Children in Cumbria living below poverty line
Last updated at 12:03, Thursday, 06 September 2012
One in five children in Carlisle lives below the poverty line.
Youngsters in other parts of Cumbria are also suffering.
These statistics have been released by charity Save the Children, which has just published a nationwide survey on the subject.
The poverty line is defined as houses where there is an income of less than £12 per day. This is the amount believed to be needed to meet bills and living expenses after housing costs have been paid.
The survey breaks up regions of the UK by parliamentary constituency and local authority area.
In the Carlisle parliamentary area, 20 per cent of children were reported as living in homes below the poverty line, the same as in Barrow and Furness.
Copeland was next with 18 per cent, followed by Workington with 17.
Penrith and the Border and Westmorland and Lonsdale did better on nine per cent and eight per cent respectively.
When Cumbria is broken into local authority areas the figures see Carlisle with 17 per cent.
This is behind Copeland and Barrow on 18 and 22 per cent respectively, but ahead of Allerdale, which has a 16 per cent figure, and Eden and South Lakeland, both with a rate of nine per cent.
The report says the recession has affected these figures in three ways; more children living in families where nobody works, a rise in the number of children living with a mixture of working and non-working adults and an increase in absolute poverty because of wages and benefits not keeping track with inflation.
It also states that its compilers heard regular reports of adults making sacrifices, such as going without meals, to help their children.
Rachael Rodway, a member Carlisle Food Bank’s steering committee, has heard of incidents like this locally.
“One of the stories that persuaded us to set the food bank up was parents giving up food for their children,” she said. She added that many receiving parcels of three days’ worth of food have said they will use it to feed their families.
The agency works at Salvation Army buildings in the city and people attending have to be referred on by other organisations.
But Ms Rodway thinks more people will be needing the food bank in the near future.
“There is another £18 billion worth of cuts to come, I don’t know how that’s going to affect people,” she commented.
“I suspect there are a lot of people in Carlisle who are just one payment away from needing us.”
The report can be found in full at www.savethechildren.org.uk.
First published at 11:26, Thursday, 06 September 2012
Published by http://www.newsandstar.co.uk
Have your say
- 28 new housing sites in Carlisle unveiled (7 comments)
- National restaurant company eyeing Carlisle's Hoopers building (16 comments)
- Hope buyer can be found for Carlisle pub (6 comments)
- Families asked to scatter ashes on Lake District fells - not leave boxes (2 comments)
- Allerdale needs 200 affordable homes a year to help first time buyers (4 comments)
- Plans to cut speed limit on Carlisle road to 40mph (27 comments)
- Cumbria police used bus full of children as roadblock to stop car (56 comments)
- Cumbrian council issues garden waste collections threat (13 comments)
- Anger as new homes approved despite 300 objections (41 comments)
- Cumbrian child porn pervert gets £150,000 pension payout (6 comments)
Court & crime
Anne Pickles
- Police appeal after girl, 10, says she was touched by man on street
- Carlisle residents' anger at mess left behind by travellers
- Man admits 33 sex offences, including three rapes
- Couple left son home alone to go on holiday abroad, Carlisle court told
- National restaurant company eyeing Carlisle's Hoopers building (16 comments)
- Couple left son home alone to go on holiday abroad, Carlisle court told
- National restaurant company eyeing Carlisle's Hoopers building (16 comments)
- Carlisle road closed after lorry driver injured
- Carlisle trader who illegally clocked cars jailed
- Gangs in Carlisle scouring rubbish bags for bank details - claim (9 comments)
- 28 new housing sites in Carlisle unveiled (7 comments)
- Allerdale needs 200 affordable homes a year to help first time buyers (4 comments)
- Families asked to scatter ashes on Lake District fells - not leave boxes (2 comments)
- National restaurant company eyeing Carlisle's Hoopers building (16 comments)
- National restaurant company eyeing Carlisle's Hoopers building (16 comments)
- 28 new housing sites in Carlisle unveiled (7 comments)
- Gangs in Carlisle scouring rubbish bags for bank details - claim (9 comments)
- Cumbria police used bus full of children as roadblock to stop car (56 comments)
- Allerdale needs 200 affordable homes a year to help first time buyers (4 comments)
- Cumbria police used bus full of children as roadblock to stop car (56 comments)
- Anger as new homes approved despite 300 objections (41 comments)
- Trade chairman against Cumbria's summer road closures plan (39 comments)
- Carlisle city centre clothes shop closing down (32 comments)
- Hoopers store in Carlisle bought 'by mistake' at auction (32 comments)








