Does it all depend on “the government”?

A month ago, our family went East to Virginia for a family vacation.  A week later, we went to Michigan.  Today, I’m writing from Hesston, KS, pretty close to the heartland of America.

Everywhere we went we encountered travel delays because of road work.  Bridges, passing lanes, shoulder repair, new exchanges – the jack hammers and dump trucks and people were out in force.

It wasn’t until we drove past Kansas City yesterday and saw workers re-building a mall that I realized we had seen almost no construction activity during those travels through 9 of the 50 states.  No new houses.  No other new office buildings.

What we saw was people working because of the massive government investment in infrastructure.  And as we drove along those roads, we heard the radio discussion of the ending of the Cash for Clunkers program because it had been so successful, and moved almost 500,000 cars off dealers’ showrooms.

And I remembered the news in Elkhart County during this time.  New jobs coming to Monaco Coach – Navistar because of a Federal government grant.  The possibility of new jobs manufacturing energy efficiency equipment that is dependent on Elkhart County tax abatements.

Many of us in Elkhart County have traditionally been critical of government spending, or government involvement in the economy.  Now, we seem to be not only appreciative of government spending, we are heavily dependent on it.  Our sense of possible recovery in Elkhart County is heavily based on Federal grants for new manufacturing, State programs to re-train workers, and County tax abatements to attract new businesses.

Maybe our circumstances are calling us to move beyond the mantra that ”government involvement in the economy is bad” to the question, “How can we best use our collective resources (government money) and individual resources (private capital) to work for the public good?” 

What do you think?

Posted in Latest News, Thought Pieces | 4 Comments

Free family financial stability workshop

Despite ongoing negative economic news and financial challenges for families,  personal financial stability is attainable.

Jonathan Geiser, associate professor of Business at Goshen College, will lead a workshop called “Dollars & Sense: Achieving Personal Financial Stability.”

What: Family financial stability workshop

When: Thursday, Aug. 27, 6:30 to 8 p.m.

Where: Goshen College’s Newcomer Center, Room 17

Cost: Free

Newcomer Center is located at the south edge of the campus (1700 S Main St, Goshen), southeast of the stoplight at Westwood Road and South Main Street. Parking is available in the College Mennonite Church parking lot behind Newcomer Center.

The session will outline elements necessary for achieving stability of personal and household finances, will address financial challenges and offer common-sense solutions.

Topics include creating a game plan, household budgeting, securing your family’s safety nets, debt management, communicating with creditors, saving and wealth building.

“This session sends a message of hope — that financial stability is attainable and your could achieve it sooner than you think,” Geiser said.

Elkhart County Works Together, a grass-roots initiative based in Goshen, is helping coordinate the event.

Geiser teaches finance, strategic management and entrepreneurship and is director of business development for Goshen College’s Center for Business and Entrepreneurial Education.

Prior to joining the college in 2008, Geiser accumulated more than 20 years of experience in both large and small companies in Spain, the United Kingdom and the U.S.  He held a variety of senior financial and managerial positions in industries including automotive, recreational vehicle, furniture manufacturing, executive  education and financial services. He is a certified independent trainer in Dave Ramsey’s Financial Peace University program.

Information: info@ecwt.org or call (574) 534-0903

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Free lunch? Is. Isn’t. Is. Isn’t.

Being a bear of small brain, I approach complicated subjects through what some call conventional wisdom.

One basic economic truth is expressed in the saying, “There is no such thing as a free lunch.”  You don’t get anything for nothing.  Someone always pays.  If it seems too good to be true, it probably is:  bah humbug on your free lunch!

But what about the other saying, the one that comes more from philosophy than economics, ”The best things in life are free.”   Things like . . . the unconditional love a parent offers a child.  The beauty of the world we inhabit. A cooked meal offered when we’re recovering from an illness.   A friend who listens . . . and listens . . . and listens, without asking anything in return.

Or the sidewalk feast last night in front of the ECWT office. 

Earlier this summer, generous residents of Elkhart County responded to the economic needs of our county, and donated land, seeds, time, gasoline for the tillers and tractors, and money to coordinate the efforts.   A community garden program was born. (And it happened all over – not just with ECWT.)

Resources in hand, we put the call out for people who wanted to garden – and they responded.  People who needed to grow food got land and seeds and help – and they got it free.   Now those gardens are bearing fruit – lots of it – in some cases more than the people who grow the garden can eat!  We have an abundance of food.

So last night we hauled a grill out, and boiled some potatoes, and made cucumber salad, and washed and snapped the green beans – and gave it away to people who were enjoying First Friday in downtown Goshen.  (Okay, there was a donation basket on the table, but that was back a bit out of sight – you had to want to donate in order to do so.)

When people tasting the zuchini steaks or enjoying Mom Schrock’s cucumber salad asked,  “What’s this all about?” we said, “We’re just completing the circle.  The community provided the resources this spring so that unemployed people could raise food, and here’s the food, and we’re giving some back.”

That’s the feel good part of the story - and “the best things in life are free” side of the argument.

But while the larger community donated the land and the seeds -  the people who raised the food had to add their time and energy – even sweat and sore muscles – before the gardens appeared. It’s true that the people who grew the food donated their vegetables – but ECWT volunteers and staff scrubbed and pared and cooked and carried dishes up and down the steps.   The food was kind of free – but it kind of wasn’t! 

Is.  Isn’t.

Having an initiative called Elkhart County Works Together isn’t free.  The website design was donated, but there is a monthly cost to host the ECWT website.  The Brew donates food for ECWT volunteers when they have extra, but the refrigerator we store it in runs on NIPSCO electricity – and there’s a meter outside that generates a monthly bill.  ECWT volunteers have donated hundreds – yea thousands - of hours of their time, but we have family obligations, and bills, and worries about the future.  Core ECWT coordinators have  each received a $250 stipend for their work – since May – which is not really sustainable over the long haul. 

Is there such a thing as a free lunch?  Is there such a thing as a free county wide initiative to respond to to our ongoing economic crisis?  What’s the right mix of donated hours and donated dollars? 

Sometimes we use the story of “stone soup” to explain the concept of ECWT.  (Google it if you need to, or call me in the morning!)  A couple of onions, some potatoes, maybe even a scraggly chicken.  Everyone throws what they have in the pot – and eventually everyone eats the stone soup.  

What can you throw in the pot?  What can you do to help Elkhart County work together? 

It’s not just a rhetorical question.

Posted in Community Heros, Gardening, Thought Pieces | 2 Comments

Top 10 reasons to volunteer at ECWT

10. You get to set your own hours (Oh, freedom).

9. You get to work in the most beautiful second floor office space in Goshen!

8. The other ECWT staff are very relaxed and friendly. (I have my moments)

7. What else are you doing right now?

6. There’s a really neat relationship with the Brew going on – you’ll find out more if you volunteer here.

5. You get a chance to “strut your stuff” and show the world how good you are.

4. You have something fresh to put on the resume for 2009.

3. One reason we’re looking for more volunteers is that people who volunteer here end up getting hired! (See number 3)

2. When your children and grandchildren ask you, “What did you do during the great recession of 2008-2010?” you’ll have something to tell them.

1. Elkhart County needs you.

We’ll be in the ECWT office tonight, August 7 for the Goshen First Friday celebration.   Come by to talk about volunteer possibilities (and enjoy some fresh produce from the ECWT community gardens).

If you can’t make it today, send us an email at info@ecwt.org or call the office.

What can you do to help Elkhart County work together?

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Being good ants in the summer

Many of us heard the story about the grasshoppers and the ants from our parents, as they tried to teach us about being industrious and planning ahead. 

The grasshoppers were jumping all over the yard, enjoying the summer day, and their ability to move and play.

The grasshoppers looked down at the ants, toiling away in the hot summer sun, dragging bits of food down into their underground nests.  “What are you doing down there?” the grasshoppers called derisively.  “Come play with us.”

But the ants said nothing, toiling away without a word.

Of course, the ants had the last laugh in the winter time, when the cold winds came and killed the grass, and the fresh food, and probably the grasshoppers as well, while the ants were warm and well fed in their underground houses.

The moral of the story is clear.  But does it have any application to us here in Elkhart County?

I’ve heard two separate themes this last month as I talk with social service agencies, bankers, unemployed workers, and government officials. 

First, the good news.  Requests for help with utility bills are down.  It’s summer time, and while you have to run the heat in the winter, you don’t have to run the airconditioner in the summer.  People are growing food, and visiting food pantries less often.  Our unemployment rate dropped a bit, and every bit helps. 

Next, the bad news.   We just passed the one year anniversary of Monaco Coach’s announcement of their closing.  People who lost their jobs last year are running out of benefits.  Extended unemployement, and the special extensions, are running out.  Job re-training isn’t finished, or the jobs people trained for aren’t there.  Family savings are exhausted.  An unemployment rate of 16% or 17%, while lower, is not sustainable.

The potential for another wave of foreclosures, bankruptcies, businesses going under, families leaving the area, depression, and other results of an extended period of joblessness and economic stress is great – and growing.

We can see the winter coming.  We know we need to be good ants.  But what does it mean to be an ant in Elkhart County this summer?

We hear of churches offering canning and freezing classes for people who want to preserve food for the winter.  That’s a great idea.  I wish there were more.  I wish we had people at ECWT to spearhead efforts like that.

We are developing a web-based Skills Bank that will allow unemployed people anywhere in Elkhart County to list work they are able to do, so that people who needs work done around the house can give them work.  That’s one small piece.

But I’m left with the feeling that there is more that needs to be done – much more – to avoid further pain and devastation in our community. 

Are you being an ant this summer?  What are you doing?

How could our community work together this summer in ways that allow us all to eat this winter?

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We’re not at our best

Talk around the tables at the ECWT office often turns to our relationship with our spouses.  Yes, un- and under-employed people think about more than where the next job is coming from.  We are also concerned about minding our intimate relationships!

It’s probably best to say at the outset that all of the ECWT coordinators who are married have supportive spouses.  That’s not just a protective comment, it has the added merit of being true.  While unemployment adds a strain to a family, and to a marriage relationship, having a partner who is employed eases the financial strain on a family.  The partner’s income can provide an unemployed person a cushion of time in which to explore other options. 

Indeed, were it not for employed spouses of the core of ECWT coordinators, this effort would not exist.  (Big thanks to them.)

The flip side of the coin is that being unemployed can hinder our ability to be the kind of partner we would like to be.   Being unemployed adds stress on us.  We worry not just about whether our family will survive the current economic hardship, we feel bad about not being an equal participant in providing for our families.

In theory, we can contribute to family life by doing some extra home projects, and preparing and having special meals ready for our spouse / children when they come home.  We can tend our social networks by helping neighbors with projects and volunteering in the community. We can even contribute by taking care of ourselves – getting back on that bicyle, working out at the gym, doing other “self-improvement” efforts.

In some ways this seems like the perfect time to being doing those things.  We have time.  We’re not tied to a work schedule.  We’re home, and can start making a special meal at 2:00 in the afternoon instead of boiling water for boxed macaroni 15 minutes before dinner.

But all those things take energy, not just physical energy, but emotional energy.  And, oddly enough, those of us who are un- and under-employed don’t always have a lot of extra energy.

Being unemployed isn’t a fulltime job, but it takes a lot of energy! It takes time and energy to review our lives, and think about what we want to do next.  It takes a lot of energy to fight off depression and self-pity.  It takes a lot of energy to get out of the house when we’re worried about what the neighbors think of us, and when we’re not sure what to say when people ask, “How are you doing?”  It takes sustained effort to feel good about ourselves, and to revise our sense of identity now that it’s no longer tied to a job.  It takes energy to create and sustain a schedule in the absence of the rhythm of a job.  It takes a lot of intestinal fortitude to mail out that next resume when the last 100 did no good, and it’s pretty clear that the company we’re contacting has no jobs available.

Our ECWT motto is, “We are strong.  We are creative.   We are an asset to our community.”  That’s true.  It’s especially true when we’re at our best.   Right now, however, it’s hard to be at our best.  In fact, we’re rarely at our best.

But we continue.  We support each other.  We cry when we must, and laugh when we can.  We thank our spouses for what they give us, when that’s not too painful to do.

And, we do what we can to help Elkhart County Works Together.

What can you do to help Elkhart County work together?

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How-to manual for rain gardens offered

A how-to manual to assist homeowners in building rain gardens is available from the Elkhart County Soil and Water Conservation District.  Their office is located in the Elkhart County Fair Grounds at 17746-B, C.R. 34, Goshen.

The manual explains how to construct a rain garden and also offers planting designs and planting lists for several different locations.

Web sites for more information are www.stormwaterelkco.org and www.elkcoswcd.org,  and a phone number for SWCD is 574-533-3630, Extension 3. The e-mail address for Stormwater Coordinator Eric Kurtz is eric.kurtz@in.nacdnet.net.

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Library’s rain garden reduces wastewater

Planting a Rain Garden

Planting a Rain Garden

            Nature’s version of a wastewater treatment plant — a rain garden — was planted Saturday at the north side of Goshen Public Library’s new parking lot.

            Volunteers comprised of master naturalists as well as members of the library’s summer reading program and Historic Southside Neighborhood Association used trowels and shovels to place in the ground nearly 500 plugs and plants of varying species and sizes.

            A $10,000 grant had been obtained to fund the 1,800-square-foot rain garden as well as install a section of pervious concrete, which allows water to drain through it. The library is located at 601 S. Fifth St.

            Eric Kurtz, stormwater coordinator with Elkhart County Soil and Water Conservation District, said the project was pursued to demonstrate new methods of dealing with storm water.

            “A healthy wetlands performs the same function as a wastewater treatment plant,” said Chris Kline of JF New, Walkerton, an ecological consulting firm with a native plant nursery. He talked to participants about the emerging economic value of building and maintaining rain gardens.

            Kline said these structures are particularly important in communities including Goshen where storm water and sewer systems are combined.

            “When there is a rain event — sometimes as little as half an inch of rain — the storm system flushes the sanitary sewer system and untreated raw sewage is dumped right into the river,” Kline said.

            With the Environmental Protection Agency “taking a harder line” in regards to the combined sewer overflow systems, Kline said rain gardens help reduce the amount of storm water flowing into the system and also provide an aesthetic benefit.

            He noted native plants are used in rain gardens because they are naturally occurring in a region, are adaptable and drought resistant, have pest and disease tolerance and also support wildlife habitats. Additionally, Kline said the root depths of native plants are 12 to 15 feet as compared to several inches of turf grass.

            Even the foliage of the plants helps capture rain, while the root masses help prevent soil erosion and filter the water, Kline said. Also, the roots provide pathways for channeling water into the ground, while turf grass is almost like a hard surface.

            “Rain gardens are not an open pool or a breeding ground for mosquitoes,” Kline said. “They are designed to hold a certain amount of water for a fairly short amount of time.”

            The structures do require watering and weeding, particularly during the first two years after installation, Kline said. Also, burning or mowing dead plant material may be required.

            Kurtz said Karen Fairfield, a master naturalist who is a member of the neighborhood association, has agreed to maintain the library’s new rain garden.                          

          Volunteers are being solicited to help with the work beginning the first Saturday in August at 8:30 a.m. The maintenance work will continue the first Saturday of each month.

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Walk and Talk

A “Walk and Talk” session for unemployed people who want to exercise and talk with others in a free, low-key way has been set June 23.

Where: The Wellness Studio
206 S. Main St., Suite 2
Goshen, IN 46526

When: 10 a.m. June 23, 2009
“Taking care of yourself both physically and emotionally can seem like a luxury when you’re unemployed,” Detweiler said. “But regular physical exercise actually increases your energy, and allows you to focus on the important tasks you face.”

After a short introduction, Detweiler will lead the group through Goshen’s historic downtown, along the Millrace and circle back to the Wellness Studio.

To register for Walk and Talk, e-mail Detweiler at Terri@GoshenWellness.com or call Elkhart County Works Together at 534-0903.

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“I just want my normal life back”

A friend, call him Andy, acted unusual when I stopped by Friday night.  “I guess your weekends feel different now that you’re not looking forward to a break from working working hard all week,” I said.

Andy works in a local factory making parts for the auto industry.  After 19 years, seniority has not spared him from  the rotating layoffs that have reduced him from working five or six days a week to maybe two or three. 

Rather than the optomistic, jovial, or bantering response Andy usually gives, there was confusion and bitterness.

“I don’t want to talk,” he said.  “I don’t like it when other people bring me down, and I have nothing to say that won’t bring you down.”

” Andy, I do want to hear what you have to say,” I told him.  “We’re friends, and when I ask how you’re doing, I want to know.”

What followed was an outpouring of confusion and anger and bitterness.  Rolling layoffs seemed to be doled out according to the whims of a capricious supervisor  rather than following seniority, or even an equal distribution of the pain among all workers.  The national news about Chrysler and General Motors did nothing to inspire hope.   After bringing dedication and skills to his job for a large part of his adult years, there seems to be no light for him at the end of this particular tunnel.

“I just want my normal life back,” Andy said.

The thought immediately came to my mind that  “normal life” isn’t coming back.  There are new realities of stock market and globalization, the disappearance of industries, and retirement funds that have been decimated.   I was about to say that no one’s life is normal when Andy said one more thing.

“It feels like life is going on for other people and I’m not part of it anymore.”

Andy’s financial challenge is compounded by the emotional isolation he feels. 

Elkhart County is divided roughly in thirds.  One third of our community is severely impacted by unemployment, under-employment, or the uncertainty of working in a company that is teetering on the edge of failure.  Two thirds of our community is employed, and continues to shop, go out to eat, plan vacations, and maybe even contribute to a retirement plan!

Part of the normal life Andy wants back is a normal work week and a normal paycheck.  Part of what he wants back is the feeling that he is a normal member of the community. 

ECWT is built on the assumption that the economic crisis we are experiencing is a community problem  that requires a community response.  That certainly involves extra giving to the local food pantry, finding ways to give unemployed people work, or  donating to a sharing fund at church.  It also involves maintaining, and building, meaningful individual relationships between people in the “one third” community and the “two thirds” community.

Everyone one of us in Elkhart County can do something to address this crisis.  We can give, and receive, financial resources with grace.  We can ask, and respond to, the question, “How are you doing?” with an open heart.

What can you do to help Elkhart County work together?

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