From Deseret News archives:
Utah's poor are often invisible, ignored
The advocates for the poor, such as the Crossroads Urban Center, Utahns Against Hunger and others are also to be commended for being the conscience of our community.
The poor will always be with us. That's what I learned as a kid listening to Sister Sophia in my catechism classes at the Guadalupe Mission. I suspect it's something many of us learned from our religious teachings. As I grew up, poor people were all around me and included some of us. It was just assumed that we would look after one another.
And though the poor are still with us, Utah's urban cities follow the trend of those around the country of flight to the suburbs, leaving the poor to struggle to survive in our deteriorating inner cities. They are often the elderly, the physically and emotionally disabled and single-parent families. Unlike the past, many Utahns now have limited contact with poor people and thus find little opportunity to have empathy for their plight.
Poverty has been described as that situation where one has to depend on others for the things we take for granted for our daily subsistence. In our complex and impersonal society, we often don't take the time to reach out to help those in need; rather, we have created bureaucracies, both public and nonprofit, to show our charitable side. It is those organizations the poor must negotiate with for services.
Our elected officials can show the public the challenges the poor face in living on food stamps for a week, and when it's over they will be able to move on with their lives; for them, there is a future. What may be most difficult for the public to understand is that for many of the poor, there is no hope, and that is demoralizing.
Comments
- Cougars beat Utes in overtime 1:11 a.m.
- UVU beats SUU; USU wins big 12:57 a.m.
- BYU spikers end season with a loss 12:55 a.m.
- Iverson may be headed to 76ers 12:34 a.m.
- Credit Coug defense for win 12:33 a.m.
- Aggies blow away T-birds 12:32 a.m.
- Mo steals show in Cavaliers' victory 12:31 a.m.
- Editorial: Facilitate Big Brother? 12:22 a.m.
- Mom befriends wife of PTSD vet 12:21 a.m.
- Political clash over U.S. debt 12:21 a.m.
- Cave to be sealed with body inside
- Predicting the unpredictable: BYU wins
- Vegas, Poinsettia bowls or bust
- Hall mouths off about hate of Utah
- BYU football: 5 keys to victory
- Glover gives Utes last-second upset
- Cougars turn back Wildcats'
- Man trapped in Nutty Putty cave dies
- Running game key to BYU offense
- Woods, wife unavailable for interview
- Cougars beat Utes in overtime
396 - Hall mouths off about hate of Utah
150 - Thunder rolls by Jazz
136 - Cave to be sealed with body inside
115 - Man trapped in Nutty Putty cave dies
115 - Editorial: Poor welcome for Palin
113 - Rivalry Week is highly profane
88 - Hall's legacy measured today
75 - Y. focused on 10-win season
73 - Letters: C02 causes warming
70
watch out for next year for sure, the negatives are just closet (and...
And something else, I generally follow players from the state schools when...
I could care less that Max Hall said what he did. The feeling is mutual BYU...
Dear Max, probably could have done without that comment. Probably would've...
As a Utah fan, let me first say congratulations to Max Hall, the Cougars, and...
Geno's and Pat's are good.. but, they are mostly for tourists, the real...
(You even got a middle initial... how's that for 'ya Max) It's nice to see...
Even today, I still cannot get enough of this movie or Charles Gitonga Maina....
...disappointed with Max Hall's comments that he hates everything about UofU....
Over the last few days I read comments of people complaining about tasteless...


You can be the first to comment on this story.