The Delaware Gazette

Divorce expo a counterpoint to wedding industry

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NEW YORK — Liz Slay­back can trace her deci­sion to pur­sue a divorce to a pre­cise, painful moment. “I knew my mar­riage was over and the divorce pro­ceed­ings were about to begin when I came home and I found my hus­band in bed with my two best friends,” said the 33-year-old den­tal hygien­ist from Staten Island.

US wealth gap between young and old is widest ever

WASHINGTON — The wealth gap between younger and older Amer­i­cans has stretched to the widest on record, wors­ened by a pro­longed eco­nomic down­turn that has wiped out job oppor­tu­ni­ties for young adults and sad­dled them with hous­ing and col­lege debt.

Same goal, opposing plans for debt ‘super’ panel

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Dig­ging in for a bruis­ing strug­gle, Repub­li­cans on Con­gress’ pow­er­ful deficit-fighting “super­com­mit­tee” tar­geted Social Secu­rity and gov­ern­ment health care spend­ing Tues­day while Democ­rats pressed for higher tax rev­enue as part of any deal to reduce red ink by at least $1.2 tril­lion over the next decade.

Census: US poverty rate swells to nearly 1 in 6

WASHINGTON — The ranks of America’s poor swelled to almost 1 in 6 peo­ple last year, reach­ing a new high as long-term unem­ploy­ment left mil­lions of Amer­i­cans strug­gling and out of work. The num­ber of unin­sured edged up to 49.9 mil­lion, the biggest in more than two decades. The Cen­sus Bureau’s annual report released Tues­day offers a snap­shot of the eco­nomic well-being of U.S. house­holds for 2010, when job­less­ness hov­ered above 9 per­cent for a sec­ond year. It comes at a polit­i­cally sen­si­tive time for Pres­i­dent Barack Obama, who has acknowl­edged in the midst of a re-election fight that the unem­ploy­ment rate could per­sist at high lev­els through next year.

Rural US disappearing? Population share hits low

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WASHINGTON — Rural Amer­ica now accounts for just 16 per­cent of the nation’s pop­u­la­tion, the low­est ever. The lat­est 2010 cen­sus num­bers hint at an emerg­ing Amer­ica where, by mid­cen­tury, city bound­aries become indis­tinct and rural areas grow ever less rel­e­vant. Many com­mu­ni­ties could shrink to vir­tual ghost towns as they shut­ter busi­nesses and close down schools, demog­ra­phers say.

Dozens of US cities line up to contest 2010 census

WASHINGTON — With jobs and fed­eral aid at stake, U.S. cities are lin­ing up to con­test their 2010 cen­sus counts as too low. A decade ago, there were 1,200 chal­lenges filed by cities, towns and coun­ties. The U.S. Con­fer­ence of May­ors is pre­dict­ing a big jump in that num­ber, due in part to tighter bud­gets that make local offi­cials more sen­si­tive to poten­tial drop-offs in fed­eral money for Med­ic­aid and other programs.

Census: US men narrowing the gender gap of old age

Women still out­live men, but the gen­der gap among U.S. seniors is nar­row­ing. New 2010 cen­sus fig­ures, released Thurs­day, show men are reduc­ing women’s pop­u­la­tion advan­tage, pri­mar­ily in the 65-plus age group. It’s a change in the social dynam­ics of a coun­try in which longevity, wid­ow­hood and health care for seniors often have been seen as issues more impor­tant to women.

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