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May 11th, 2009
09:48 AM ET

Charging rent to homeless

[cnn-photo-caption image= http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2009/images/05/11/carroll.homeless.art.jpg caption= "Princess Seyborn and her daughter live in a New York City public shelter where they are now being asked to pay rent."]

Imagine you're a single mother. You're living in a homeless shelter making barely enough at your job as a day care worker to feed your daughter and pay the bills. Now what would you do if that shelter suddenly told you in order to stay you had to pay rent? This is the reality for Princess Seyborn and hundreds of other working homeless families in New York City.

The city is starting to charge working homeless families like Seyborn to stay in the city's publicly run shelters. Seyborn now has to pay $345 dollars a month in rent. "I tried to explain it on my best behalf," Seyborn said. "I don't have it and all I'm getting is pens and paper in my face saying sign here and sign here, and I refuse to sign."

The policy is based on a 1997 state law, which requires shelter residents with jobs to use a portion of their earnings to pay rent. The amount varies according to family size and which shelter is being used.

So why is the city implementing the law now? One reason could have to do with the results of a 2007 state audit. The city was required to pay back $2.4 million in housing aid that should have been supplemented by working homeless families.

FULL POST


Filed under: Economy
May 5th, 2009
12:53 PM ET

Obama’s Recent Market Rally

John P. Avlon is the author of Independent Nation: How Centrists Can Change American Politics and he writes a weekly column for The Daily Beast. Previously, he served as Chief Speechwriter for New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani and was a columnist and associate editor for The New York Sun.
[cnn-photo-caption image= http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2009/images/04/29/avlon.john.art.jpg caption= "John Avlon writes that Obamanomics is starting to look pretty good these days."]

By John Avlon
Special to CNN

Despite all the recent screaming about socialism, Barack Obama’s past month and a half has quietly been pretty good for capitalists.

Yesterday, the stock market picked up more than 200 points, capping weeks of rallies that have erased almost all of 2009’s losses to date. The market hit its low on Obama’s 50th day in office – March 9th – but since that early crisis of confidence, the Obama administration’s economic plans have started to solidify and begun to take hold. Perhaps the most important measure is polls that show the American people feel our country is moving in the right direction again.

The acid test of yesterday’s rally was the fact that it continued after President Obama announced plans to close corporate tax loopholes and offshore tax-havens. If the market was feeling myopic there might been an immediate negative impact – some Wall Street commentators still reflexively tried to paint it as anti-big business class warfare. But it was accompanied by a plan to make the research and development tax credit a permanent tax cut, incentivizing long-term economic competitiveness. And the plan was carefully framed with Main Street common sense (despite the odd intro of Treasury Secretary Geithner, castigating individuals who don’t pay all their taxes): “I want to see our companies remain the most competitive in the world,” said the president. “But the way to make sure that happens is not to reward our companies for moving jobs off our shores.”

A bit of springtime optimism may be influencing this market rally. The absence of deepening crisis may be mistaken for good news. There will likely be additional bumps on the road to recovery – this week’s bank stress test might be one such bump. Some economists will argue that these closed loopholes should be accompanied by a reduction in the U.S. corporate tax rate, which is the second highest in the world. The long-term economic impact of the unprecedented stimulus spending still remains to be seen. Our deficit and debt have ballooned and, if unaddressed, represent a new degree of generational irresponsibility. Remember, reckless spending got us into this mess in the first place.

But if President Obama was blamed by some partisans for the market’s decline in his first 50 days, then its only fair that he receive some credit for the rebound now. We’re not out of the woods – there’s plenty of anger left for both big government and big business – but at least compared to Bushonomics, Obamanomics is starting to look pretty good these days. And that’s good news for everyone who’s invested in America’s success.


Filed under: Economy • John Avlon • Politics
April 3rd, 2009
08:55 AM ET

Just in: 2 million jobs lost so far in '09

Unemployment rate spikes to 8.5%, a 25-year high, as 663,000 jobs lost in March.
5.1 million jobs have now been lost since the beginning of 2008.

By Chris Isidore, CNNMoney.com senior writer

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) - Job losses continued to mount in March and unemployment hit a 25-year high, according to the government's latest reading on the battered labor market Friday.

Employers trimmed 663,000 jobs from their payrolls last month, roughly in line with forecasts of a loss of 658,000 jobs, according to economists surveyed by Briefing.com.

For the first three months of the year, 2 million jobs have been lost, and 5.1 million jobs have been lost since the start of 2008.

To put the three-month loss in context, if no more jobs are lost over the next nine months, 2009 would still be the fourth worst year for job losses since the government started tracking the number of workers in 1939.

March's monthly loss is up slightly from the loss of 651,000 jobs in February, although it's less than the number of jobs lost in January. That figure was revised up to a loss of 741,000 jobs - which now stands as the biggest monthly drop in 59 years.

The unemployment rate climbed to 8.5% from 8.1% in February, in line with economists' forecasts. It was the highest since November, 1983.

Keep reading this story


Filed under: Economy
April 2nd, 2009
11:05 AM ET

Government may limit bonuses

Rep. Barney Frank talks about legislation that would limit bonuses.
Rep. Barney Frank talks about legislation that would limit bonuses.

Washington tries again. Another bill designed to avoid an AIG-style bonus backlash.

The House passing the "Pay For Performance Act" to limit pay and bonuses at financial firms getting your money.

Can it work?

Massachusetts Congressman Barney Frank chairs the House Financial Services Committee and he joined us live.

Watch

What do you think? Is Congress doing enough to fix the AIG bonus mess?


Filed under: Economy • Politics
April 2nd, 2009
08:47 AM ET

Meet the bailout cop

Meet Neil Barofsky, the federal government's cop on the bailout beat. CNN's Jim Acosta reports.
Meet Neil Barofsky, the federal government's cop on the bailout beat. CNN's Jim Acosta reports.

As we're finding out at the G-20 summit, people aren't just mad at the banks in this country but all over the world. 

And part of the reason is the bailout.  People are still asking the question: Where has all of that taxpayer money gone?  

As it turns out, somebody inside the federal government is trying to get an answer to that question.

Watch


Filed under: Economy • Politics
March 30th, 2009
09:00 AM ET

Candy sales soar

CNN's Alina Cho reports that candy sales are soaring despite the recession.
CNN's Alina Cho reports that candy sales are soaring despite the recession.

As the recession deepens and unemployment widens – more and more Americans are actually adding on a household expense: Tootsie Rolls, Mary Janes, Gummy Bears and chocolate Kisses.

In all this gloom and doom, it appears a little something sweet goes a long way toward lifting your spirits.

Watch


Filed under: Economy
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