Showing posts with label income and work. Show all posts
Showing posts with label income and work. Show all posts

Monday, October 26, 2015

How to build wealth at "the bottom" Part 2

So, here's how we ended in my last post:

. . . a growing underclass struggles with intensive  toxic stress, resulting in a spiral downward for tens of millions of Americans. 

Poverty is growing. 

Poverty is tragic.

Poverty presents possibly the most serious threat to our nation's long-term security. 

What is necessary to overcome these negative forces?  How, in fact, do we build wealth at "the bottom?"


This seems so obvious, but to overcome poverty and its various expressions leading to the toxic stress ravaging so many urban neighborhoods we must create higher income levels among today's working poor. 

How do we do that? 

What steps must we take if we are really serious about attacking the problem of poverty? 

Step one:  raises wages, and not just to minimum wage expected standards.  Wages must rise to a livable level--the paycheck required for a full-time employee to be able to care for himself/herself and whatever family.  Wages have risen for the upper-class at historic and astounding percentages over the past 20 years, while the middle and lower classes have seen wage stagnation and exploitation produce the biggest income gap since the early 20th century.  This must change.

Step two:  provide quality, affordable health care to everyone who works and for the disabled who cannot work.  Health care costs and health disasters drive much of the growth in poverty since the 1990s.  An example of leadership failure in this regard is the state of Texas' refusal to expand Medicaid for our poorest citizens.  Not only is this shameful, it is terrible business practice. 

Step three:  develop and execute on a plan that enables millions of us to prepare for and purchase a home.  Nothing grows real wealth like homeownership. The expansion of efforts to teach financial literacy when coupled with the real prospect of home ownership will only drive incomes in the right direction.

Step four:  expand educational options for everyone.  Creative efforts to re-purpose public schools and libraries as community learning centers for children and adults could produce good results.  Finding ways to reduce student debt for those seeking college opportunities will be essential to progress in filling the mid-level and upper-level skill sets for which employers continually request. 

Step five:  eliminate predatory lenders and lending schemes and provide consumer protection against such unjust businesses.  Payday lenders must be declared illegal enterprises.  At the same time, banks must develop credit products for low-income households as a part of their community reinvestment requirements. 

Step six: require 1-2 years of national service along the lines of AmeriCorps on the part of all our high school graduates.  This "youth corps" effort would come with a monthly stipend and educational awards upon completion of each members tour of service.  Such an effort would provide meaningful work for students, significant impact on communities and pathways to careers across the spectrum of labor sectors. 

Stay tuned for part 3.



Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Cash

To Help Poor Neighborhoods, Urban Planners Have to Do More Than Urban Planning
They can't just improve the physical environment if they want to revitalize poverty-stricken areas.
by | October 2015
 
William is a Governing columnist, director of the Kinder Institute for Urban Research at Rice University and former mayor of Ventura, CA.
In San Diego, half the neighborhoods are inhabited by mostly poor residents. During my recent stint as director of planning and economic development there, residents would often ask me how I planned to revitalize those neighborhoods. I tended to give an alarmingly honest answer: I wasn’t sure.

Read the interesting conclusion here.

Saturday, March 02, 2013

Surprising facts. . .


Nine Economic Facts That Will Make Your Head Spin

Wednesday, 20 February 2013 10:07By Lynn ParramoreAlterNet | Report
    Half the population of the US has slipped into poverty or is barely making enough to get by.
How much will you need for medical expenses in retirement? What does it cost to keep 2.5 million Americans behind bars? Here are a few facts and figures that might surprise you.

1. Recovery for the rich, recession for the rest.
Economic recovery is in rather limited supply, it seems. Research by economist Emmanuel Saez shows that the top 1 percent has enjoyed income growth of over 11 percent since the official end of the recession. The other 99 percent hasn’t fared so well, seeing a 0.4 percent decline in income.

The top 10 percent of earners hauled in 46.5 percent of all income in 2011, the highest proportion since 1917 – and that doesn’t even include money earned from investments. The wealthy have benefitted from favorable tax status and the rise in stock prices, while the rest have been hit with a continuing unemployment crisis that has kept wages down. Saez believes this trend will continue in 2013.

2. Half of us are poor or barely scraping by.

Click here to read on. . . 

Saturday, January 19, 2013

Justice at work: Living wage jobs?


This Week in Poverty: The Fiscal Cliff and the Janitors Who Are Already on It


“I really want people to understand that we all work just as hard as the next person that’s in a business suit,” says Tamika Maxwell, mother of three, describing her work as a janitor in Cincinnati, her hometown.
Along with 1,000 colleagues in the city, Maxwell hopes that current negotiations between SEIU and the city’s cleaning contractors will raise their $9.80 hourly wage—which, for annual full-time work, still leaves a family of three below the federal poverty line and relying on food stamps and Medicaid. In essence, the state ends up subsidizing corporations to continue paying people a non-living wage.
“My paycheck is the same amount as my Duke Energy bill,” says Maxwell. “And you know they don’t care—they will cut you off if you don’t have their money.”
Maxwell works part-time while also pursuing a business degree at Cincinnati State. She’s now employed byScioto Services, which recently won the contract for the Public Defender’s office building that she has cleaned for four years. The company retained Maxwell but cut back all of the janitors’ hours. Instead of working the 5–10 pm shift five days per week, Maxwell now works only four.
“That’s a big deal when you’re only making $9.80 an hour,” she says.
But perhaps what is most frustrating to Maxwell and her colleagues is that among the cleaning contractors’ clients are some of the richest companies in the world. Macy’s, for example, made $1.25 billion in profits last year; Fifth Third Bancorp took in $1.3 billion; and Kroger netted more than $600 million. In all, thirteen Fortune 1000 companies with their corporate headquarters in Cincinnati earned combined profits of nearly $17 billion in 2011. If any of them told the cleaning contractors to pay a living wage, the contractors would do so, and would pass the additional cost onto the multibillion-dollar corporations.
Indeed, Procter & Gamble instructed its cleaning contractor, Compass, that the janitors who clean its headquarters should earn a living wage. Compass then offered the workers healthcare and guaranteed full-time hours, as well as an hourly wage increase of $0.30 in the first year, $0.25 in the second year, and $0.30 in the third year. That would result in a $10.65 hourly wage in 2015, and an average annual salary of $19,863 (just over the poverty line for a family of three). In contrast, the other contractors involved in negotiations with SEIU are offering next to nothing: a wage freeze for two years and a ten-cent increase in 2015.
“We just want to be paid fairly, and treated fairly. And the big businesses need to know that we have families that we want to take care of too,” says Maxwell. “I’m struggling right now, trying to figure out what I’m going to do for my kids’ Christmas. I know the big businesses aren’t worrying about their Christmas.”
Maxwell takes her son to school every morning at 7:45, then gets on a bus to go to school herself. After classes, she is home to help her son with homework, and then takes the kids to day care at 4:30—in time to arrive at work at 5 pm for her five-hour shift.
“By the time we get home it’s bedtime,” she says. “So the only time I really get to spend with my children is on the weekends. It sucks, really. But hopefully it will all be worth it when I finish school and won’t have to struggle as hard.”
Maxwell believes that part of the reason for the plight of the janitors is that “people really don’t understand the work that we do.” In her shift, she cleans forty-three bathrooms on thirteen floors. Half of the bathrooms have two stalls, half of them are singles. That’s about sixty-five toilets a night, or thirteen an hour—about four and a half minutes per toilet. That’s hard enough to do in five hours, and of course the job involves a lot more than cleaning toilets.
“I stock the bathrooms—paper towels, tissue, soap, seat covers. I clean them all, mop them all, and dust them all. Clean the mirrors, the countertops, the sinks, the stainless steel,” she says. “It’s really hard work. I go through more gym shoes than anyone can imagine.”
With so much stress over their reduced hours, one way Maxwell and her colleagues try to make up their lost income is by working overtime to fill-in for someone who can’t make it to work. But she says collecting the extra pay can be a challenge.
“I worked two extra hours over four weeks ago and still haven’t gotten paid,” she says.
She has also been waiting for three months for Scioto to fill out a job verification form that she needs so that her family will not be cut off of food stamps.
“Every time I see the manager and ask him about it he says he’ll get it back to me or the office hasn’t sent it back yet—gives me the runaround,” says Maxwell.
A look at the Scioto website and this kind of treatment of employees—in terms of poor wages, reduced hours and irresponsibility—flies in the face of the image the company is projecting:

It is our human resource investment, however; [sic] that makes us most proud. Scioto Services associates are encouraged to become volunteers with community organizations including the local Chambers of Commerce, Project Parks, Big Brothers/Big Sisters, YMCA, Meals on Wheels, youth sports programs, regional food banks, adult literacy programs and youth tutoring, just to name a few. At Scioto Services, we’re convinced that community involvement is the best way to show our pride in who we are, what we do, and in the communities where we do business.
Another way to invest in human resources and the community is by paying workers enough so that they can eat.
In the meantime, Maxwell hopes that people will rethink their assumptions about janitors and their labor, and get involved in the fight for better pay.
“People think janitors are people who either aren’t trying hard enough, or didn’t try hard enough back when they [were younger], and that’s simply not the case,” says Maxwell. “Somebody has to do these jobs. Workers couldn’t function without our work.”