Now
that the “American Recovery and Reinvestment Act” has been signed
into law by President Obama, what has happened through much trial
and tribulation is tantamount to what Cuba Gooding said in one of
his movies – “show me the money.” We have been shown the money,
$787 billion, and now it is up to us to get down to business and
follow the money and then access it for the good of our communities.
The stakes are enormous. This is one of the rare moments in history
when a cruise-ship size load of funds docks in our states in a few
weeks, but if we are not savvy enough to know enough how to access
the funds, that ship could come in and leave us with substantial
needs unmet.
The
Act is a big one with lots of sections. Click here
look at them all. But I will provide a quick glimpse of a few things
in Title 9 on “Labor, Health, and Human Services and Education.”
•
$4 billion is added to the Workforce Investment program.
•
$500 million of that amount goes to states for adult employment
and training activities;
•
$1.2 billion will go to states for youth under 24 years old for
summer jobs
•
$1 billion will go to states to assist dislocated workers employment
and training
•
Another $500 million will be put in the dislocated worker reserve
to assist through June 30 2010
•
$50 million will go to YouthBuild programs through June 30, 2010
•
$750 million will provide grants for training and placement of
workers for careers in energy efficiency and renewable energy
employment
•
$120 million will be allotted to fund Community Service jobs for
senior citizens
•
$500 million will be given to states to augment their Unemployment
Insurance funds
•
$300 million for Job Corps
This
is the time for black leaders the various communities to come together
and work out a system of communicating information to many people
who have been laid off, who are disabled, who are youth, who have
been unemployed, who are elderly but want to work, and generally
everyone who wants to participate in the program funded by this
Act. Citizens themselves who want to participate in these programs,
many of which are already going in some states like YouthBuild and
some that have been shut down, should contact the office of their
elected officials at the local, county, state and national level
to find the entry point into these activities.
The
Obama Administration has created a website RECOVERY.GOV
for the average citizen to follow how these funds will be used.
That will not be a place to access the programs, but to understand
how they are being distributed and what effect the funding is having
on things like the unemployment rate.
As
the debate has suggested, this may not be the last stimulus package
needed to jump-start the economy by the spending made possible through
job creation. But our national organizations such as the Congressional
Black Caucus, Black Leadership Forum, National Urban League, NAACP,
National Action Network, RainbowPush, and others should followed
the distribution of such funds carefully to see whether or not the
black community is getting a fair share of those jobs and the other
resources made available by this Act.
I
must confess however, to being somewhat worried when I see that
Black leaders have not visited the White House to make their position
felt on this matter, but on Friday, February 13, 60 Latino and Latina
leaders from around the country visited the White House for a briefing
by key White House staff. Perhaps we should not have been first
in the door among racial and ethnic groups – perhaps we would not
have been permitted to be first – but we should make it plain that
there is an expectation that the black community would experience
a fair distribution of these funds.
Without
the black vote, there would be no Barack Obama in the White House.
Take away the states where the Black vote influenced an Obama victory:
North Carolina, Virginia, District of Columbia, Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania
and Indiana, and John McCain would have won the election. Our claim
on policy fairness is strong.
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board member
Dr. Ron Walters is the Distinguished Leadership Scholar, Director
of the African American Leadership Center and Professor of Government
and Politics at the University of Maryland College Park. His latest
book is: The
Price of Racial Reconciliation (The Politics of Race and Ethnicity)
(Rowman and Littlefield). Click here
to contact Dr. Walters. |