Atlanta, GA
Drop in Georgia poverty rate might be misleading

Fewer Georgia residents reside in poverty than a decade in the past, a brand new Census report reveals, however consultants warning the numbers don’t replicate how the COVID-19 pandemic affected the financial realities for households.
State of play: The most recent numbers from the American Group Survey 2016-2020 five-year estimates reveal 14.3% of Georgia residents had incomes beneath the federal poverty line.
- That’s down from 17.8% reported through the earlier five-year estimate, 2011 to 2015.
That’s good, however: Ife Finch Floyd, an financial justice coverage analyst on the Georgia Funds & Coverage Institute, tells Axios that individuals must be cautious about placing an excessive amount of inventory within the ACS figures as a result of they do not embody the fallout from 2020 and past.
- The pandemic, she says, “disrupted every little thing in our lives, and that included doing, actually, an correct rely of individuals within the nation and their financial circumstances.”
- She’s been reviewing different information collected over the past two years that present persons are having a tough time affording the necessities and are battling meals insecurity.
- “That is a sign that these decrease poverty ranges … might not be capturing the total story,” she mentioned.
Actuality test: Kyle Waide, president and CEO of the Atlanta Group Meals Financial institution, which helps meals banks distribute meals throughout metro Atlanta and north Georgia, tells Axios that his nonprofit noticed demand for meals help improve as a lot as 40% through the peak of the pandemic.
- The numbers dropped off in 2021, however they’re creeping again up once more due to inflation, Waide mentioned.
- “We’ve by no means actually gotten again right down to the extent we had been at previous to the pandemic,” he mentioned. “Till a few of this inflationary strain is resolved, we’re simply going to have a variety of the households we serve actually experiencing increased ranges of want, and we predict that’s going to be true all through the remainder of this 12 months.”
By the numbers: Within the five-county metro Atlanta area, Cobb had the bottom poverty fee at 8.6% whereas Clayton reported the best at 16.6%.
- Poverty charges in Georgia are increased in central and South Georgia, Census bureau information reveals.
- Jenkins County, in southeast Georgia between Augusta and Statesboro, had a 34.5% poverty fee, the best within the state.
Zoom out: Throughout the nation, 12.6% of individuals mentioned their incomes fell beneath the poverty line between 2016 and 2020. That’s an enchancment from 15.5% reported through the earlier five-year survey.
- The survey notes that poverty dropped in 49 states between the 2 time durations.
The underside line: Whereas it seems we’re in an financial rebound from the pandemic, inflation is pushing costs for some gadgets past what’s inexpensive for a lot of Individuals.

Atlanta, GA
At 55, Atlanta Pride faces fresh challenges

Atlanta, GA
LaGrange officer shares heart attack experience

When a Lagrange police officer experienced a heart attack, her colleagues, along with 911 operators and EMTs, sprang into action to save her. They were all recognized at the city council meeting for their efforts.
Atlanta, GA
The National Center for Civil and Human Rights expands at a critical moment in U.S. history
ATLANTA (AP) — A popular museum in Atlanta is expanding at a critical moment in the United States — and unlike the Smithsonian Institution, the National Center for Civil and Human Rights is privately funded, putting it beyond the immediate reach of Trump administration efforts to control what Americans learn about their history.
The monthslong renovation, which cost nearly $60 million, adds six new galleries as well as classrooms and interactive experiences, changing a relatively static museum into a dynamic place where people are encouraged to take action supporting civil and human rights, racial justice and the future of democracy, said Jill Savitt, the center’s president and CEO.
The center has stayed active ahead of its Nov. 8 reopening through K-12 education programs that include more than 300 online lesson plans; a LGBTQ+ Institute; training in diversity, equity and inclusion; human rights training for law enforcement; and its Truth & Transformation Initiative to spread awareness about forced labor, racial terror and other historic injustices.
These are the same aspects of American history, culture and society that the Trump administration is seeking to dismantle.
Inspiring children to become ‘change agents’
Dreamed up by civil rights icons Evelyn Lowery and Andrew Young, the center opened in 2014 on land donated by the Coca-Cola Company, next to the Georgia Aquarium and The World of Coca-Cola, and became a major tourist attraction. But ticket sales declined after the pandemic.
Now the center hopes to attract more repeat visitors with immersive experiences like “Change Agent Adventure,” aimed at children under 12. These “change agents” will be asked to pledge to something — no matter how small — that “reflects the responsibility of each of us to play a role in the world: To have empathy. To call for justice. To be fair, be kind. And that’s the ethos of this gallery,” Savitt said. It opens next April.
“I think advocacy and change-making is kind of addictive. It’s contagious,” Savitt explained. “When you do something, you see the success of it, you really want to do more. And our desire here is to whet the appetite of kids to see that they can be involved. They can do it.”
This ethos is sharply different from the idea that young people can’t handle the truth and must be protected from unpleasant challenges but, Savitt said, “the history that we tell here is the most inspirational history.”
“In fact, I think it’s what makes America great. It is something to be patriotically proud of. The way activists over time have worked together through nonviolence and changed democracy to expand human freedom — there’s nothing more American and nothing greater than that. That is the lesson that we teach here,” she said.
Encouraging visitors to be hopeful
“Broken Promises,” opening in December, includes exhibits from the post-Civil War Reconstruction era, cut short when white mobs sought to brutally reverse advances by formerly enslaved people. “We want to start orienting you in the conversation that we believe we all kind of see, but we don’t say it outright: Progress. Backlash. Progress. Backlash. And that pattern that has been in our country since enslavement,” said its curator, Kama Pierce.
On display will be a Georgia historical marker from the site of the 1918 lynching of Mary Turner, pockmarked repeatedly with bullets, that Turner descendants donated to keep it from being vandalized again.
“There are 11 bullet holes and 11 grandchildren living,” and the family’s words will be incorporated into the exhibit to show their resilience, Pierce said.
Items from the Morehouse College Martin Luther King Jr. collection will have a much more prominent place, in a room that recreates King’s home office, with family photos contributed by the center’s first guest curator: his daughter, the Rev. Bernice King. “We wanted to lift up King’s role as a man, as a human being, not just as an icon,” Savitt explained.
Gone are the huge images of the world’s most genocidal leaders — Hitler, Stalin and Mao among others — with explanatory text about the millions of people killed under their orders. In their place will be examples of human rights victories by groups working around the world.
“The research says that if you tell people things are really bad and how awful they are, you motivate people for a minute, and then apathy sets in because it’s too hard to do anything,” Savitt said. “But if you give people something to hope for that’s positive, that they can see themselves doing, you’re more likely to cultivate a sense of agency in people.”
Fostering a healthy democracy
And doubling in capacity is an experience many can’t forget: Joining a 1960s sit-in against segregation. Wearing headphones as they take a lunch-counter stool, visitors can both hear and feel an angry, segregationist mob shouting they don’t belong. Because this is “heavy content,” Savitt says, a new “reflection area” will allow people to pause afterward on a couch, with tissues if they need them, to consider what they’ve just been through.
The center’s expansion was seeded by Home Depot co-founder and Atlanta philanthropist Arthur M. Blank, the Mellon Foundation and many other donors, for which Savitt expressed gratitude: “The corporate community is in a defensive crouch right now — they could get targeted,” she said.
But she said donors shared concerns about people’s understanding of citizenship, so supporting the teaching of civil and human rights makes a good investment.
“It is the story of democracy — Who gets to participate? Who has a say? Who gets to have a voice?” she said. “So our donors are very interested in a healthy, safe, vibrant, prosperous America, which you need a healthy democracy to have.”
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