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AmeriCorps: Working Families Will Pay the Price By Senator Chuck
Grassley During the Clinton presidential campaig n Americans were
promised a new way of doing things. We heard slogans such as "New
Covenant," "New Democrat," and "Reinventing Govern- ment." Now that
-we are nearly two years into this Administration, we can look at
not just what they say, but what they' v e done. It appears to me
that, unfortunately, while this Administration has slogans for the
nineties, it is acting like it is still the sixties. The
Administration seems to follow the same failed tax and spend
policies of the sixties. And just like in the sixties, this
Administration's answer to every issue is to throw more money at
the problem. The Administration's premier national service program,
"AmeriCorps," today stands in danger of joining a long list of
costly Great Society programs. What's more, A m eriCorps likely
will squander money that could be used to provide students of
working families an opportunity to attend college. This is not good
news for those of us in Congress who want to see this concept
succeed. AnieriCorps was sold to Congress as a p rogram to help pay
the costs of college and to encour- age young people to perform
community service. However, early indicators reveal its approach is
impractical for many students and costly for taxpayers. In 1992,
AmeriCorps demonstration projects showe d a drop-out rate of 20
percent, and a bot- tom line cost of $30,400 for a single
participant to complete his or her term of service. Roughly half
the $30,000 goes for salary and benefits for the participants, the
rest is for overhead and ad- ministration. That's enough money to
cover four years of tuition and fees for three full-time students
attending the University of Iowa. Despite the exorbitant cost, the
White House sought an eyebrow-raising 67 percent increase in
funding for AnieriCorps for fiscal yea r 1995. During the next
year, 20,000 AmeriCorps partici- pants will be given a salary and
an educational award which equal approximately $7.27 per hour, plus
medical benefits and free child care. That equates to a full-time
job that pays a rate of over $15 , 000 annually. That is more than
what 39.3 million Americans live on, according to the U.S. Census
Bureau. Meanwhile, countless working parents struggle and sacrifice
for years to help put their chil- dren through college with little
or no assistance from the federal government. And, while the costly
AmeriCorps program is revving up, another more efficient education
program is strapped for cash. The Library of Congress reports that,
in real dollars, the value of the maximum Pell Grant had decreased
25 perc ent since 1980. This is unfortunate because, as Senator
Robert Byrd stated during the Senate consideration of ArneriCorps,
five college students could qualify for Pell Grants for the cost of
just one AnieriCorps participant.
Senator Grassley, a Republican, represents Iowa in the United
States Senate. He spoke at The Heritage Foundation on October 6,
1994. ISSN 0272-1155 0 1994 by The Heritage Foundation.
Let me remind you that AmeriCorps does not exclude by income level.
Therefore, under this program, c hildren from poor and middle-class
families may be excluded to make room for the children of
millionaires or political cronies. In fact, ArneriCorps is the
perfect set up if an unscrupulous few wanted to play the political
pa- tronage game with this progr a m. The concern of politics
undermining the integrity of programs such as ArneriCorps is
already becoming reality. The Los Angeles Thnes reported on
September I I that a "Summer of Safety" program in San Francisco
"organized 40 other groups for a rally aga i nst the crime bill's
'three strikes and you're out' provision ...... Summer of Safety is
part of the AmeriCorps program. If this news story is accurate, it
is unconscionable that taxpayers' money, which is supposed to help
communities, is instead spent on partisan politics. As for
promoting community service, AmeriCorps is questionable, at best.
It creates a new government bureaucracy and pays 20,000 young
people to do what 2.9 million others their age already do
free-of-charge and without reward, save the gratification inherent
in voluntarism. And what are some examples of the work these 20,000
young people will do? The Rolling Stone, on September 22, 1994,
reported the following: "In a little more than four hours, 10 corps
members and a supervisor have me a sured one window, installed
another and put one lock on a door." So now, based on this data,
when someone asks'you how many AmeriCorps volunteers it takes to
screw in a lock, the unfortunate answer is: 10, plus I supervisor.
Since the mid-1980s, I have le d the fight against waste at the
Defense Department. My investigations highlighted that the
taxpayers were paying for a $7,600 coffee pot and a $500 hammer. It
appears now, that AmeriCorps has given us the $ 100 lock. And this
is not the only boondoggle: A m eriCorps paid the public relations
firm of Ogilvy, Adams and Rinehart $1.7 million this year to
publicize the creation of AmeriCorps. This is al- most double what
the Administration requested for the Office of the Inspector
General which oversees AnieriCo r ps. Is it possible that the
priority of those administering this program is public relations
first, and managing the taxpayers' money a distant second? As for
Mr. Clinton, the program fundamentally contradicts the pledge he
made two years ago, when he sai d he was a "New Democrat" who would
not repeat the failed designs of the Great So- ciety. One year
later, Vice President Al Gore advanced a high-profile and
praiseworthy symbol of the President's commitment to change when he
unveiled the National Performan c e Review to "reinvent
govermment." With AmeriCorps, the White House had a good chance to
show that "reinventing government" was not just another slogan.
However, this program violates the first law of reinvention,
namely, that governmental functions shoul d be returned to the
citizenry whenever possible. Under Ameri- Corps, this
Administration seeks to federally bureaucratize voluntarism,
thereby standing the concept on its head. My colleague Senator
Kerrey from Nebraska spoke eloquently on this paradox dur ing
Senate consideration of Americorps. He stated: Although the Federal
Government's intent is to duplicate successful local ventures, its
presence can often have a negative impact on the effectiveness of
the program. Local ownership of the program may be
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surrendered due to its reliance on Federal dollars. Federal
supervision and mandates can damage a well-functioning program.
Republicans have promoted community service by honoring volunteers
through programs such as "Points of Light." The New Democrats see
this voluntarism and believe the answer is to establish a
bureaucracy which pays young people to serve their community. We
saw this New Democrat mindset at work in the crime bill. President
Bush applauded the grassroots communities that had created t h e
"midnight basketball leagues." In doing so, Presi- dent Bush
honored private citizens serving the public. He regarded the
creation of midnight basketball by the grassroots-not by the
government-as an example for others to emulate. But New Democrats
chos e government funding over grassroots example. Just like the
Demo- crats of old, the New Democrats think the answer is to spend
the tax money of working families. Let me explain what these
different approaches mean in practical terms. Midnight basketball
at the community level could be run by a iandful. of people on a
shoestring. All you need is a church social hall, a basketball and
net, and some devoted volunteers. Now, with the New Democrats and
federal bureaucrats involved, you need a federal bureau- cra t to
write the grant announcement, a federal bureaucrat to oversee and
review the grant applications, another federal bureaucrat to issue
the grant, then you need a state bureaucrat to write the grant, a
state bureaucrat to establish a "dialogue" with the l ocal
communities, and you will need several staff at the local level to
make sure that they are complying with all the guide- lines and red
tape required by the federal government. Perhaps we can look
forward to seeing federal bureaucrats issuing regulati o ns
defining what is meant by the word "midnighf' in midnight
basketball, and detailing when a zone defense is legal or illegal.
To turn back to AmeriCorps, in sum, the program suffers from three
serious flaws: first, it is an inefficient and costly way of
assisting working families in paying for college; second, the Ad-
ministration's efforts to federally bureaucratize voluntarism. go
against -the principles of &&reinventing government"; and
finally, it undermines efforts to promote volunteers providing co m
munity service. Highlighting these three points: a recent Omaha
World-Herald editorial reported that the State of Nebraska had
received a grant of $457,622 to recruit 23 AnieriCorps members.
This works out to $19,987 in bureaucratic overhead for signing u p
each AmeriCorps member. Despite AmeriCorps' taxpayer-paid public
relations machine, the Senate is not blindly agree- ing to
continued funding for AnieriCorps. Senator Mikulski and I agreed in
a colloquy on the Senate floor to have the General Accounting O
ffice (GAO) conduct a complete cost review of ArneriCorps. I
commend Senator Mikulski for her support of this review and her
strong commit- ment that the taxpayer's money be spent wisely and
efficiently. The GAO review will tell the American people exactl y
how much it costs for each volunteer and how much is spent in
overhead, and it will suggest cost-saving alternatives. I'm pleased
that we will have this information for AmeriCorps, but it is
unfortunate that we do not have this data for every program for
which the taxpayers pay. What are possible alternatives to
ArneriCorps? We could quintuple the number of families helped with
education needs by increasing funding for Pen Grants, as suggested
by Senator Byrd and others. Some have suggested that the state s
could be provided funding on a formula basis. The states would then
establish a board which would award scholarships to needy students
nomi-
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nated by churches and other local groups in recognition of the
student's past work as a volunteer performing community service.
The board would serve without pay. Such a proposal would recognize
those who have served while at the same time elimin ating la y ers
of costly bureaucracy. It would also have the benefit of addressing
Senator Kerrey's con- cerns that there be local ownership of the
programs. Programs would not be created to cater to - the whims of
federal and state bureaucrats. Lastly, since only a few young
people would receive the scholarships, the program would teach them
the intrinsic value of volunteering to serve their community,
instead of the lesson of AmeriCorps-that you should only help your
community if you get a paycheck. There are many p aths the
Administration could have chosen that would have benefitted more
young people or encouraged people to volunteer instead of expecting
a paycheck. One can only conclude, therefore, that the
Administration is content to allow Mr. Gore to de- cry the costs of
government ashtrays while looking to the 1960s and 1970s for its
real model: more money, more bureaucracy. In this case, the "New
Democrats" look a lot like the. old one. Unfortunately, with
AmeriCorps, it is working families and struggling stude nts who
will pay the price.
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