![]() “We don’t have school because of the Coronavirus. The documentary shows how that struggle is magnified when her school district goes remote. Schoolwork has long been a struggle for Laikyen, who has ADHD. Fantasy makes just over Ohio’s minimum wage: “In my opinion my mom doesn’t get paid as much as she should, because my mom works hard and she deserves a little bit more,” Laikyen said. Twelve-year-old Laikyen, whose mother, Fantasy, works at a gas station to provide for Laikyen and her older sister, also feels her mom’s pain. This is the first time we’ve been able to talk to and show the experience of those who are part of the ‘hidden homeless.’” “There is a stigma and embarrassment around homelessness. They are living with relatives or sharing a house with another family,” said Neumann. “’Hidden homelessness’ is a term for those who are not accessing available services. As an escape, Kyah watches video tours of houses online, imagining that her family will one day have a home of their own. Now, rather than entering the shelter system, they’re experiencing “hidden homelessness”-with all three of them temporarily living in a single room at a relative’s house as Becky looks for work and a home they can afford within Kyah’s school district. And the family lost many of their cherished possessions when they could no longer make payments to the storage company holding their belongings: “I lost important things like pictures that I can’t get again,” Kyah said. Becky was supposed to start a new job in March, but it fell through due to the pandemic. ![]() She, her mother, Becky, and her older sister, Kelia, became homeless when Becky became unable to pay their rent. It is a dilemma that’s familiar to 14-year-old Kyah. He feels the need to protect his mother from his fears about the family’s struggle: “If I feel sad or something, and I expressed to my mom, that would make her feel sad, and so I just keep it to myself.” Including food stamps, Crystal takes home the equivalent of $885 each month, an amount that leaves them unable to fix their car when it breaks down.Īt the trailer where they are living through government assistance, Shawn helps to care for his toddler sister, striving to be a positive role model for her: “I mean, it’s a lot of pressure on me, but I try to do my best,” he said. Thirteen-year-old Shawn fears that his mom, Crystal, who keeps working at the local Salvation Army food pantry throughout the pandemic, will catch the virus. “The film then became about poverty in America with the backdrop of COVID.” We were considering swing states to film in, and I was in Ohio when things started to happen with COVID-19,” said Producer/Director Jezza Neumann. “We were looking to make a film that examined child poverty in America with the presidential election coming up. Their families were already living below or near the poverty line when the Coronavirus hit, and now, they’re confronting the new challenges that come with surviving the pandemic and the social occurrences that have coincided with the viral outbreak: school closures, rising unemployment, and the momentum of the Black Lives Matter movement. Filmmakers spent six months with three children and their families (one mixed-race, one Black and one white). The film follows children living in The Plains, Ohio, Marietta, Ohio and Columbus, Ohio. The documentary film called Growing Up Poor in America will air on WOUB HD on September 8 at 9 p.m. Growing Up Poor in America airs September 8ĪTHENS, OH – PBS Frontline examines issues surrounding child poverty during the pandemic by visiting southeast Ohio. ![]() – Frontline Examines Child Poverty in Southeast Ohio “I try not to show my feelings because I know it will be overwhelming and it makes things worse.TONIGHT ON WOUB AT 9 P.M. “What makes me the saddest about all this is seeing my mom like this,” Kyah said. One of the most memorable scenes was 14-year-old Kyah talking about how she, her older sister, Kelia, and mother Charlotte became homeless when Charlotte suddenly couldn’t pay rent after her new job fell through due to the pandemic. President Donald Trump speaks to the press outside of the White House on 30 October, 2020 in Washington, DC (Photo: Getty) In letting the children speak, the film was almost unbearably sad, but also full of the straight-talking, innocent insight of which only children are capable. ![]() The kids and their families were filmed for several months through the period of Black Lives Matter protests, and in the wake of the financial devastation caused by the pandemic. Growing Up Poor, Channel 4, review: A devastating indictment of 2019 Britain that should be watched by every politician in this country ![]()
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