Difference between revisions of "Anarchy 84/Notes on poverty 2: Child poverty, with a look at a Lancashire town"
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{{tab}}Although there is no defini­tive slum area in Black­mills and one cannot walk through the streets seeing overt poverty, there ''is'' poverty here{{dash|hidden behind the skirts of the {{w|Welfare State|Welfare_state_in_the_United_Kingdom}}}}as indeed there is through­out the country. | {{tab}}Although there is no defini­tive slum area in Black­mills and one cannot walk through the streets seeing overt poverty, there ''is'' poverty here{{dash|hidden behind the skirts of the {{w|Welfare State|Welfare_state_in_the_United_Kingdom}}}}as indeed there is through­out the country. | ||
− | {{tab}}The work of Professors {{w|Townsend|Peter_Townsend_(sociologist)}}, {{w|Abel Smith|Brian_Abel-Smith}} and {{w|Titmuss<!-- 'Titmus' in original -->|Richard_Titmuss}} have shown us that poverty exists on a vast scale in this country and hits hardest those who are most help­less{{dash}}the children. Peter Townsend points out (letter, ''{{w|Guardian|The_Guardian}}'', {{popup|8.7.67|8 July 1967}}) that the {{w|Minis­try of Social Secu­rity|Department_of_Health_and_Social_Security}} (MSS) drew a very severe poverty line when it arrived at its, already high, poverty figure. He accuses the Minis­try of not asking the right ques­tions and comments {{qq|… instead of 280,000 fami­lies (with 910,000 chil­dren) having been found in the summer of 1966 to have resour­ces less than re­quire­ments, there would pro­bably have been, judging from the report (MSS) and other sources, at least 450,000 (with over 1,400,000 chil­dren).}}<!-- end quotation mark omitted in original --> These reve­la­tions about the level of poverty become more alar­ming when one realises that in this age of afflu­ence where the stan­dard of living is rising (for some) and the | + | {{tab}}The work of Professors {{w|Townsend|Peter_Townsend_(sociologist)}}, {{w|Abel Smith|Brian_Abel-Smith}} and {{w|Titmuss<!-- 'Titmus' in original -->|Richard_Titmuss}} have shown us that poverty exists on a vast scale in this country and hits hardest those who are most help­less{{dash}}the children. Peter Townsend points out (letter, ''{{w|Guardian|The_Guardian}}'', {{popup|8.7.67|8 July 1967}}) that the {{w|Minis­try of Social Secu­rity|Department_of_Health_and_Social_Security}} (MSS) drew a very severe poverty line when it arrived at its, already high, poverty figure. He accuses the Minis­try of not asking the right ques­tions and comments {{qq|… instead of 280,000 fami­lies (with 910,000 chil­dren) having been found in the summer of 1966 to have resour­ces less than re­quire­ments, there would pro­bably have been, judging from the report (MSS) and other sources, at least 450,000 (with over 1,400,000 chil­dren).}}<!-- end quotation mark omitted in original --> These reve­la­tions about the level of poverty become more alar­ming when one realises that in this age of afflu­ence where the stan­dard of living is rising (for some) and the cost of living rising (for all), the amount of real poverty has risen sharply, e.g. since 1954. Poverty can rise while stan­dards rise and now (not a new pheno­menon), many fami­lies, whose bread­winner is in full-<wbr>time employ­ment, are living in poverty, well below the MSS basic sub­sist­ence level. Poverty cannot be seen solely as the result of unem­ploy­ment and sick­ness (phy­sical, mental or social) but also as a result of a hope­lessly inade­quate Welfare State and straight capi­talist profi­teer­ing and ex­ploita­tion. The major­ity of families {{p|44}}living in poverty have at least one person in employ­ment which means that their poverty is hidden from the bureau­crats at the {{w|Labour Exchange|Employment_agency}} and Social Security as they may never have re­course to draw bene­fits that the Welfare State has to offer. |
{{tab}}In Black­mills the wages for un­skilled workers are low. Un­skilled labour­ers in tex­tiles earn the same. Buil­ding labour­ers can earn up to £25 to £30 per week by breaking their backs seen days every week, weather permit­ting, but this is very uncer­tain money and all to fre­quent­ly they receive an insul­ting wage. There is very little con­struc­tion work in Black­mills and buil­ding workers go far afield to find well-<wbr>paid jobs. Where these low paid workers are the {{qq|honest poor}} always trying to make the best of it, budget­ing their money as wisely as pos­sible, never wasting a far­thing, and just managing week by week, they will rarely see the man at the Dole office and no one will offi­cial­ly hear of their plight. It is easy to dis­cover that unem­ploy­ment has risen in Black­mills from 318 to 479 in one year (how many chil­dren are depen­dent<!-- 'dependant' in original --> on these 479 bread­winners we are not told) and that about 125 of these unem­ployed are recei­ving supple­men­tary benefit, but it is almost impos­sible to dis­cover the fami­lies in need who are on very low incomes, often suppor­ting large fami­lies. These fami­lies would once have been called {{qq|the deser­ving poor}} who are often too proud or igno­rant to admit their poverty. | {{tab}}In Black­mills the wages for un­skilled workers are low. Un­skilled labour­ers in tex­tiles earn the same. Buil­ding labour­ers can earn up to £25 to £30 per week by breaking their backs seen days every week, weather permit­ting, but this is very uncer­tain money and all to fre­quent­ly they receive an insul­ting wage. There is very little con­struc­tion work in Black­mills and buil­ding workers go far afield to find well-<wbr>paid jobs. Where these low paid workers are the {{qq|honest poor}} always trying to make the best of it, budget­ing their money as wisely as pos­sible, never wasting a far­thing, and just managing week by week, they will rarely see the man at the Dole office and no one will offi­cial­ly hear of their plight. It is easy to dis­cover that unem­ploy­ment has risen in Black­mills from 318 to 479 in one year (how many chil­dren are depen­dent<!-- 'dependant' in original --> on these 479 bread­winners we are not told) and that about 125 of these unem­ployed are recei­ving supple­men­tary benefit, but it is almost impos­sible to dis­cover the fami­lies in need who are on very low incomes, often suppor­ting large fami­lies. These fami­lies would once have been called {{qq|the deser­ving poor}} who are often too proud or igno­rant to admit their poverty. |
Revision as of 17:54, 27 September 2016
2: Child poverty,
with a
look at a
Lancashire town
ALISTAIR RATTRAY and
ALEX SIMPSON
- On Sunday she wore blue stockings, a yellow skirt and a bright red blouse;
- On Monday she wore the same.
- On Tuesday she wore a bright red blouse, blue stockings and a yellow skirt;
- On Wednesday she dressed the same;
- On Thursday again the red, the yellow and the blue;
- On Friday again the same.
- On Saturday she didn’t come out.
- On Sunday she wore blue stockings, a yellow skirt and a bright red blouse.
There are few facilities for the children and teenagers in Blackmills. The children play in the small parks and on the streets, going up the hill on fine days. Only one primary school has its own football pitch attached to the school. There is one poorly-
Although there is no definitive slum area in Blackmills and one cannot walk through the streets seeing overt poverty, there is poverty here—
In Blackmills the wages for unskilled workers are low. Unskilled labourers in textiles earn the same. Building labourers can earn up to £25 to £30 per week by breaking their backs seen days every week, weather permitting, but this is very uncertain money and all to frequently they receive an insulting wage. There is very little construction work in Blackmills and building workers go far afield to find well-
The proposals made by the Child Poverty Action Group (CPAG) would help these families where they have numerous children (and poor families are usually large families). One of the ways CPAG propose to alleviate family poverty is by greatly increasing family allowances and abolishing income tax relief for children. “This would leave the net income of well-
The Government are under tremendous pressure to change the wage-stop rule, largely thanks to the CPAG and social workers dealing with poverty. Child Care Officers automatically assist wage-
The children’s department are in a particularly good position to exert their influence as they, more than any other agency, deal first-
One of the special difficulties of the children’s department has had to overcome is general lack of sympathy for the people who they try to help. These are more often than not “the undeserving poor”; problem families, perhaps better described as families with problems, which are often so insurmountable that the family breaks down. The breakdown of a family cannot be attributed to one single cause. There may be matrimonial difficulties; the parents may have unstable, inadequate personalities, or may be mental illness. Large families, sickness and unemployment, and particularly poverty, where the children are suffering, will all bring the family to the attention of the children’s department. The family is usually refered to the department for some form of “anti-
The woman of 30, husband left, who, as often as possible, gets out to the smart-
There are the fathers who drink most of the money away, perhaps because they cannot face the thought that even if they didn’t drink there still wouldn’t be enough money to feed the children properly. Child care officers are very pragmatic in such situations. There is no question of moralizing. The children need help and as far as possible they give it, realising that to split a family up is usually worse for the child than living with inadequate parents whose major crime, more often than not, is poverty. They tend to have a liberal—
In Blackmills there are various other organisations which work on the fringes of the problem of poverty. The NSPCC (who have also come to realize that prosecution is no answer to cruelty) work in close liaison with the children’s department. Many of their cases are caused by poverty and their help tends to be practical. The WVS gives clothes to the poor but only when they “bring a note from someone in authority, like a doctor or a vicar” (WVS worker). The church-
In effect, it is only the child welfare officers who really come to grips with the children in poverty in Blackmills, and attempt to nurse the problem families back into some kind of stability. Gone are the days when they saw their function as keeping the poor “happy in their misery”. They now see themselves as a professional body exerting influence on the Government to take real steps to alleviate poverty.
But it has taken a group like the CPAG to come up with a definite practical plan which could reform the present situation immediately in a way which would reduce some of the worst effects of poverty. They have really hit upon the crux of the problem. Whilst social workers and others see the problem families and offer what help they can, there are countless others involving over 1,000,000 children who are living in poverty with no one to help.
Perhaps the parents are not anti-
- Some morning, after a star
- Has hung over our house all night,
- We might walk forth and recognise things:
- This would be one miracle worth seeing—
- Energy working on our values
- To create something out of nothing.
- And what might we see?
- That boy with the twelve-month running nose,
- is not just a pillar of snot
- Trying to annoy us,
- But a person of flesh and blood
- With other things to see besides a nose—
- No shoes, no fruit, no underwear—
- These are the things his presence screams at us.
- The feeling that a surplus of food
- Gives us a well-earned condescension
- Over the ones whose children
- Sit and wait, and who, finally,
- As destroyed by the great bitch, hope,
- Would be seen as our greatest shame.
- I’m not setting out a catalogue
- To gratify complacency:
- A star did shine over our house last night,
- But we, the strong, the good, the beautiful,
- Remained impregnable.
* Investigated by the Supplementary Benefits Commission.