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Racial & Geographic Inequities Persist For Illinois Children, New Report Finds

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In Illinois, the quality of a child’s health, education, housing and economic situation often correlates with a child's race, ethnicity and geographic location, according to a new KIDS COUNT report fromVoices For Illinois Children, an organization that advocates for state investments that benefit children across the state.

Credit Voices for Illinois Children 2019 report

The disparities highlight the need for increased access to services and program to improve the lives of all Illinois children, said Bill Byrnes, project manager for the KIDS COUNT program, which has been tracking data on these issues for the past 30 years.

Byrnes said although child poverty has been declining since 2012 and is now at 17.8%, black and Latinx children are still more likely to live in poverty than white or Asian children (38% and 24%, respectively, vs. 10%).

The median income for black and Latinx families was $43,000 and $50,000, respectively, compared to an overall median family income in Illinois in 2016 of $74,000.

Some of the most disturbing trends, Byrnes said, are related to health outcomes.

While the infant mortality rate has slowly declined overall, Byrnes said the data show the black infant mortality rate in 2016 was 12.9 per 1,000, which is more than twice the state rate of 6.3 per 1,000.

Black mothers are also more likely to die while pregnant or following the birth of a child.

“When we look at maternal mortality rates, for all women it was 49 per 10,000. For black women, it was 109 per 10,000,” Byrnes said. “Every other racial or ethnic group was below the 49 per 10,000 threshold.”

The findings highlight racial inequalities in access to health care, Bynes said.

Credit Voices for Illinois Children 2019 report

Black and Latinx children were also about twice as likely as white children to live in households with a high housing cost burden.

The KIDS COUNT report also look at geographic disparities in poverty and housing issues. The report finds counties with the highest rates of poverty and student homelessness are clustered in the southern third of Illinois.

Byrnes attributes this trend to the decline in manufacturing jobs and the overall lack of jobs with high wages and benefits in rural areas.

Credit Voices for Illinois Children 2019 report

The report includes 14 recommendations to help address these geographic and racial disparities, including:

  • Ensure the recent increase to a $15 minimum wage keeps up with inflation
  • Increase funding to school districts using the evidence-based funding formula
  • Provide training to doctors on the social causes of health inequalities
  • Encourage counties and municipalities to increase the stock of affordable housing

“The continued existence of racial and ethnic disparities among Illinois children suggest that Illinois has not gone far enough in addressing inequalities in these areas,” said Tasha Green Cruzat, president of Voices for Illinois Children, in a statement. “Investing in our children now will pay out dividends in the future.”

Credit Voices for Illinois Children 2019 report

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Christine Herman spent nine years studying chemistry before she left the bench to report on issues at the intersection of science and society. She started in radio in 2014 as a journalism graduate student at the University of Illinois and a broadcast intern at Radio Health Journal. Christine has been working at WILL since 2015.
Christine Herman