Nearly all of California’s crises are worse in its Latino communities, new report says

Sobering information about the state of Latinos in California:

Almost every problem elected officials have struggled to solve seems even worse for Latinos, who have almost double the poverty rate of white Californians and less than half the growth in household income over the last two decades compared with Asian Americans. Nowhere is that more evident than in the Bay Area, where Latinos have a median income of almost $37,000 less than Asian Americans. The gap in comparison to white residents is even larger.

The researchers also uncovered clear evidence of just how hard the state’s housing crisis has hit Latinos. The data suggest 80% of Latinos in California don’t earn enough to buy a home selling at the state’s median sales price. Others are also struggling to become homeowners, but the relatively low wages of many Latinos — almost half of whom work in service and office support jobs — make it that much harder.

Fewer Latinos own homes than their white neighbors in every region of California, led by a 24-percentage-point gap along the Central Coast. Nor are the homes they live in of good quality; the report finds 62% of Latino households in the Los Angeles region are “substandard,” defined by federal guidelines as having inadequate kitchens, bad plumbing, being overcrowded or overpriced.

Educational inequality further complicates the picture. The report notes that many Latino students are “disproportionately attending segregated and underperforming schools” and have less access to the resources that would prepare them for college. Latino students have high school graduation rates below the overall state average. Fewer than 1 in 3 young Latino men do well enough in their studies to be eligible for admission to a University of California or California State University campus. And no ethnic group has a smaller rate of success at earning a four-year college degree — nor has any group seen such anemic improvement in those numbers since 2000.


If it's like this in one of the more progressive states in the union, what is it like elsewhere???

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