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A Summer Farewell

Teri Mueller

​The fleeting nature of time never ceases to amaze me. I am having a hard time grasping the fact that I ended my internship at the close of last week. The past eleven weeks have passed very quickly and have contained so many meaningful experiences!

Prior to coming to the churchwide office, I had rarely focused specifically on the issue of hunger in our world. Sure, I had volunteered at food banks, collected cans for food drives, participated in fasting activities, and served meals at shelters, but my experiences were solely surface level. They satisfied me but did not truly engage me. I could volunteer and feel good about myself and then return to my life slightly more grateful for the blessings I had been bestowed with.

Working as the ELCA World Hunger Education intern allowed me to bridge experiences with information. I was able to better connect the statistics and data of hunger to real life through looking into resources. I began to realize the importance of educational exposure that makes people think critically about social issues in our world. I was able to do research and learn more about what hunger and poverty directly relate to. I was challenged through trying to communicate information in a concise manner through working on blog posts and potential resources. I had the opportunity to journey on educational field trips to Bethel New Life and Cross Lutheran Church/Alice’s Garden.

As I prepared to leave, I found myself asking the question What does my internship mean for me as I move forward? I am still figuring out the answer to that. I obviously learned a lot. I feel more passionate about issues of hunger and poverty. I will definitely look for ways to be involved with hunger work in the future. The rest is rather uncertain, but I am sure that I will continue to realize ways this internship has affected me as time progresses.

My time working with ELCA World Hunger at the churchwide office has been an incredibly beneficial experience. Though I was sad to say goodbye, I look forward to the coming adventures that God brings my way during my final year at Wartburg and the somewhat daunting time after graduation. I take comfort in Jesus’ final words to his disciples in the Gospel of Matthew, “I am with you always, even until the end of the age.” (Matthew 28:20) Thank you to everyone who has been part of my journey at the ELCA and God Bless!

Teri Mueller is an intern with ELCA World Hunger. This is her final post for the summer.

Would you like to subscribe to the ELCA World Hunger blog?  Click here to enter your email address on the homepage.

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ELCA participating in NY Climate Events in September

Mary Minette, Director of Environmental Advocacy & Christine Mangale, Assistant to the Director Lutheran Office for World Community in New York

​UN Climate Summit

Lutheran Office for World Community (LOWC) will host a delegation of Lutheran World Federation Youth that will come to attend the United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s Climate Summit in September 23, 2014, New York. The delegation will also attend an Interfaith Summit that is being organized by the World Council of Churches and Religions for Peace September 21-22, 2014. The main goal is to mobilize action and ambition on climate change and garner support for climate change agreement by 2015. Lutheran World Federation Youth will host a one-hour fasting vigil parallel to the Ban Ki-moon Summit September 23, 2014 at 1-2pm EST. Please join in reflection and prayer wherever you are. Join thewww.fastfortheclimate.org.

In addition to this, the UN will also hold the World Conference on Indigenous Peoples on 22-23 September 2014.

The ELCA Washington Office is also working with the ACT Alliance to help plan a day of side events on climate change issues on September 24th, and LOWC and ELCA Washington staff will attend the Religions for the Earth conference at Union Theological Seminary the weekend before the summit along with other global interfaith leaders.

People’s Climate March in New York

Plans are underway for what is expected to be the largest march in history on climate change in New York City on the weekend preceding the UN Climate Summit.  The ELCA Washington Office is working with the Metro New York Synod to support Lutherans attending the march. If you have plans to go, please let our office know and we will keep you informed of meeting places on the day of the march and other events.  Fill out our google form​ for Lutheran march participants!

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Climate Justice for all God’s Creation: How you can speak out now!

Mary Minette, Director of Environmental Advocacy

Last week, Lutheran leaders across the US testified before the EPA to publicly proclaim that Climate Change is a moral dilemma, and to announce their support for the proposed Clean Power Plan.  “For us as Lutheran Christians, addressing environmental concerns is part of what it means to live as responsible caretakers of the earth,” said Rev. Robert Moss in Denver, Colorado. “… I believe that support for the Clean Power Plan Proposed Rule to regulate and reduce carbon emissions is part of our responsibility.” Excerpts of some of their testimonies can be found on our Advocacy Blog!

We write today to ask you to join these fellow Lutherans in taking action! Here are three steps you can take to help address climate change caused in part by pollution from our nation’s power plants:

  1. Submit a comment to the EPA through our Action Center, telling them why you support addressing Climate Change and protecting God’s Creation by reducing carbon emissions at our nation’s power plants.
  2. Sign the Faith Climate Petition urging US Leaders to become more engaged in negotiations for a new global climate change agreement.
  3. Join the People’s Climate March on Sept. 21, 2014 in New York City as world leaders meet to discuss a framework for international action on climate change. Be sure to check out group transportation options​, and RSVP on our Google Form​ as well. If you can’t make it to New York, find or help plan an event that weekend in your own community!

As people of faith, we are equipped to name and to confront this moral crisis. As the impacts of Climate Change are becoming more severe on our most vulnerable neighbors, the time for action is now! Share how you are addressing climate change in your congregation or community, and be sure to pass along any stories you may have to our office (Washington.Office@elca.org)!

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Milwaukee Ministries: Visiting Cross Lutheran Church and Alice’s Garden

Teri Mueller

​Many powerful and meaningful ministries are flourishing across the United States. This past FrCompressed Milwaukee Intern field tripiday, the interns at the ELCA Churchwide office had the opportunity to hear from two Milwaukee-based ministries on our second and final field trip of the summer. Joe Young, ELCA Program Director of Community Development, described the trip as “an opportunity to integrate what is happening at the Churchwide level with what is actually happening on the ground.” I was really excited about the trip because of my interest in community gardening and social ministry organizations. We visited Cross Lutheran Church andAlice’s Garden, two organizations that are doing really incredible work.

We arrived at Cross Lutheran Church in the late morning and were greeted by Pastor Michelle Townsend de López. She talked to us about the history of the church, the ministries of the church, and the city of Milwaukee. Cross is an urban congregation located in the heart of the city. Originally founded as a Missouri Synod church, Cross has German and Polish roots that date back 144 years. Compressed Pastor Michelle talkingCross has a rich tradition of embracing diversity and is known as “one of the most diverse congregations in not only Wisconsin, but also the entire U.S.” according to Pastor Michelle. During the 20th century, Cross was seen as a safe place for mixed race couples in the midst of segregation and as a shelter for refugees fleeing oppression from countries in conflict like Bosnia, Somalia and Sudan. In 1984, Cross was one of the first churches to becomeReconciled in Christ, meaning that they welcome and affirm lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender couples and individuals. Their decision to openly embrace so many forms of diversity has been contentious at times, but now diversity is a given at Cross. Inclusivity is a key focus of the church in all that they do. We were all encouraged to remember the importance of welcoming and including others as we move forward with our lives.

Numerous services and programs are run through Cross Lutheran Church as part of their outward, community focus. Pastor Michelle gave us a tour of the church and explained many of the ministries that occur. The Bread of Healing Empowerment Ministry provides a hot meal every Wednesday, operates a food pantry and hosts a Bible study. The Bread of Healing Clinic offers free services to uninsured individuals and serves over 3600 people each year. The church additionally is home to the Bridges Tutoring Program, a job training program, yoga classes, three different church choirs (Cross Youth Praise Team, Community Gospel Choir, and Cross Praise Choir) and more. Over 2000 people come through the church every week!

Funds from ELCA Domestic Hunger Grants have helped the church with its various social ministry programs. Cross has plans for expansion in the near future. The ministries and programs of the church are simply outgrowing the space. Visiting Cross really helped us make connections to work at the churchwide office in a variety of different ways. Ben Skelton, an intern with the Mission Investment Fund (MIF), explained how the visit connected to what he has experienced through working in MIF. He explained, “Working with the Mission Investment Fund, I was able to see how supporting a congregation like this with a loan would allow them to make expansions to their facility. This would ensure that they can continue to grow and have a positive impact on a community that is in desperate need of it.”

Compressed Venus talks under shelter

After a very informative morning at Cross Lutheran Church, we continued on to Alice’s Garden and met with the Executive Director, Ms. Venice Williams. The garden has undergone a lot of positive change in recent years under her direction. Ms. Williams has a strong passion for using the earth’s resources and explained, “I came to farming and urban agriculture because I was unhappy with how we feed people as the church.” She emphasized that there was not enough responsibility, accountability or harvesting of people’s talents. She wanted a different model that helped enable people so she invested heavily in Alice’s Garden. It was really touching and inspiring to hear Ms. Williams talk about the positive impact of the garden on the community. She described Alice’s Garden as “the best blessing outside of family or spouse that I’ve ever had.”

Compressed Venus talks in garden

Alice’s garden occupies 2.2 acres of land and is described as both an urban farm and a community garden. A number of plots are available for community members to rent out to grow their own plants and produce.  However, so much more than food is harvested from the garden! Alice’s Garden is a cultural haven for people as 20+ ethnicities are represented among the gardeners. There is an herbal product line, Alice Garden Healing Herbs, that is produced. Forty-seven young people ages 14-24 have found work in the garden over the summer due to Milwaukee’s Earn and Learn program. Nine caterers and food trucks use food from the garden. Yoga is held in the garden twice a week.  The list could go on and on.

On a personal note, I was really touched by the thriving community garden in theCompressed Milwaukee Intern group 2midst of the city. I did not grow up on a farm, but I am from a rural community in Iowa. My family had a garden where we grew varied produce like strawberries, squash, and tomatoes. There is something about growing one’s own food that warms my heart. Ms. Williams talked a lot about how Alice’s Garden taps into the community resources and gives people an outlet to help themselves. Alice’s Garden is a beautiful gift to the community, but community members are also a beautiful gift to Alice’s Garden. It is a partnership between people and the land that is far too often ignored.

Cross Lutheran Church and Alice’s Garden are two amazing community partners of the ELCA that promote social justice in Milwaukee. It was a true blessing to hear about their work and see the context of their ministries. I have no doubt that they will continue to do great things in the years to come.

Teri Mueller is an intern with ELCA World Hunger.

Would you like to subscribe to the ELCA World Hunger blog?  Click here to enter your email address on the homepage.

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‘Tis the Season for Fresh Produce

Teri Mueller

​Summer is now in full swing, and with it comes the flourishing of many farmers’ markets and community gardens all across the country. According to the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), the United States currently has over 8,100 farmers’ markets of varying sizes in operation. Their online directory provides people with an easy way to determine where nearby markets are and what produce is typically offered. Community gardens also are in season during the summer months. Because of farmers’ markets and community gardens, many people are able to access fresh and healthy produce.

One may wonder, what’s all the hype about farmers’ markets and buying local?  There are actually numerous perks to the markets that attract a variety of different people.  One of the most frequently referenced positives is the flavor of fruits and vegetables because they are picked in season and not overly processed. Many people also like that farmers’ markets support local economies and encourage community. Free samples from some vendors attract the hungry and curious, too.

Another appeal of farmers’ markets is that families of different income levels are able to shop there and purchase fresh produce. As of May 2014, 2,696 markets accepted Supplemental Nutrition Assistance (SNAP) benefits. Utilizing SNAP helps ease food insecurity and is a benefit to multiple parties. It brings more customers to the market, which is good for business, and helps families to eat fresh food without traveling too far. While the price of produce is often lower at supermarkets or grocery stores (at least in the Midwest according to a recent article published by Time), farmers’ market advocates still stand by the importance of the markets for low-income families. Markets can increase the appeal of a variety of fruits and vegetables and provide inspiration to eat a wholesome diet.

Like farmers’ markets, community gardens also increase access to fresh, healthy produce and provide a sense of community. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has identified many physical and mental health benefitsof community gardens. Beyond the obvious increase in availability of fresh produce, gardens also beautify empty lots, encourage physical activity, revitalize neighborhoods and bring people together.

Gifts to ELCA World Hunger have helped provide many churches and organizations with Domestic Hunger Grants to start, continue, and/or enhance community garden projects. Trinity Gardens is one such project in Santa Barbara, CA. The project is run by Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church and has both a communal garden and individual garden plots. Each week, around 150-200 pounds of food from the communal garden is donated to community non-profits and community members who are in need. (Click here for more information about the project.)

Another example of an organization supported by gifts to ELCA World Hunger is the Kenai Peninsula Food Bank in Soldotna, AK. The food bank’s “Hoop House and Garden” produced 1,860 pounds of produce in 2013, and they have already harvested 69 pounds of produce as of June 12, 2014. ELCA World Hunger supports an educational component of the garden that seeks to help individuals living in poverty to plant container gardens and grow their own produce. (Clickhere to see pictures from the Hoop House and Garden). Trinity Gardens and the Hoop House and Garden are just two examples of the over 20 garden projects supported by grants from ELCA World Hunger.

Farmers’ markets and community gardens both provide communities with fresh produce and assist with neighborhood development. Taking advantage of nearby resources is beneficial to all people and is an important step towards alleviating hunger. Local initiatives like farmers’ markets and community gardens help people think about where their food is coming from. They personalize the food gathering experience through providing fresh and tasty produce to individuals and families all across the country.

Teri Mueller is an intern with ELCA World Hunger.

Would you like to subscribe to the ELCA World Hunger blog?  Click here to enter your email address on the homepage.

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Thirst in a Hungry World: 10 Facts about Water

Teri Mueller

Water is closely related to hunger, disaster, and poverty. Take a look at the 10 facts below to learn more!

  1. A lot of water is used to produce foods that we often take for granted. Consider that it takes 200 liters to produce a glass of milk, 70 liters to produce an apple, 140 liters to produce a cup of coffee, and 2,400 liters to produce a hamburger.1
  2. The total amount of water generally needed to produce food for one person for one day ranges from 2,000 to 5,000 liters.2
  3. Humans are able to use only about 1% of the 70% of the earth that is covered by water.3
  4. Water is closely connected to food security as agriculture is responsible for 70% of the water that is withdrawn by the agricultural, municipal and industrial sectors.4
  5. It is estimated that there will be a 19% increase in agricultural water consumption by 2050 due to population growth.5
  6. Progress has been made as advances in access to drinking water have occurred over the past few decades. The World Health Organization reports, “By the end of 2012, 89% of the global population used improved drinking water sources, a rise of 13 percentage points in 22 years or 2.3 billion people.”6
  7. However, approximately 780 million people in the world still do not have access to clean drinking water. One third live in Africa and around 130 million live in Latin America and the Caribbean.7
  8. Contaminated water still plays a part in 80 percent of all worldwide sickness and disease.7
  9. Children are hit especially hard by not having clean water. Shortages account for the daily deaths of more than 3,000 children under the age of five. These children die every day due to water-related illnesses like diarrhea.8
  10. Between the 1970s and 2005, the percentage of the Earth that experienced serious drought more than doubled.7

Interested in helping with water issues in our world? Check out options that are available in the Good Gifts catalog!

Would you like to subscribe to the ELCA World Hunger blog?  Click here to enter your email address on the homepage.

Teri Mueller is an intern with ELCA World Hunger.

  1. “Water and Hunger,” The Water Project, http://thewaterproject.org/hunger
  2. “Water and Hunger,” The Voss Foundation, http://www.vossfoundation.org/therippleeffect/water-and-hunger/
  3. “Water Supply in the U.S.,” United States Environmental Protection Agency,http://www.epa.gov/watersense/pubs/supply.html
  4. “Water for Food,” U.N. Water, http://www.unwater.org/topics/water-and-food/en/
  5. “Water for Food PDF,” U.N. Water,http://www.unwater.org/fileadmin/user_upload/unwater_new/docs/water_for_food.pdf
  6. “WHO/UNICEF highlight need to further reduce gaps in access to improved drinking water and sanitation,” World Health Organization, http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/notes/2014/jmp-report/en/
  7. “Water Facts,” Food and Water Watch, https://www.foodandwaterwatch.org/water/interesting-water-facts/
  8. “World Water Day 2013: How Shortages Affect Women, Kids, Hunger (And What You Can Do),” The Huffington Post,http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/22/world-water-day-2013-facts_n_2927389.html
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Unaccompanied and Migrant Children: Myths vs. Facts

Megan Brandsrud

Since October 2013, approximately 60,000 children from Central America have crossed borders to arrive in the United States. This mass migration of children has garnered international media attention, and with it, a lot of contradictory information. So what is actually happening with this crisis at the border? Recently, a group from the ELCA traveled to the U.S. Texas/Mexico border to learn about the situation first-hand. The trip included visits with U.S. Border Patrol, social workers, pastors, an attorney, and the refugee children themselves.

cropped Martinez

(Pictured: Danny Martinez, an agent for U.S. Border Patrol, gives a presentation about the U.S. Border Patrol’s work.)

Listed below are just five myths and their corresponding facts that tell what is really happening at the border. For further detail, and for more myths and facts, please read the Unaccompanied and Migrant Children –Myths vs. Facts resource.

MYTH: Border crossings are on the rise.

FACT: Border crossings are actually down from where they were in the 1990s, when more than 1.5 million people would come to the U.S. every year.

U.S. border apprehensions overview:

2000: 1,675,438 people

2008: 723,825

2013: 420,789

 

MYTH: These kids are here illegally.

FACT: Most of these kids are seeking out and surrendering themselves to U.S. Border Patrol; they are not running. When a child comes into contact with U.S. Border Patrol, Border Patrol has 72 hours to process him or her. If possible, the child is repatriated. If not, the child is processed and given a “Notice to Appear” (NTA), which references his or her court date. Because of this processing, the child is neither here undocumented nor illegally.

The ELCA and other humanitarian organizations are caring for children who are awaiting review of appeals for asylum or protection and for those who have been released from detention to join family or sponsors.

 

MYTH: These kids are carrying drugs and are just here to cause trouble.

FACT: Drug-related violence and exploitation is a primary reason these children flee. Drugs are being run by drug cartels, not by children from Central America who are seeking asylum.

Most of these children are seeking out and surrendering to U.S. Border Patrol in order to receive protection from exploitation and other risks. When asked why they left their homes, children say they were hungry or their parents sent them to try to protect them from being recruited into the gang violence and trafficking in their communities. They are not troublemakers; they are trying to avoid trouble.

 

MYTH: These kids have diseases that they will spread to us and our kids in school.

FACT: Lutheran Social Services of the South has cared for approximately 6,000 unaccompanied children in the past year, and they report fewer than a dozen children who have needed more than routine medical care. The primary health issues these children are receiving care for include dehydration, the common cold and dental needs.

 

MYTH: Taxpayers are paying for these kids to reunite with their families.

FACT: When unaccompanied children are released from detention facilities while their cases are reviewed and resolved, they are released to a family member or a sponsor. They are not released until their transportation is paid for either by themselves or their family or sponsor. Often, family members send money and a bus voucher is given to be redeemed for a ticket at the bus station.

If you would like to support Lutheran Disaster Response’s work with Unaccompanied and Migrant Children, please visit theLutheran Disaster Response giving page.

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Myths and Realities about Water Shutoffs in Detroit

Ryan P. Cumming

Access to clean water has long been a concern of ELCA World Hunger.  Together, we have supported our companion churches with projects like wells, knowing that ending hunger means not only having food but also having clean and safe water for washing fruit and vegetables, cooking, drinking, and sanitation.  God taught Moses to sanitize the waters of Marah (Exodus 15:25) and graced God’s people with water from the rock (Exodus 17:1-7).  Clearly, the basic need of water for life is never far from God’s attention, nor from ours as the people of God.

shutterstock_198729194

But even as we focus on the need for water in the developing world, we can often miss the problems people in the US face in accessing water.  Lately, more attention has been on this issue since the news media have taken up the story of water shutoffs in Detroit.  Last year, the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department (DWSD) ramped up efforts to shut water off to homes with delinquent accounts.  By this spring, the shutoffs had increased exponentially, with more than 7,500 homes losing access in April and May 2014, and DWSD threatening to shut off up to 3,000 more customers each week this summer.  This comes as Detroit is in the midst of the largest municipal bankruptcy in US history.

Thankfully, the department has responded to criticism and halted the shutoffs – at least for now.  Yet, there was so much misinformation and misinterpretation about the crisis, that it is difficult to see what this meant for Detroit residents – and what it means for the rest of us.  Below are some of the myths and realities about the Detroit water shutoffs.

Myth #1 – This is about residents refusing to pay the bills they owe.

Reality – The municipal water department in Detroit had no intention of holding its worst delinquents accountable.  Until public opposition got in the way.

DWSD has argued that shutting off water to customers is the only way to force residents to pay the nearly $100 million dollars owed to the department.  However, while 39,000 households had their water shutoff within the last year, DWSD has only recently – after significant community pressure – begun sending notices to the 22,735 commercial accounts that are delinquent.  And these businesses and agencies owe quite a bit more than the few hundred dollars homeowners are behind (see this April report from local news WDIV):

  • Ford Field (home of the Detroit Lions) – $55,803 [1]
  • Eastern Market – $60,911
  • Joe Louis Arena (home of the Detroit Red Wings) – $80,255
  • Veterans Administration hospital – $131,006
  • Vargo Golf (Oakland County golf course management firm) – $437,714
  • State of Michigan – $5,000,000

Recently, DWSD has started sending shutoff notices to commercial customers, but this appears to have been the result of public outcry rather than original intent.  In fact, the contractor hired by DWSD to shut water off was not even equipped to shut off commercial customers.  And residents are still waiting for these large businesses to lose their access to water.

 

Myth #2 – This is about a municipal department trying to pay its bills.

Reality – This is an attempt to create opportunities for profit by shaming and harming over-burdened households.

On the one hand, yes, the department needs money to function, and this money comes from customers paying for a service.

On the other hand, DWSD issued $1.16 billion in bonds in 2011-2012 to pay for its aging infrastructure.  According toBloomberg Businessweek, more than $500 million of this was given to banks like JP Morgan Chase to terminate financial agreements.  In fact, as Detroit was heading for bankruptcy, JP Morgan Chase made money on the swap.

This goes a step further, though.  In June 2014, Detroit Emergency Manager Kevyn Orr reviewed several bids to privatizethe Detroit water department, making way for private companies to operate and manage the public service.  As The Guardian reports, the shut-off campaign comes as this shift toward privatization gains momentum, leading many to believe that residents are losing water to make the utility a more attractive entity for investors.

We should also bear in mind that Detroiters currently pay twice the national average for water services and are facing yet another rate hike.  In 2009, the rates paid by Detroiters were substantially higher than the rates paid by suburban residents, many of whom get their water from Detroit.  At that time, the average water and sewage bill in Detroit was $62.75; in the suburbs, it was $26.56.[2] And this is in a city sharing a border with the source of nearly 1/5 of the world’s surface freshwater.

 

Myth #3 – Customers have the money; they just don’t want to pay.

Reality – Yes, customers have the money, though typically it might go to other luxuries – like food.

DWSD officials have argued that the shut-off campaign has been a success since as many as 60% of delinquent accounts have been paid.  That figure, however, obscures the reality that many people are paying their water bills with money that would go to other needs like food, health care, or transportation.

Detroit has an excessively high rate of poverty.  Over 38% of residents live the below the federal poverty line ($23,850 per year for a family of four).   The unemployment rate has fallen from a high of nearly 28% in 2010 to nearly 15% in 2014 – still more than twice the national average.  Homes in the city – usually the single largest asset for individuals and families – sell for less than a new car.  With delinquent water bills running into the thousands of dollars, many families simply cannot get caught up without assistance.

 

Myth #4 – This a local issue; no one outside Detroit is affected.

Reality – Detroit is the latest example of a shift toward privatization of water services and, some fear, commodification of water itself.

As researchers from Georgetown University Law Center pointed out in an April 2013 report, “In the United States today, the goal of universal water service is slipping out of reach.”

The distressing reality is that this is merely one example of what some see as a gradual shift from viewing water as a public good to viewing it as a private commodity, available only or mostly to those with the means to pay for it.  Many cite examples like Bolivia, which, in the late 1990s, was forced to lease its water supply to Bechtel, a multinational corporation that doubled water rates within a few years, leaving many Bolivians paying nearly a quarter of their income for water.

The World Bank famously declared in a 2000 sourcebook on Africa, “Work is still needed with political leaders in some national governments to move away from the concept for free water for all…” (see Gernot Kohler and Emilio José Chaves,Globalization: Critical Perspectives, page 200).  The World Bank, of course, was the entity that forced Bolivia to lease its water system to Bechtel.  As communities continue to grow and water use continues to expand, more and more companies see the opportunity for profit in privatizing water supplies, regardless of the “large-scale and long-term risks and harms”posed by privatization.

But this isn’t limited to other countries.  In the US, cities and states are increasingly turning toward private corporations to operate or manage their water systems, and multinational corporations are seeking water rights for bottling, shipping overseas, and agricultural and industrial uses.

What has privatization looked like in the US?  Ask Atlanta, Ga., residents whose water ran brown and had to be boiled often after private firm United Water cut jobs and training for employees once it took over the city’s water supply.  Even when they are not providing unsanitary water, private firms raise rates, fail to ensure long-term sustainability of infrastructure, and do little to prevent the degradation of the interconnected water systems within a region, according to Craig Anthony Arnold, Boehl Chair in Property and Land Use and Professor of Law at the University of Louisville.

 

Myth #5 – This is not about race.

Reality – To ignore race is to miss the entire background against which this situation plays out.

Almost half of the Black citizens of Michigan are living under non-democratically elected “overseers with little say in the governments nearest them.”  Legislation passed by the disproportionately white state government allowed the governor of Michigan to appoint emergency managers in cities under financial distress.  These managers have more power than locally elected officials and are not accountable to the voting citizens of the area.  Of the eight municipalities that have been or are under emergency management, six have been majority-black cities.  This is despite the reality that many majority-white cities in Michigan face as bad – if not worse – financial distress, according to reports.

Even if the governor begins to correct discrimination in this process, there is a legacy of racist policies and processes that have left their mark on Detroit.  From riots to protest integrated housing, to denial of federal loans to Black would-be homeowners, to redlining of neighborhoods as recently as 2000, the bankruptcy of Detroit has to be seen against a backdrop of the deep divisions and lasting scars of institutional racism.

This is not even to mention that research has demonstrated that the burden for paying for public services like water is disproportionately borne by African Americans.  In their analysis of data from Detroit, researchers Rachel Butts and Stephen Gasteyer found that “water costs more in areas with greater proportions of racial minorities,” regardless of household income or whether the home was in an urban or rural area.[3]  The structural injustice caused by discrimination in housing and employment, coupled with economic shifts, thus shows its long reach over time.

 

Myth #6 – The people of Detroit are broke and broken; their situation should inspire pity and move the rest of us to go there and help.

Reality – There is nothing wrong with the people of Detroit; there is something deeply wrong with the systems – inside and outside the city – that seek to constrain them.

As I sat with a pastor from Detroit and talked about the upcoming ELCA Youth Gathering, he flipped a common lens on its head – “No one is bringing God into Detroit; God is already here.”  Having grown up north of Detroit and recalling fond memories of evenings and weekends in the city, I often think of Philip’s words to Nathanael when people talk about Detroit with pity or derision: “Nathanael asked him, ‘Can anything good come out of Nazareth?’ Philip said to him, ‘Come and see!'” (John 1:46).

It’s no lie to say that outside attention and criticism helped force the city’s hand in this situation.  But that is not to say that the recent moratorium in shutoffs came from the hard work of anyone but Detroiters themselves.  Coalitions of faith communities, along with many other community organizations, have been involved in peaceful demonstrations and activism.  Many of our ELCA brothers and sisters have also been active.  Some Detroiters have gone so far as to be arrested for physically placing their bodies in front of water shutoff valves for their neighbors.  In addition to this, the Detroit Water Brigade has provided immediate relief to families in need and advocated for affordable water for all people, with a cap on the utility fees that can be charged to a household.  There are also local agencies working to help people pay their bills or make arrangements to pay with DWSD.

Detroit does not need rescuers from outside.  What those of us who are not from the city can do is support what is already going on, learn more about the context of Detroit and the current situation, and listen to community members.  We can also help bring attention in our own communities, by using what we have learned to change the conversation about Detroit, and join the conversation about what it means for water to be a human right – both around the world and in our own communities.

 

Ryan P. Cumming, Ph.D., is Program Director of Hunger Education for ELCA World Hunger.  He can be reached atRyan.Cumming@ELCA.org.

 

[1] The owners of Ford Field have recently resolved their bill by providing evidence that the delinquency was a clerical error. Still, it is curious how they were able to resolve this without having their water disconnected, while stories of residents facing shutoff due to billing errors, arrearages from prior property owners, or water leaks continue to emerge from the city.

[2] Rachel Butts and Stephen Gasteyer, “More Cost per Drop: Water Rates, Structural Inequality, and Race in the United States—The Case of Michigan,” Environmental Practice 13,4 (Dec 2011): 393.

[3] Butts and Gasteyer, 392.

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Ebola outbreak: Shipment of personal protective equipment set to arrive in Liberia

Megan Brandsrud

​The World Health Organization has declared the Ebola virus disease (EVD) epidemic a “worldwide health emergency.” The virus, which started in Guinea and spread to Liberia and Sierra Leone, has now spread to Nigeria. It is being reported that more than 1,770 people have been infected with the Ebola virus, with approximately 961 having died as a result.

Lutheran Disaster Response, in partnership with Global Health Ministries and the Lutheran Church in Liberia, assisted in theshipment of personal protective equipment to Phebe Hospital and Curran Lutheran Hospital in Liberia. The personal protective equipment, which consists of hazmat suits with hoods and boots and disinfectant, is scheduled to arrive at Roberts International Airport in Liberia on Saturday, Aug. 9.

Ebola PPE

(Pictured: Shipment of personal protective equipment being sent to Phebe Hospital and Curran Lutheran Hospital in Liberia.)

We continue to gather information from our partners and our global companion churches in West Africa as we earnestly pray for healing and relief from this deadly virus. We will walk with our brothers and sisters who are facing the risks of the Ebola virus as we add our efforts to the international community that is working to contain the virus.

 

If you would like to support Lutheran Disaster Response’s work in providing assistance against the Ebola virus disease in West Africa, please visit the Lutheran Disaster Response giving page.

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Gaza Strip: Providing assistance to Augusta Victoria Hospital

Megan Brandsrud

Gaza - AVH Medical Team

(Pictured: A medical team from Augusta Victoria Hospital prepares to provide medical assistance in Gaza. LWF/Mark Brown)

Violence in the Holy Land erupted at the beginning of July, and now more than 1,800 people have been killed and more than 10,000 people have been injured as the conflict between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip continues. Most of the deceased and injured are reported to be civilians and children.

Because of the lack of security, the ability to provide proper health care in Gaza is waning thin.

Working with the Lutheran World Federation, Lutheran Disaster Response has committed an initial $100,000 to Augusta Victoria Hospital (AVH), a Lutheran hospital in Jerusalem, to send AVH medical teams and supplies into Gaza. Augusta Victoria is a hospital that provides medical services regardless of race, gender, religious or political affiliation.

Medical professionals from Augusta Victoria are providing specialty care, medications and supplies to triage and treat patients in Gaza. Augusta Victoria is also providing care for patients with cancer and chronic illnesses who are being moved from Gaza to AVH to avoid deterioration of their health during the conflict and to relieve beds in Gaza for injured patients. In addition to physical care, Augusta Victoria medical professionals are providing psychosocial support to patients who have been evacuated from Gaza.

The Rev. Dr. Munib A. Younan, the bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Jordan and the Holy Land has visited with patients who have been injured as a result of the conflict. In a July 16 public statement, Younan called for critical support for healthcare infrastructure and asked that “all people of good will intervene in the present situation of unacceptable violence and bloodshed.”

We continue to monitor the situation in Gaza closely and walk with our brothers and sisters who are being impacted by this conflict. We pray for peace in the Holy Land and for God to grant comfort and healing to those who have been injured.

If you would like to support Lutheran Disaster Response’s work in the Holy Land, please visit the Lutheran Disaster Response giving page. Your gifts designated for Gaza Humanitarian Assistance will be used in full (100 percent) to assist those directly impacted by this crisis. Bishop Younan asked us “to create hope in a hopeless situation,” and your gifts allow us to continue to respond.

Although the doors were shut, Jesus came and stood among them and said, “Peace be with you.” John 20:26

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