Feb 18, 2012
By Naomi Schaefer Riley
Salt Lake City
Mitt Romney has raised the issue of the social safety net. Washington could learn from the lesson of his church.
Ever
since Mitt Romney said he was "not concerned about the very poor" but
would fix America's social safety net "if it needs repair,"
conservatives and liberals have been frantically making suggestions.
Gov. Romney says he would consider options like restructuring Medicaid.
But if he wants to see a welfare system that lets almost no one fall
through the cracks while at the same time ensuring that its
beneficiaries don't become lifelong dependents, he could look to his own
church.
As I ride
in a golf cart through a new 15-acre warehouse on the outskirts of
Utah's capital, I can't help but wonder: How many Wal-Marts would fit in
here? How many burgers can you make from 4,400 industrial pallets of
frozen meat? And how do they keep this place cleaner than my kitchen
floor?
Dedicated
last month(2012), the Bishops Central Storehouse contains a two-year supply of
food to support the Mormon church's welfare system in the U.S. and
Canada (primarily for church members in need) and its humanitarian
program, which sends food, medical supplies and other necessities to the
needy (of all faiths) world-wide.
In
addition to goods from canned peaches to emergency generators, the
facility also houses the church's own trucking company, complete with 43
tractors and 98 trailers, as well as a one-year supply of fuel, parts
and tires for the vehicles. Just in case.
The
storehouse is not only a kind of physical marvel——it has been built to
withstand an earthquake with a magnitude as high as 7.5——but also a
symbol of strength and self-sufficiency.
Launched
during the Great Depression, the Mormon welfare system was designed by
church leaders as a way to match the armies of the unemployed faithful
with some of the nearby farms that needed temporary labor. As storehouse
manager Richard Humpherys explains, goods and services were traded so
that if a father needed food for his family he could get some in
exchange for, say, repairing the fence of a widow down the road.
In
1936, Heber Grant, one of the church leaders, reported the reasoning
behind this effort: "Our primary purpose was to set up insofar as it
might be possible, a system under which the curse of idleness would be
done away with, the evils of a dole abolished and independence,
industry, thrift and self respect be once more established among our
people. The aim of the Church is help the people to help themselves.
Work is to be re-enthroned as the ruling principle of the lives of our
Church membership."
Over
the ensuing decades, the church acquired farms and ranches of its own.
It built grain silos and dairies and canneries to store and process the
food. By the end of World War II, church leaders had enough in the way
of reserves that they contacted President Truman to ask if they might
assist in feeding and clothing the destitute across Europe. The
president readily agreed.
Because
it has members on the ground around the world, the church continues to
be an important force in bringing food and supplies to the impoverished
and victims of natural disasters. Local church leaders contact the
central headquarters in Salt Lake City to tell them what is
needed——gauze pads, school supplies, wheelchairs——and the church does
its best to accommodate.
The
Department of Defense recently visited the new storehouse to find out
how the Mormons are able to mobilize so quickly, and there is an almost
military sense of efficiency and strategy to the church's efforts. When
Hurricane Katrina struck, for instance, the church had positioned its
fully loaded trucks in a kind of semicircle from South Carolina to Texas
because no one knew how the storm was going to move. The church used
reserves of fuel that it has placed around the country, and drivers were
able to bring full tanker trucks into New Orleans, powering rescue
vehicles and even chain saws to remove tree limbs.
Most
of the inventory in the central storehouse, though, goes to supply more
than 100 smaller storehouses around the country, plus hundreds of soup
kitchens and homeless shelters of other religious communities around
North America. Members of the Mormon church who find themselves in
difficult circumstances can go to their local bishop and ask for aid.
The
bishop then fills out an order allowing them to go and receive food
from the local storehouse. Seventy percent of the items on the shelves
are produced by the church itself and the remainder are purchased at
steep wholesale discounts. According to Rick Foster, who oversees a
smaller storehouse in Salt Lake City along with the cannery and dairy at
Welfare Square (the original site of all the church's welfare
services), people depend on the food at the storehouse for an average of
three to six months.
That's
because the church's goal is to help them get back on their feet as
soon as possible. And the storehouse is only one of the tools at the
disposal of local bishops, who may also refer members to other church
programs, including employment counseling or family services. The bishop
may even use money from a fund at his disposal to help pay for
education, housing or utilities.
The
labor behind the farming, food production, counseling and even cattle
ranching is provided almost entirely by volunteers. Some are retired
folks who come in every day. Other times an entire ward, or
congregation, will come for the day, each of the members standing on an
industrial assembly line packaging bread, processing cheese or sealing
jars of apple sauce.
Regular
tithing by church members helps pay for the facilities, but the primary
source of capital support is the Mormons' monthly fast, as church
members are asked to contribute what they would have spent on two meals.
Many give much more, says Mr. Foster.
It
is safe to assume that Mr. Romney is among them. The tens of millions
of dollars he has given the church over the years have raised suspicion
in some quarters. What does the church do with all that cash? Wouldn't
that money have been better spent paying a higher income-tax rate? But
his donations are supporting the kind of safety net that government can
never hope to create. Jesus may have said the poor will always be with
you, but he didn't say Medicaid would.
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