for 23-year-old courtney yoder,. the cruel recession hit just as she was saving enough from her job to move out of a tent, anticipating the birth of her first child. >> courtney yoder: working actually was something good for me. and then when i lost it, it was like, "now i have nothing, you know what i mean, to look forward to." because i actually felt good about myself. i felt accomplished. i felt like i was doing something in my life. i had stacked up three checks. i was actually trying. then, all that gets taken from me. >> pelley: there wasn't much to take from courtney yoder. she had lived in and out of foster care from age three. on her own at 18, she pitched a tent in columbus, ohio and found a job in a restaurant. covid comes, and i take it, the restaurant closed. >> yoder: yes. yeah. >> pelley: you went back to the tent and thought, what? , i'm not woing. i have no income. i'm waiting on unemployment. i have no way to get to and from anywhere. i can't go to the library. all the places are closed that we usua