The Census Bureau just released national poverty, income, and insurance data for 2023. It’s important to understand income and health insurance trends, but it’s especially important now since Congress will take up major tax legislation in 2025.
One thing we know for sure is that when the Child Tax Credit (CTC) was expanded in 2021, child poverty decreased by 46% overall, with Black and Hispanic/Latino child poverty falling by 6.3 percentage points in each community, impacting 716,000 Black children and 1.2 million Hispanic children. The new data shows that in 2023, the CTC lifted 2.4 million people above the federal poverty line―while important, falling far short of the 5.4 million lifted above the federal poverty line in 2021 by expanded monthly Child Tax Credit payments that included all children in low-income families.
Click here to send a direct message to Congress to expand the Child Tax Credit today.
Many people are facing food and housing insecurity, challenges with high child care costs, and dealing with other hardships that make it harder to make ends meet. Expanding the Child Tax Credit fixes a major flaw in current law: over 18 million children and their families are excluded from the full credit because their parents’ income is too low.
You read that right. Families where a parent can’t work due to illness or being laid off, cannot qualify for the Child Tax Credit at all. And many parents who work at low wages cannot get the full CTC. A single parent earning $15,000 a year and who has two children, will receive less than a family with a parent who has a higher paying job. This is a flaw that does nothing but exacerbate inequity and accelerate the racial wealth gap.
Instead of cutting investments in key programs and services, Congress must prioritize funding for human needs and that means passing an expanded Child Tax Credit that reaches the very poorest households.
Click here to send a direct message to Congress to expand the Child Tax Credit today.
Thank you so much to everyone who helped make our 17th Human Needs Hero event such a success! Did you miss the sponsorship deadline but would still like to support? Please contact Nicolai Haddal at nhaddal@chn.org
Our first ever virtual Human Needs Hero will be held on Zoom this year!
Every year, the Coalition on Human Needs gathers advocates, from neophytes to veterans with decades of experience, to celebrate our community’s steadfast commitment to standing up for the most vulnerable in our society. This year, in spite of the tremendous upending of our lives by the pandemic, we’ve continued to stand up as a human needs community for the same priorities we’ve always held dear. So, while we cannot come together physically, we’re embracing the opportunity to bring even more folks into the fold virtually.
Our 2020 Human Needs Heroes have been especially heroic this year. We are so honored to celebrate three campaigns that have overcome tremendous obstacles to ensure justice for children and immigrants today and for generations to come: The Census Counts and Count All Kids campaigns, who continue to fight for an accurate count of all people in the Decennial Census, and Protecting Immigrant Families, a campaign committed to lifting up immigrant voices and advocating for humane immigration policies in our communities and in our country.
But our honorees are much more than just campaigns. These are group efforts spearheaded by some of the most compassionate and dedicated advocates and policy experts in Washington and beyond. Our friends have found ingenious solutions to continue rallying for immigrants and children despite the stress and obstacles presented by COVID-19. Join CHN in celebrating their myriad accomplishments!
We are hoping you and/or your organization will sponsor the event and be listed in invitations and our program. This is our only major fundraising event of the year and all proceeds raised go to supporting the work of the Coalition on Human Needs. Plus: this is the first time we have gone fully virtual! So get out your best Zoom shirt, pour your favorite drink, and bring out your loved ones and pets for a very special 2020 Human Needs Hero reception. We can’t wait to see your faces there.
If you have any questions, please reach out to Nicolai Haddal, Field and (Virtual) Events Coordinator at nhaddal@chn.org or 202-223-2532 x115.
ABOUT OUR HONOREES
The Census Counts campaign, which is housed at The Leadership Conference Education Fund, brings together community-based organizations across a wide spectrum of advocacy: civil rights, immigrant, LGBTQ, disability, infant and child, poverty and homelessness, faith-based, labor, health care, education, youth, and more. Census Counts organizers and advocates are working to ensure communities the census has historically missed are counted in the 2020 Census.
Through educating the public, supporting state and local advocates, and working with the Census Bureau to help them improve their plans to reach out to families with young children, the Count All Kids Committee and the Count All Kids Campaign are working to make sure that every child is counted in 2020. Because young children have been the age group most missed in previous censuses, Count All Kids has worked ceaselessly to spread the word that everyone should be counted, including babies, toddlers, and people of all ages. Count All Kids has been an invaluable ally in the fight for a fair and accurate census.
The Protecting Immigrant Families, Advancing Our Future (“PIF”) Campaign was created in 2017 in response to leaks about policy changes by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and other government agencies. Co-chaired by the National Immigration Law Center (NILC) and the Center for Law and Social Policy (CLASP), the Campaign has grown into a nationwide network of over 500 groups. Members represent diverse sectors including public health, nutrition, anti-poverty, early childhood, education, housing, aging and disability, faith-based, immigrants’ rights, civil rights, and many others united by the belief that our collective well-being depends on all of us being healthy and safe. The Campaign’s structure has allowed them to develop innovative advocacy strategies, lift up best practices, and keep allies informed of public charge policies that impact immigrant families. The PIF Campaign has led the fight against the proposed “public charge” wealth test for immigrants, which has deep roots in America’s history of discrimination, racism, and classism. PIF secured a record-setting quarter million comments to DHS’s public charge regulations which strengthened multiple strategic lawsuits brought by PIF members and allies in federal courts. Since the public charge changes were first threatened, the rule has discouraged many immigrant families from accessing benefits even though they are eligible. PIF campaign members remain dedicated to fighting back and to making sure immigrants and others who believe they are directly affected by public charge rule changes have information to make sound decisions about maintaining their families’ health and well-being.
WHY SUPPORT CHN?
Your support for CHN is more important than ever. We truly mean it. The pandemic has changed the way we work, but not our commitment to fighting for basic human needs programs.
All proceeds from sponsorships and ticket sales benefit the work of the Coalition on Human Needs. Since 1981, CHN has promoted adequate funding for human needs programs, progressive tax policies and other federal measures to address the needs of low-income and other vulnerable people.
We do this by:
Thank you so much to everyone who helped make our 17th Human Needs Hero event such a success! Did you miss the sponsorship deadline but would still like to support? Please contact Nicolai Haddal at nhaddal@chn.org