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Report notes 'crisis' facing urban Indian youth
Thursday, December 4, 2003
Children in the county with the largest urban Indian population in
the U.S. face a "crisis" of poverty, education and housing, according to
a study released this week.
Using three decades of census data, the University of
California at Los Angeles formed a comprehensive look
at socio-economic status of American Indian and Alaska
Native children in Los Angeles County.
Researchers found that one in four live below
the poverty line, few live in two-parent households,
many face educational barriers and few have access
to childcare.
"As home to the largest urbanized American Indian population, this
region should be on the forefront of developing and implementing
policies and programs that address the challenges of American Indians,"
the Los Angeles County American Indian Children's Council (AICC) said on
Monday.
The report follows a 2000 study, also undertaken by UCLA,
that examined Native youth in the county.
Data showed that Native families are eight times more likely to
live in the poorest neighborhoods than non-Hispanic whites.
About 111,000 Native Americans make their home in the county,
according to the 2000 U.S. Census, and their numbers are
rising. In the past decade, the Indian population saw a more than 40 percent increase.
At 28 years, the median age of this population is very
young. Combined with the growing population, the UCLA report
said these factors contribute to a pressing need to provide
adequate services to Native youth.
With a median household income of $36,000, Native families
are some of the poorest in the county. More than
5,000 Indian families lived at or below the national poverty
line, based on census data from 1999.
This was nearly 25 percent of all Indian families
in the county, the report noted.
Indian families face other challenges, the report noted.
About 45 percent were headed by a single
parent. More than half of these homes were headed by a Native woman.
Native "children are also
more likely to live in crowded housing with fewer basic
amenities," the report adds. "These results are not surprising given their
overall lower economic status."
As Native youth get older, they are less likely to enter
college or some type of post-secondary institution.
The four-year dropout rate at public
schools was 13 percent. Only about half of Native
students graduated with their class, according to data from 2000.
According to the UCLA researchers, childcare for Indians
is virtually non-existent in the county. With large
numbers of Indian children below the age of 3 and a large
number of households headed by single mothers, the report
says the need far outweighs the available services.
"The analysis indicates that [Native] children tend to
reside in areas with relatively fewer childcare slots," the report
stated.
The report was put together by the UCLA's
Ralph and Goldy Lewis Center for Regional Policy Studies.
Last November, the center put out a related study on the status of
the Native adults. Research showed that
two out of five Indian males did not complete high school,
the unemployment rate among Indians was nearly twice
that of non-Hispanic whites, Indian men earned
45 percent less than non-Hispanic white men and
Indian women earned 31 percent less than their non-Hispanic
white counterparts.
The poverty rate among American Indians was over two and a
half times the rate among non-Hispanic whites, the report said.
Get the Report:
The Status of American Indian
Children in Los Angeles
(November 2003)
Relevant Links:
American Indian Children's Council -
http://www.childpc.org/localaicc.asp?spa=9
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Survey finds heavy health burden on Indian
population (12/01)
Recession affects poverty rates and income
levels (09/29)
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