Kids Count Alaska 2000

One of a long series of annual reports on this subject - see "Kids Count" Children living in small isolated places lead much different lives from those in bigger communities on the road system. Many villages still lack adequate water and sewer systems, and some still rely on honey buckets....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dinges, Norman, Lampman, Claudia, Ragan, Shawna
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Institute of Social and Economic Research, University of Alaska. 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11122/12080
Description
Summary:One of a long series of annual reports on this subject - see "Kids Count" Children living in small isolated places lead much different lives from those in bigger communities on the road system. Many villages still lack adequate water and sewer systems, and some still rely on honey buckets. In the past 20 years, state and federal agencies have built sanitation systems in many rural places–but it’s an enormous and ongoing job. Part of the problem is that many areas of Alaska require specially adapted systems that are very expensive to build and operate. In this data book, we look at (1) the indicators of children’s well-being the Kids Count program uses nationwide; and (2) other measures that reflect conditions Alaskan children face—and that illustrate the sharp differences among regions of a state twice the size of the original 13 American colonies. Kids Count is a nationwide program funded by the Annie E. Casey Foundation.