After the 2005 flooding of New Orleans,
Pence's Republican Study Committee recommended we privatize the school system. We did that. It also recommended several other things we decided to try such as .
Eliminate any regulatory barriers and other disincentives that block
faith-based and other charitable organizations from engaging in the recovery
and reconstruction process
Twelve years later,
we see how these policy pursuits compound.
Fresh Food Factor is run by the local chapter of Volunteers of
America, a multimillion-dollar Christian ministry that runs halfway
houses, shelters, food banks, drug treatment programs and housing
projects nationwide, often with government funding. For right-wing
champions of charter schools, such as Betsy DeVos, President Trump's
controversial education secretary, Fresh Food Factor would be a shining
example for the rest of the country: a religious group serving healthy
meals at charter schools that chose to partner with a civic-minded
contractor. Democrats would be happy to know that the food service helps
schools comply with nutrition standards established by Michelle Obama
-- standards that the Trump administration recently scaled back.
Despite its parent organization's name, most Fresh Food Factor
workers are not volunteers like me. Employees who cook in the warehouse
kitchen or serve students in schools receive wages that start at $9 per
hour. Some work full-time, but the food service relies on part-time
workers and a smattering of volunteers to fill the gaps. Besides
managers and truck drivers, most employees are women of color, the
workers commonly called "lunch ladies" who are inseparable from mealtime
in public schools. As we wrap dozens of veggie eggrolls in sheets of
shiny foil, one part-time kitchen employee tells me that she is not
scheduled for enough hours to make ends meet and is looking for
additional work, a common story in a local economy built on tourism and
low-wage service industry jobs
There's a ripple effect at work. First break up the schools and in doing so break the teachers and their union. In the process you've also broken the support staff and their union as well. You guys know this story by now, right? The ripples go out into the community at large.
The mass teacher dismissal in New Orleans was reflective of a trend that reached far beyond the classroom. Thousands of jobs that supported Black middle-class people vanished at a time when residents were recovering from an unprecedented natural disaster. Some displaced families have still not returned. In the years since, property values in New Orleans have skyrocketed and working-class neighborhoods have become hipster hotspots, putting increasing pressure on lower-income renters in a gentrifying city.
The few stable middle class jobs that remained in the city were gutted and wages and benefits were depressed by the very same forces that caused the cost of living to blow up and out of reach for those left struggling to make ends meet. Meanwhile, who benefits?
Volunteers of America has long been in the "affordable housing"
business, using federal housing grants to construct residential
buildings for lower-income, disabled and elderly people. The group's
neighborhood development subsidiary in New Orleans, which was created
specifically to replace housing post-Katrina, is a nonprofit that has
its own for-profit subsidiary for
building residences to rent out. Robert Silverman, a professor of urban
planning at the University at Buffalo who focuses on the nonprofit
sector, said for-profit spinoffs of nonprofit housing initiatives are
becoming more common, but profit incentives also raise concerns about
"mission drift."
Volunteers of America is considered a church, so it does not have to
file federal tax returns, and it remains unclear how top administrators
and property developers are paid for their work.
"It's kind of a new trend that has been bubbling up over the past six
or seven years, where a nonprofit will have a for-profit subsidiary
connected to it," Silverman told Truthout. "Different rules and tax laws
apply to each, but they use it as another way to generate revenue [for
the parent organization]."
Donald Trump landed in Corpus Christi today to say stupid things on TV. But Mike Pence is expected to head up development of the administration's recovery policy. We'll take Trump's advice and wait until later to hand out the congratulations on that.
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