Assets - New York

Average college graduate debt

$38,751

Unbanked households

5.10%

Economic well-being - New York

Extreme poverty rate

10%

Food insecurity

10%

Minimum wage

$15.50

Number of Black or African American children living in families where no parent has full-time, year-round employment

Number of Hispanic or Latino children living in families where no parent has full-time, year-round employment

Percent of individuals who are uninsured

5%

Percent of jobs that are low-wage

Percent of working families under 200% of the poverty line

30%

Poverty rate

14%

Unemployment rate

4%

Family - New York

Children in foster care

14,928

Percent of children living in single parent families

34%

Percent of children in immigrant families

36%

Housing - New York

Home foreclosure rate

1 in 4765

People experiencing homelessness

158,019

Households paying more than 50% of income on housing

951,600

Percent renters

50%

Total housing units

Poverty by demographic - New York

Child poverty rate

20%

Number of Asian and Pacific Islander children below 200% poverty

134,000

Number of Black or African American children below 200% poverty

286,000

Number of Hispanic or Latino children below 200% poverty

494,000

Percent of single-parent families with related children that are below poverty

Senior poverty rate

14.3%

Women in poverty

9,912,287

August 26, 2016

Syracuse.com, August 26, 2016: Central New York Has Most Segregated School District Border in State, Report Finds

Read

August 14, 2016

New York Daily News, August 14, 2016: Disaster Predicted for Obama Desegregation Plan for City’s Poor

Read

August 1, 2016

Democrat & Chronicle, July 31, 2016: Summer school program fights rural poverty

Read

May 17, 2016

The New York Times, May 17, 2016: Why There’s an Uproar Over Trying to Increase Funding for Poor Schools

Read

May 9, 2016

FOX News, May 9, 2016: (Op-Ed) Colleges should open doors to bright low-income students

Read

March 23, 2016

Syracuse.com, March 23, 2016: Without an education, poverty in Syracuse can feel like a sentence

Read