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In Short

Asset Building News Week – September 9, 2016

Highlights from this week's news stories

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News Highlights: Paid Sick Leave, Uneven Recoveries, and Online Shopping

A new from the Center for Economic and Policy Research 鈥減rovides strong evidence that implementing paid sick days has virtually no negative impact on employers. Paid sick days do, however, have a huge positive impact for workers.鈥 The report did find that workers in different industries take advantage of policy at varying levels. Only 53 percent of workers within the leisure and hospitality industries take advantage of paid sick leave compared to about 70 percent of all other industries. 鈥淭he authors suggest this is probably because restaurant workers make most of their income in tips, so having their wages recompensed doesn鈥檛 make up for a lost shift.鈥

In a segment on All Things Considered, Ari Shapiro profiles Evelyn and Grattan Betancourt, a black couple living in Fort Washington, MD. The Betancourts live in Prince George鈥檚 County, Maryland, which is one of the richest majority-black counties in the United States. All is not how it seems, however. “[T]he reality is 鈥 and we’re aware of this 鈥 that many people here, even though they’ve lived here many years, are fighting to save their home,” says Mr. Betancourt. The same can be said of many black communities across the country, where post-recession home values have taken much longer to recover compared to white neighborhoods and the intergenerational impacts of the racial wealth gap are on full display.

Writing for Slate, Kavin Senapathy makes the case for allowing SNAP recipients to use their benefits to purchase food online. The biggest barrier many recipients face is simply accessing the markets and grocery stores where their benefits are accepted since 鈥淪NAP users often live in food deserts or lack convenient and reliable access to transportation.鈥 Two groups鈥擳hrive Market and the Environmental Working Group鈥攈ave taken up the cause, but Senapathy cautions that it may be to push an agenda not actually help those receiving SNAP.

News in Brief: Human-Centered Storytelling, Transparency Not Secrecy, and More

  • The 础迟濒补苍迟颈肠鈥檚 interviews Larisa Dinsmoor, a public defender in California, on the Orange County Community Court鈥檚 more holistic approach to helping the homeless. 聽
  • With the help of old fashioned storytelling, the Washington Post鈥檚 captures how difficult it is to live on minimum wage.
  • In Mother Jones, reports on the labor laws and 鈥渟heltered workshops鈥 that allow employers to pay workers with disabilities sub-minimum wages.
  • As part of an ongoing series about work and identity in America, the 础迟濒补苍迟颈肠鈥檚 interviews Mohamed Zaker, a janitor at Harvard University.
  • More than 7 million childless Americans are taxed into poverty every year. 厂濒补迟别鈥檚 calls for expanding the Earned Income Tax Credit in order to right this wrong.
  • The people over at continue their coverage of the impacts of the gender pay gap by explaining how inflexible work hours put women at a disadvantage.
  • In order to close the pay gap, policy should focus on increased salary transparency not secrecy writes the Washington Post鈥檚 .
  • In a recent study, the 鈥渇ound that simple rules of thumb about credit card use can be an effective and inexpensive way to help people make better financial decisions.鈥
  • What should the next administration do to restore the middle class? It鈥檚 actually fairly straightforward according to the 础迟濒补苍迟颈肠鈥檚 .
  • According to recent survey, the Bay Area housing crisis is resulting in a public health crisis. 鈥淭he health outcomes…can be seen in rising numbers of hospitalizations for hypertension, mental health emergencies, asthma attacks, and numerous other illnesses that shorten people’s lives,鈥 reports East Bay Express鈥 .
  • 聽documents how incomes have changed across the United States over the past few decades for the New York Times.听

Events:

| Urban Institute | September 13, 2016

| Brookings Institution | September 14, 2016聽

| American Enterprise Institute | September 19, 2016

| Brookings Institution | September 22, 2016

| Brookings Institution | September 23, 2016

| CFED | September 28-30, 2016

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Asset Building News Week – September 9, 2016