Connecticut Voices for Children Logo
Faces
Home
Publications
By Title
By Date
E-mail Updates
Donate
Advocacy
Partnerships
For the Media
About Us
Contact Us
GiveGreater.org 2010 Challenge
Tax & Budget
HUSKY
Twitter Facebook
Youtube Flickr
Printer-Friendly Printer-friendly Version
Site Map Site Map
Home > Publications >
Child Poverty in 2006: How Do Connecticut Cities Measure Up?

Taby Ali

Recently-released data from the U.S. Census Bureau finds that Hartford no longer has the ignoble distinction of having the second highest child poverty rate among United States cities of 100,000 or more persons. Hartford now ranks 6th highest.

Despite Hartford's apparent improvement in rank, the proportion of Hartford children living in poverty is reported to have actually increased slightly - by 2.1 percentage points (about 5%). Hartford's relative improvement in its ranking stems, instead, from that fact that four other US cities increased their rates of child poverty even more than did Hartford. (September 2007)

Downloads

Download Fact Sheet (916.76K)

Issues
· Child Well-Being Data Reports
· Family Economic Security

Viewers
Download the Acrobat Reader software Get the free Acrobat reader

Download the PowerPoint Viewer software Get the free PowerPoint Viewer



[Back to top]