Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (July 24, 2015)
Street Roots • July 24-30, 2015 News Page 4 PRINT BY ART HAZELW OO D COURTESY OF WESTERN REGIONAL A D V O C A C Y PROJECT W o r k in g BY AM AN DA WALDROUPE to reducing poverty: create “transitional jobs” for underemployed and unemployed people; increasing the federal minimum wage to educing poverty by 50 percent sounds $10.10 an hour; expand the earned income like a bleeding heart liberal’s dream. tax credit; increase funding for child-care Saying that people should work more sounds like the canned response of a free- subsidies; and increase support for people who are physically or mentally incapable of market capitalist working — people with disabilities and But David Riemer thinks such a dramatic receiving Social Security and Supplemental reduction in poverty is possible — with the Security Income. help of America’s free-market economy. The policy proposals developed by Riemer is a senior fellow at the Community Advocates Public Policy Institute, a think tank Community Advocates relies on modeling software developed by the Urban Institute, a based in Milwaukee national organization that conducts research that promotes on social and economic policy, which is able policies to reduce to simulate a household’s eligibility for poverty. In March, different assistance programs or tax credits, Community depending upon changes in income. The Advocates released a result is an empirical analysis of various report analyzing how factors that can lead to a reduction in poverty. poverty can be “Until this report came out, no one could reduced from its say (how poverty could be reduced) with this current national rate level of certainty,” Riemer says. of 14.5 percent to Riemer has spent his career in the private nearly 7 percent and government sectors implementing ways The report to reduce poverty and improve health care presents a package and other social services without increasing of policy proposals spending. In 2003, he worked as the budget that would enable director for Wisconsin’s then-governor, Jim more than half of Doyle, and was responsible for balancing a people living in poverty to earn wages that state budget with a $3.2 billion deficit without would lift them above the poverty line. cutting core services. He has also worked as The report takes a five-pronged approach the budget director for the city of Milwaukee STAFF WRITER R David Riemer to cut poverty in half D avid Riem er and the Com m unity Advocates P ublic Policy Institute have a plan that would allow poor Am ericans to earn wages they need to get out o f poverty and has authored numerous articles on poverty, health care reform and public administration. Riemer will speak about the report 10:30 a.m. Thursday, July 30, at Portland State University’s Smith Memorial Student Union. His talk, “Working Our Way Out of Poverty,” is free and open to the public. It is sponsored by the Oregon Business Council’s poverty task force. A m anda W aldroupe: Your report concludes that work is the primary way out of poverty. Why is that? David Riem er: As we talk about poverty here, we’re talking about a shortage of income. The point that I was trying to make is that when you have a shortage of income when you’re underemployed or unemployed, it makes it more likely for you to become sick or ill. It makes it harder for children to learn. I know there’s often a lot of discussion that we shouldn’t only think of poverty as being a matter of money. But it’s hard to measure some of those other things - whether people’s emotional state or general well-being is getting better or staying the same as things that you would measure and point to to change public policy. You can measure whether people’s incomes stay the same or rise. See RIEM ER, page 5