From $70K to food bank, one family's struggle
March 27, 2008
ALTADENA, California (CNN) -- When she was laid off in February, Patricia Guerrero was making $70,000 a year. Weeks later, with bills piling up and in need of food for her family, this middle-class mother did something she never thought she would do: She went to a food bank.
art.guerrero.cnn.jpg
Patricia Guerrero was laid off in February. Desperate to make ends meet, she recently went to a food bank.
It was Good Friday, and a woman helping her offered to pay her utility bill.
"It brought tears to my eyes, and I sat there and I cried. I was like, 'This is really where I'm at?' " she told CNN. "I go 'no way;' [but] this is true. This is reality. This is the stuff you see on TV. It was hard. It was very hard."
Guerrero is estranged from her husband and raising her two young children. She's already burned through her savings to help make ends meet, and is drawing unemployment checks. She has had to take extreme measures to pay for her interest-only mortgage of $2,500 a month. In fact, her mother moved in with her to help pay the bills.
Guerrero even applied for food stamps, but was denied.
"I never used the system. I've been working since I was 15-and-a-half. I needed it now and it turned me down," she said. more...
AntiSpin: The myth of the lazy, drug addled, spendthrift US consumer busted again. Most of the people getting hurt by the economic crisis are normal folks with too much debt and too little savings but don't know it. In "The Sun Also Rises" Hemingway has a character answer the question "How did you go bankrupt?" with the response "Gradually, then suddenly." For millions of Americans, "suddenly" is here.
March 27, 2008
ALTADENA, California (CNN) -- When she was laid off in February, Patricia Guerrero was making $70,000 a year. Weeks later, with bills piling up and in need of food for her family, this middle-class mother did something she never thought she would do: She went to a food bank.
art.guerrero.cnn.jpg
Patricia Guerrero was laid off in February. Desperate to make ends meet, she recently went to a food bank.
It was Good Friday, and a woman helping her offered to pay her utility bill.
"It brought tears to my eyes, and I sat there and I cried. I was like, 'This is really where I'm at?' " she told CNN. "I go 'no way;' [but] this is true. This is reality. This is the stuff you see on TV. It was hard. It was very hard."
Guerrero is estranged from her husband and raising her two young children. She's already burned through her savings to help make ends meet, and is drawing unemployment checks. She has had to take extreme measures to pay for her interest-only mortgage of $2,500 a month. In fact, her mother moved in with her to help pay the bills.
Guerrero even applied for food stamps, but was denied.
"I never used the system. I've been working since I was 15-and-a-half. I needed it now and it turned me down," she said. more...
AntiSpin: The myth of the lazy, drug addled, spendthrift US consumer busted again. Most of the people getting hurt by the economic crisis are normal folks with too much debt and too little savings but don't know it. In "The Sun Also Rises" Hemingway has a character answer the question "How did you go bankrupt?" with the response "Gradually, then suddenly." For millions of Americans, "suddenly" is here.
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