"This is the
untold story of W-2...dead-end low-paying jobs."
Phil
Wylato A Job is a Right
Campaign
We
met Phil Wylato outside, collecting signatures on a petition to end evictions
in winter. He is a printer by trade and coordinator for the "A Job is
a Right Campaign."
Question:
What problems do you see with W-2, particularly with
winter evictions?
Phil Wylato:
A few months ago, the Milwaukee County Board of Supervisors commissioned a group
called Women in Poverty Initiative to do a survey of what's happened to people
who are no longer in the W-2 program. It was the first done of that kind. Governor
Tommy Thompson says 30,000 people are off the Welfare rolls. But there's been
no survey to find out what's happened to them. If they've gotten jobs; if they're
homeless, if they've moved out of state.
So, the Women
in Poverty Initiative went out door-to-door and interviewed people. They found,
of the people who had been declared job-ready that's a classification
from the W-2 agency and had been pushed out of the program, only 15 percent
had full-time jobs. Forty percent had been evicted, or were facing eviction.
The majority were living on $400 to $600 a month.
So, what are they
doing? They don't have a place to live. They're living with relatives, with
friends, They're moving from house to house, they're in homeless shelters. And
an increasing number of them, and this was in a "Milwaukee Journal"
article this past Saturday, increasing numbers of them are giving up their children
to foster care or friends, and showing up in homeless shelter. These are single
mothers.
This is the untold
story of W-2. The W-2 system may benefit a few people. But the majority of them
that get jobs, they'll be dead-end, low-paying jobs. They won't advance. And
after five years lifetime participation in the program, they'll be out of the
W-2 system and worse off than when they started. Then there's a whole chunk
of people who are out of the program altogether.
The evictions
that take place in Milwaukee County, there's a thousand evictions a month, twelve
thousand a year...the number of sheriff-assisted evictions is skyrocketing...These
are people who in the past might have gotten an eviction notice and then moved.
Now, there's no place for them to go. If you ride around this neighborhood,
you will see piles of furniture out on the sidewalk, where people are being
physically evicted with absolutely no place to go. And they're destitute.
A large part of
this is due to W-2. The landlords admit it, the sheriff's department admits
it. We've exposed it, but the state refuses to deal with the question. We're
saying the W-2 agencies that benefit from this program should create a fund,
to pay emergency rent to keep these people in their apartments at least until
April 15th.
It's wintertime
in Wisconsin.
Question:
We hear a lot "There's a labor shortage, why don't these people go out and get
jobs?"
Phil Wyalto:
Unemployment in the state is under 4 percent, in (Milwaukee) County I think
it's just slightly above that. But in this neighborhood here officially it's
25 percent, that's officially. And there's a lot of neighborhoods that were
two-thirds folks who were surviving on AFDC.
From here to where
the jobs are see, there's no jobs in this neighborhood from here
to where the jobs are there's no public transportation. The few places where
there is public transportation, it'll take you 2 to 2 1/2 hours to get out to
those jobs and then take 2 to 2 1/2 to get back. So if you have children, now
you're talking about putting your children in daycare for 12 hours, which is
not covered by W-2, that length of time.
So you've got
a transportation problem. You can't move out to the suburbs because there's
no affordable housing there.
Milwaukee, statistically,
is one of the most racially segregated cities in the country. Most major cities
the population is 20, 30, 40 percent people of color in the surrounding suburbs.
Milwaukee County is 98 percent White in the suburbs. It's the smallest percent
of people of color living in the suburbs of any major city in the country.
Racial segregation,
the lack of transportation, the lack of jobs in the city, all mean that when
you are unemployed in the central city, it's very difficult to get a job and
get yourself out of that situation.
There are some
obvious solutions: put some jobs in the central city, break racial segregation
in the suburbs, create a real mass transportation system. All those things would
help.
Employers have
a problem because there is a labor shortage, so they're trying to come to terms
with that. But nobody is talking about putting a new AO Smith in the central
city, a new American Motors, a new Briggs and Stratton. Those are the jobs that
are being destroyed. The jobs that are being created are the $5-an-hour, $6-an-hour
jobs, which is not going to bring anybody out of poverty.
The biggest solution
to that is obviously unionization. If there are $5-an-hour, $6-an-hour jobs,
those workers should be unionized. W-2 workers should have the right to be in
a union, represented by a union contract.
Question:
Why do you care so much about this?
Phil Wylato:
Because I like to go home at night and put my feet up and watch TV and not have
to think that two doors down there's someone whose living in an abandoned home.
And it's not right
what's happening in this society. It affects all of us. Nobody's future is really
all that secure anymore; a lot of us are one paycheck away from being homeless.
And they've destroyed the safety net; for 61 years we had a guarantee through
the Social Security act of 1935 there would be some minimal level of support
for people. President Clinton signed a bill and wiped that out in 1996. So now,
where's the safety net? Where's the guarantee?
You've got all
these layoffs coming down, Johnson and Johnson and the oil companies and the
papermaking companies. Whose job is secure, who's secure in this society?
Our organization
is called a Job Is a Right. We believe a job is a right. Well, that's controversial.
Are public schools a right? That's becoming controversial, too, because of the
school choice program. How about a sidewalk, do I have a right to walk down
a public sidewalk?
We define what
are rights in this society. And we're saying that people have the right to a
job, they have a right to housing, to medical care and to education. And we
need to structure society to make sure that those things are guaranteed. It
can't only be the right to make a buck. That can't be the only right we have.
We're fighting for justice. We're not doing it out of sympathy for the poor.
We're doing it out of solidarity for all of us who just want to survive, who
want to live and have a decent life for themselves and their kids.