ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: TUESDAY, February 9, 1993                   TAG: 9302090346
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: B1   EDITION: NEW RIVER VALLEY 
SOURCE: By Associated Press
DATELINE:                                 LENGTH: Medium


REGION LEADS IN POVERTY

Northern Virginia generally has the lowest poverty rates in the state, while Southwest Virginia and urban areas have the highest, according to 1990 U.S. Census Bureau figures released Sunday.

Radford has the highest poverty rate in Virginia, although state and local officials say that number is skewed by the presence of 9,500 university students.

In Radford, 4,152 people, or 32.2 percent of the city's population, were living below the national poverty line. The poverty line is defined as $12,675 in annual income for a family of four.

(Blacksburg, home of Virginia Tech, has an even higher poverty rate than Radford, according to census figures released earlier by the Virginia Employment Commission: 37.4 percent. But Blacksburg is a town, not a city, so it didn't make the Census Bureau's list.)

Lee County has the second highest rate in the state, 28.7 percent. Norton had the third highest rate, 26.7 percent.

"The coal area - that whole far southwestern corner of Virginia - and the inner cities of Norfolk and Richmond are what we think of as the poverty pockets," said De Ann Hubicsak, spokeswoman for the state Department of Social Services.

Norfolk's rate was 19.3 percent and Richmond's rate was 20.9 percent.

Roanoke's rate was 16.1 percent, while Roanoke County's was 4.1 percent. Salem's was 5.2 percent.

Poquoson's 2.8 percent rate was the lowest statewide, followed by Loudoun County with 3.1 percent, Prince William County with 3.2 percent and Fairfax County with 3.5 percent. Poquoson is on the Peninsula; the other three localities are in Northern Virginia.

Hubicsak says the low rates can be misleading because the data do not accurately reflect true poverty in places such as Northern Virginia, where the high cost of living, especially for housing, skews the poverty figures.

"Northern Virginia, as prosperous as it is . . . is really a bad place to be poor," she said.

Virginia's 10.2 percent poverty rate was below the national rate of 13.1 percent.

New Hampshire, at 6.4 percent, had the lowest percentage of residents below the poverty line. Mississippi had the highest rate at 25.2 percent.

Some information in this story came from an earlier story by staff writer Kevin Kittredge.

\ POVERTY IN VIRGINIA\ NUMBER OF POOR, PERCENTAGE OF POPULATION, NATIONAL RANK

LOCALITY POOR RATE RANK

Bath County 679 14.2 1,758

Bedford County 3,162 7.0 2,954

Bedford 927 16.4 1,351

Bland County 593 10.0 2,581

Botetourt County 1,511 6.2 3,013

Buchanan County 6,770 21.9 637

Buena Vista 870 14.4 1,712

Carroll County 3,694 14.1 1,785

Covington 909 13.1 2,000

Craig County 425 9.8 2,612

Danville 9,795 19.0 958

Dickenson County 4,518 25.9 374

Floyd County 1,673 14.0 1,808

Franklin County 4,228 11.1 2,363

Galax 1,200 18.8 984

Giles County 1,974 12.2 2,145

Grayson County 2,461 15.3 1,537

Henry County 5,241 9.3 2,697

Highland County 358 13.6 1,892

Lexington 853 18.2 1,065

Lynchburg 9,889 16.4 1,351

Martinsville 2,504 15.6 1,477

Montgomery County 14,381 22.1 623

Norton 1,132 26.7 337

Patrick County 2,352 13.6 1,892

Pulaski County 4,480 13.4 1,940

Radford 4,152 32.2 139

Roanoke County 3,164 4.1 3,106

Roanoke 15,238 16.1 1,395

Rockbridge County 2,460 13.6 1,892

Salem 1,116 5.2 3,067

Smyth County 5,219 16.7 1,296

Tazewell County 8,609 19.0 958

Wise County 8,439 21.6 666

Wythe County 4,375 17.5 1,175

Source - 1990 Census


Memo: shorter version ran in the Metro edition.

by Archana Subramaniam by CNB