September 20, 2012|By Antonio Olivo, Chicago Tribune reporter
This particular article " Illinois sees more people living in poverty" took me back a bit by these facts and statistics. there are so many Ann Gadon's today who is at the age of 51 and was employed as a sales representative for a sales distribution comapany. Ms. Gadon's pay was cut by 25% and now she was eventually let go from her sales position. She presently gets help from her parents to make ends meet, .
New census data indicatesa very rough road for tens of thousands of people in Illinois. We are all waiting to kick start the economy, an estimated 1.9 million people in the state are living below the federal poverty guideline rates, a 150,000 more than in 2010.
White collar jobs are taking lower paying work when they are able to get it. the median household income in Chicago was $43,628.00 less than in 2009 and part of a steady decline over the past three years. Chicago and all of the United States is out of control and the people who need jobs cannot get them because the one's who were in higher positions are now taking those jobs that the lower paying people had and are left without anything, but poverty. Trade jobs will always be needed, but the competition for the jobs becomes more competitive and only the strong survive and downsizing plat's a big part in this field
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