What are the barriers we can help remove?

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Participants in poverty simulation

One Joplin Poverty Simulation
When: 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 16, 2025
Where: Joplin Public Library
Cost: Free, but seating is limited (lunch will be provided)
Details: Register at https://onejoplin.com/events

For the next month, you must work with the cards that are dealt you.

You’re John Smith, recently divorced with two kids and a part-time manufacturing job. Between child-care costs, putting food on the table, and normal day-to-day expenses, money is extremely tight. Then the transmission on your vehicle goes out, leaving you to scramble to figure out transportation needs and how to cover those costly repairs.

And never far from your thoughts is another lingering worry … what problems might be lurking just around the corner?

It’s a simulation, but a scenario that’s all too real for some residents in our community, with census data indicating that more than 17 percent of Joplin residents are living below the poverty line.

One Joplin will present “Rethinking Poverty” on Thursday, Oct. 16, at the Joplin Public Library, a simulated experience designed to spotlight the challenges faced daily by low-income families, and to identify ways that we can come together to make a difference for those in need.  Participants can register at https://onejoplin.com/events

If it sounds like an intense experience, it’s by design.

Each hour will represent a week in the life of someone facing the hardships and challenges too often associated with poverty, says Dr. Kerry Sachetta. Superintendent of Joplin Schools, who participated in the program two years ago.  “You’re put through a situation where events just start cascading on you,” he said. “You’re suddenly thrust into this cycle and not able to get out of it. In education, we’re often dealing with people on an individual level and may have a social worker or counselor who can help connect a student and their family with a particular group or organization. But we’re dealing with just one aspect of the issue. We don’t see everything that people are dealing with … that’s one of the things that was most illuminating to me (about this program).”

The goal of the poverty simulation is for it to be an “empathy builder,” says Nicole Brown, executive director of One Joplin. The nonprofit organization is led by a committee of dedicated individuals working to address local issues of poverty, health, education, and literacy by pooling knowledge and resources.

“We hear over and over that people have a picture in their head of what individuals living in poverty should do … that they can just make better choices and outwork the situation on their wits, but things happen along the way and it’s much harder than they thought. They hit barrier after barrier.”

The event is directed toward leaders within the local community, whose policy decisions and direction could have an impact on the working poor.

“What are the barriers we can help remove?” asks Brown. “One of the best outcomes from the 2024 Poverty Simulation was a local business that sent their entire leadership team to participate.  Afterward, they reviewed their policies and procedures to see if they were inadvertently making life harder for lower-wage workers.  They made several changes that have positively impacted employee morale and retention.