandmother from Ghana, endured regular beatings, threats and insults by the fathers of their children. Like many battered immigrant women in the Washington D.C. area, they mostly suffered in silence, fearful that if they went to the police they could lose their right to remain in the United States and their source of economic support.

It was not until both women ended up in emergency rooms — Teresa with her face slashed and bloodied from a knife attack, Margaret bruised and traumatized from another beating — that they discovered a network of support that eventually helped them obtain legal immigration status as well as psychological and financial help.

“He treated me like a slave, and there was no one I could tell,” said Ashong, 62, who lives in Arlington County, Virginia.  “He told the police I was not his wife and that they should send me back to my country. But [the police] said to me, ‘Don’t weep, madam, this is not an immigration matter. It is a case of domestic violence. We will get help for you.’ ”

www.washingtonpost.com/local/for-battered-immigrant-women-fear-of-deportation-becomes-abusers-weapon/2012/01/30/gIQAZCx3zQ_story.html

Tax Refunds: A Vital Chunk of Working Poor's Annual Budget

For Ola Jones, 53, her federal income tax refund typically amounts to more than an extra paycheck each year.
It's a vital part of her annual budget and a way to cover extra bills and necessities.
"Right now, I need a washing machine and tires for my car," said Jones, who stood in line one snowy Saturday morning in late January to obtain free tax-preparation help at Focus: HOPE in Detroit.


Her daughter, Tujuana Jones, 19, also received free tax-preparation help, offered that day by volunteers from the Michigan Association of Certified Public Accountants. The student, who attends Wayne County Community College District and works at Rainbow Clothing in Detroit, planned to go shopping with her $500 tax refund.

For lower-income families, the tax season kickoff is a time to catch up with bills and rebuild some savings. The federal earned income tax credit and other Michigan-related tax credits offer a powerful punch for limited budgets.

www.freep.com/article/20120209/COL07/202090429/Susan-Tompor-Tax-refund-is-vital-chunk-of-annual-budget-for-many-people

Monday, February 6, 2012

Farm Worker Justice: A Report on NPR's Religion & Ethics Newsweekly

 For decades, religious organizations such as the National Council of Churches, the Catholic bishops, and others have been working with labor organizers to try to improve conditions for farm workers, and there’s been some success, most recently in the tomato fields of south Florida, where immigrants harvest nearly all the winter tomatoes this country grows. Our report is from Saul Gonzales in Immokalee, Florida.




www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/episodes/february-3-2012/farmworker-justice/10207/

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Study finds few have enough savings to get through emergencies

More than a quarter of Americans have little or no savings to help them survive an emergency that leads to a three-month loss of income, according to a new report on the health of Americans' finances.

And that's only if they can sell their homes or cars to get fast cash.

The number jumps to 44 percent when researchers exclude assets like homes, businesses and cars that could be sold to raise cash, according to the Washington-based nonprofit Corporation for Enterprise Development, which got an assist from Ohio Policy Matters.

In other words, lots of us are asset poor, even if our incomes may look OK on paper.

www.cleveland.com/consumeraffairs/index.ssf/2012/01/study_finds_few_have_enough_sa.html

Niles special needs dance class a hit

Kelsey Wolff put her hands in the air and stretched them way up high toward the ceiling, smiling wide as she did it. Beside her, another dancer laughed and raised her hands, too.

It was just another night in the Niles-Buchanan YMCA’s special needs dance class.

YMCA dance director Maycie Boyle said the class is a great way for special needs kids to get out and have fun.

“It is a great social network for them because they are meeting people just like themselves and finding friends outside of class,” Boyle said. “That is so important because, at home, they might not have someone they can relate to.”

Boyle helped start the class new this year at the request of a parent with a special needs child. She had no experience with special needs kids and didn’t know what to expect.

She found out really quick.

“I have to say this is my favorite class. I just love it,” Boyle said. “They are so much fun and so carefree. When my class is having fun, I am having fun.”

The class, which is for special needs kids 18 and older, takes place at 6:30 p.m. every Tuesday.

www.nilesstar.com/2012/01/31/special-needs-dance-class-a-hit/