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Society of St. Vincent de Paul: Cut the
Bureaucracy in the National Budget Without
Putting Millions at Risk
March 14, 2011 –
Before becoming involved with St. Vincent de
Paul (SVdP), Jon Sass was homeless for 35
years, dealing with chronic mental illness,
and in and out of shelters and mental
institutions. The cuts currently proposed in
the national budget will put him and
millions like him at risk, says Elizabeth
Disco-Shearer, associate executive director
of the SVdP's South Central regional office
in Fort
Worth
.
Sass,
55, was diagnosed with paranoid
schizophrenia, but he has volunteered six
days a week for more than three years at the
Society of St. (SVdP in San
Antonio, Texas.
He helps with cleaning and organizing, the
delivery of food to the SVdP pantry, and
pickups of in-kind donations.
"The Society of St. Vincent de Paul is the
only family that I've ever known or cared
about me," said Sass.
"When folks think of people like Jon, they
sometimes have a misconception that they're
somehow 'taking advantage' of the system,"
said Disco-Shearer, associate executive
director of the SVdP's South Central regi
onal office in Fort
Worth.
"But people like Jon give back as much as
they get."
Federal support in 2010 enabled SVdP in San
Antonio to
assist 1.37 million people with everything
from meals to help with utility and housing
bills, and job training and placement. "We
serve some 36,000 meals a month at St.
Vinny's Bistro, our dining facility in San
Antonio,"
said Disco-Shearer.
"Without that federal
funding, we simply couldn't do it, and there
aren't enough private donations to make up
the shortfall."
Like Sass, Andrew
Guzman also
will be at risk if the proposed budget cuts
are approved. A former convicted felon who
was homeless, Guzman went through an SVdP
culinary training program. He passed
certification, secured a job at St. Vinny's
Bistro, and eventually obtained his own
apartment.
In contrast, Amie
Meyers in Cincinnati,
married and the mother of two small
children, never thought her family would
need help. A nurse, Meyers had to quit her
job to care for her husband as he battled
cancer.
After his death, she returned to
work but lost her job when her company
merged with another healthcare firm. Meyers
had an emergency fund that sustained her
through the first few months of
unemployment, but she soon found herself
short and couldn't pay her utilities. SVdP
soon gave her the help she needed to pay
that bill.
"Everyone falls," said Meyers. "I'm just
getting back up."
"When people look at those who are homeless
or living in poverty, they sometimes think
it's their fault or that they don't deserve
help," said Roger Playwin, SVdP's national
executive director. "But it doesn't take
much - maybe an illness or a job loss - to
put any one of us in their situation."
Joe Flannigan,
national president of SVdP, added: "Some
studies show that as much as 40
cents of
every dollar for federal assistance programs
gets siphoned off by the bureaucracy instead
of going to the people it's designed to
help. Our hope is that legislators can find
a way to reduce the waste without putting an
additional burden on the weakest and most
vulnerable of our neighbors."
One of the oldest and most effective
charitable organizations in the world, the
Society of St. Vincent de Paul (http://www.svdpusa.org)
is a Catholic lay organization of more than
690,000 men and women throughout the world
who voluntarily join together to grow
spiritually and offer person-to-person
service to the needy and people living in
poverty in 142 countries on five continents.
With the U.S. headquarters inSt.
Louis, Mo.,
membership in the
United States totals
more than 146,000 in 4,600 communities.
Programs include home visits, housing
assistance, disaster relief, job training
and placement, food pantries, dining halls,
clothing, transportation and utility costs,
care for the elderly and medicine. Providing
more than $572
million in
tangible and in-kind services, SVdP serves
more than 14 million people in need each
year, performs more than 644,000 visits to
people in their homes, and delivers more
than 7 million service hours to those in
need.