| CSUF Hosts Oct. 29 Forum on Conditions of O.C. Children Center for Community Collaboration's Annual Report Cites Rises in Poverty, Gang
  
                    
                   Oct. 28, 2007 :: No. 84  More  children are living in poverty, and gang membership has spiked for youngsters,  ages 8 to 17, according to the 13th annual Report on the Conditions of Children  in Orange County. The  report, filled with statistics on the health, economic status, safety and  education of Orange County’s children, will be discussed at an 8 a.m.-noon  forum Monday, Oct. 29, in the university’s Titan Student Union. Produced  by Cal State Fullerton’s Center for Community Collaboration, the report is used  by agencies throughout the county to help determine what can be done to improve  children’s lives. “The  community continues to look at the report as a gage to benchmark their  progress,” said Michelle Berelowitz, director of the Center for Community  Collaboration. She said the purpose of the forum is to raise awareness about  the conditions of children in Orange County and to find ways to improve them. Hundreds  of educators, community leaders, representatives of human service groups and  law enforcement agencies, as well as probation officers will participate in the  forum. Members  of a formerly homeless family, once separated because the parents were drug  addicts, will tell their story of rehabilitation and explain how they recovered  and were reunited, thanks to help they received from the county’s government,  educational and nonprofit agencies. This  year’s report contains data that provides an analysis of trends over the past  decade. Some of the conditions that need improvement, Berelowitz said, include:
				   
  The number of students who qualify for and receive free or reduced-priced  lunches at school increased by 9.1 percent (169,528 children) between the  1997-98 school year and the 2006-07 school year (184,956 children). In 2006, there were 1,205 known gang  members, ages 8 to 17. That’s 375 more than in 2002.  Between 1996 and 2005, the percentage of  newborns with low birth weight increased from 5.2 percent to 6.3 percent.  The  report also reveals conditions that have improved. Among them:
				    
 The number of women receiving early prenatal  care has increased. In 2005, there were 97,425 active child  support cases in Orange County, constituting a 20 percent decrease from 1997.  The decrease in caseload, coupled with an increase in distributed collections,  has led to an increase in per-case collections from $807 in 1997 to $1,823 in  2005. The Academic Performance Index (API) in  Orange County schools has increased in the past eight years. The average API  scores across all Orange County school districts ranged from 654 to 887 for the  2005-06 school year. Orange County performs above statewide totals of the  percent of schools at or above the 800 target. “There  are lots of improvements, but the issue of poverty is important to address  since it affects the entire community,” Berelowitz said. “It correlates to low  reading scores, a higher level of free and reduced-cost lunches in the schools,  low academic performance, crime and homelessness.” The  homeless issue will be addressed at the forum by Scott Darrell, executive  director of the Kennedy Commission in Orange County. The commission is an  advocacy organization that supports affordable housing developments and works  on providing housing for the poor. Other  experts also will speak on homelessness, developmental screenings, child  support services, community service learning and gangs. Additional  information is available from the Center for Community Collaboration at  657-278-5681.   
 
                     
                      | Media Contacts: | Michelle Berelowitz, Center for Community  Collaboration, 657-278-5681 or mberelowitz@fullerton.eduMimi Ko  Cruz, Public Affairs, 657-278-7587 or mkocruz@fullerton.edu
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