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Speaker Paul Ryan on Bob Woodson: “A mentor, a force for good, an icon”

Speaker Paul Ryan on Bob Woodson: “A mentor, a force for good, an icon”

August 2, 2021 by Mike

By: AIF Statement

Washington, DC – On Thursday, civil rights leader and President of the Woodson Center, Robert “Bob” L. Woodson announced his retirement following four decades of leading the organization as it helped restore communities and assisted people around the country improve their lives. Woodson, who founded the organization (formerly called the Center for Neighborhood Enterprise) in 1981, is a long-time friend and advisor to American Idea Foundation President and former Speaker of the House, Paul Ryan.

Upon the announcement of Woodson’s retirement from the non-profit bearing his name, Speaker Ryan issued a heartfelt congratulations:

 “Bob Woodson’s life and career have been solely focused on helping others. The positive impact Bob has made in countless people’s lives and in communities across the country is simply profound.

“Bob has been so effective because he believes in the inherent good of every person he meets. He has an unbending faith in people’s tenacity and determination to better themselves; he believes in the power of redemption; and he is an eternal optimist. There is a generation of community leaders who owe their success to Bob and who will undoubtedly continue evangelizing his belief in free markets and the principles of the Gospel.

“To me, Bob Woodson is a mentor, a force for good, an icon. I will forever be grateful for all that he taught me about fighting poverty from the ground up. I will always be thankful for the wisdom he imparted and for the organizations and people that he brought into my life.

“God broke the mold when he made Bob Woodson and knowing Bob, he would want us to honor his work by continuing it. I look forward to advancing Bob’s legacy as the Woodson Center begins their next chapter and remain in awe of all Bob has done for others over his amazing career.”

To learn more about the Woodson Center’s amazing work, visit their website. For more on Speaker Ryan’s relationship with Bob Woodson, check out some of the following content.

National Review: Paul Ryan’s Ground-Level Anti-Poverty effort

Forbes: The Gangster, The Preacher, and the Speaker of the House

American Idea Foundation: “The Comeback” Video Series

C-SPAN: A Conservative’s Approach to Poverty in the U.S.

American Enterprise Institute: Expanding Opportunity in America

The Atlantic: Paul Ryan finds God

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Filed Under: Blog, Press Release Tagged With: Community Organizations Making a Difference

Op-Ed: Expand economic opportunities by enhancing the Earned Income Tax Credit

July 28, 2021 by Mike

By: Kevin Seifert

As the nation responds to the economic turbulence caused by COVID-19, Congress should build on elements of the American Rescue Plan by further reforming and expanding the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC). Since 1975, the Earned Income Tax Credit has proven to be one of the federal government’s most effective poverty-fighting programs and enhancing the credit is one of the best ways Congress can ensure a strong, bottom-up recovery from the pandemic.

A common-sense expansion of the EITC is precisely the medicine the U.S. economy needs to return to full health. The economy is still 6.7 million jobs short of its February 2020 levels but as the American Enterprise Institute’s Survey Center on American Life reported this month, 3 in 4 individuals who have been unemployed for less than two years are currently looking or planning to look for work. Correspondingly, employers are hungry for workers and need them to keep up with rising demand for goods and services.

Unfortunately, during the pandemic, the federal government erected new short-term disincentives – most notably through enhanced unemployment benefits and other direct payment programs, that have slowed individuals’ re-entry into the workforce. While stabilizing measures were necessary at the pandemic’s outset, Congress needs to shift from emergency responses to policies that help individuals and families over the long-term. An expansion of the Earned Income Credit will accomplish this by incentivizing labor-force participation and targeting benefits to those individuals and families most in-need.

As the American Enterprise Institute’s Michael Strain succinctly stated: “If you want more of something, subsidize it.” The EITC benefit is equal to a percentage of annual earnings and determined by the number of children living in the household. In short, it is a tax credit that subsidizes work. For millions of Americans with lower-incomes, because of the Earned Income Tax Credit, the more they earn, the larger the benefit they receive. The EITC’s intentional design not only helps employers and their employees but it directly aids families and their children as well. The benefit helps society’s most vulnerableand because it is tied to earnings, it reinforces the values that come with a steady paycheck.

The effectiveness of the EITC is precisely why Members of Congress already agreed to expand the benefit via the American Rescue Plan. The recent reforms extended the benefit to Americans aged 19 to 24, increasing the credit’s maximum value and the income cap for adults without children. According to the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, these reforms will help over 17 million low-income Americans.

In a time of legislative gridlock, these changes made to the EITC via the American Rescue Plan were a meaningful step in the right direction, but Congress should not stop there.

Congress can easily address the significant marriage penalty associated with the current Earned Income Tax Credit. Many low-income families are faced with a choice of remaining unmarried or losing EITC benefits. Congress can fix this “benefit cliff” by increasing the income limit where the EITC begins to phase-out and by reducing the phase-out rate. This would help lawmakers achieve the dual goals of incentivizing work and encouraging family formation.

Though the Earned Income Tax Credit has been historically focused on individuals with children, further increasing the overall amount of the credit for single individuals would promote work among younger Americans and assist a wider array of people battling poverty. There are 5.8 million working age adults  without children, including 1.5 million Latino and 1 million Black workers, who stand to benefit from a more expansive EITC. And given those who lost jobs during COVID-19 generally skew younger, an EITC expansion for single individuals would give this cohort a timely boost, pushing job-seekers into the workforce and incentivizing continued employment.

The EITC is already one of the largest federal safety-net programs and these potential enhancements are not without costs, which is why legislators should scour the federal budget to identify offsets. One option, long supported by both conservatives and good-government advocates, is reducing the billions in improper payments associated with the IRS’ processing of the EITC. Another approach is to reduce spending on ineffective federal poverty-fighting programs that lack the evidence and data to justify continued funding. The federal government could reallocate funds from under-performing social programs and put them towards an enhanced EITC. The federal government spends hundreds of billions of dollars annually on fighting-poverty and it should be prioritizing programs that actually improve outcomes. The EITC has demonstrated its effectiveness over decades and expanding the program would be consistent with taking an evidence-based approach to battling poverty.

An enhanced tax credit that reduces the marriage penalty, fixes the “benefit cliffs” and increases benefits for single individuals would address our labor-force participation issues and would assist those battling persistent poverty or temporary financial difficulties related to COVID-19. It would help families, job-seekers, and job-creators alike.

A more generous Earned Income Tax Credit is not a silver bullet to alleviate poverty, but it does represent one of the most powerful tools at the federal government’s disposal. It has already done a great deal to help Americans economically and if Congress continues to sensibly build on the program, it will benefit even more in the future.

Kevin Seifert is the Vice President of the American Idea Foundation, a non-profit headed by former Speaker of the House Paul Ryan committed to promoting evidence-based public policies and programs that expand economic opportunities and fight poverty. This op-ed originally appeared in The Hill. 

Filed Under: Blog, In The News Tagged With: Validating Reforms that Expand Opportunity

Recapping site visits with South Carolina legislators

July 26, 2021 by Mike

By: AIF Staff

Charleston, SC – Last month, the American Idea Foundation facilitated two site visits in South Carolina, holding roundtable discussions with federal legislators, policy experts, and community leaders. At a tech incubator located in an Opportunity Zone and at Nurse-Family Partnership in McLeod, participants heard testimonials about how some of the policies championed during Paul Ryan’s tenure as Speaker of the House are being implemented.

Following the visits, AIF President and former Speaker of the House Paul Ryan said:

“In my experience, learning from these front-line organizations and talking directly with the individuals doing the hard but amazing work in our communities is incredibly valuable as legislators look to craft more impactful public policies.

“Today’s visits provided first-hand examples of how laws like Opportunity Zones and MIECHV  are making a difference in alleviating poverty, improving outcomes, and expanding economic opportunities for South Carolinians. I’m thankful for my former colleagues in Congress taking the time to see the positive effect of organizations like the Charleston Tech Center and the McLeod Nurse Family Partnership.”

A comprehensive look at these conversations and the major takeaways is available here: Lessons from the front lines of South Carolina. A recap of the local media coverage from the day’s conversations follows.

The State: Former GOP House speaker Paul Ryan to visit Charleston alongside U.S. Sen. Tim Scott

“Paul Ryan, the former Republican speaker of the House, will travel to Charleston on Friday in a visit that puts him alongside a popular GOP figure in a state known for having an outsized influence on presidential politics….

“While in Charleston, Ryan will tour the Charleston Tech Center, a newly opened tech incubator located in an Opportunity Zone, a tax program Scott introduced to help revitalize economically distressed communities.”

Read more from The State here.

The Sumter Item: ‘More than health care’: Former House Speaker Paul Ryan visits McLeod Health Clarendon to see Nurse-Family Partnership program

“Nurses in a pregnancy and motherhood program at the county’s only hospital know their work goes beyond health care, breaking barriers between provider and patient, outsider and friend. Now, their stories have reached the ears of who was once one of Congress’ top leaders.

“Children played in the next room last week as McLeod Health Clarendon’s private dining room, which had just the day before hosted a reception marking the hospital’s 70th anniversary, hosted a roundtable discussion about the Nurse-Family Partnership program. Attending were mothers, nurses, hospital executives and former Speaker of the House Paul Ryan.

“Ryan said he has been involved in the war on poverty for more than a decade and that he has spent the last two years since leaving Congress and Washington, D.C., learning about evidence-based poverty-fighting solutions across the country. He founded a nonprofit to promote those solutions and inform policy….

“Four mothers took turns telling their story, their nurses by their side, to Ryan. He heard about the mother who was sick her entire pregnancy and had her texts answered late at night. He heard about the nurse who ensured her mothers were signed up for COVID-19 relief payments. And the nurse who started educating a mother’s young sister on how to care for a newborn when COVID-19 put the mom on a ventilator.

“What Ryan learned from the mothers, nurses and program and hospital leaders was why this program works. “It’s more than health care,” he said.

“The relationship the nurses build with their mothers goes beyond a check-up. They become friends. They help their mothers study for their GED and get a job. They carry their children to let them rest. And to play with the cuties, of course….

“We’re dealing with high-pressure situations, but we’re improving lives,” Miller said. Each nurse usually has at least 25 moms at a time, with 14 nurses covering McLeod Health’s seven-county reach.

“If Ryan was looking for evidence-based solutions, he came to the right place when he visited the rural hospital in Manning. As Frank Daidone, CEO of the national NFP, put it, McLeod’s program is the most efficiently run and best performing NFP in the country.”

Read more from The Sumter Item here. 

Live 5 News: Sen. Scott meets with small businesses at Charleston Tech Center

“Lawmakers met with small businesses on Friday in downtown Charleston to tour the newly opened Charleston Tech Center and discuss the economic impact of opportunity zones.

“United States Senator Tim Scott and former House Speaker Paul Ryan along with US Representatives Joe Wilson and Ralph Norman met with representatives from some of the companies that call the Charleston Tech Center home.

“Ernest Andrade, Executive Director of Charleston Digital Corridor, says the $54 million building on Morrison Drive and the companies housed inside help attract and keep recent college graduates in the city.

“As a state, we were producing them [college graduates], but basically, we were a net exporter of talent to the rest of the country and we had to reverse that,” Andrade said. “We had to basically avoid that brain drain and create opportunities….”

“One of the things that we always thought about when this happened was, we didn’t want this to be a regentrification machine,” Ryan said. “We want it to be about revitalization about bringing capital into these communities to revitalize those communities meaning to revitalize the people in those communities.”

Former Speaker of the House Paul Ryan said he had worked on similar programs in the past and felt that private investment into communities was one of the best ways to fight poverty.

Read more from Live 5 News here.

WCBD News 2: U.S. Sen. Tim Scott tours Charleston Tech Center as part of ‘opportunity zone’ legislation

Lawmakers from across the state were in the downtown Charleston on Friday to hear from small businesses about how opportunity zones are helping to revitalize part of the Lowcountry.

The Charleston Tech Center, which opened this year, is part of U.S. Senator Tim Scott’s ‘Opportunity Zones’ legislation, which is designed to bring money into impoverished areas and help turn things around.

Sen. Scott hosted former Speaker Paul Ryan along with US Representative Joe Wilson (2nd District), US Representative Ralph Norman (5th District), and staff from U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham’s office during a trip to the tech center Friday afternoon….

Former House Speaker Paul Ryan said he worked with Congressman and later Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, Jack Kemp, many years ago on similar enterprise zones without much legislative success.

“I think the big benefit of Senator Scott‘s legislation is it’s brought tens of billions of dollars of capital into the poorest communities of America. That’s money that would’ve never come otherwise. It’s also brought in the private sector and the public sector to focus on getting people out of poverty, getting revitalized in these poor communities. So, this is an idea a lot of people fought for a long time. Tim Scott actually got it done…”

Sen. Scott says they have seen less than 5% of gentrification in the opportunity zones. He believes this is proof the plan is working.

“This has to be a win-win; a win for investors, a win for citizens, and a win for America and so far, so good,” he said.

Read more from WCBD News 2 here. 

ABC News4: Top lawmakers touring Charleston Tech Center Friday

“Some of the area’s top lawmakers are gathering in Charleston on Friday for a tour of the Charleston Tech Center….

“This is the first office project to be completed as a federally designated Opportunity Zone, which was part of bipartisan legislation led by Sen. Scott. The Charleston Tech Center is part of the city’s Digital Corridor, which looks to enhance the region’s tech economy by attracting these types of businesses to the Holy City.

“The 92,000-square-foot building features its own garage and currently hosts nearly three dozen tech and tech-related companies. $54 million in capital went into the project, potentially creating upwards of 400 jobs.”

Read more from ABC News 4 here. 

The Sumter Item: Paul Ryan visits McLeod Health Clarendon

“Since former Speaker of the House Paul Ryan has left Washington, he founded the American Idea Foundation, a nonprofit that promotes poverty-fighting programs and policy to help Americans achieve their idea of the American Dream.

“To further those efforts, he visited McLeod Health Clarendon on Friday to learn about the Manning hospital’s Nurse Family Partnership program.

“The program connects expectant, first-time mothers with a nurse, who helps guide them through the physical, financial and emotional journeys that come with pregnancy and motherhood, and they stay with the mother until their child turns 2.” Read more from The Sumter Item here.

Filed Under: In The News, Press Release

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