Page 22 ®1»* ^ortlanh (Dbserucr November 13, 2013 New Prices S Effective May 1 ,2 0 1 0 Martin Cleaning Carpet & Upholstery Cleaning Residential & Commercial Services AUD A LUMP OP e o A ix p o R M O N0PP T o PülU“lW ê0>/Ê § e>y TH0R Ç O O T ^ ÎP A ^ , Minimum Service CHG $45.00 , HO HO HO/ _2 Service own A sm all distance/travel charge m ay be applied CARPET CLEANING 2 Cleaning Areas or more $30.00 Each Area Pre-Spray Traffic Areas (Includes: 1 small Hallway) 1 Cleaning Area (only) $40.00 T ough lûVEISTHe Aew ER Includes Pre-Spray Traffic Area (Hallway Extra) Stairs (12-16 stairs - With O ther Services): $25.00 Area/Oriental Rugs: $25.00 Minimum Area/Oriental Rugs (Wooly. $40.00Minimum Heavily Soiled Area: Additional $10.00 each area (Requiring Extensive Pre-Spraying) UPHOLSTERY CLEANING Sofa: $69.00 Loveseat: $49.00 Sectional: $ 109 - $ 139 Chair or Recliner: $25 - $49 Throw Pillows (With Other Services)'. $5.00 % ADDITIONAL SERVICES • Area & Oriental Rug Cleaning • Auto/Boat/RV Cleaning • Deodorizing & Pet Odor Treatment • Spot & Stain Removal Service • Scotchguard Protection • Minor Water Damage Services SEE CURRENT FLYER FOR ADDITIONAL PRICES & SERVICES Call for Appointment (503) 281-3949 Heartless for the holidays S am P izzigati Scrooge has com e early this year. H e’s already kicking o u r T iny Tim s. This holiday sea­ son, kids in A m erica’s poorest fam ilies w ill have less to eat. N ov. 1 brought $5 billion in by new cuts to the n atio n ’s food stam p program , now officially know n as the Supplem ental N utri­ tion A ssistance Program , o r SN A P. P oor fam ilies are losing on average 7 p ercent o f th eir food aid, calculates the C enter on B ud­ get and Policy Priorities. A m o th er w ith tw o kids w ill lose $319 o v er the rest o f the current federal fiscal year. T he cuts could cost som e fam ilies a w e ek ’s w orth o f m eals a m onth, says the c h ie f o f A m erica’s largest food bank. M ore cuts are loom ing. A H ouse o f R ep re­ sentatives m ajority is dem anding an additional $39 b illion in “ savings.” O hio and o th e r states, in the m eantim e, are m oving to lim it food stam p eligibility. T o d a y ’s h e artlessn ess to w ard A m e ric a ’s m ost vulnerable actually goes far d e ep e r than food stam p cuts, as a new E conom ic Policy Institute report docum ents in rath er chilling detail. F o u r states, the report notes, have “ lifted restrictions on child labor.” In W isconsin, state law used to lim it school-age kids to five hours o f w ork a day on school days. T he new law erases these lim its. O th e r states are c u ttin g b a c k o n p ro te c ­ tions fo r lo w -w ag e w o rk ers o f all ages. E a rlie r th is y ear, M ississip p i a d o p te d a law th a t b an s c itie s an d c o u n tie s in th e sta te fro m g iv in g lo cal w o rk e rs e v en u n p a id sic k le av e rig h ts. A m e ric a ’s c u rre n t su rg e o f m e an - sp irite d n e ss, o b serv es G o rd o n L a fe r, th e U n i­ v e rs ity o f O re g o n a u th o r o f th e E P I stu d y , e ss e n tia lly e ru p te d rig h t a fte r th e 2 0 1 0 e le c ­ tio n s. In 11 sta te s, th o se e le c tio n s g a v e rig h t­ w in g e rs “n ew m o n o p o ly c o n tro l” o v e r th e g o v e r n o r ’s m a n s io n a n d b o th le g is la tiv e c h a m b e rs. L a fe r links this rig h t-w in g electo ral triu m p h d ire c tly to g ro w in g in e q u a lity . A w id e n in g in c o m e g ap , he e x p la in s, “h as p ro d u c e d a c r itic a l m a ss o f e x tre m e ly w e a lth y b u s in e ssp e o p le , m an y o f w h o m a re p o liti­ c a lly c o n s e rv a tiv e ,” an d v a rio u s re c e n t c o u rt c a se s h a v e g iv e n th e se w e a lth y a g re e n lig h t to sp en d v irtu a lly u n lim ite d su m s on th e ir fa v o re d c a n d id a te s. B u t A m e ric a ’s n ew h e a rtle s s n e s s re fle c ts m u ch m o re th an th is tu rb o c h a rg e d p o litic a l p o w e r o f A m e ric a ’s rich. T h e w id er a s o c ie ty ’s e c o n o m ic d iv id e , as D e m o s th in k ta n k a n a ­ ly st S ean M cE lw ee o b se rv e s, th e le ss e m p a ­ th y on th e p a rt o f th e ric h to w a rd th e p o o r. In a sta rk ly u n e q u al so c ie ty , p e o p le o f a fflu e n c e “ra re ly b ru sh s h o u ld e rs ” w ith p e o p le o f little a d v a n ta g e . T h e se ric h d o n ’t see th e p o o r. T h e y s te re o ty p e th e m in ste a d a s la z y an d u n w o rth y . C N N colum nist John S u tter has ju s t brought us face-to-face w ith this p henom enon, via a m oving and insightful p ortrait o f A m e ric a ’s m ost unequal locale, E ast C arroll Parish in L o u i­ siana. In E ast C arroll, the rich live north o f L ake P rovidence, the p o o r south. T he tw o groups seldom interact. E ast C a rro ll’s m ost affluent 5 p ercent average $ 6 1 1 ,0 0 0 a year, 9 0 tim es the $6,800 in co m es the p o o rest fifth o f the parish average. “L ooking across L ake P rovidence from the n o rth ,” w rites Sutter, “can w arp a p e rso n ’s v isio n .” O n e e x a m p le o f th is w a rp e d v isio n : E a st C a r ro ll’s ric h see fo o d sta m p s as an “ e n title ­ m e n t” th a t ro ts p o o r p e o p le ’s in c e n tiv e to w o rk . Y e t th e se sa m e ric h a n n u a lly p o c k e t e n o rm o u sly g e n ero u s farm su b sid ies. In 2 010, E a st C a r ro ll’s m o st h ig h ly su b sid iz e d farm o w n e r g ra b b e d $ 6 5 5 ,0 0 0 fro m o n e fe d e ral su b sid y a lo n e. T he average fo o d stam p p ayout in the parish: $ 1,492 p er person p er year. W hat should w e do about the ram pant in ­ eq u ality in E ast C arroll Parish — and far be­ y o n d ? F o r starters, w e co u ld end federal farm subsidies fo r w ealthy farm ers — and restore food stam ps to full strength. T h e longer-term task? T h at w ould include ev erything from raising taxes on the n a tio n ’s m ost privileged to raising m inim um w ag es for the n a tio n ’s low est-paid w orkers. In 2013 A m erica, sum s up C N N ’s Sutter, w e ’ve com e to see stark gaps betw een rich and p o o r as “in ev itab le.” H is sim ple rem in d er fo r us all: “T h ey d o n ’t hav e to b e .” OtherWords columnist Sam Pizzigati is an Institute fo r Policy Studies associate fellow.