Greetings from Zavala County in
southwest Texas, “the spinach capital of the world”, replete with an annual
spinach festival and two statues of Popeye by the town square. You might expect
a place where all children eat healthy and grow strong, but instead the
child poverty rate is close to 50%, more than twice the national average and
the L.A. Times reports that “The
highest rate of food-insecure children (in the nation) is in Zavala County,
Texas, where 83% of youths are in some jeopardy.”
Thanks to
Chuck and Katie Dooley, and our partners at The Texas Hunger Initiative and the
San Antonio Food Bank, I came down a day before a scheduled speech in Austin to
visit schools, teachers and social workers. Our agenda was to learn and bear
witness, and explore whether we can bring back a larger group of leaders in
2014. We flew into San Antonio, and drove a couple of hours through semi-arid
brush land of mesquite trees and cacti, to Crystal City, the county seat.
Maggie Flores runs school food service for 2000 students in four schools.
She sees hunger through the eyes of “the ladies” who work for her. They
struggle to feed their own kids, taking home only $800 a month after taxes.
Many work a second job after their 6:00 a.m. to 2;00 p.m. shift. The raise they
are expecting will be their first in seven years. Jobs are scarce and mostly at
the Corrections Center, and the Del Monte canning factory paying a low hourly
wage. Some find work in new oil fields 12 miles away, where fracking turned
Carrizo Springs into a boom town a few years ago. The result is
enormous wealth for a few far-away corporations, but a higher cost of
living for all who actually live here, with rents increasing from $400 a month
to the $1200 a month that oil company employees can afford.
School breakfast participation is low across the county for the usual reasons.
Four years ago Flores tried breakfast in the classroom but teachers mishandled
the paperwork. That put reimbursement at risk. The experiment was cancelled.
There is no food bank in town, although the San Antonio Food Bank holds a
mobile food distribution once a month. Cars lined up there as far as we
could see. Summer school includes meals for 30 days but otherwise there’s no
rec center, Boys and Girls Club, or other facility to serve as a summer meals
site. We asked where families turn for help. “They bunk up together”, state rep
Tracy King said, “doubling up to save on rent is their only option.”
On our way to the elementary school cafeteria, Principal Sonia Zyla told us how
she’d reversed poor attendance rates, and tried to get the faculty to model
behavior of good attendance and punctuality. “My mantra is Honor Our Time
whether it’s the time we set for meetings, or the time we have to do this
important work together.”
We learned of the impact of HeadStart cuts, children “strategically failing” so
that they could attend summer school for the meals, and one social worker’s
lament with regard to obesity and poor nutrition: “I wish they would teach them
how to shop.”
So close to the newly booming oil fields, but so far from benefitting directly
or indirectly, Zavala County is but an isolated example of an increasingly
dominant aspect of American life: economic growth that benefits a relative few,
while the struggle of hard working families persists. This week a new study
from UC Berkeley reported that in 2012 the top ten percent of earners took home
more than half of the country’s total income – the highest recorded level
ever. The top one percent took more than one-fifth of the income earned
by Americans.
There is a price
for such inequality, and in the short-term that price gets paid by those most
vulnerable, least able to afford it, and least responsible for their plight–
children like those we visited at Zavala Elementary. They pay for it
through compromised health, poor literacy, and lack of opportunity. In the long
run we all pay – because we can’t have a strong America with weak kids.
After decades of
bearing witness, not much surprises any more, But there was one thing: no one
we met asked us for support, grants, or assistance of any kind. It was as
if decades of struggling on their own had conditioned them not to expect it. We
saw the hope and determination that always characterizes places we think of as
Hinges of Hope. But imagination in Zavala County has been depleted by the
oppressive heat of a scorching sun combined with the cold indifference of
America’s new Gilded Age.
And that’s why we went: to learn, to bear witness, and to make sure they knew
that others cared and hoped to help make a difference.
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