final paper - Humanities
I attached doc for all the requiremtns please read carefully. This is my final and I dont want to fail it, iam looking for a good paper with NO PLAGRISM.IAM NOT SURE HOW MANY PAGES THE PROFESSOR DID NOT MENTION, ITS AS LONG AS YOU ANSWER ALL QUESTIONS TO THE TOPIC SO I HAVE NO IDEA HOW MANY PAGES I NEED TO SELECT BUT I NEED IT DOUBLE SPACED. THANK YOU
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I have included information about the experiences of 2 families at the end of the
final. Please answer all questions for each family
1. (10 points) Please name the first family you selected:
1a) What changes in the American Family have influenced the current family
situation of this family?
1b) What help do we provide, through our tax dollars (government programs),
for this family? Include the name of the program and describe how the program
supports this family.
1c) Describe the biggest challenge to this family to allow them to be selfsufficient?
1d) If this family were close friends, what suggestions would you have to help
them become more self sufficient?
2. (10 points) Please name the second family you selected:
2a) What changes in the American Family have influenced the current family
situation of this family?
2b) What help do we provide, through our tax dollars (government programs),
for this family? Include the name of the program and describe how the program
supports this family.
2c) Describe the biggest challenge to this family to allow them to be selfsufficient?
2d) If this family were close friends, what suggestions would you have to help
them become more self sufficient?
3. Your Student Learning Outcome for this course was: Analyze the effects of
ethnicity, class and social policy on the family. (10 points for each completed
question)
1. How did you analyze the effects of ethnicity on the family?
2. How did you analyze the effects of class on the family?
3. How did you analyze the effects of social policy on the family?
*Include assignments you completed for each and review how you performed for
these assignments.
FAMILY PROFILES
FAMILY #1-HANEBUTH FAMILY:
Daniel, 6, Ayden, 7, Aaron, 10, and Serenity, 5, live in a housing
project in Middletown, Ohio. In the past two years, they’ve also
stayed in a motel and a homeless shelter because their mother,
Tiffany Hanebuth, lost her job and has not been able to find another
job.
The January jobs report from the U.S. Department of Labor was good news for the
243,000 people who found jobs. And good news for the American economy as the
unemployment rate fell to 8.3 percent, the lowest level in nearly three years. This is
the 16th straight month of jobs growth, but the recovery can’t come soon enough for
the millions of long-term unemployed like Tiffany Hanebuth from Middletown,
Ohio. She says, “I just want a job, any kind of job.”
As with other families barely afloat on minimum wage jobs, the Hanebuths never had
steady smooth sailing, but they were self-supporting until two years ago when Tiffany
was laid off as a carhop at a Sonic drive-in and could not find another job. “I
remember before, you could just go anywhere and get an application and get hired
that day. It’s not like that now,” she said.
Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Julia Cass recently met Tiffany Hanebuth on
assignment for the Children’s Defense Fund, and Cass says by anybody’s definition
Tiffany is a survivor and a worker. Tiffany was raised by her father who she said was
a biker and bar owner. “He started bringing friends home and it was too much for
me,” Tiffany said. By the time she was 12 she left home to stay with friends and
eventually found a job, got her own apartment, and finished high school. Tiffany
didn’t meet her mother until she was 17. “My father told me she didn’t want to take
care of me because she was a drug addict,” Tiffany said. “I wanted to find her and I
did. She was a drug addict.”
Despite the fact that her own childhood was so chaotic and cut short, Tiffany wants
to provide a better life for her own children, Aaron, 10, Ayden, 7, Daniel, 6, and
Serenity, 5. Aaron said he wants to go to college, get a job at NASA, live with his
mom, and pay the bills for her. Tiffany has always been the breadwinner for her
children although their father, who doesn’t live with them, helps out with child care
and other occasional needs. She’s worked at gas stations, fast food restaurants, grocery
stores, a Bob Evans restaurant, and various factories through temporary agencies
before she lost her job two years ago.
Tiffany managed on unemployment for almost a year but fell behind on her rent and
the family was evicted. She lost $150 when a landlord kept her deposit and didn’t give
her the apartment. “He said, ‘Take me to court if you want to.’ I think he knew I
couldn’t afford to do that.” That’s when the family lived for a while in a motel and a
homeless shelter. The shelter staff helped her get public housing at a sprawling
complex named Freedom Court where Tiffany pays $180 a month rent. She also
signed up for food stamps and in June 2010, for cash assistance from Temporary
Assistance for Needy Families (TANF).
Anyone who thinks welfare recipients do nothing but sit around and cash their
checks isn’t familiar with the schedules of Tiffany and many others like her. The
welfare reform of the late 1990s put the emphasis on moving recipients from welfare
to work and set a lifetime limit on federally-assisted cash payments for many families.
Initially recipients are required to go to a job readiness site for a month to get training
in resume writing and interview skills and use the computers and fax machines to
apply for jobs. The big problem is that when there aren’t many jobs, the system
doesn’t work as designed. So Tiffany was assigned to community service in exchange
for receiving cash assistance (about $650 a month for her and the children). Her
assignment was at the local Salvation Army where she put donated clothing on racks
and did whatever else she was asked to do. After several months, she was hired there
and went off cash assistance. “But I only worked there a month and a half before they
had to let the new people go,” she said.
When she reapplied for cash assistance she was told she would be sanctioned for not
reporting to community service and could not receive assistance for three months
because she was on record as not having signed in at the Salvation Army. But Tiffany
said she didn’t sign in for community service because she had started to work there
instead. She said she took her pay stubs to the welfare office but the sanction was not
withdrawn. “The guy was actually rude. He said if I wanted to keep complaining, he’d
take my food stamps and Medicaid too.” By that point Tiffany had sold her car and
television and gotten behind on bills. She’s still in a hole.
Tiffany got back on cash assistance after the three months passed. She now does 86
hours a month of community service at the food pantry of Family Services of
Middletown and likes it there. The people are nice and she can sometimes take home
extra produce. She usually takes the bus but at the end of the month she sometimes
walks—a two-hour trip. The director gave her a bicycle, but it was stolen at the
housing project. Recently she missed a day when Ayden was sick. “I’m a stress ball
that I won’t be able to make up the hours and be sanctioned again,” she said.
Tiffany’s children sometimes get backpacks of food at school on Fridays to take home
for the weekend. Tina Osso, Executive Director of the area’s Shared Harvest
Foodbank, said that 300 children in Middletown schools received the backpacks last
school year. “They don’t go to all the children who receive free breakfasts and
lunches, just to those identified as showing physical, behavioral, or academic
problems associated with chronic hunger,” she said. But cuts in federal and school
district funding have put this school year’s backpack program in jeopardy. Tiffany,
who’s never been afraid of hard work, doesn’t want to have to rely on assistance and
donated food forever. For now, the safety net is doing exactly what it is designed to
do: programs with proven track records are keeping Tiffany and her family above
water while she continues searching for a job. Proposals to dismantle many of these
proven programs wouldn’t make unemployed parents’ job hunts any easier—but they
would leave millions of poor children with less help and less hope. They need jobs!
FAMILY #2-NAILOR FAMILY:
Amanda, 4, and Emily, 3, play with toys their parents got on a
bartering website called freecycle. Their father, John Nailor, owns a
computer repair business in Evart, Michigan but makes less than
$22,314 a year, the poverty level for a family of four. “If it weren’t
for food stamps and the income tax credit, I don’t know where we’d
be,” he said. “We would be lost.”
The Nailors don’t fit the old image of a poor family. They live in a house with a yard
in a small town in Middle America—the sort of place that might have been featured
in a Norman Rockwell painting. They are the new face of poverty. Almost a quarter
(23 percent) of children in Michigan live in poverty today, according to the 2010 Kids
Count Data Book for the state. The rate is even higher—up to 35 percent—in rural
counties in central Michigan like Osceola, where Evart is located.
Day to day, this means that John and his wife Sarah are “on a budget so tight we are
down to dimes and pennies” by the end of the month, he said. For food, they eat “just
the basics except maybe one meal a month where I’ll cook something super special
like shrimp,” she said. They have no cable television. “We can’t afford it! No way!”
John said. They never go out to eat or take trips. The childrens’ toys are mostly second
hand, and their clothes are hand-me-downs that John got through freecycle.org, an
international website with local groupings that trade items for free. About 300 people
in Osceola and three neighboring counties, undoubtedly struggling like the Nailors,
are in their group, exchanging household items, furniture, toys, clothes and even
foods like fresh eggs. If not for the Earned Income Tax Credit, he said, they wouldn’t
have anything new at all.
“Amanda and Emily are young so they don’t realize how poor we are,” Sarah said.
“But when they get older…” She did not finish the sentence.
The Nailors are deeply worried about the future because they don’t know what else to
do. Anyplace but Evart would be more expensive because they live in a house owned
by Sarah’s mother and don’t have to pay rent. Their computer repair business is
struggling—and they started the business because John couldn’t get a decent job. “The
business made just $1,900 over the past three months and summer’s usually the best
time,” he said. “Now comes winter when it’s slower.”
The Nailors retreated to Evart when Sarah got pregnant with Amanda and they’d
both become frustrated with the job market in Grand Rapids, the largest city in the
area. “Granted there were jobs there but so many people looking for them it was
hard,” he said. John graduated from high school and went to a technical school to
become a certified computer technician. He said he has loved computers and worked
on them since he was 14.
A telling moment came when he saw a Help Wanted sign in the window of a
computer repair store in Grand Rapids. He put in an application. As he walked out
the door, a man with an NEC decal on his work suit came in and asked for an
application. “I knew there was no way I was going to get that job,” John said. “NEC is
a major computer builder for businesses. I knew he had more credentials than I did.”
Sarah, who moved to Grand Rapids after high school, held a series of jobs with ever
lower pay. The best was at a bank where she handled applications for credit cards.
When that bank sold out to another bank, she lost the job but got some severance
pay. She used it to go to culinary arts school. “I thought it would be great but I ended
up with low paying jobs in food service. I didn’t have the experience for fine dining,
and there was more competition.” Like many other employees in fast food restaurants,
she didn’t always get a full 40 hours a week and kept looking for something better.
“Then my having gone from job to job worked against me because they saw me as not
stable. But I’m a very hard worker and I enjoy work.” She’d worked after school in
her father’s real estate office when she was in high school, she said, and helped care
for her grandfather when he got Alzheimer’s.
In Evart, Sarah stayed home with the new baby and John worked wherever he could,
mostly cleanup type jobs with temp services. That didn’t bring in enough steady
money so they applied for cash assistance. One of its requirements is going regularly
to a Michigan Works office that offers job training and help with job searches,
resumes and work skills. Recipients must show that they are actively seeking work.
The Nailors received cash assistance for about a year.
“Then they changed the rules,” John said. “You had to put in qualified applications. If
you didn’t put in applications to places that were actually hiring, not just maybe
hiring in the future, you would be put off. I thought, ‘Forget that! There’s no way.
This is Michigan! Nobody’s hiring!’” He quickly summarized the local employment
scene: A factory that hires through temp agencies, which didn’t count. A glass plant
that closed and then reopened and gave preference to prior employees. A dairy where
you have to have family that works there. Some mom and pops that employ only
family. “I told them to keep their cash assistance. I was going to open my own
business.”
Nailor Services opened two years ago in a small building downtown that once housed
an A & P. The best John can say about it is that “I’m still in business even though we
don’t have enough business to get off food stamps.” He fixes computers that people
bring in or he goes to their homes. He finds inexpensive programs and parts for his
clients and recycles old computers. “People bring me computers they want to get rid
of and I break them down and sell the metal and copper. That’s what gets me through
the winter.” With Emily going to Head Start this fall, Sarah said she’ll have time to
help him.
The Nailors are due soon for a redetermination of their food stamp allotment of $669
a month, John said, and this worries them. “The state’s been cutting a lot for the
budget,” he said. A proposal to throw out the earned income tax credit entirely was
dropped in the state legislature but lawmakers recently shrank the benefit by about
one fourth.
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