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4/14/13, "It’s not working for NYC," NY Post, Byrne, "Nearly 2M on food stamps in Gotham"
"They’ve fallen through the cracks: millions of jobless or
underemployed New Yorkers whose daily struggle is to find work and food.
They certainly don’t show up in the 9.1 percent unemployment rate for the city, since they have exhausted those benefits.
But the number of city residents on food stamps is on pace to jump this
year from just above 1 million in 2007 to a breathtaking 2 million
sometime this summer. That’s equals almost 50 percent of the city’s
labor force today, which, according to the latest government
calculations, shrank by nearly 200,000 people since 2011. There”s also
176,000 New Yorkers collecting Social Security disability insurance,
which is up 30,000 in last 4 years.
Not surprisingly, the official economic recovery that began with the
end of the Great Recession in June 2009 does not look or feel like much
of a recovery to residents like Marc Capozza.
Capozza, a mid-50s
professional with his MBA and a background in higher education, hasn’t
had steady employment since he lost his job three years ago. He was
managing a staff of 74 administrative assistants at a prestigious
Manhattan law firm. By his reckoning, he has since sent out 800 resumes —
and received not one offer back.
“Being a baby boomer, I was
taught that you had to go to college, so I did everything society told
me to do,” said Capozza, who lives in Chelsea. “I put money into a
retirement fund and into a supplemental fund, and later I opened up another account when I started at the law firm.”
Now
Capozza, who has exhausted his unemployment benefits, is tapping into
his retirement savings to pay his bills. He earns the minimum wage in a
part-time office job, 16 hours a week and collects $50 a week in food
stamps....
If Washington and the thousands of other New Yorkers who have left the
work force were counted today, New York City’s real unemployment rate
would likely hover in the mid-teens, labor experts say."...
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