In In The News

On Saturday, I’m graduating college.

The idea of this is so abstract to me, and although I’ve tried to wrap my head around it a million times, it still doesn’t seem real.

Maybe it’s because for the last few years through the pandemic, time hasn’t felt entirely real. It feels like we’re moving in slow motion, but an overwhelming amount is happening each day. Every time I open an app like Twitter, so much bad news is thrust onto me, and every day I see something new that makes it hard to believe the world will head in the right direction.

I think a lot of people my age are frustrated with the policies created by those before us. Inflation isn’t new, and prices are continually rising. But incomes and economic security from the government aren’t rising at the same rate.

Twenty-three percent of Michigan residents 18 to 24 live in poverty, according to a report from the Michigan League for Public Policy. Young adults who are in the lowest income bracket have severely limited opportunities to improve their economic standing. Most cash assistance programs—and even those are in need of major improvements— are targeted to older people, or people with children.

Read more in Lansing City Pulse.