[Faith & Hunger] Hunger Action Launches Poverty to Prosperity Pledge Campaign

Dunleamark at aol.com Dunleamark at aol.com
Mon Aug 18 12:48:21 EDT 2008


 
 
 
 
Hunger Action Network of  NYS 
_www.hungeractionnys.org_ (http://www.hungeractionnys.org/) 
Media  Release 
For Release: August 18,  2008 
For More Info: Mark Dunlea, 518 434-7371 xt  1# 
Rev. Jim Reisner, Westminster Presbyterian  Churcn 518 436-8544 
Patti Jo Newell, NYS Coalition Against  Domestic Violence, 518-482-5465

Hunger Action Network Calls on State  Lawmakers to Pledge to End Poverty in 
New York  State 
The Hunger Action Network of New York State  announced today a campaign to 
get state legislative candidates to sign a Poverty  to Prosperity Pledge. The 
Pledge highlights seven key economic security issues:  raising the welfare grant 
after 18 years; raising the state minimum wage to $10  an hour; supporting 
job creation, including a massive home energy conservation  initiative; single 
payer universal health care; affordable housing; state  funding for the Home 
Energy Assistance Program; and tax  reform.

Speakers included Mark Dunlea and Bill Peltz of Hunger  Action Network, Patti 
Jo Newell of the NYS Coalition Against Domestic Violence,  and Rev. James 
Reisner of the Albany Presbytery. The Presbyterian Hunger Program  has been a 
long time funder of Hunger Action.

As former New York Governor  Franklin Delano Roosevelt said, "The test of our 
progress is not whether we add  more to the abundance of those who have much; 
it is whether we provide enough  for those who have too little." By this 
measure, New York is  failing. 
”Poverty, homelessness, and hunger are  significant problems in New York, a 
shameful situation in the richest nation in  the world. New York has the 
greatest income inequality between the poor and rich  in the country. Poverty is 
seldom discussed in the State Capitol, and is  generally treated as an insolvable 
problem. It is time for lawmakers to not only  make ending poverty a state 
priority but to be held accountable for their  success in doing so,” stated Mark 
Dunlea, Executive Director of Hunger Action  Network of New York State. 
Dunlea noted that there were only a handful  of food pantries and soup 
kitchens in NYS prior to the 1981 federal budget cuts  under President Reagan. There 
are now more than 3,000, feeding more than 2  million New Yorkers annually. “
New Yorkers shouldn’t have to rely on emergency  food programs to feed 
themselves. It is time that state lawmakers make a  commitment to shut these programs 
down by ensuring that all New Yorkers have the  resources to support their 
families. We need to provide economic security not  just for the poor but for 
all New Yorkers,” added  Dunlea.
"Survivors of domestic violence keenly feel  economic pressures, and 
challenges associated with housing, employment, public  assistance, health care and 
child care are typically identified among as the  primary reasons for remaining 
with batterers. Economic independence is a  prerequisite to independence from 
batterers. Leaving is not in itself  sufficient. Survivors are routinely 
driven back to batterers because of economic  pressures, even after using emergency 
shelter and other services. This is an  unnecessary tragedy in New York's 
response to domestic violence," said Patti Jo  Newell, deputy director at the NYS 
Coalition Against Domestic  Violence. 
For the last nine years more than 200 human  services, faith and labor groups 
have promoted the Empire State Economic  Security Campaign (ES2) which has 
included the issues in the Poverty to  Prosperity Pledge. Last year Governor 
Spitzer announced the creation of an  Economic Security cabinet for the state, 
which recently completed a series of  Town Hall meetings to get input from  
residents. 
In addition to the pledge, ES2 will be  holding town hall meetings with state 
legislative candidates on economic  security and poverty in Manhattan, 
Brooklyn, Albany, Buffalo, Rochester, and  Westchester in October.

A similar campaign is being launched at the  national level to cut poverty in 
half in the next decade by the Center for  American Progress. Thirty-seven 
million Americans live below the official  poverty line. Millions more struggle 
each month to pay for basic necessities, or  run out of savings when they lose 
their jobs or face health emergencies. Poverty  imposes enormous costs on 
society. Persistent childhood poverty is estimated to  cost our nation $500 
billion each year, or about four percent of the nation’s  gross domestic product.  

More than 2.6  million New Yorkers are living in poverty – one in five 
children (858,000) and  one in ten families (575,000) had incomes below the official 
federal poverty  thresholds in 2006.  Over one  million of these New Yorkers 
had incomes below half the official poverty  threshold -- or less than about 
$10,000 a year for a family of four. New York  State and New York City still 
have the highest measures of income inequality in  the nation, and New York is 
the only state that is considered both a high income  state and a high poverty 
state.  
Poverty is particularly severe in the  state's cities.  New York City's  
poverty rate was 19 percent but poverty rates in Buffalo, Rochester and Syracuse  
exceeded 30 percent.  Child poverty  rates were greater than 40 percent in 
Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse and Albany  and more than 10 percent of the 
residents of these four cities had incomes below  50 percent of poverty. 
A family of four is considered poor if the  family’s income is below $19,971—
a bar far below what most people believe a  family needs to get by. All 
economists agree that the official poverty  measurement is inaccurate – they just 
can’t agree on how to fix it. The poverty  measure also doesn’t reflect 
regional variations in cost. NYC recent revision of  the poverty measurement raised 
the poverty threshold for a family of two adults  and two children in New York 
City to $26,138 annually compared to the official  level of $20,444, raising 
the percentage of poor city residents from 19% to  23%. 
A recent report by the Fiscal Policy  Institute found that the median “
hardship” gap in New York is a staggering  $1,079 a month – the second worst in the 
country. The hardship gap is the  difference between the basic family budget 
(for food, housing, energy, health  care, etc.) and their monthly income. 
Poverty in the United States is far higher  than in many other developed 
nations. At the turn of the 21st century, the  United States ranked 24th among 25 
countries when measuring the share of the  population below 50 percent of 
median  income. 
The groups are especially upset that the  state’s basic welfare grant has not 
been raised in over 18 years. Children have  been the prime victims of this 
inaction.  In 1975 public assistance for a three-person family was equal to 
110% of  the Federal Poverty Level. Today it has fallen to less than 50% of the 
poverty  level. Within the past two years, there has been a modest, inadequate, 
increase  in the shelter portion of the public assistance grant, but the 
basic allowance  for all other expenses has been unchanged for 16 years. To keep 
pace with the  rising cost of living, the $291 a family of three received in 
the non-shelter  portion of its public assistance grant in 1990 would today have 
to be increased  by 55% to $450.  
“One key issue in reducing poverty is to end  the high rate of income 
inequality in America – the highest of any industrial  country. This means both 
raising the wages of workers at the bottom and to  reverse a regressive system of 
state and local taxes where the poorest 20% of  New Yorkers pay twice as much 
of their income in state and local taxes as the  richest 1%, those making more 
than $500,000 a year,” added Bill  Peltz. 
Nationally, the top one percent of  households received 21.8 percent of all 
pre-tax income in 2005, more than double  what that figure was in the 1970s. 
(The top one percent's share of total income  bottomed out at 8.9 percent in 
1976.) This is the greatest concentration of  income since 1928, when 23.9 
percent of all income went to the richest one  percent. Between 1979 and 2005, the 
top five percent of American families saw  their real incomes increase 81 
percent. Over the same period, the lowest-income  fifth saw their real incomes 
decline 1 percent. The situation is even worse in  NY, which consistently ranks as 
the worst state in income inequality between the  rich and the poor, and 
among the worse in income inequality between the rich and  the middle class. 
The richest one percent of U.S. households  now owns 34.3 percent of the 
nation's private wealth, more than the combined  wealth of the bottom 90 percent. 
“The state budget is about our choices,”  added Dunlea. “Lawmakers have 
chosen for too long to keep poor children and  their families in abject poverty, 
balancing the state budget on the backs of the  poorest and most vulnerable. We 
hear from state budget officials that they face  a revenue shortfall, so they 
can’t make needed investments. But revenue  shortfalls are a political 
decision, not an act of God or nature. New York has a  particularly unfair system of 
state and local taxes, where the poor pay more as  a percent of their income 
than the wealthy. The state budgetary needs should be  met through tax 
fairness that restores the principle that those who can most  afford it bear a 
greater share of the  burden.” 
The Poverty Pledge incorporates the national  Let Justice Roll campaign by 
faith, community and labor groups which is calling  for a hike in the minimum 
wage to $10 in 2010. Even after the federal minimum  wage rises to $7.25 in July 
2009, it will be far below the minimum wage of 1968,  which is worth $9.86 
now. The groups support the raise because   
    *   The present minimum wage is a poverty  wage instead of an 
anti-poverty wage.  
    *   $10 in 2010 is necessary to make up  the ground lost in real wages 
since 1968.  
    *   $10 in 2010 will bring us closer to the  goal of the “minimum 
standard of living necessary for health, efficiency and  general well-being of workers
” articulated by the Fair Labor Standards Act,  which established the minimum 
wage 70 years ago.  
The state minimum  wage in NY is presently $7.15 an hour. 
The group is also pushing for a single payer universal health care system  
like most of the industrial world has. A single payer system, such a Medicare,  
has one entity pay all bills, thus eliminating the costly and negative role 
that  private health insurance plays, draining as much as a third of each dollar 
to  pay for their profits, overhead and bureaucracy. Last year, Hunger Action 
 Network and others convinced state lawmakers to fund studies on how New York 
 could best provide health care to all residents. The studies have been 
delayed,  with their completion expected this fall.  
Groups have raised concerned that the group hired by the State Health  
Department to do the studies, Urban Institute, appears biased against single  payer. 
In addition, even though Governor Paterson was a sponsor of single payer  
legislation while a member of the State Senate, the health care team left over  
from the Spitzer administration appears to be pushing an incremental approach  
based on the Massachusetts model of mandating that individuals purchase health 
 insurance if they don’t get if from their employer or qualify for a 
government  funded program. Critics argue that such approaches invariably fail, 
largely  because they don’t control the costs and power involved with private health 
 insurance. 

2008 Poverty to Prosperity Pledge for State Legislative  Candidates 
Poverty, homelessness, and hunger are  significant problems in our state, a 
shameful situation in the richest nation in  the world. More than two million 
New Yorkers utilize emergency food programs.  New York has the greatest income 
inequality between the poor and rich in  the country. As former New York 
Governor Franklin Delano Roosevelt said, "The  test of our progress is not whether 
we add more to the abundance of those who  have much; it is whether we provide 
enough for those who have too  little."  As an elected official, I pledge to 
make ending poverty,  hunger and homelessness a significant priority in our 
state. In particular, I  pledge to support the following: 
1. Raise the welfare grant. Immediately  Restore the basic welfare grant to 
its purchasing power of 1990 and  establish commission to determine how to 
further raise it to a reasonable level  and then index to inflation. Welfare 
benefits have fallen to less than half of  the federal poverty level. 
2. NYS must invest in creating sustainable,  living wage green jobs. We must 
enact a state fund to support a massive campaign  of weatherization and energy 
conservation for homes. 
_http://www.centerforworkingfamilies.info/cleanenergygreenjobs/NYS%20RRF%20Proposal.doc_ 
(http://www.centerforworkingfamilies.info/cleanenergygreenjobs/NYS%20RRF%20Proposal.doc)  
4. Make work provide a living wage by raising the  minimum wage to $10 an 
hour by 2010 and index it to inflation..  _http://www.letjusticeroll.org/_ 
(http://www.letjusticeroll.org/) . Raise other workers support such as unemployment  
benefits and Earned Income Tax Credit. 
5. Increase state funding for the Home  Energy Assistance Plan (HEAP)  (e.g., 
A11590) 
6. Stop making the poorest New Yorkers pay twice  as much of their income in 
State and local taxes as the wealthy. Increase the  income tax for wealthiest 
New Yorkers. Raise the Property Tax Circuit Breaker,  including for renters. 
_http://www.abetterchoiceforny.org/_ (http://www.abetterchoiceforny.org/)  
6. Recognize the right of all people to  quality, affordable health care. 
Support a single payer “Medicare for All” type  program that eliminates 
commercial for-profit health insurance.  (A7354 / S3107)   
7. Support affordable housing initiatives for NYS, starting with $13  billion 
over the next ten years to create and preserve 220,000 units of  affordable 
housing 
Name  ______________________________________ 
Signature  __________________________________ 
District  ___________________________________ 
Address  ________________________________________________________________ 
Phone ____________________   Email  ____________________________ 
(If can’t pledge to support all, pledge to support  numbers ____________) 
Return by: October 5, 2008 to Hunger Action Network, 275 State St.,  Albany 
NY 12210 or 260 W. 36th St., #504, NY NY 10018; fax 518  434-7390– For info, 
518 434-7371 xt 1# 








**************Looking for a car that's sporty, fun and fits in your budget? 
Read reviews on AOL Autos.      
(http://autos.aol.com/cars-Volkswagen-Jetta-2009/expert-review?ncid=aolaut00030000000007 )
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://hungeractionnys.org/pipermail/faithhunger_hungeractionnys.org/attachments/20080818/da1b4ed6/attachment-0001.html 


More information about the Faithhunger mailing list