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Detroit's Food Banks Strain to Serve Middle Class

Wall Street Journal Original article ›

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Mnay people who have engineering degrees and jobs which pay 60,000 to $75,000 in the auto companies are now visiting food banks as they exhaust their unemployment benefits. They live in suburbs of Detroit, in Rochester Hills, in Dearborn Heights, in Taylor and so on. THe unemployment rate has reached 14.1% and there are more layoffs ahead. THis is also affecting the health care business as companies cut benefits. By the end of of 2009 100,000 residents will have lost their benefits, according to the state's unemployment insurance agency. THe US Department of Agriculture provides 20% of the food aid in the state to food banks and is watching the situation closely. In May, the caseload of the Michigan Food Assistance Program, which adminsters the USDA's food stamp aid for the state rose to 719,000 households, up 3.1% in April and nearly triple the figure in 2000. THe USDA has doubled its shipments to Gleaners, a food bank, which says it is stretched, as it does not serve the once affluent suburbs.

How the economic crisis is affecting the U.S. as joblessness increases and people exhaust unemployment benefits.

07/10/2009

The situation in states like Michigan with the auto industry hit hard, and in other parts of the country.

Grouped Articles

Recipients of Jobless Benefits Down Sharply

Wall Street Journal 12/26/2014

Detroit's Food Banks Strain to Serve Middle Class

Wall Street Journal 07/10/2009

Part-Time Workers Mask Unemployment Woes

New York Times 07/15/2009

Jobs Report Highlights Shaky U.S. Recovery

New York Times 10/03/2009

It Will Be Years Before Lost Jobs Return -- and Many Never Will

Wall Street Journal 10/05/2009

The Lost Generation

BusinessWeek 10/09/2009


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