|
MN Poor Resist Massive Cuts
by Linden Gawboy
St. Paul, MN - A team of Welfare Rights Committee members marched
up with the ladder and put it against the iron gate of the Minnesota governor’s
mansion, Sept. 24. Deb Konechne of the WRC climbed to the top. Surrounding
her were dozens of angry women chanting “Hey Pawlenty, come out today!
We have bills that you must pay!”
| |
|
| |
WRC activists mail their bills to MN Gov. Pawlenty.
Photo by Kim DeFranco
|
Eventually, glaring state troopers gave up, standing by helplessly while
members of the crowd came up to the fence one after the other and presented
household bills, denials of medical coverage, utility shut-offs and eviction
notices. After giving short, impassioned speeches about each bill, the
people reached through the fence and put the items in the ‘mailbox’ that
Konechne had dropped over the fence onto the governor’s walkway. Amid
chants of “Make Pawlenty pay,” the protest ended with the troopers carrying
the mailbox into the mansion, for delivery to the Governor.
Biggest cuts in history
The protest by the Minneapolis-St. Paul-based Welfare Rights Committee
was against the biggest cuts to the Minnesota’s safety net in history.
A statement from the WRC summarizes the worst cuts: “On July 1, the cuts
took $125 per month per disabled person from the rest of the family’s
welfare grant. This is outright stealing from disabled families and children!
On Sept. 1, most of us who are in subsidized housing saw our already-too-small
grants slashed by $50 per month. In the future, we looking down the barrel
of 100% sanctions for supposed ‘non-compliance’ with welfare rules and
a ‘family cap’ that steals from innocent babies.” Besides the cuts to
cash welfare, many day care providers had their income cut in half. Over
30,000 Minnesotans lost health care.
Behind the Attack
The cuts were the result of Minnesota politicians making the decision
to balance the state’s budget by cutting services and programs for poor
and working people, instead of increasing taxes on the wealthy. According
to Konechne, “Minnesota legislators stole money from poor families, in
the name of ‘balancing the budget.’ While these cuts are having a devastating
effect on our families, the sickening reality is the grant cuts to our
families didn’t have that much of an impact on the whole state budget.
The politicians did it just to be cruel; just to make families on welfare
suffer. They have wanted to get rid of welfare for years.”
| |
|
| |
Stop the war on the poor!
Photo by Kim DeFranco
|
Yolanda Moore, one of many affected by the cuts, states “The poor get
poorer and the rich get richer. If my rent goes up, I might wind up living
with Pawlenty. We can’t give our kids a good education and all if we gotta
worry about how they’re gonna eat or where I’m gonna get their clothes
for the winter. I would like for him to try my living for two years. He
needs to just stop it.”
Welfare programs were started during the economic crisis of the 1930s,
in response to a near revolt of poor unemployed working people. Today’s
economic crisis is showing the need a survival safety net again. For all
its problems, the welfare program’s cash grants provide a ‘floor’ below
which workers’ wages cannot fall. “Without this, the employers would be
paying us around $2 per day, like in other countries,” said WRC’s Trishalla
Bell. “Its part of the whole globalization thing.” It is no coincidence
that one of first ‘re-structuring’ demands of the IMF to debtor countries
is to get rid of social safety nets - from unemployment insurance, to
healthcare, to education, to public water systems and on and on.
Minnesota is a racist state. For years, politicians have used welfare
as a codeword for ‘Black’, and presented welfare cuts as a way to attack
people of color, even though, up until recently, most welfare recipients
in MN were white.
WRC’s Deb Howze explains the situation this way; “We all know welfare
was not originally for people of color,” referring to how Black parents
were shut out of the program at the beginning. But now, “Politicians say,
‘those lazy black people are on welfare; they’re taking our money. We’re
not going to take care of them with our tax dollars.’”
Howze continued, “What about white America who uses the government tax
dollars? No one is screaming about that. Why? Because it’s the rich who
are collecting tax dollars and running with it – that’s the real welfare
in this country.”
Recent revelations about Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty’s shady financial
dealings are a snapshot of the bizarre world the rich inhabit. For over
a year, he collected $4500 per month from a fellow republican, but he
cannot show what he did to earn his $60,000. Welfare Rights’ Angel Buechner
declared, “A man who casually pockets $4500 in one month then has the
nerve to slash away at the survival income of poor families who are forced
to stretch that amount for 10 months. That is unbelievable.”
WRC’s Birgid Machenik noted, “The rich people want the money for themselves.
They are very wrong, they are very selfish - they have it all already
and yet they want even more, they are very greedy.”
Organizing
This year, the Welfare Rights Committee has gathered thousands signatures
from welfare recipients and other low-income people. Almost every day,
WRC members stand outside the doors of the county welfare offices, talking
to people, passing out information, letting people know about upcoming
protests and signing people up to participate in the battle. Besides having
small teams doing outreach, WRC held group leafleting days, complete with
signs, bullhorn and speeches.
One of the things that comes with the territory of organizing in the
low-income community, and that is more intense this year, is people losing
their phones and their housing. “A lot of phones are disconnected pretty
fast. Addresses change all the time. But we’ve been at this for over twelve
years, and we connect back with folks eventually. For the people we can
reach, we keep calling and inviting them, because we know that our lives
are pretty hectic right now just trying to survive. We never give up,”
said Kim DeFranco.
According to Deb Howze, “The southern Blacks back in the day had to
organize - starting with the students, trade unions, churches and agricultural
workers forming a united front to help organize people to come together
for one cause, to help improve their educations, for the right to vote
and to stop the killing of the black people by whites who at the time
was lynching people. Just like then, it’s the same now but in a different
way. We, the Blacks of America, can’t afford to relax, letting things
go by as if nothing is going on. The welfare all around America is showing
that the effects of its cuts are cutting people into pieces – and now
the people of color are crying out for help. I can go on and on about
the struggles of our community and how women are under the attack in this
unjust world of ours - the question is the same. We must build and educate
the people for the movement. Until then, we will continue to be under
attack and poor - and time has proven that.”
Allison Smith, a new member said, “Hopefully we can all still keep doing
it, no matter what. No matter how they try to break us down, we can still
stay together, because somebody’s got to say something, somebody’s got
to be the voice. So many people, they don’t, they can’t or they won’t.
So somebody’s got to do it. I hope I can keep being one of those somebodies.”
Taking Action
The Welfare Rights Committee believes in taking action. According Allison
Smith, “This is the first time I’ve ran across anybody that actually did
something besides just sit around and talk. It’s the perfect place to
be if you’re tired of just complaining or hearing other people complaining.
Actions are great, I like engaging with other people and getting our issues
out there so people can hear it.”
Next Steps
The summer and fall organizing is getting the Welfare Rights Committee
in gear for what promises to be a busy legislative session in 2004. WRC
is now laying plans to undo the cuts. “We’ve said it for years,” said
WRC’s Kim Hosmer, “just because it’s law doesn’t make it right.” WRC believes
that when laws make people homeless, hungry and desperate, they have to
be struck down.
|