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By Dale Wright $26.91
By Yalman Onaran $23.40
$24
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 Peter E. Lee (catching up) (CC-BY)
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By Bill Quigley, AlterNet —
Millions of people in the U.S. work and are still poor. Here are eight points that show why the U.S. needs to dedicate itself to making work pay.
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 Packmatt (CC-BY)
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The Census Bureau published a new measure of poverty this month to more carefully count those Americans who are barely getting by. The new income category—“near poor”—is up for grabs to those in the OWS movement, who could use it to better tell their alternative story of broad American hardship. (more)
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 Flickr / Misserion (CC-BY)
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One out of every seven Americans lived through 2009 in poverty, according to the Census Bureau. Working Americans haven’t been this poor in 50 years. The poverty line—$21,954 or less annual income for a family of four—is quite low and the number of Americans struggling to get by is much higher still.
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