NEWS STORY: Religious Leaders Urge Candidates to Embrace `Living Wage’ to Fight Poverty

c. 2000 Religion News Service WASHINGTON _ Urging an end to”faith-based rhetoric,”about 100 religious leaders affiliated with the Industrial Areas Foundation _ East have called on political candidates to support affordable housing for all and the establishment of a $25,000 minimum national living wage standard as a means to fight poverty.”We’re calling on the major […]

c. 2000 Religion News Service

WASHINGTON _ Urging an end to”faith-based rhetoric,”about 100 religious leaders affiliated with the Industrial Areas Foundation _ East have called on political candidates to support affordable housing for all and the establishment of a $25,000 minimum national living wage standard as a means to fight poverty.”We’re calling on the major presidential candidates to stop the rhetoric of religiosity and speak directly to the most important domestic issue today _ the wide and growing gap between American families doing well and those mired in poverty,”the Rev. Johnny Ray Youngblood of New York, co-chair of the Industrial Area Foundation’s regional division, told a Tuesday (Jan. 11) news conference.”We are aware of the limitations of faith-based solutions to society’s problems. We want to start a debate about the stubborn reality of low-wage work, and scarce and unaffordable housing.” Catholic, Protestant and Jewish members of the foundation’s regional division, which represents 14 church-based community groups along the East Coast, traveled to Washington for the announcement of the group’s goals for the political campaign season.

During a news conference held in the shadow of the White House at historic St. John’s Episcopal Church, speakers proposed a federal requirement that all agencies meet a living wage standard in order to receive any federal funding.”We want a living wage set, a minimum of $25,000 with medical benefits,”demanded retired Bishop Harold Jansen of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, a Washington area resident.”Any group that receives any form of government subsidy should pay all its employees a living wage and provide medical benefits. With public subsidy comes public responsibility. You put that responsibility on poor people who get government subsidies. Now, this is the public responsibility.” Religious leaders from a variety of denominations voiced their support for the living wage concept.


Bishop Felton Edwin May of Washington, episcopal leader of 705 United Methodist congregations in Maryland, eastern West Virginia and Washington, D.C., said establishing a national living wage standard would do more to help the nation’s poor than any”faith-based”solution.”The term `working poor’ should be an oxymoron,”said May in a statement released on his behalf at the news conference.”This is not a political or economic issue, but a matter of fundamental morality and decency _ to use a person’s labor to make money and then not pay that person enough to live decently is a sin.” Bishop John Hurst Adams of Washington, senior bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, echoed May’s sentiments.”We cannot solve profound social problems with petty cash grants to faith-based organizations,”he said.”This nation is wealthy enough and ought to be willing to create a national living standard so everybody makes a living and has a life.” Speakers also urged candidates to address the nation’s shortage of affordable housing by supporting an expansion of the foundation’s Nehemiah program, which builds new and affordable homes for the working poor.”There should not be 5,000 Nehemiah homes around the country, there should be 500,000,”said Bishop David Benke, the New York-based spiritual leader of the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod.”We need candidates to do more than quote Scripture. We’re asking them: `Don’t offer to pray if you’re not prepared to walk with us.’ That’s empty piety _ a piety that quotes the Bible but does not produce.” The foundation’s Eastern division plans to present its proposals to candidates at presidential debates in New Hampshire later this month (January), said Arnie Graf, senior organizer and national staff member of the Industrial Areas Foundation, a Chicago-based national community organizing group.”In these debates no one is asking, `What about the growing gap between rich and poor?’ No one is asking that question,”he said.”The questions they’re talking about now aren’t relevant to the people. We need to ask, `What will you do about urban America, where the people who need a living wage live?’ They won’t be able to put us off anymore.”

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