On Sunday the Chicago SunTimes and WBEZChicago published a story about how life expectancy in some neighborhoods of Chicago is much lower than in others. Below is the map that was in the SunTimes story, and which can be found on the WBEZ site.
I included some text from the article with the map. The top paragraph says,
"In a city with a deep history of segregation, Chicago public health officials view the gap through the lens of race. They say four main drivers — heart disease, homicide, opioid overdoses and cancer — fuel shorter lives among Chicagoans who are Black compared to residents of other races. In many cases, these deaths are preventable."
The bottom paragraph reads,
"In West Garfield Park, merely living is much harder than in most parts of Chicago, according to a “hardship index” that incorporates unemployment, income and other factors. Around 40% of households make less than $25,000 a year, data shows. The majority of residents are unemployed or stopped looking for a job"
I've been writing about this for over 20 years. In 2008 I followed a SunTimes report titled "Schooled in Fear" with these articles.
As we began 2025 I wrote an article titled, "Inequality. So much data. So little change."
In that article I included this Chicago Tribune story and map from 1994.
This is not a new problem.
As you celebrate Thanksgiving, then the year-end holidays, I urge you to form a study group and start reading some of the articles I've posted on this blog, and some of the information I've shared in this section of the Tutor/Mentor library.
Then read some of my articles about philanthropy, such as this one.
Helping volunteer-based tutor/mentor programs grow in high poverty neighborhoods is one way to provide extra support that helps kids through school and into adult lives. It's also a way to increase the number of adults from beyond poverty who become personally involved, through the bonds they form with the kids they work with.
But each node of this map points to issues that need to be addressed concurrently. It's a huge challenge and something that won't be solved in a short term of any single elected official.
Or a gift to my on-going Fund T/MI campaign.









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