Bakar Toese drinks a bottle at the Road Home in Salt Lake City on Friday, Sept. 28, 2012.
Kristin Murphy, Deseret News
SALT LAKE CITY — Sophie Toese hoped that things would change when she had a girl with the father of three of her four children.
"That's his first daughter," she said, gesturing to one-week-old Harmony, who was asleep on a bunk bed in the Road Home. "I thought having a girl would make him change his life. But he just wants to go to parties."
Her family of six, including Toese, 22, her four children and her younger sister, Tina, 19, are sharing a room in the Road Home. They've been there for about a month.
"Momma, fries," her 2-year-old, Jamal, urged Toese as she fed him ice cubes. "Momma, fries."
"I know," she said. "We don't have money for fries. Tomorrow, OK?"
It's part of the dialog here for a young mother living day to day. Toese grew up in American Samoa and it's too soon to say what the future holds for her children. But Toese, simply by virtue of her gender, is almost two times as likely as a man to be a second generation recipient of public assistance. Add the children and the number skyrockets.
It is among several revelations in a report released Friday by the Utah Department of Workforce Services. Called Intergenerational Poverty in Utah 2012, it measures the impact of growing up in poverty and the likelihood that poverty and its related problems will continue into adulthood.
"The more impoverished a person is during childhood, the more likely that person is to receive public assistance as an adult," the report states.
The Utah figures show: "Almost 36,000 children receiving (public assistance) between 1989 and 2008 are now adults receiving (public assistance). These 'second generation' adults are ages 21 to 41 and represent 1 in every 24 Utahns of the same age group," the report states.
Almost 70 percent of all of the mothers in this group have at least two children.
Rick Little, Director of the department’s Workforce Research and Analysis Division, said there have always been examples of intergenerational poverty, but this is the first time that there has been deep research and data to reveal trends and the size of the challenge facing individuals and the state.
It shows just how difficult it will be for Toese to climb out of poverty, and offers a troubling predictor of the challenge facing her children.
"This is the first time we've quantified that," Little said. "Now we want to watch it. This focuses on those individuals who are chronic."
The report is the result of Senate Bill 37 — the Utah Intergenerational Poverty Mitigation Act, passed in 2012. The act establishes a system to tack poverty and an annual report is required to detail those findings.
The information will be passed on to the governor and to legislators and will be used by state and government officials to determine policies for attacking problems associated with poverty. The department's acting executive director, Jon Pierpont, said intergenerational poverty will be a key issue at an Oct. 9 conference seeking solutions to chronic poverty.
"This is the baseline," he said. "Now, what do we want to do moving forward?"
The results looked at numerous categories, including employment history, legal issues, homelessness, number of children in the home, marital status, age and gender.
"This is not a study on intergenerational poverty in total," Joe Demma, communications director at Utah's Department of Workforce Services, said. "It's only people we can identify who are on public assistance."
Currently, 70 percent of all people living in poverty in Utah receive public assistance. But that leaves 30 percent who don't.
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Oh the Liberal victim mind set! Saying your poor because your parents were poor is a falsehood. You inherent bad heart genes and cholesterol problems. Having children out of wedlock is a choice. The Democrat mantra of the rich keep getting rich and More..
She thought having a child would make him change his partying ways.
DUH!!
By sleeping with him with NO commitment on his part, you FACILITATED his partying ways.
See Dadof5sons's comment upon the consequences of
There is actually some skill involved in knowing how to game the system. A good panhandler can clear $300 a day.