Jan 10 2018 half of isle residents face financial hardship

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Nearly half of isle residents face financial hardship By Susan Essoyan January 10, 2018

COURTESY AINA PAIKAI Cindy Adams, president and CEO of Aloha United Way, describes the new report as “a call to action.”

Nearly half of Hawaii’s households earn too little to cover their basic needs, even though many are holding down more than one job, according to a study released Tuesday by Aloha United Way. AUW commissioned the “United Way ALICE Report-Hawaii” to assess financial hardship in the islands, focusing on a group of people caught in the gap between what it costs to live here and what they get paid. “ALICE” is an acronym for Asset Limited, Income Constrained, Employed. “Our ALICE population represents hardworking people we interact with every day, who have a job — or two or three — yet cannot afford basic necessities to remain stable and self-sufficient,” said Cindy Adams, president and CEO of AUW. “This report really quantifies that and puts a number to our ALICE households in Hawaii and helps us understand the enormity of the situation and also the obstacles they struggle with every day,” she said in an interview. “It’s now up to us as a community to decide what we are going to do to address the issue.”


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