Interview with Alice Steigerwald, 11/6/13

The poverty group went on a fieldwork yesterday. We visited the Covenant House which is a transitional housing unit for youth in NYC. We met with Alice Steigerwald and discussed the work of Covenant House and general poverty in New York. We also learned about how Covenant House and others similar organizations work including what the funding of a private organization entails versus that of a public organization. When the government gives an organization money, they have certain power over what the organization does.

We learned of many outrageous statistics from the almost one hour long meeting. Notes we took that are particularly provocative include that “the average reading level (for the 16-21-year-old homeless, runaway, or pushed out New Yorkers) is 5th grade”. This is because either the youth’s parents, foster parents or other guardians never pushed kids to study or do well. There is no incentive for these kids to learn, do homework, or read.

Our group now understands why youth younger than 16 cannot be helped by organizations like Covenant House. Alice helped us understand that these teenagers are in the hands of the government and their Child Protective Services. One other thing that I found interesting about the Covenant House and other similar organizations is that they cannot force anyone to stay in their home. From this information, we felt motivated to find other ways to help homeless children that can’t legally be helped by any government related organizations.

18juliam

Hello, my name is Julia Meltzer. I am an eigth grader at LREI, a school in Greenwhich Village, New York. Our grade's project for the year is a social justice project. My group of five is focusing on poverty, specifically on homelessness in New York. Aside from this, I enjoy music theory, playing piano, and oboe. 

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