|
DEPARTMENTS: One Nation Under God
By Barbara von der Heydt
Tough medicine for welfare moms
Jay and his eight-months-pregnant wife, Connie, both
former crack users, moved into a temporary apartment managed
by the Interfaith Housing Coalition, an employment and
housing program for homeless families in Dallas. Within a
week, Jay had broken one of the conditions for entering and
remaining in the program: He was caught using drugs.
A Dallas
program uses teams of church volunteers to get the homeless
into jobs and housing.
Jay got a stern warning from Ben Beltzer, Interfaith's
founder, along with some help getting into a drug
rehabilitation center. His wife and five-year-old son stayed
in the apartment free of charge through the birth of the
baby. Within two weeks of Jay's return, he was caught using
drugs again.
Now he comes to Beltzer with his daughter, thrusting the
baby toward him and pleading, "You're not going to put
her out on the streets, are you?"
Beltzer looks at him clear-eyed. "No. You are."
This may be one of the nation's toughest of tough-love
approaches to helping the homeless. Participants are expected
to complete educational training, get a job, find permanent
housing, and save $1,200--all in three months. But for most
of the 800 men and women who have graduated from the program,
it was just tough enough. One independent study shows that
two out of three graduates are still off the dole and off the
streets two years later.
Some residents get the message even if they don't
graduate. Within two hours of Jay's second drug infraction,
the whole family had to leave the program. Connie learned the
tough-love lesson from getting kicked out of Interfaith.
Today, although Jay is still using crack, she is now clean.
She has a job, her own apartment, and full custody of both
her children.
Most of the residents at the Interfaith Housing Coalition,
the majority of whom are welfare mothers, cannot turn their
lives around without a great deal of help. They need more
than job skills; they need basic life skills. Each Interfaith
resident receives intensive individual attention from 10
people, who help lift them out of dependency. Two full-time
staff members guide the daily job search, while two mentors
coach each resident on employment skills. Two more mentors
work with each resident on personal budgeting. Others teach
family and parenting skills, nutrition, and comparative
shopping. A case manager and child-care volunteers round out
the team. The professional staff of 10 is augmented by 250
volunteers, who come from 28 Dallas congregations.
Methodists, Presbyterians, Episcopalians, Southern Baptists,
and Catholics work side by side. With 10 people helping each
resident, it's all but impossible to fall through the cracks.
It's Not for Everybody
A few hours after arriving at the Interfaith Housing
Coalition with her two young daughters, a young woman--let's
call her Maria--is sitting in the comfortable living room in
the agency's main building. She has spent the past three
weeks in a home for battered women after leaving a nine-year
marriage of physical, emotional, and sexual abuse. Starting
over alone doesn't look easy, but she believes it's better
than living in a domestic war zone.
Maria receives an introduction to Interfaith from Carter
Holston, a long-time volunteer. "Interfaith is not for
everybody," he tells her, explaining that the group
requires a comprehensive interview, information about her
family history, and a drug test. Applicants who test
positive--as about 40 percent do--are referred to a
drug-treatment program. They may not apply to Interfaith
until they have kicked their drug habit. the program takes
most of the remaining applicants if they show a flicker of
willingness to be held accountable for their behavior. Maria
shows that spark.
Holston is one of 250 volunteers, called
"co-partners," who work with the full-time staff of
10. "We're nearly all volunteers," he tells Maria.
"Nobody is paying us to come and be here. We're here for
the right reasons--because we care about you. We get a lot
out of seeing you succeed."
When Maria arrives at her apartment, one of 36 owned by
the agency, she finds it tastefully furnished, with cheery
lighting and pictures on the wall. The refrigerator and
pantry are stocked with food. Dinner is ready, and her host
family welcomes her to what will be her home for the next
three months. She will pay no rent.
Tomorrow morning the staff will check to see if Maria and
her children need medical care, dental work, or eyeglasses.
If so, Interfaith will provide them. They will each receive
three complete outfits of clothes and shoes, if they have
none of their own, and one week of groceries. Maria will not
receive money.
The following day, she will begin her job search in
earnest. All residents must report each morning to the
job-search area dressed appropriately and ready to work.
Finding employment becomes their eight-hour-a-day job. Each
resident occupies a cubicle with a telephone and a set of
telephone directories. With the assistance of the staff,
residents use a computer and a photocopier to prepare
professional resumes and fax them to prospective employers.
Each one must make at least five appointments by 11 a.m. and
then spend the rest of the work day going to job interviews.
The staff and the employment co-partners teach the
residents effective telephone manner, coach them on how to
introduce themselves, encourage them to go out with a winning
attitude, and help them deal with disappointment. Those with
literacy problems seek work in cafeterias or dry-cleaning
establishments while they learn to read.
The results are dazzling. Residents typically find jobs
within 21 working days, most paying at least $7.50 an hour.
Only full-time employment with benefits is acceptable.
Tough But Fair
Welfare recipients who land jobs, however, often have
trouble keeping them; many still lack a work ethic or an
ability to manage their personal finances. The Interfaith
staff teaches these life skills. The residents, however, are
not coddled. "They are taught to make choices,"
Beltzer says. "Tough love is adjusting to
responsibility. For most of the residents, that involves a
lot of adjusting: no alcohol, no drugs, no visits from the
opposite sex. No fighting or guns. They have to come to class
and to job search every day. They can't be late, and there
are no excuses."
Of those accepted in the program, 70 percent make it
through the full three months. Of these, all leave with a job
and a place to live. They also leave with a changed attitude.
"I've learned while working with the poor that they
don't want something for nothing," Beltzer says.
"Their self-esteem grows when they give and when they
work. No one has ever let them know the potential they
have."
An Atlanta consultant came to Dallas to check Interfaith's
reputation among welfare recipients and the homeless. He
posed as a homeless man, didn't shower for two weeks, and
talked to people on the street. The word on Interfaith, he
reported, was that it is tough but fair. The street people
told him, "If you don't want to get your act together,
don't go."
Katrina, who has been a resident at Interfaith for two
months, appears for her Thursday evening class on employment.
She is one of the few residents who is married and living
with her spouse. He has found a night job, and she has just
started as a receptionist.
With two jobs, three kids, and no car, it's a logistical
nightmare. Katrina is up at 5 a.m. and on the 6:11 bus with
the children to drop them off at school and day care, before
going to work. When she returns with them after 5 p.m., her
husband has already left for work.
Jim Maloney, who meets with Katrina tonight, has been
volunteering for the past five years. They discuss her
apartment search. Early on, Katrina's mentors helped her set
personal goals for independence: save $2,000, learn how to
budget, and get a job. Now four weeks away from leaving the
program, she has achieved the latter two, and is on the way
to her savings target.
Learning to make a budget and stick to it was rough.
"The way I spent before," she says, "I didn't
know where it went." But for two months she has had to
account in writing for every cent to her budget co-partners,
who are tough taskmasters. "They drilled it into
me," laughs Katrina. "Is it a need or is it a
want?"
Hearing the Call
As welfare reform takes effect, Beltzer contends, the aid
of religious communities is desperately needed. Their
approach insists that alleviating poverty involves much more
than providing education or job skills. It means addressing
spiritual needs. "If the Spirit isn't at work in the
staff and the volunteers," he says, "we're just
another social service. We are Christ's people responding to
a call."
Responding to the call quite often means healing broken
lives. Adults and children alike arrive here battered not
only in body but also in mind and spirit. Interfaith staff
provide pastoral and therapeutic counseling.
The agency runs a deceptively cheerful play-therapy room
for kids who have been abused. A therapist works with them to
reverse the damage, assisted by volunteers whose task is to
hold the children and rock with them. One volunteer comes to
read to them, another teaches them tennis. "The greatest
gift we have to give is love," Beltzer says.
"Unconditionally."
Interfaith accepts no government money toward its $690,000
budget. Beltzer once returned a government check for $15,000,
balking at the boxful of forms he had to fill out--and the
regulations that went with it. "No way," he says.
"There are too many strings." One string seriously
harmful to the program would be removing the faith component.
"Accepting government money would limit our ability to
express our faith. We're not just doing social service,"
he says. "We're doing this because we're Christ's people
and following our Lord. That's why it's so successful."
Another problem would be enforcing accountability.
Interfaith residents who miss classes or do drugs are told to
leave the program. Not so with government-subsidized
programs. Says Beltzer, "If I accepted government
funding, they would require that I go through an eviction
process," undermining the program's emphasis on
consequences.
The agency's tough-minded approach is gaining ground.
There are now 14 transitional housing programs in other
cities emulating the Interfaith model. It has been singled
out by IBM as one of six exemplary charity programs in the
country. It was selected to receive the top 1996 Samaritan
Award, along with $10,000, from the Acton Institute for the
Study of Religion and Liberty, in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
Interfaith stays in touch with former residents, offering
help and continued friendship. Many return for visits,
including Linda, a woman Ben had booted out of the program.
"Why did I kick you out?" he asks, trying to place
her among hundreds of former residents.
"Because of drugs," she says. "And I want
to thank you."
Linda and her husband had been living in one of the
agency's apartments for a month when both were caught using
drugs. When they refused to leave with their three children,
Beltzer called the police.
Two years on the streets, however, convinced Linda that
Beltzer and his colleagues were right: "If things were
going to change, I had to change." She checked herself
into a drug rehab program and kicked her drug habit. She
eventually left her addict husband, who is now in jail. Today
Linda has found a job, left welfare, and regained custody of
her children.
She tells Beltzer: "You are the only people who held
my feet to the fire and didn't tolerate my behavior."
|