Friday, February 27, 2009

Will It Ever Be Called A Depression?

The country's social fabric is being torn to shreds

"Feb. 26 (Bloomberg) -- In California’s Contra Costa County, 40,000 families are applying for just 350 affordable-housing vouchers. Church-operated pantries are running out of food. Crisis calls have more than doubled in the city of Antioch, where the Family Stress Center occupies the site of a former bank.
The worst financial crisis in seven decades is forcing thousands of previously middle-income workers to seek social services, overwhelming local agencies, clinics and nonprofits. Each month 16,000 people, including many who were making $60,000 to $100,000 annually just a few years ago, fill four county offices requesting financial, medical or food assistance.
“Unless we do things differently, not only will we continue to be on life support, but the power to the machine is going to die,” said county Supervisor Federal Glover, who represents Antioch and the cities of Pittsburg and Oakley about 50 miles (80 kilometers) east of San Francisco."


California has always been a bellwether for the rest of the nation.

2 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Just a related thought: With so many people in CA suffering and be forced into homeless situations, maybe they should join the squat-teams to give them more strength in numbers and plot squats in some of those vacant "McMansions" that nobody seems to be capable of affording out there these days.

http://squat.net/

27/2/09 7:32 AM  
Blogger nolocontendere said...

THE big news story in the coming months nick.

27/2/09 5:27 PM  

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