By David K. Shipler
Let’s
assume that Senators Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema are decent people, not callous
to children in poverty. That would mean that they’re merely clueless. They are
not connecting the dots. As they insist
on slashing President Biden’s proposed $322 billion in housing
subsidies, they cannot possibly understand how much lifelong damage that will
do to kids.
Biden and the Democratic leaders are trying to
break a key link in the chain reaction of poverty. Housing is that link. Without
government aid, high rents leave less money for food, leading to malnutrition,
parental stress, and disrupted living, all of which can impair brain
development in young children. The scientific and social research has been
clear on this for decades. Yet the connections are rarely recognized by
legislators and officials—and journalists as well—who persistently treat each problem
and government program as separate and distinct, with little regard for the web
of interactions among the hardships that struggling families face.
In many
parts of the country, the private housing market is brutal for low-wage
workers. Nationwide, households in the bottom 20 percent spend
a median 56 percent of their income on rent. The rest of their monthly funds are committed
to paying for electricity, water, phone, heat, car loans, and the like. What
they can shrink is the part of their budget for food. And without proper
nutrition during critical periods of early life, children suffer cognitive
impairment that is not undone even if food security is later restored. [See A
Hungry Child’s First Thousand Days in Washington Monthly.]
Stress
is also a factor in brain development, researchers have found. Even if a family
doesn’t become homeless but lives with constant tension over paying the rent
and other bills, the anxiety can be absorbed by children, both in
utero and after birth. Imagine—if you can—the anxiety of parents who
have too little food for their children, for feeding offspring is a most
elemental instinct and duty.
Furthermore, children’s biological
and mental health is damaged when families have to move repeatedly or reside in
poor housing with lead in the water from old pipes, roaches and mold that trigger asthma
attacks, and overcrowding that causes household friction.
The study of stress has been a significant addition to the understanding of the environmental impacts on the brain, to the point where the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) devotes an entire website to updating research on risks and prevention. In its list of what scientists in a seminal study call Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs), the CDC includes housing issues along with more obvious traumas such as suffering neglect and witnessing violence or suicide.
Actual brain chemistry and architecture can be
affected by “families with caregivers experiencing high levels of parenting
stress or economic stress,” the CDC reports, “communities with unstable housing
and where residents move frequently,” or “where families experience food
insecurity.” On the contrary, protective factors include “communities with
access to safe, stable housing.”
It would be nice if Manchin and
Sinema would read and respect their own country’s expertise. Sinema labels
herself a former social worker. It’s hard to imagine any social worker with
proper training and credentials failing to grasp these pernicious risks to
children’s futures.
Specialists
identify three
types of stress: positive, tolerable, and toxic. The response to
each of these determines its longterm effects. A certain amount of transitory stress
is necessary to healthy development, according to Harvard’s Center on the
Developing Child. “Some situations that might trigger a positive stress
response are the first day with a new caregiver or receiving an injected immunization.”
Tolerable
stress—a death in the family or a natural disaster—can elevate alert levels for
a longer period, but “if the activation is time-limited and buffered by
relationships with adults who help the child adapt, the brain and other organs
recover from what might otherwise be damaging effects.”
Toxic stress, which can include
prolonged economic hardship, occurs when the body’s stress response is
activated for an extensive period without adequate adult support. That “can
disrupt the development of brain architecture and other organ systems, and
increase the risk for stress-related disease and cognitive impairment, well
into the adult years,” the Harvard center notes. Diabetes, heart disease,
depression, substance abuse, and developmental delays may result.
The
biological chemistry is no mystery. “When a child experiences toxic stress,” according
to pediatrician Kari Phang, “the Hypothalamic Pituitary and Adrenal
(HPA) hormone axis is over-activated. This results in blood levels of the
stress hormone cortisol being higher which can result in long term changes in
inflammation and immunity. Studies have shown associations between toxic stress
and changes in brain structure. The consequences of this can include more
anxiety as well as impaired memory and mood control. Toxic stress responses can
also include changes in gene expression, meaning which genes in your DNA are
turned on or off.”
Since
housing is a major factor in stress-producing hardships, increasing subsidies
is an important part of the Biden administration’s proposal in its $3.5-trillion
social spending bill—which won’t be enacted thanks to Manchin and Sinema and
the Senate Republicans. Of the $322 billion in proposed housing subsidies,
$200 billion would go for the federal program of vouchers that about two
million poor families now use to pay part of their rent. It is a sad but
undeniable fact that America’s vaunted free-market economy alone does not
enable low-wage workers enough income to live healthy lives, emotionally or
physically.
Glenn
Thrush reports
in The New York Times that
the funds would add 750,000 families to the program, going part way to
alleviating a waiting list so enormous that some local authorities have stopped
taking new applicants. You have to wait to get on the waiting list. But even
that additional aid would barely make a dent, since limited funding leaves an
estimated 16 million eligible households unable to get rental assistance, according
to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.
Manchin,
Sinema, and their short-sighted colleagues are wielding their devastating axes
against the powerless people who depend on government lifelines. As Thrush
points out, housing subsidies are vulnerable to cuts because they enjoy less
popular support than programs benefitting the middle-class as well as the poor:
pre-school education, health care, community college.
This blindness
to the harm inflicted on children displays the country’s poverty—its poverty of
understanding.
Previously published in the Washington Monthly.
(I am just seeing this article now!...December 2019!)
ReplyDeleteThis is such an excellent article! It should be published where Sinema and Manchin cannot miss it!! Someone should push their unconscionable faces into it!!! I think you are too generous when you "assume that Sinema and Manchin are decent people;" What's decent about them?!! I see two very selfish, power-hungry, callous and hurtful people primarily interested in building their own power through their dirty associations with extremely vile sources - Corrupt Big Industry!!! They are each a serious Stumbling Block against a WONDERFULLY progressive agenda that Joe Biden has courageously put forth for our country - a rare opportunity for us to MOVE AHEAD WITH GIANT STRIDES in so many MARVELOUS and WONDROUS ways!!! They are both a SICKENING obstacle to great progress so amazingly introduced by Joe Biden. They're not actual Democrats - they're classic Selfish, Callous, Short-sighted, Evilly-Inclined Republicans in All But Name!!! People should not be blind-sided by their coy disguise in some form of "seemingly decent" sheep's clothing!!! They both MAKE ME SICK!!!!! - and I believe they SHOULD make anyone DECENT SICK, TOO.
A Pox on their ugly, hurtful and corrupt houses!!! A VILE POX ON THEM BOTH - to the end of time!! And may it come to pass - to them and to all who hold their DESPICABLE VALUES.
Thanks for publishing this article. It's sad but truthful and therefore I just LOVED reading it!!! Thanks.