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Without Further Action, A Housing Crisis Looms
Like so many aspects of our society and social safety net, the coronavirus outbreak has revealed the tenuous state of many Americans’ access to housing. On April 1st, mere days after the coronavirus shut down many businesses in the U.S. and caused mass layoffs or furloughs, nearly one third of renters were unable to pay their rent. Many states have put in place moratoriums on evictions and foreclosures (tracked by NLIHC here), but a looming crisis awaits: the potential for mass evictions the day the moratoriums end, leaving a shocking number of people without a place to live. Advocates have pressed for rent freezes to avoid such catastrophe.
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State Legislators Fight for Race Data in COVID Cases
As reports of racial disparities in coronavirus cases started to surface, state legislators in Maryland, Colorado, Texas, Ohio and others are pushing for information: race data of those diagnosed with COVID-19. Other states like Illinois are responding to the disparities by increasing testing in Black communities and issuing guidance on providing health care equitably and ethically. The data we have seen shows that COVID-19 and the resulting economic crisis exacerbates existing inequities and is disproportionately harming and killing Black Americans and people of color. The policy response must address those inequities: in health care, housing, workers rights, and more.
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Access to Health Care Still a Major Hurdle
What were once cracks in our health care systems are now gaping holes, as people are laid off and lose their employer-based health insurance. There’s a renewed call for Medicaid expansion in states that haven’t yet taken advantage of the opportunity to get as many people covered as possible, like in the South, where Black Americans make up greater proportions of the population. People of color also have less access to health care and experience worse treatment and outcomes, laying the foundation for a crisis within the crisis. Meanwhile, residents in rural areas face another challenge to access: long-term disinvestment in rural hospitals.
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We Could All Use a Little Good News These Days
Legislators in the SiX network are standing up and serving their communities in ways that go beyond passing good, progressive legislation. Watch this short video to see the many ways in which legislators are leading—from finding creative ways to encourage constituents to stay home to putting on their PPE and treating patients within the health care system. Thank you to all the legislators, in and out of session, who are working to keep your communities and constituents safe.
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How We Are Celebrating Black Maternal Health Week 2020
SiX is proud to partner with the Black Mamas Matter Alliance on Black Maternal Health Week (BMHW), a week of education and advocacy around the experiences of Black Mamas. Through a series of digital and community events, BMHW uplifted Black-women led entities to focus on the root causes of poor maternal health outcomes and highlighted Black voices to drive conversation around tangible community-driven policy, programs, and solutions.
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Lawmakers Exploit Pandemic to Ban Essential Health Care
SiX’s own Kelly Baden, VP of Reproductive Rights, pens an op-ed in Swaay. Conservative legislators across the country are using the pandemic as an opportunity to ban abortion, calling it “non-essential” and other nonsensical claims. “Pushing for abortion restrictions at a time like this isn't about healthcare, PPE, or even safety. It is a purposeful and manipulative political agenda that will make things even harder at a time when we can all agree things are hard enough.”
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