Guillotined in 1997
Editorial
Yes, most
every progressive journal in the country is currently pushing the message that
welfare reform was a fraud perpetrated on the people of the United States.
We feel obligated to reach beyond the rhetoric, and talk about the impact
on the homeless population that we interact with everyday.
How did we
get to this situation:
Much of the
current legislation is based on myths and misconceptions that exist about
welfare and the cycle of dependence. Very
little hard research has been done on the welfare system, and the impact of
changes. It is a shame that welfare
is not considered a national security issue so that we could tap into that
funding stream. The media has done
its best to root out corruption, and trumpet stories about abuse and fraud.
With a lack of research and a constant stream of negative welfare
stories, the impression in the eyes of middle America was that people, mostly
men, were getting rich off welfare.
The fact is
that in no state did welfare benefits lift a person out of a poverty level of
income, and in many states welfare was confined to women with children.
The able bodied single adults were forced into the workforce or community
service. We began going down the
wrong path when we left the idea that women should have the option to stay home
and take care of their own children for the good of the neighborhood and a
better future. And we have arrived
at a point in which there is no federal guarantee to a minimum standard in which
a child cannot fall below. There is
a federal standard for air quality, radio indecency, civil rights, law
enforcement, and even care of livestock. But
there is no longer a federal standard for a safety net for the poor.
State
Control of the System:
Throughout
history states have a mixed record on the care of individuals.
Some have excelled, but many have not.
In Ohio, we fought an obviously flawed educational funding system to the
Ohio Supreme Court. How can we be
expected to take care of poor children, when we can’t even give them equal
access to quality education? States
can use the Federal Block Grant to give incentives to employers to hire people
off the rolls, build rehabilitation facilities (read: forced labor camps) or put
it all in one area like healthcare or childcare.
In thinking of some of the characters that have served in the state
legislature, one has to conclude that State representatives are not qualified to
make these decisions.
What are
we really talking about?
We are
looking at the establishment of a permanent underclass that will no longer be
able to turn to the state for assistance. We
are looking at the abject poverty on a scale that we see in the Third World.
We are looking at a raid on the resources that were in formerly part of
the welfare system by many states for higher priorities such as recreation,
prisons, and “community development.” We
are entering a period in which we drive down labor costs, and break many of the
service unions. We are entering a
period in which we see more families attempting to enter the homeless service
sector. The big winners will be
corrections, homeless services, and temporary labor because of welfare reform.
Driving
down labor costs:
Labor unions
should be on the front lines in battling welfare reform.
If unemployment rates need to stay at the level that they are currently
at for Alan Greenspan to be at ease and not raise interest rates, and the states
are going to be moving a substantial number of workers from welfare to work, how
can these both work together? It is
simple drive down labor costs. If a
company can hire a welfare recipient for $5 an hour as well as get a tax credit,
does the $10 an hour worker stand a chance?
There are provisions to protect current workers, but there are provisions
for companies not to exploit workers, pollute, and rip off the government, and
these are routinely ignored. Ronald
Reagan was able to injure the unions, but Clinton/Gore may be able to finally
“End-Unions-as-We-Know-It.”
“Give me
your tired, your poor, (They can harvest our food, and be viewed as the scourge
of our existence and the reason for all of our problems.)"
Your huddled
masses yearning to breathe free, (So
that we can beat this out of them and then pacify them with an endless stream of
sitcoms and sporting events.)
The wretched
refuse of your teeming shore, (Who will live off our refuse in soup lines and
will not have access to benefits or assistance.
Send these,
the homeless, tempest-tossed, to me; (On second thought, keep them.)
I lift my
lamp beside the golden door!” (to those who are worthy or don’t complain too
much and who bring wealth to our country.)
— Emma Lazarus and George Voinovich
Haven’t
I heard all this before, and nothing really happened?
Didn’t
activists say that if we cut General Assistance the sky would fall.
There are many things to remember about these debates.
First, the most insidiousness aspect of these proposals are that they
creep up on us. If on August 22
there were 5,000 people living on the streets and the next day we woke up and
there were 10,000 people, we would view this as an emergency and all of our
energy would be exerted to reverse the situation.
The homeless population increases over years, and we develop a comfort
level of immunity to this suffering (until it happens to me).
It gets easier to ignore the situation if it slowly increases.
There has
also been an explosion in a population of those undocumented people who are
staying with family or friends. There
is no attempt to measure the number of people living in basements or attics or
stuffed into small apartments. The
charity of one individual that allows another to stay in their place is not
counted and not recognized by the decision makers.
Rest assured that these individuals are homeless, and they go to sleep
with the smell of the steam grate lingering all about them.
We have a
vendor who is again homeless because he has too many people staying in his
place. He went through the system,
and finally received his disability for a work related injury and was able to
get a subsidized small apartment. His
former wife and daughter became homeless and moved in with him.
This was too many people for a one-bedroom apartment, so he did what any
caring father would do. He moved back to the familiar life on the streets so his
family could stay in his place until they were able to find housing.
The cold
reality is that if someone does not step up to show what the worst case will be
if welfare reform continues, people are left with the conservative assertions of
politicians that voted for the legislation.
Reform was passed to forward a political agenda, and it flew in the face
of facts and trends. At least the rhetoric being forwarded by activists is based
on real experiences and trends within the community.
Where is
this path going?
It is a crime
to build stadiums and prisons when we cannot even provide a minimum standard for
our children. We are terribly
misguided if the three large cities in Ohio are each spending public money on
stadiums that are playgrounds for the rich and we cannot provide for our poor
citizens. A government that cannot
care for the least fortunate, those without a voice and without power, does not
deserve to exist, and will fall.
“Society
is under obligation to provide for the support of all its members either by
procuring work for them or by assuring the means of existence to those who are
not in condition to work.”--Maximileien Marie Isidore De Robespierre Guillotined in 1794.