REMINDER: The ideas included in this blog post are not
terribly new—most have been at least attempted. And, keep in mind that my goal
in sharing these ideas is NOT to end poverty, but simply to remove some of the stresses
that are added to poor people’s lives because they are poor. Most of these
ideas are met with skepticism, others with outright hostility. Alas. I can’t
let a negative reception keep me from putting all of these ideas together in
writing in a publicly available forum.
ODJFS: Burn-out
prevention Thanks to cutbacks in almost every program for poor people,
county Job & Family Services departments across the state are under great
stress. They have laid off workers to cut their budgets at the same time that
the number of people requiring services has soared. This puts the remaining workers—the ones
charged with helping the poor—under great stress.
These workers need help. They need a plan for burn-out
prevention. I don’t know what the plan would be—massages at work? Weekly
debriefing sessions? Free coffee and bagels every morning? New desk chairs?
(OK, the desk chair thing is personal—I know a new desk chair would be valuable
to me personally.) I think regular infusions of food from our local
wunder-chef, Chef Mary from Flutes & Peppercorns, would be a welcome stress
reliever. Anyway, something needs to be done for these dedicated professionals
to help them feel like something other than a paper-pusher or payment policer.
Expand OBB (Ohio
Benefit Bank) The Ohio Benefit Bank (OBB) is a wonderful computer program
that determines likely eligibility for various programs, from food stamps to
FAFSA, from TANF to tax filing. (TANF is “temporary assistance for needy
families,” pronounced TAN-iff.)
Individuals may process themselves through the OBB program, but usually
a trained volunteer guides the data collection and entry. OBB is a one-stop
application process; applications are generated and sent directly to
appropriate agencies, whether it is for your Golden Buckeye Card or for WIC for
your baby.
Some Job & Family Services offices see OBB as a
competitor—something that is eroding their authority. OBB counters that the
program only allows people to apply for benefits more easily—JFS still has
total control over determination and administration of benefits. I hope that
these two entities can find a way to co-exist or even cooperate in bringing
services to poor people.
Appalachia last in
line: 2-1-1 The twenty or so counties who still do not have 2-1-1
information line service are all in counties designated as poor and
Appalachian. The Appalachian counties that do have 2-1-1 are often serviced
through neighboring non-Appalachian counties—and that’s fine.
I think It’s funny that between United Way and my other employer, I am
sort of a mini-2-1-1, a referral service to a range of callers. And my efforts
pale compared to the real 2-1-1 woman in Vinton County—Brandi Betts of the
Chamber of Commerce. Thank you, Brandi, for your patience with so many random
requests for information.
2-1-1 would assist every resident to navigate among care
providers, find the food pantries, find Sojourners for runaway and homeless
youth services or for Youthbuild or work programs. 2-1-1 would focus only on
helping and not be torn by numerous other responsibilities. When are the poor
people of Appalachian Ohio going to get it?
Subsidize family
activities: The free ride I remember from my own impoverished childhood
what it felt like to be left out, what
it meant to never go to the amusement park everyone else was excited about, to
never ride the rides at the county fair. That’s just one reason I am proposing
that we find ways to subsidize rides at local events such as McArthur’s Wild
Turkey Festival (no, not THAT kind of Wild Turkey) and the Vinton County Junior
Fair.
But I insist. Let’s find funding for all children to ride free. It shouldn’t be
necessary for families to sacrifice food or rent money to make sure their kids
can ride the rides.
In Vinton County, where 90% of schoolchildren qualify for
free lunch (highest percentage in Ohio), the school district recently decided to just give free
lunch to every child. Everyone gets to eat. No more stigma of being identified
as one of the free lunch kids. This generous act may have been the result of
financial realities, but it is the free lunch for all attitude of the schools
that made me think about free rides at local events. Now, where do we apply for
the free tilt-a-whirl grants?
My parents used a pencil and ruler to make their own spreadsheet. |
Sidebar: The Frugal Poor--My Parents
My family was poor--poorer than my sisters and I really understood. As with all children, our own family was the norm--we couldn't believe what went on in other families! Others were "less" normal than us.
What set my family apart from other poor families is that my parents had a plan. From their church, they learned about budgeting and tithing and record-keeping. (To figure your tithing, you had to keep track of your income and expenses--sort of like God was your shareholder.) We always asked whether something was a necessity--and the opposite of "necessity" was "no." There was always a big sheet of paper magnetized to the fridge, on which my mom or dad would record anything we spent individually or as a family. This was a good thing and kept us off public assistance and kept us housed, clothed, and fed. We even had some savings.
However--yep, there's a "however"--the budget of my parents didn't allow for much extravagance in the fun-having department. Our gifts from Santa were a bit on the practical side (while our poorer neighbor kids received a lavish haul every year--we were jealous). And only once do I remember going on a non-church-camp vacation. (We hardly knew what to do with ourselves.) And we seldom rode the rides or saw the latest Disney movie.
We always got "books" of Lifesavers for Christmas--and socks and underwear, of course. |
I felt that I was privy to some deep knowledge in terms of how my parents handled money. I knew my parents were doing the right thing. But I hated it. I had wants that just wouldn't go away--my wants had way more to do with not seeming peculiar than about a deep urge to ride a Ferris wheel or eat an elephant ear or see a movie. I became my own outcast, went about in my own world, became mentally inventive, grew into a writer. But I have never lost the outsider mentality fostered by my parents' budgeting zeal (and other family peculiarities, of course). I'm pretty frugal, too, and it has kept me marginally afloat during the past several lean years. But it's still not fun. Free rides would be great.