LOS ANGELES, June 3 (Xinhua) -- More than 100 mayors across the U.S. were
searching for ways to address poverty that affects millions of Americans, a
newspaper report said on Saturday.
At a just-concluded conference in Las Vegas, the mayors reaffirmed their commitment to providing better-paying jobs and affordable healthcare and housing to millions of
Americans living in poverty in their cities.
Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa Villaraigosa urged the mayors to
work together to start a national dialogue about the need for better jobs ,
housing and healthcare, the Los Angeles Times reported.
This was a national problem that should be given enough attention,
villaraigosa said, expressing concerns that issues facing the working poor are a
low priority in Washington.
He acknowledged that bringing the public's attention to the issue would not
be easy.
The mayor said he and a delegation of mayors will travel to Washington to
voice their concerns, perhaps by year's end.
It was the third meeting of the U.S. Conference of Mayors' poverty task
force, which members hope will lead to new federal policy, Villaraigosa said.
"We're putting this together for the purpose of forcing a conversation with
the nation," the mayor said after the meeting. "We want to put this on the
national agenda in a bipartisan way. Neither Democrats nor Republicans have been
talking about poverty for a very long time," he said.
Villaraigosa said the high cost of housing and a dearth of higher-paying
jobs, among other things, had shrank the number of middle class in Los Angeles
and across the country.
Eighteen percent of Los Angeles families live below the poverty line,
according to the Public Policy Institute of California. In Los Angeles, poorly
educated migrant workers hold two or three jobs and still struggle to pay for
housing, food and transportation.
Villaraigosa said he hoped to become a high-profile face in the battle
against urban poverty and would advocate new partnerships between government and
private industry to bring bothjobs and affordable housing to cities across the
nation.
For Los Angeles, the mayor voiced support for providing incentives for
developers to construct low-income housing, training workers for higher-paying
jobs and offering programs to improve literacy.
Providing quality education goes hand-in-hand with efforts to reduce
poverty, he said. The country also needs to find a solutionto the high cost of
healthcare, the mayor said, noting that millions of working Americans cannot
afford health insurance. Enditem