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By Marc H. Morial | SACOBSERVER.COM
WIRE SERVICES
(NNPA) - The recent slight
uptick in job creation has prompted some to declare that the
great recession is over. But a look beneath the surface of
the numbers tells a more ominous story. It's true - the Labor
Department's employment report for the month of May showed
a gain of 431,000 jobs and an overall unemployment rate of
9.7 percent - down slightly from April's rate of 9.9 percent.
But before breaking out the champagne we should
consider that 411,000 of the newly employed are temporary
Census workers and that 15 million Americans are still looking
for work. Consider also, that African American and Latino
joblessness continues to far outpace the national average,
and now stands at 15.5 percent and 12.4 percent respectively.
With summer fast approaching, the unemployment rate for Black
teens has climbed to 38 percent. Clearly, like the oil spewing
from that well in the Gulf of Mexico, the jobs crisis continues.
Perhaps the most disturbing statistic in the
latest jobs report is that 46 percent of all unemployed workers
have been out of a job for six months or more - a clear sign
that the labor market is far from being in recovery. The burgeoning
ranks of the long-term unemployed, coupled with the weak growth
in private sector jobs reinforces the need for legislation
that funds direct job creation and training for the chronically
unemployed. This will reap huge dividends for struggling families
and communities as well as our nation.
A new report from the National Urban League
Policy Institute describes how investing in job creation is
also the best strategy for reducing the deficit. We estimate
that if the economy could replace the 8 million jobs lost
since the recession began in December of 2007, the resulting
increase in tax revenues would reduce the deficit by $235
million. Another $75 billion dollars in deficit reduction
would be achieved due to reduced spending on unemployment
benefits. In total, a robust jobs surge can reduce the budget
deficit by $310 million.
The continuing increase in teen unemployment
is also cause for alarm. We urge the Senate to join the House
in swiftly passing H.R. 4213, the American Jobs and Closing
Tax Loopholes Act. That bill includes $1 billion for a summer
youth program and $2.5 billion in emergency assistance for
needy families. We know that summer jobs are the launch pad
for success. They provide a foundation for a solid work ethic
and invaluable experience that gives young people a clear
advantage that lasts throughout their working life. The Senate
must act without delay. We cannot continue to sacrifice our
future for short-term political gain.
As a part of our centennial year IAMEMPOWERED
campaign, the National Urban League has challenged the nation
to meet the goal of ensuring that every American has access
to jobs with a living wage and good benefits by the year 2025.
To keep the country focused on that goal, we recently launched
our State of Urban Jobs site at iamempowered.com. Log on today
to stay abreast of the latest developments.
NUL's 6-POINT PLAN FOR JOB CREATION
- Fund Direct Job Creation by offering financial support
to cities, counties, states, universities, community colleges
and non-profit community based organizations to hire the
personnel necessary to provide critical services in communities
across the nation. Eligibility for support will be based
on local unemployment rates with a focus on the long-term
unemployed. At least twice in American history, the government
has responded to high rates of unemployment with investments
in direct job creation - the 1935 Works Progress Administration
when nearly one-fourth of the labor force was out of work,
and the Emergency Jobs and Unemployment Assistance Act of
1974 which established Title VI of CETA as a temporary countercyclical
employment program at a time when unemployment was quickly
approaching 9 percent. We propose an investment of $150
billion to create 3 million jobs, a number that represents
only half of the current unemployed with a high school diploma
or less.
- Expand and Expedite the Small Business Administration's
Community Express Loan Program through a reduction of the
interest rate to 1 percent targeted for those businesses
located in areas where the local unemployment rate exceeds
the state average. A ten-fold expansion of the program (from
$1 billion to $10 billion) should make credit available
to an additional 50,000 small businesses nationwide.
- Create Green Empowerment Zones in areas where at least
50 percent of the population has an unemployment rate that
is higher than the state average. Manufacturers of solar
panels and wind turbines that open plants in high unemployment
areas will for a period of three years, be eligible for
a zero federal income tax rate and a zero capital gains
tax under the condition that they hire and retain for a
minimum of three years at least half of their workforce
from the local area.
- Expand the Hiring of Housing Counselors Nationwide by
investing $500 million to fund housing counseling agencies
nationwide to help delinquent borrowers work with their
loan servicers to secure more affordable mortgages. Over
the past 18 months more than $400 million in federal funds
have been invested by the Administration to help mitigate
the mortgage crisis through housing counseling and according
to a recent report by the Urban Institute, borrowers facing
foreclosure are 60% more likely to hold onto their homes
if they receive counseling and receive loan modifications
with average monthly payments $454 lower than those who
did not see counselors.
- Expand the Youth Summer Jobs Program for 2010 by investing
$5-7 billion to employ 5 million teens. While the unemployment
rate for African Americann youth is over 40 percent, the
employment population ratio makes clearer the desperate
situation faced by many urban youth. Since the late 1990s,
this number has declined from a high of 33 percent down
to 15 percent and labor force participation for this group
is now at a record low of 26 percent. A critical factor
in eliminating racial and socio-economic disparities in
unemployment is providing a solid foundation upon which
African Americann youth can build positive future labor
market expectations and experiences.
- Create 100 Urban Jobs Academies to Implement an Expansion
of the Urban Youth Empowerment Program (UYEP) to employ
and train the chronically unemployed. UYEP, a four year
demonstration project created in partnership with the U.S.
Department of Labor in 2004, is a youth career preparation
initiative designed for at-risk, out-of-school, and adjudicated
youth and young adults between the ages of 18 and 24. With
27 Urban League affiliate sites and a total of $29.3 million,
the program served 3,900 youth, 65 percent of whom either
had job placements (paying an average wage of $9.32/hour)
or completed their high school diploma or GED. Two hundred
participants were placed in postsecondary schools or college
upon completion of their secondary education. Scaling this
program up to 100 sites would more than triple the program
at a cost of $108.5 million.
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