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Pope’s visit to nonprofit to shine light on poverty in U.S.

Sister+Donna+Markham%2C+president+of+Catholic+Charities+USA%2C+says+Pope+Francis%E2%80%99+trip+to+the+United+States+highlight+the+issue+of+poverty+in+the+U.S.
Amanda Guillen
Sister Donna Markham, president of Catholic Charities USA, says Pope Francis’ trip to the United States highlight the issue of poverty in the U.S.

WASHINGTON – Poverty in the United States has remained at a consistent high in the past five years. As Pope Francis visits here this week, he will meet some of the city’s poorest residents.

Census data released this month estimates the poverty rate in 2014 was 14.8 percent, or 46.7 million people.

Catholic Charities USA served 8.7 million people in 2014, including Catholics and others. Half were adults younger than 65, 18 percent were senior citizens and 32 percent were children.

The national nonprofit’s mission is to work to reduce poverty in the United States.

With Pope Francis scheduled to arrive in the U.S. on Tuesday, Sept. 2 the issue of poverty in relation to the Pope’s focus on the impoverished is a topic that Catholic Charities USA knows all too well.

Sister Donna Markham, the group’s president, said last week that everyone should be aware of poverty.  Catholic Charities USA spent more than $4.3 billion to assist poor people last year with a staff of 61,907 and 267,626 volunteers.

Markham said the pope’s visit will illuminate the issue and bring it to the forefront of people’s minds.

“As an expression of our faith and solidarity with Pope Francis, Catholic Charities is right now taking on the obligation to call to awareness the plight of those who are living in poverty,” Markham said.

The group hopes its #End45-Raise a Hand to End Poverty in America campaign will bring awareness to poverty and draw volunteers.

“There are a lot of judgments made about people who are poor, suggesting that they should just go out and find a job,” Markham said. “Well, sometimes they are too distraught to even be able to get to that place, and I do think we started the campaign because most Americans don’t know the extent of the problem in this country.”

On average 7,784 people are homeless every day in D.C.

Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Washington worked with the District of Columbia to provide six emergency shelters to anyone in need and four traditional housing programs for people on the path to independent living.

Erik Salmi, the group’s director of communications, said there are misconceptions about homelessness.

“Some of the hardest working folks that I’ve met are our clients, and I’ve heard a saying that where you finish the race depends on where you start and I think that is especially true of the clients that we see,” Salmi said. “I think that is still a misconception that people think that they are just freeloading or that they have given up and that is just not true.”

Catholic Charities agencies across the country conduct outreach to understand what needs to be done to get people off the streets and place them in homes.

Nationwide, Catholic Charities has provided 524,010 housing services that can include emergency shelters and traditional housing programs.

Additional services include providing affordable housing, offering foreclosure prevention support, rental assistance, case management, housing search and information, home mortgage assistance and supervised living for those who are developmentally disabled, mentally ill and elderly.

“Throughout my own religious life, some of my most profound mentors have been the broken hearted and the marginalized often invisible to many of us,” Markham said.

Markham said that throughout her career as a clinical psychologist her teachers have often been those who suffer from severe cases of mental illness, who she said make up a large part of the homeless population.

Markham ended her talk with an excerpt from the pope’s homily given Jan. 3, 2014, at the Church of the Gesu in Rome, where he said, “An authentic faith always implies a deep desire to change the world.”

Reach reporter Amanda Guillen at [email protected] or 202-408-1490. SHFWire stories are free to any news organization that gives the reporter a byline and credits the SHFWire. Like the Scripps Howard Foundation Wire interns on Facebook, Instagram and follow us on Twitter.

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About the Contributor
Amanda Guillen
Amanda Guillen, Editor-in-Chief
Amanda Guillen is a senior multimedia journalism major with a minor in women's studies. She was born and raised in El Paso, Texas and graduated from El Paso High School in 2011. She has been a part of The Prospector since summer 2013 and is currently Managing Editor. She has always had a passion for journalism and plans to become a television news reporter upon graduating from UTEP. In addition to being a full-time student and reporter, she is a part of two honor societies on campus, Alpha Lambda Delta and the National Society of Leadership and Success where she participates in community service regularly. Amanda also interns for KVIA Channel 7 the El Paso affiliate of ABC. Her love for the city of El Paso is something that led her to choose UTEP as her school of choice. She has enjoyed her past 3 years at the university and looks forward to an eventful school year.
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Pope’s visit to nonprofit to shine light on poverty in U.S.