In Louisiana lack economic security
A new report from Loyola University New Orleans’ Jesuit Social Research Institute reveals that more than 250,000 families with children in Louisiana lack economic security to meet essential needs such as housing, food, child care, transportation and health care. The Jesuit Social Research Institute officially released the report, “Too Much for Too Many,” during a press conference today.
“Too Much for Too Many” was made possible by a grant from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation and sets out to establish a measure of family economic security to provide families, employers and policymakers with a better understanding of Louisiana’s cost of living.
“We are not talking about families living in luxury or even very comfortable lives. Rather, family economic security is shorthand for the concept that there is a measurable standard of living that ensures that families can meet essential basic needs and live a modest but dignified life,” said The Rev. Fred Kammer, S.J., J.D., director of the Jesuit Social Research Institute.
Some important findings of the report include:
86,232 married-couple families, 138,039 single-mother families, and 26,539 single-father families with one to three children lack incomes that meet the family economic security estimate for Louisiana.
New Orleans has the highest family economic security annual estimate in Louisiana: $51,264 for a single-mother family with one child and $62,040 for a married-couple family with one child.
53.3 percent of workers are employed in occupational groups with median salaries below $30,000.