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NCC Members Focus on 'Poverty March'


From Carol Fouke <carolf@ncccusa.org>
Date Mon, 4 Mar 2002 14:49:08 -0800

National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S.A.
NCC3/4/02 For Immediate Release
E-mail: news@ncccusa.org; Web: www.ncccusa.org

NCC MEMBERS FOCUS ON 'POVERTY MARCH'

Feb. 28, 2002 News media contact: Linda Bloom (212) 870-3803 New York

Note to Editors and Reporters: We (in the NCC Communication Department)
couldn't have described the "Poverty March" any better!  So we are sharing
this United Methodist News Service story, written by Linda Bloom.  Used with
UMNS permission.  Carol Fouke/NCC News (212-870-2252; news@ncccusa.org)

NEW YORK (UMNS) - In years past, when U.S. churches committed themselves to
resolving problems such as slavery, child labor and legalized racial
discrimination, they became agents of social change.

Now, through its decade-long "Mobilization to Overcome Poverty," launched in
November 2000, the National Council of Churches (NCC) hopes to stimulate the
same type of commitment. The month of March each year is designated as a
time to heighten awareness and monitor progress of the 10-year initiative.

"We want to make poverty as abhorrent in this century as slavery was a
century and a half ago," said the Rev. Robert Edgar, a United Methodist
pastor who serves as the NCC's chief executive.

The aim of the poverty mobilization is not necessarily to create new
programs, but to organize around existing projects, share information and
set realistic goals regarding such issues as housing, health care and public
education. "Over the years, I hope we'll fine-tune what is achievable," he
added.

"The bottom line is we're really trying to get people to change how they
think about the poor," Edgar said.

This year's "Poverty March" will highlight the work of NCC member communions
and partners and provide a focus on poverty issues in the United States. The
agency's Web site, www.ncccusa.org, will feature Bible references, facts and
figures on poverty, a listing of events, related sermons and daily
descriptions of poverty programs throughout the month, beginning March 1.

Advocacy on public policy regarding poverty also is a key focus in March,
according to Brenda Girton-Mitchell, director of the NCC's Washington
office. In 1996, Congress eliminated the old federal welfare program and
replaced it with a new plan called Temporary Assistance to Needy Families
(TANF). The fact that TANF and other "safety net" programs for the poor -
the Food Stamp Program and Child Care and Development Block Grant - are up
for reauthorization by Congress this year is "really driving a lot of our
work together," she said.

She noted that the economic impact following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks
has pushed some people closer to poverty level. "The things that people are
asking for (in assistance) are increasingly more basic," she added.

Edgar pointed out that even after such a long period of economic prosperity
in the United States, children are no better off. "We have more poor
children today than we did 10 years ago," he said.

Girton-Mitchell believes the churches are more committed to tackling the
problems of welfare reform now than they were in 1996, when TANF was first
adopted, and that they want to create opportunities for the concerns of the
poor to be heard. The NCC Washington Office will host a March 13-15 meeting
on TANF that will include representatives of state and local councils of
churches.

Last November, the NCC General Assembly passed a resolution noting that the
purpose of the three programs up for renewal by Congress, as well as other
programs to assist low-income people, "should be the reduction and
elimination of poverty, not the reduction of caseloads." Each program should
provide assistance to help low-income families obtain safe and affordable
housing, access to affordable health care, developmentally oriented child
care, a nutritious diet and the opportunity to contribute to society through
employment or in other ways, the resolution added.

Current time limits for TANF participants should be replaced with an
individualized plan, with termination only for those who refuse to
participate, the NCC General Assembly said. Adults caring for the elderly or
disabled should be exempt from work requirements, and those enrolled in
secondary education should be counted as meeting work requirements.

The resolution concluded: "No family should be worse off as a result of
moving from welfare to work than it was while receiving assistance."

-end-


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