RALEIGH, N.C. — North Carolina ranks 34th in the nation in terms
of the overall wellbeing of its children, according to the Kids Count
survey released Wednesday.
The report by the Annie E. Casey Foundation finds that one in four
North Carolina children lives in poverty. The percent of North
Carolina children living in families where no parent has full-time,
year round employment jumped to 35 percent in 2010.
The number of North Carolina children living in high-poverty
neighborhoods more than doubled over the past decade, increasing
from 76,000 in 2000 to 212,000, the report showed. Overall, North
Carolina ranked 35th in the nation when it comes to its children’s
economic wellbeing.
In June, North Carolina tied with South Carolina for the fifth-highest
unemployment rate in the country, at 9.4 percent. The Kids Count
report ranked South Carolina as 43rd in its children’s overall
wellbeing.
But analysts said the study showed investments in health and
education efforts for North Carolina’s children are beginning to pay
off. The state ranked in the middle of the country in terms of both
indicators, and North Carolina ranked among the top 20 states in
two education-related indicators: fourth-grade reading proficiency
and eighth-grade proficiency in math.
Deborah Bryan, president and CEO of Action for Children North
Carolina, said the report showed “mixed progress” for North
Carolina and warned that the state must work harder to help keep
its children ahead.
“The trend within many indicators —
particularly those of economic well-being —
show North Carolina children are losing
important ground,” Bryan said.