New Olympic Sport: Hoop Jumping

People in poverty better ramp up

Latest

New hurdles keep people in poverty from getting benefits
Melissa and I visited the county school district to give them a copy of our Three Melissas book. (Photo Diane Nilan).

Editor’s Note: See original posting of this story here:

Now that the athletes have returned home following the decadent Italian version of Winter Olympics, we can focus on the “event” getting little attention, hoop jumping. While FBI Director Kash Patel chugged his last locker room beer, and the tyrant-wannabe tarnished the US Men’s hockey team, notices were hitting mailboxes of families lined up for their events — poverty survival.

Hurdles and hoop jumping

A dedicated and determined mother I’ve known for more than 20 years, Melissa N, recently messaged me about her latest events — red tape hurdles to keep her family’s SNAP benefits.

As promised with passage of HR1, the bill we call The Big, Bad, Ugly Bill, our government is cracking down on those considered “unqualified” to use tax dollars to help feed their families. Qualifying for the SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) “event” used to be pretty rigorous to avoid letting food slip into households of those deemed unworthy. How to make it harder has provided a challenge for White House minions wanting to gain approval of the felon-in-chief. They get a prize!

I’ll let Melissa, the sole caregiver for her son who is autistic and the main caregiver for her grandkids, describe the process (with her permission to share):

“Systemic barriers all created to force those most vulnerable and in need further into poverty and labeled as “uncooperative” thereby ensuring temporary sanctions or permanent disqualification if they cant “figure it out.’ We have to have access to a computer, internet, and transportation in order to meet even the first set of requirements with Workforce. I’ll be hoop jumping if I choose to remain accountable to every whim and new barrier of our current regime of hypocrites and haters.” — Melissa N. 2/23/26

Nose counting

Almost every morning I peruse news articles about family homelessness. This story caught my eye. Since it’s about Cumberland County in my now-home state of North Carolina, I gave it a look. Glad I did!

The article highlighted chronic absenteeism, which hovers around 33%. For me, that’s a red flag about the issue I work on — family and student homelessness.

Cumberland County, the fifth largest county in NC, is home to Fayetteville, a city of 300,000 or so, with a racial makeup of Black 42%, white 38%, Hispanic/Latino 13%, and assorted races comprising the balance.

I don’t know much about this city, nor am I a data geek, but I did look into some revealing data that likely speaks to the chronic attendance issue. As someone who’s worked closely with the issue of students experiencing homelessness, I turn to a very helpful website that lets me drill down all the way to school districts and their student homelessness data.

Stick with me…

For Cumberland County, I picked up a dead giveaway. They identified 846 students as homeless for the ’22–23 school year. Their poverty rate for kids 5 -17, just shy of 22%. With a reported 51,512 public school students, about 11,332 students fall into the poverty rate (an underestimated rate by some standards). Those of us familiar with student homelessness issues will estimate 10% of students in poverty could be homeless. Something in the 1,100 range. If you want to check homeless student stats for your district, state, or congressional district, here’s the website.

Press enter or click to view image in full size

cumberland county nc homeless student stats
https://public.tableau.com/app/profile/schoolhouseconnection/viz/ChildandYouthHomelessnessDataProfiles/National

Not to pick on Cumberland County

This school district just happened to be the subject of the article about chronic absenteeism. Every time I look at the website with these stats, I typically see similar, or worse, gaps.

For me, it’s not about numbers. It’s about the kids. And families. When kids aren’t identified as homeless, they miss out on invaluable support from the school. They go through anguish because of their circumstances. They’re hungry, tired, and feeling alone. And their childhood homelessness can often lead to adult homelessness.

School districts are required to deal with student homelessness by assigning a homeless liaison, the point person responsible to:

  • train district staff,
  • ensure students experiencing homelessness are promptly enrolled and assisted to succeed in school, and
  • get word out in the community about the “McKinney-Vento” program designed to remove educational barriers for homeless students.

Too often, when liaisons get appointed, the duty gets piled onto too many others, they don’t get trained, nor do they have adequate resources to do their job. Help is on the way!

A new power tool is available!

Proper training is vital! Which is why I wrote the new e-book, Making Bad a Little Better: The least we can do to ease family homelessness. The theory is liaisons get trained. Well, maybe eventually, but from what I hear, they often get thrown into the fire and have to do the best they can without knowing anything much (although NC has a strong state homeless ed program).

My new book! Design by Diane Nilan

book cover for making bad a little better

Having spent lots of time with good liaisons, and having heard from those who knew they didn’t know what they were doing, I created this e-book as a quick study tool for liaisons and anyone else needing or wanting to know about family homelessness and students’ rights to education.

Some Help is Needed!

My one-woman nonprofit, HEAR US Inc., will market the book, but I’ll admit we can use some help! I’m in the final throes of getting the book online, so I’d suggest you keep an eye on our website, www.hearus.us, for the e-book release info. It’s affordable — $5.99 — so it can get into as many hands as possible. My sister read it and said it needs to be a print book, too. I’ll work on that next.

I created this e-book as a quick study tool for liaisons and anyone else needing or wanting to know about family homelessness and students’ rights to education.

It’s daunting to see the cruelty incorporated in the Big, Bad, Ugly bill. Not every parent will be capable of jumping through the hoops and enduring the grueling process of protecting their families’ essential assistance. No referees are ensuring a fair “contest.” And alleged cheaters will be exiled, unlike those in power who seem to relish every opportunity to exploit and deceive.

For more wisdom and painful observations, The Three Melissas — The Practical Survival Guide to Family Homelessness, is a guaranteed eye-opener. The three Melissas get the proceeds from sales of their book.

For more stories on poverty, public benefits, student homelessness, education equity, and the policies that shape families’ daily survival, follow Fourth Wave. Have you got a story or poem that focuses on women or other targeted groups? Submit to the Wave!

+ Articles by this author
Diane Nilan is President ofhearus.us, an organizationthat gives voice and visibility to homeless families and children. Diane has devoted her life to advocating for and presenting the real face of homelessness in America through 20 years on US backroads. She has decades of experience running shelters; advocating for improved state and federal policies; filming and producing award-winning documentaries. Her latest works,Dismazed and Driven: My Look at Family Homelessness in AmericaandThe Three Melissas.

The People’s Tribune opens its pages to voices of the movement for change. Our articles are written by individuals or organizations, along with our own reporting. Bylined articles reflect the views of the authors. Articles entitled “From the Editors” reflect the views of the editorial board. Please credit the source when sharing: peoplestribune.orgPlease donate to help us keep bringing you voices of the movement for change. Click here. We’re all volunteer, no paid staff. The People’s Tribune is a 501C4 organization.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Featured

‘They Tricked Me’: Father Chained After Going to ICE to Reunite With His Kids

The Trump administration is using migrant children held in federal custody to lure in their parents so ICE can arrest them, whether or not they have a criminal record.

‘No Kings Day.’ Join Local Protests Saturday, March 28!

Photo story of protests for human rights, democracy and no war have swept America in the past months. The 'No Kings' protest scheduled for March 28 f expects to see 15 million people in the streets, once again expressing people's voices and demands in hand-made signs.

The Women Leading the Farmworker Movement Won’t Let it be Defined by Cesar Chavez

This article, originally from writers at The 19th, explores the views of several women who are organizers in the farmworker rights movement in the wake of the recent revelations about Cesar Chavez.

When Enforcers Look Like Us: La Malinche, the Border, and America’s Colonial Trap

A painful and recurring question surfaces in immigrant communities: why are so many of the people working for ICE and Border Patrol and enforcing deportation, detention, and family separation Latino themselves?

Afghanistan War Veteran Dies in ICE Custody One Day After Arrest

Mohommad Nazeer Paktyawal served alongside US troops in Afghanistan. He died at age 41 after ICE arrested him in front of his children and he had been in ICE custody only one day.

More from the People's Tribune