| With nod from
Bush, state and religion join forces for jobs
By Scott S. Greenberger-
American-Statesman Capitol Staff - Sunday, December 26,
1999
OBRENHAM
-- "You are a mighty man of valor, Andre King!"
King's been called a dishwasher, a fry cook and a drug dealer.
"Man of valor" is a new one.
King, 25, is in a classroom at the First Assembly of God
Church listening to former missionary Marcus Lawhon talk
about Jesus Christ and the workplace. It is Week 2 of a
12-week course designed to transform Brenham's welfare recipients
and perennially underemployed into reliable, God-fearing
workers who can command more than the minimum wage.
Lawhon pulls the "mighty man of valor" line from
the Bible, the only required text for the course. He tells
King and the six other students that faith will enable them
to overcome abusive bosses and that God has plotted a career
path for each of them. They are beginning to believe it.
Religion, specifically Christianity, permeates nearly every
aspect of the Jobs Partnership of Washington County -- and
the State of Texas helps pay for it. The program's successes
-- its organizers say about four-fifths of its graduates
have found jobs -- bolster Republican presidential front-runner
George W. Bush's contention that faith can transform lives
in ways that government can't.
But the Brenham program also raises questions about government
support of religion, which the First Amendment prohibits.
And even as Bush says taxpayer money should not pay for
proselytizing, the program seems to conflict with state
rules that prohibit the practice.
The Department of Human Services kicks in $8,000 of the
program's $20,000 annual budget, paying the bulk of the
salary the Rev. George Nelson earns for running it. The
agency's contract with the program says that "no state
expenditures can have as their objective the funding of
sectarian worship, instruction, or proselytization."
Several times during the 12 weeks, a state worker stops
by unannounced to make sure instructors are following the
rules.
But department officials themselves don't agree on how much
religion is too much. Becky Corkran, the worker who does
the spot inspections, says instructors "aren't allowed
to coerce anyone to believe in a certain way, or try to
change their beliefs" -- in other words, they can't
proselytize.
Department attorney Margaret Roll, however, says the key
is how state money is being used.
"They can proselytize all they want. We are just not
going to pay them to do that," Roll said. "We
are funding a job-training program with certain elements
that we want in there. If they want to include other elements,
we're not going to stop them."
In the state's view, the Brenham group is following the
terms of its contract -- even though Nelson gets state dollars
to oversee the whole program, not just the nonreligious
parts of it. And instructors readily acknowledge they are
trying to change students' beliefs. Only Jesus, they say,
can transform their lives.
"We want to change from the inside out, rather than
from the outside in, and that can only be accomplished through
a relationship with Jesus Christ. That will become more
obvious as the program moves along," instructor Rick
Flammer tells the students during their second day in class.
As governor, Bush took advantage of changes in federal law
to encourage Texas social service agencies to contract with
religious groups and has promised that as president he would
give tax dollars to community and faith-based groups to
address social problems. Vice President Al Gore, the Democratic
front-runner, has made a similar pledge. If either man is
elected president, it is likely that taxpayer dollars will
be used to support many more programs like the one in Brenham.
Learning to trust
Eight churches and eight businesses in Brenham launched
the Jobs Partnership three years ago to help county residents
find jobs. The state began to help pay for it this year.
The students gather twice a week, with Monday nights reserved
for Bible study and Thursdays dedicated to job-skills training.
On many nights, it's hard to tell the two apart.
On the first Thursday, Flammer takes the class to the church
gym to teach them about interdependence. The students are
paired off, and half of them are blindfolded. As Nelson
stands in the center of the room and reads Psalm 23 in his
booming baritone -- "The Lord is my shepherd, I shall
not want" -- the students without blindfolds lead their
partners around tables, chairs and sawhorses scattered around
the room.
The lesson is that you've got to trust in God and in other
people. "Do you think that as individuals we can ever
truly be independent?" Flammer asks, before gathering
the students around him for a closing prayer.
One Monday, Lawhon asks the students to describe their difficult
bosses. He writes their responses on a white board: "nasty
attitude," "grouchy," "lack of ability,"
"won't listen," "lazy."
Those frustrations can be overcome, Lawhon says, as long
as the students remember a simple fact: They're working
for God.
"He cares about his creations, he cares about his kiddos,"
Lawhon says. "God knows what's going on in your workplace.
He was there when the boss said that to you. God is in the
process of justice."
Lawhon's words are a revelation for the students, most of
whom have bounced from one low-wage, low-prestige job to
another. He is arming them to endure life at the bottom
of the ladder long enough to move up to the next rung.
"I have faith in God to help me find a job," King
says after several weeks of the course. "I don't feel
like the same old person that I used to be -- acting bad,
staying in trouble, not wanting to do nothing."
He is standing outside the Faith Mission, a homeless shelter
and food pantry where he has been living for the past three
months. Lawhon, who runs the Faith Mission, told King about
Jobs Partnership.
As a teen-ager in a small town outside Galveston, King says,
he sold drugs and joined a gang. After high school, he held
a series of menial jobs, including dishwasher at a dog track
and fry cook at a seafood restaurant. In the short term,
he'd be happy with a steady construction job, although he
dreams of cooking crawfish etouffee someday at his own Cajun
restaurant.
Another student, 28-year-old Yvette Adams, wants to be a
teacher. A single mother with three sons -- she first got
pregnant at 16 -- Adams has worked at Sonic and an Exxon
station, but she never took those jobs too seriously, figuring
she could get by on child support if she had to. The class
has changed her, too.
"Before, I didn't care if I got fired. Now it's different.
You're not just working for your employer, you're working
for God," said Adams, who found out about the program
after she began attending Nelson's church. Nearly all of
the students say learning that God wants them to work has
given them an extra incentive to find and keep a job.
Adams, who was recently baptized, says her nonreligious
family thinks "I'm losing my mind." She doesn't
care. Every night before her sons go to bed, she gathers
them around her to talk to them about God.
"The Bible pushes you a whole lot. This is the right
way -- it's in the book so you know it's the right way."
Mastering the basics
The course has a biblical foundation, but it includes some
job training that isn't overtly religious. Students learn
basic skills that may be second nature to steady workers
but are new to them: They must stand up and speak clearly
when they answer a question in class. There is a dress code,
and they must show up on time. The students sell themselves
in mock job interviews, which are videotaped so they can
spot their weaknesses and correct them. They learn how to
put together a resume.
During one class a guest speaker, Appel Motors owner Gregg
Appel, offers this insight: "The last thing an employer
wants to do is work on personal hygiene with somebody,"
he says.
In those respects, the class at the church isn't much different
from the job-training course across town at the Texas Workforce
Commission. The decor in the government's class is different:
The wall is decorated with a keyboarding chart, not pictures
of Jesus. There isn't a Bible in sight, and the bookshelves
are crammed with titles such as, "Cover Letters That
Knock 'Em Dead" and "Occupational Outlook Handbook."
There are computers, so students get some keyboarding practice
and experience using basic software programs. The organizers
of the church program are trying to raise money to pay for
computers.
But building students' confidence -- albeit without religion
-- is a big part of the government course, too.
"We're all going to make it to the workplace. We're
going to get there eventually, we're just not there now,"
instructor Laura Burrell said in the inspirational cadence
of a preacher.
Burrell, who taught biology for 31 years in the Rockdale
public schools, is no bloodless bureaucrat. Flashing around
the room in her red polka-dot dress and owlish glasses,
she is energetic, patient and warm. The students, mostly
welfare recipients who must take the class to fulfill job
training requirements, call her "Miss Laura" with
obvious affection.
During a recent class, Burrell noticed one student squinting
at a W-2 form and asked her whether she had glasses. They
were broken, the young woman replied, and Medicaid wouldn't
pay for a new pair for another two years. But Burrell wasn't
satisfied with that response, and she called in a Workforce
Commission official to help. Within the hour, the agency
had found a way to get glasses for the woman.
"They don't know that they can, because everything
has been a brick wall for them," Burrell says after
class. "I know she came out of here just a little bit
taller today. That's the kind of hope we hope to instill
in people."
A religious obligation
But organizers of the church class say secular programs
can never measure up to religious ones.
"Most of the organizations that have no religious ties
deal with the outer man. What we do is address the inner
man," Nelson said. "We change them by giving them
hope, and making them feel good about themselves. We make
them realize that the world is not against them, that the
world is a cornucopia of opportunity."
The religious and moral aspects of the class are crucial,
Nelson said. Students learn that they will "benefit
and profit in the long run from doing things right, and
doing the right thing," he explained. "Many of
them have changed their lives totally -- and not just from
an employment point of view."
In the past three years, roughly 80 percent of the church
class graduates have found jobs, working as secretaries,
forklift drivers, and nurse's assistants, according to Nelson.
The Department of Human Services wasn't involved in the
program during its first two years, but 10 of the 13 students
who have graduated since department involvement have found
full-time jobs, according to an agency official. One of
those who hasn't is working part-time, and the other two
have about two more months to find work under the terms
of the contract between the agency and the church program.
In the first eight months of this year, 62 percent of the
people who completed the Texas Workforce Commission course
found jobs within a month of finishing the class. But unlike
Jobs Partnership, which is optional, the government class
is required for welfare recipients, so it might be that
some of the students aren't as motivated as those who choose
to attend the church class. Jobs Partnership organizers
hope that state officials will clear their program as an
alternative for welfare recipients who must fulfill the
job training requirement, but they haven't yet.
Helping their students isn't a job for Nelson, Lawhon and
Flammer -- it's a religious obligation. Lawhon, a 27-year-old
Baylor University graduate, spent a year in the former Soviet
republic of Moldova as a missionary and views his participation
in the Brenham program as a continuation of that work. Flammer,
a retired chemical company executive who now breeds Arabian
horses, said he began to give back to the community as a
baseball coach in Harlem, where he was touched by the desperation
of the kids he coached.
"I think I've been blessed in my life, and this is
an opportunity for me to give something back to people who
are less fortunate," Flammer said. "That's something
that Christ taught, and I believe in it strongly."
Nelson says running the job-training program is part of
his job as a member of the clergy.
"Taking care of widows and orphans, from a biblical
standpoint, was the responsibility of the church. For a
long time, we've neglected our responsibility as mandated
by God," Nelson said as he stood in front of the stone
building that houses his Grace Fellowship Baptist Church.
"I think the churches ought to be involved. They've
been just inside these four walls long enough."
Church vs. State
Most clergy members agree that they have a social responsibility,
but some are uneasy about accepting government aid.
"It's awfully hard in my position to criticize when
people are being helped -- that's what we're all about.
But the danger of government money going to any religious
group is the entanglement of church and state," said
the Rev. Larry Bethune of University Baptist Church in Austin.
"The state has to require accountability for our tax
dollars; if they don't, they're not fulfilling their role.
But when they do, they begin to interfere with the internal
life of the churches."
Bethune said that when the government gives money to any
religious group, it promotes religion and violates the Constitution.
"Charitable choice," a part of the 1996 federal
welfare reform law, cleared the way for government dollars
to flow to religious programs. The provision, little noticed
when it was passed, allows states to give money to religious
groups to provide job training and other services to former
welfare recipients as long as there are secular alternatives.
It has since been expanded to cover other social services.
Religiously affiliated groups such as Catholic Charities
and Lutheran Social Services have been getting government
money for years -- but before "charitable choice,"
they had to use it for secular social services. Churches
were supposed to maintain a wall between their religious
and nonreligious endeavors, with separate financial records
and different directors.
Bush, who has signed legislation in Texas easing regulations
on religious organizations, has made the state a leader
in enacting "charitable choice." In announcing
his presidential plans, Bush pledged "a commitment
to pluralism" in choosing which groups to support.
But it might not be possible to treat every faith-based
group equally when there is limited government money.
"Who will decide which churches or synagogues, which
denomination or sect will be funded and which will be excluded?
The answer is obvious: The personal religious preferences
of those with authority, no matter how extreme, will override
the need to provide efficient social services to Americans,"
Dallas Rabbi Peter Berg said.
Barry Lynn of Americans United for Separation of Church
and State, a Washington advocacy group, said it's only a
matter of time before there's a lawsuit challenging "charitable
choice."
"It is fundamentally based on the idea that there is
a Christian value system that is going to help you be a
better person," Lynn said of programs like the one
in Brenham. "Whether that's true or not is irrelevant.
What's important is that government funds can't be used
for that sort of indoctrination."
But Flammer said the state should help pay for the Brenham
course because it "clearly helps people to become self-sustaining
and become productive citizens -- and from the standpoint
of government, this is what they want to see in these programs."
Nelson isn't about to strip religion out of Jobs Partnership.
After all, he says, that's the key to its success.
"When you talk about faith, you talk about Christianity.
That's what I am and what I do," he said. "I'm
a pastor and a preacher and a Christian -- so I stick to
basic biblical teachings."
You may contact Scott S.
Greenberger at sgreenberger@statesman.com or 445-3654.
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