2/3: Food hardship report: Poverty up in South
Examiner: Food hardship report shows increase in poverty in South
Ten of the eleven states the ThinkSouth blog covers are suffering the highest rates of hunger in America -- Mississippi, Arkansas, Alabama, Tennessee, Kentucky, Louisiana, South Carolina, North Carolina, Florida and Georgia.
Mississippi, the state with the highest incidence of food hardships report, saw their numbers increase when children under the age of 18 were factored into the statistics. Mississippi households without children held a hunger rating of 22.5 percent while Mississippi households with children held a hunger rating of 33.8 percent.
Also in the South:
ALABAMA: State Senate fails to pass $1 billion road construction bill
ARKANSAS: Counselors see increase in gambling addictions in Arkansas
FLORIDA: Including illegal immigrants in census count becomes an issue in Senate race
GEORGIA: PSC wants refund for taxpayers from abandoned Yucca Mtn. nuclear waste project
KENTUCKY: State highway plan could cost $11 billion from 2010-2016
LOUISIANA: Coastal restoration funds in President Obama's proposed 2011 budget
MISSISSIPPI: Commentary: Odds stacked against state lottery
NORTH CAROLINA: State has exhausted ability to borrow money according to new report
SOUTH CAROLINA: Study links port expansion to health problems
TENNESSEE: Nursing home care in state ranks very low
VIRGINIA: Under Gov. McDonnell, death penalty likely to expand
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Labels: coastal, death penalty, gambling, health, highway, hunger, lottery, nursing, port, poverty, roads

