menu
Sections
News
Investigations
Politics
Health
Tech
Science
Pop Culture
Business
Latino
Asian America
TV
Nightly News
Meet the Press
Dateline
TODAY
Top storylines
Iraq Turmoil
West Bank Kidnappings
Ukraine Crisis
Featured
30 seconds to know
Art of the Startup
Show Me
Nerdwatch
First Read
Flashback
Ann Curry
Maria Shriver
Multimedia
Video
Photo
Top Stories
Holder Condemns Leaks About Officer's Grand Jury Testimony
Pahoa Lava Flow in Hawaii Threatens Homes
Chris Christie Scolds Heckler at Hurricane Sandy Event
Maine Filing Court Order to Keep Kaci Hickox Quarantined
More from NBC
Local News
Weather
Sports
CNBC
MSNBC.COM
NBC.COM
Breaking News
In Plain Sight
NBC Learn
RE/CODE
Peacock Productions
Next Step for Vets
Parent Toolkit
nbcnews
home
latest
search
In Plain Sight
In Plain Sight
210 days
In Plain Sight: Poverty in America
In Plain Sight: Poverty in America is a special editorial initiative of NBC News focused on covering poverty and inequality in the United States.
Michael Brown Shooting
302 of 306
3 days
Jim Seida / NBC News
Poverty Cops: America's Finest Struggle on Meager Salaries
Seth Freed Wessler
Around the U.S., some police officers earn comfortable middle-class wages while others scrape by on poverty or near poverty pay.
In Plain Sight
11 days
Leo York / for NBC News
How New Mexico Helps Teen Moms Stay in School
Seth Freed Wessler
In New Mexico, high school students are eligible for parental leave, making it easier for teen mothers to continue their education.
In Plain Sight
18 days
JIM MICHAUD / for NBC News
Highly Educated, Unemployed and Tumbling Down the Ladder
Martha C. White
In the topsy-turvy world of jobs these days, even an advanced degree can’t protect some Americans from tumbling down the economic ladder.
In Plain Sight
22 days
Christopher Furlong / Getty Images
Is Health Care Just Another Chaotic, Low-Wage Job?
Seth Freed Wessler
According to a new book, American workers in the medical field face similar harsh management practices as workers in other low-wage jobs.
In Plain Sight
23 days
John Brecher / NBC News
'Condo Takeover Schemes' Can Pose New Foreclosure Threat
Seth Freed Wessler
A Boston woman says she fell prey to a questionable practice that housing advocates are calling a “condo takeover scheme.”
In Plain Sight
41 days
Robin Rayne Nelson / for NBC News
Pregnant and Poor? Eating Healthy Just Got Harder
Martha C. White
A recent warning about mercury levels in canned tuna has put poor moms-to-be in a bind.
In Plain Sight
43 days
AP fie
MacArthur 'Genius' Ai-jen Poo: Organizing Domestic Workers
Seth Freed Wessler
Ai-Jen Poo, the director of National Domestic Workers Alliance, was one of 21 "geniuses" awarded a prestigious MacArthur Foundation fellowship today.
In Plain Sight
44 days
Dustin Franz / for NBC News
'Dying Out Here': Job Gains Leave Black Women Behind
Bill Briggs
A creeping escape from the Great Recession is bolstering job prospects in every demographic slice of the U.S. economy but one: black women.
In Plain Sight
55 days
JOHN TAGGART / EPA
Fast Food Walk Out: Workers Strike in 150 Cities
Seth Freed Wessler
Fast food workers walked off the job nationwide on Thursday, as police arrested dozens who engaged in civil disobedience.
In Plain Sight
60 days
ADEK BERRY / AFP - Getty Images
More Money: Why Paychecks Will Get Fatter for Many
Seth Freed Wessler
A growing number of state and local governments are acting on their own to raise the minimum wage as efforts stall on Capitol Hill.
Michael Brown Shooting
196 of 306
67 days
Scott Newell / for NBC News
Why Did Ferguson Erupt? The Answer Depends on Your Race
Seth Freed Wessler
White and black residents of Ferguson, Missouri, tell starkly different stories about their city, its problems, and the Michael Brown shooting aftermath.
In Plain Sight
71 days
Robert F. Bukaty / for NBC News
Fresh Direct: How Farms' Extra Crops Feed the Hungry
Seth Freed Wessler
An initiative in coastal Maine delivers crops that would otherwise go to waste to families in need.
Michael Brown Shooting
141 of 306
72 days
Seth Freed Wessler / NBC News
Michael Brown's High School on Edge as Class Begins
Seth Freed Wessler
As classes resumed at Michael Brown's former high school, teachers and students were coping with the aftermath of his death days earlier.
In Plain Sight
73 days
Bill Wechter / for NBC News
Hungry Heroes: 25 Percent of Military Families Seek Food Aid
Miranda Leitsinger
Twenty-five percent of active duty military families get aid from food pantries nationwide, a rare survey about food insecurity among troops finds.
In Plain Sight
89 days
Stephen McGee / Stephen McGee
Can Longer School Years Save Failing Schools?
Sarah Butrymowicz
In Detroit, an experiment to help poor students by extending the school year is failing, critics say.
In Plain Sight
90 days
Joe Raedle / Getty Images file
Poverty Growing Fastest in the Suburbs: Report
Research from the Brookings Institution shows that the poor population in the suburbs increased at a rate three times faster than in urban areas.
In Plain Sight
101 days
Getty Images file
Easy Prey: Foster Kids Face High Risk of Identity Theft
Seth Freed Wessler
Foster kids are vulnerable to I.D. theft because they bounce from home to home, with their private information accessible to many people along the way.
In Plain Sight
102 days
Baptiste Lignel / Otra-Vista
VIEW GALLERY
Hidden Costs: How the Poor Cope with ADHD
A Mississippi family unites around Lyric, 7, who has ADHD. Kids from low-income homes are diagnosed more often with the disorder, research shows.
In Plain Sight
107 days
Astrid Riecken / Getty Images file
OSHA Chief: Inequality Is About Workplace Hazards, Too
Seth Freed Wessler
David Michaels, head of OSHA, says low-wage workers face more dangers at work and that current federal guidelines aren't enough to protect them.
In Plain Sight
108 days
John Brecher / NBC News
What's Making These Auto Plant Workers So Sick?
Seth Freed Wessler
At an auto parts supplier in Selma, Alabama, workers have complained that chemical exposure is making them sick—and get blood tests to prove it.
In Plain Sight
126 days
John Brecher / NBC News
Poor Immigrants Get Free Legal Defense in NYC Program
Kat Aaron
A pilot program in New York City provides legal defense free of charge for poor immigrants in detention, the first of its kind in the country.
In Plain Sight
132 days
Spencer Platt / Getty Images file
Desperate Times: Fewer Americans Blame Poor for Poverty
Seth Freed Wessler
A growing number of Americans say that poverty is caused by circumstances beyond individual control, according to a new NBC News poll.
In Plain Sight
134 days
John Brecher / NBC News
Why It's So Hard to Close the Tech Divide in Schools
Sarah Garland
Philadelphia, where most students are disadvantaged, has made progress on high-speed Internet access in schools. But there are still many hurdles.