It’s Your Money. Where Is It Going?

So, you didn’t make it to last Tuesday’s Winning a Better Budget Dinner and Action Session at Bread for the City. That’s okay. This week Empower DC and DC Jobs With Justice will be having a free training on the DC Budget. Here are the details.

DC BUDGET TRAINING It’s YOUR Money! Where is it Going?

Tues. April 19, 2011 6:30-8:30 PM Empower DC, 1419 V St, NW (2 1/2 blocks from the U Street Metro)

Special guest Jenny Reed from DC Fiscal Policy Institute will fill us in on the details of Mayor Gray’s budget. How much money is going to subsidize DC’s for profit developers and how much money is being cut from child care, affordable housing, human services programs, etc. Being sponsored by Empower DC and DC Jobs With Justice much of the discussion will be about what we can all do about it.

The following videos, which the Grassroots Media Project produced last year at budget time, show some of the issues at stake. The first is about hits to the city’s subsidized child care program, the second is about the need for adult education and the third is about the council’s refusal to adopt a more progressive income tax code. Enjoy or, ya know, get indignant. Hope to see you on Tuesday night.

DC Doesn’t Work Without Child Care

Adult Education and the Millionaire’s Tax

Dear City Council …

Show Us The Green Rally: Demanding Quality and Affordable Child Care

By Ben Parisi, Empower DC Child Care Organizer

On Thursday, March 17, 2011, St. Patrick’s Day, members of Empower DC’s Child Care for All Campaign and Save Our Safety Net DC came together to demand that newly elected Mayor Vincent Gray “Show Us the Green” for Child Care Subsidies.

Most of the people featured in this video, and many of their neighbors in Ward 7 and 8 supported Gray – without those wards Gray may well have lost the election. Yet many are worried that Gray will continue some of the same dangerous trends that Fenty began – including slashing the budget for child care subsidies.

The Child Care Subsidy Program is a critically important program that allows low-income families to access child care so that they can keep their jobs, enroll in school, and provide for their families. If these subsidies are cut further, parents will be left with no option but to forego employment and remove their children from quality early childhood education. Child care providers, who rely on DC’s reimbursement for serving subsidy-holders, will be left with no option but to close – as over 50 have already in the past year.

Child care like that provided by those featured in this video ensure that children are more likely to be prepared to enter school, successfully graduate high school, move on to college, and stay out of the criminal justice system. Investment in early childhood has a huge return on investment by saving taxpayer money down the line on reduced need for remedial education and pressure on the penal system.

In four years, this critical program that also employs nearly 6,000 people in DC, has been cut nearly $30 million. THE CUTS MUST STOP NOW. Send Mayor Gray the message: eom@dc.gov.

Thank you to all the Child Care for All Campaign members, to Save Our Safety Net DC, and the Puppet Underground (for the great signs in this video)!!

The People’s Soapbox

Empower DC set up the PEOPLE’S SOAPBOX for the first time at last weekend’s Black LUV festival. In our first edition, Brian Anders has some ideas about how to deal with homelessness and DC’s affordable housing crisis. Do you agree with him or not?

Expect more from the PEOPLE’S SOAPBOX soon.

DC Doesn’t Work Without Childcare For All

Children Protesting

This video was produced for Empower DC’s Childcare for All Campaign, which brings together residents who are directly impacted by the lack of quality, affordable and accessible childcare in DC for low and moderate income working families. Specifically, the campaign has been advocating for full funding of the Child Care Subsidy Program by the city council. Last year the council cut $4 million from the program and Mayor Fenty’s proposed budget was slated to cut an additional $4 million this year. But lobbying efforts paid off, and much of the funding was restored. I believe this video had a positive impact. Shout outs must be made to videographer Lorenz Wheatley and Hip Hop artist Head-Roc for providing the soundtrack for this video and for the Childcare For All campaign.