Columbus at a Crossroads
Transcription
Columbus at a Crossroads
★ COLUMBUS AT A CROSSROADS FACTBOOK EXECUTIVE SUMMARY While other cities in Ohio were hit hard by the recent economic downturn, Columbus’s corporations were largely unaffected; working families in our city were not so lucky. While Columbus’s unemployment rate remains well below the national average at 6.2%, the poverty rate in our city has nearly doubled in the past 10 years. This is largely because low wage, no-benefit service jobs have begun to replace the good jobs of the past. Of the 10 largest occupations in Ohio, 8 do not pay enough for an adult and a child to survive without welfare. It didn’t used to be this way. Poverty wage jobs like these hurt our whole city; they’re the reason the middle class is disappearing. When working people can’t afford to pay their rents and mortgages, foreclosures ravage neighborhoods, crime increases, and our communities deteriorate. Increased poverty also leads to high truancy rates and a decreased property tax base, both of which have devastating effects on public school districts. This isn’t happening by accident; profitable corporations that pay workers wages that qualify them for public assistance and don’t pay their fair share in taxes are enriching themselves at the expense of our city and with our tax dollars. Columbus can do better. Service workers are uniting to restore the middle class, bring good jobs to our city, and raise wages for all working people. If business leaders in our city truly want to build a healthier, more sustainable future for Columbus, they should start by paying their fair share in taxes and by ensuring that working people—not just CEOs—share in the prosperity they helped create. In this moment, the leaders of Columbus’s business community have the opportunity to decide which direction our city will go. ★ COLUMBUS AT A CROSSROADS FACTBOOK 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS Executive Summary Prosperity for the Few Rising Poverty Making Ends Meet in the Low-Wage Workforce Invisible Labor First Responders Living in Poverty Profiting at our expense Rising Inequality • • • 2 4 6 • 6 • • 8 6 7 9 Columbus at a Crossroads: What Kind of City Will We Be? Endnotes • • 10 11 ★ COLUMBUS AT A CROSSROADS FACTBOOK 3 PROSPERITY FOR THE FEW Columbus’s economy remains largely unaffected by the Great Recession. While other cities in Ohio, like Cleveland and Cincinnati, were hit hard and are still feeling the effects of the downturn, Columbus has been hailed as the #1 “up & coming” high-tech city by Forbes.1 But it wouldn’t be entirely accurate to say that the city is prospering. While business booms and the unemployment rate in Columbus continues to drop, the number of working people in our city living in poverty is rising,2 as is reliance on public assistance programs like food stamps.3 Columbus can’t be a world class city if its residents are working hard but increasingly poor; and we can’t attract new businesses if working people have no buying power. It’s a privileged and wealthy few who are reaping the benefits of Columbus’s sustained economic growth. The Fortune 1000 companies headquartered in the Columbus area profited over $5 billion in 2012, while their CEOs took home over $133 million in compensation. JPMorgan Chase, the largest private employer4 in the Columbus area, profited over $21.1 billion dollars last year.5 This should be good news for everyone in Columbus. But unfortunately, poverty in our city has risen right alongside soaring corporate profits and CEO pay. In fact, the concentrated poverty rate in Columbus has nearly doubled since 2000. COLUMBUS AREA FORTUNE 1000 COMPANIES6 CEO CEO BASIC COMPENSATION 20127 Abercrombie & Fitch Michael Jeffries $48,069,500 American Electric Power Michael Morris $9,186,910 Steven Fishman $11,924,700 Steven Davis $3,634,210 Cardinal Health George Barrett $11,209,700 Greif Michael Gasser $4,421,540 Momentive Specialty Chemicals Craig Morrison Not public Stephen Steinour $6,445,710 Limited Brands Leslie Wexner $19,230,500 Mettler-Toledo International Olivier A. Filliol $5,379,640 Steve Rasmussen Not public Daniel W. Avramovich $1,842,920 Jay L. Schottenstein $2,205,040 Scotts Miracle-Gro Co. James Hagedorn $5,484,410 Worthington Industries John P. McConnell $3,974,710 FORTUNE 1000 COMPANIES Big Lots Bob Evans Farms Huntington Bancshares Nationwide Pacer International Retail Ventures (Merged with DSW in 2011) Total $133,009,490 ★ COLUMBUS AT A CROSSROADS FACTBOOK 4 COLUMBUS AREA FORTUNE 1000 PROFITS8 COMPANY PROFIT Cardinal Health $1,069,000,000 American Electric Power $1,395,000,000 Limited Brands $850,000,000 Big Lots $207,064,000 Momentive Specialty Chemicals $118,000,000 Huntington Bancshares $641,022,000 Scotts Miracle-Gro Co. $106,500,000 Abercrombie & Fitch $127,658,000 Greif $126,100,000 Worthington Industries $125,353,000 Retail Ventures (Merged with DSW in 2011) $174,788,000 Bob Evans Farms $72,850,000 Mettler-Toledo International $290,847,000 Pacer International $4,300,000 Total $5,308,482,000 ★ COLUMBUS AT A CROSSROADS FACTBOOK 5 RISING POVERTY The rising inequality facing working people in Columbus mirrors a national trend marked by record profits and stagnating wages. All across the country, the rich are getting richer while more families are falling out of the middle class and into poverty every day. A report released in April 2013 by the Brookings Metropolitan Policy Program reveals that the number of extremely poor census tracts in the city of Columbus increased from 8 to 24 in the past 10 years.9 The report states that the number and population of extremely poor neighborhoods—those with poverty rates of 40 percent or higher—has jumped since 2000, with the population in those neighborhoods rising by one-third.10 MAKING ENDS MEET IN THE LOW WAGE WORKFORCE Columbus service workers—like janitors, security officers, airport staff, and higher education food service workers— are among the thousands of working people in our city who can work full time and still qualify for public assistance. In an economy as healthy as Columbus’s, there is no excuse for this. When working people aren’t paid enough to stay in their homes or buy medicine, entire communities suffer the consequences. And it probably goes without saying that workers who can’t afford basic necessities also do not have disposable income to spend at Columbus businesses and restaurants. INVISIBLE LABOR After most white collar workers have gone home for the day, Columbus janitors begin their nightly work of vacuuming our floors, emptying our trash, and sanitizing our bathrooms. They clean downtown office buildings, including the offices of corporate and financial giants like JP Morgan Chase, Huntington Bank, Nationwide Insurance, and American Electric Power. But in spite of the health of Columbus’s economy and the wealth of these corporations, the average full time janitor in our city is paid just $18,200 a year—below the poverty level for a family and well below the cost of living. ★ COLUMBUS AT A CROSSROADS FACTBOOK 6 COLUMBUS COST OF LIVING AND JANITORIAL WAGES $49,102.54 $18,200 Estimated Cost of Basic Family Necessities—One Parent, Two Children (Columbus MSA) Full Time Columbus Janitor Yearly Gross Earnings Veronica Ramos-Lopez works from 5:30pm until 2am every night cleaning bathroom after bathroom for a company called Mid American Cleaning Contractors (MACC) in Chase Bank’s Polaris offices. Chase Bank is one of the richest and most influential corporations in the world, yet MACC pays Veronica less than $19,000 a year. Veronica and her children live with some of her coworkers in order to afford housing. Her eightyear-old daughter qualifies for Medicaid and her nineteen-year-old son works in a factory nearby because the family can’t afford for him to go to college. Veronica’s rent and bills take up about half of her paycheck, leaving little for groceries and clothing for her kids. Her daughter wants to go to college someday, and Veronica is afraid that this dream may be out of reach—no matter how hard she works. FIRST RESPONDERS LIVING IN POVERTY Contracted private security officers protect our office buildings and our city’s public infrastructure. Security officers put themselves on the line to protect millions of dollars worth of property and hundreds of thousands of lives in Columbus every day. Despite their hard work and the wealth of this growing industry, Columbus security officers are paid less than $19,000 a year—below the poverty level for a family—and most have no access to affordable health care. Many are forced to rely on public assistance programs like Medicaid, SNAP, and HEAP to get by, despite working full time. These aren’t the good, middle class jobs our city needs. Thurman Elliot is a security officer in Columbus. He works for a company called Universal Security. Thurman and his coworkers don’t get any sick days and they can’t take vacation days because of understaffing. This means that Thurman has to choose between having time to spend with his wife and having the money he needs to pay for her treatment. Thurman’s wife suffers from a condition that attacks her immune system and makes her more likely to get sick. Because he doesn’t have affordable health care for himself or his wife through his job, they both rely on Medicare. ★ COLUMBUS AT A CROSSROADS FACTBOOK 7 PROFITING AT TAXPAYERS’ EXPENSE “Ultimately, we as a community bear the expense through higher health care costs, increases in crime, and the depletion of our social services.” —Columbus City Council Statement in support of Janitors, February 11, 2013 Columbus’s wealthiest companies didn’t succeed on their own; they received tens of millions of our tax dollars in the form of subsidies, all while contributing to rising poverty and increased strain on taxpayer-funded public assistance programs. Together, Columbus-area companies Huntington, Nationwide, and JPMorgan Chase have received an estimated $50,039,147 in state and local tax breaks. WHAT ELSE COULD $50,039,147 COVER? • Approximately 1,221 first year Columbus public school teachers15 • A full year of school lunches for approximately 90,739 Columbus public school students16 Nationwide • Took $33,990,943 in state and local tax breaks since 2008. JP Morgan Chase • Took $25 billion bailout from the federal government.11 • Took $15,409,681 in state and local tax breaks just the past few years. • CEO Jamie Dimon made $23,105,400 in 2011—the equivalent of 1,270 of the janitors who keep Chase buildings clean.12 Huntington • Annual wages for approximately 2,749 full time janitors • Annual wages for approximately 2,633 full time security officers • The entire 2014 budget shortfall for the Columbus City Schools—twice17 As if padding their profits with our tax dollars wasn’t shameful enough, Columbus’s wealthiest corporations are fueling poverty in our communities by contributing to the rise of lowwage no-benefit jobs. When janitorial and security contractors hired by these corporations fail to pay employees a living wage and offer only unaffordable health care options, we all pay. The estimated cost for providing health care for the uninsured in Franklin County is $162M a year; by forcing hardworking people onto our already over-burdened public safety net programs, irresponsible companies are essentially asking Ohio taxpayers to further subsidize their profits.18 • Took over $638,523 in state and local tax breaks. • Profited over $542.6 million in 2011, an increase of 74% from the previous year.13 • CEO Stephen Steinour made $6,445,710 in basic compensation in 2011.14 ★ COLUMBUS AT A CROSSROADS FACTBOOK 8 WHAT PUBLIC ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS DO COLUMBUS JANITORS, SECURITY OFFICERS, AND THEIR FAMILIES QUALIFY FOR? Single Person One Parent with a Child One Parent with Two Children HEAP (Home Energy Assistance Plan)19 X X X Children’s Medicaid (Ohio Healthy Start)20 X X X Reduced School Lunches N/A X X Free School Lunches N/A X X X X X O X X Ohio Head Start (Child care program) O X X Section 8 (Subsidized Housing) X X X Program 21 22 WIC (Women, Infants, and Children)23 SNAP (Food Stamps)24 25 26 (X=qualifies based on income guidelines; 0=does not qualify based on income guidelines) RISING INEQUALITY Increasing wealth disparity and the proliferation of poverty-wage jobs are driving inequality in our city. Columbus ranks among the most economically segregated cities in America. According to a 2012 Pew Research Center report, Columbus ranked 7th most segregated by income, just below Detroit. About 34% of lower-income households in the Columbus area live in majority lower-income census tracts.27 Because the vast majority of workers consigned to poverty-wage, no-benefit jobs are people of color, the poverty rates for these groups are disproportionately high; while the overall poverty rate for the Columbus area is 15.7%, the rates are significantly higher for Latinos—at 27.2%—and African Americans—32.1%.28 And as racial income disparity in our city rises, African American and Latino workers are disproportionately relegated to low-income and under-resourced neighborhoods. As a result, Columbus is becoming increasingly segregated by race and class. POVERTY RATES, 2011 COLUMBUS METRO AREA 32.1% 11.6% 11.2% Asian White Black 27.2% Hispanic or Latino ★ COLUMBUS AT A CROSSROADS FACTBOOK 9 COLUMBUS AT A CROSSROADS: WHAT KIND OF CITY WILL WE BE? Despite the health and wealth of corporations in Columbus, poverty in our city is skyrocketing and our neighborhoods are becoming increasingly poor, dangerous, and segregated. If Columbus continues down the current path, it will truly become 2 cities—one where corporations profit at the expense of all else, and one where the children of working people go to bed hungry and without hope for a better future. Columbus can do better; this rising tide could lift all boats. Our city’s business and elected leadership have the ability and responsibility to truly move Columbus forward and to ensure that everyone who works hard has the opportunity to prosper. Columbus workers, taxpayers, and families are calling on businesses to do their part by paying their fair share in taxes and paying fair wages to workers. A strong economy should mean good jobs and a better future for everyone in our city—not just for the rich. When working people are able to support themselves on one good job, families are able to stay in their homes and spend their paychecks at local businesses. And that’s what will truly make Columbus’s economy stronger, its neighborhoods safer, and its communities healthier. Together, we can create a prosperous and sustainable future for Columbus. ★ COLUMBUS AT A CROSSROADS FACTBOOK 10 ENDNOTES 1. City of Columbus, Department of Economic Development, http://econdev.columbus.gov/facts_figures/rankings.aspx 2. Columbus Dispatch, Number of families struggling continues to grow, January 30,2013 www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2013/01/30/new-poverty.html 3. Columbus Dispatch, Food stamp secrecy, April 22, 2013 http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/editorials/2013/04/22/food-stampsecrecy.html 4. JPMorgan Chase Chase to add up to 1,000 jobs in Central Ohio, April 27, 2011 http://investor.shareholder.com/jpmorganchase/releasedetail.cfm?releaseid=572534 5. JPMorgan Chase SEC 10K Filing Fiscal Year End 2012 www.sec.gov/cgibin/viewer?action=view&cik=19617&accession_number=0000019617-13-000221&xbrl_type=v# 6. Columbus Regional Chamber, Fortune 1000 Companies, http://columbusregion.com/files/documents/fortune1000-companies.pdf 7. CEO Basic Compensation from Reuters.com Executive Profiles 8 Profits from company’s last full fiscal year SEC 10-K Filing. Full year 2011 or Full year 2012 depending on full fiscal year most recently filed. 9. Columbus Dispatch, Poverty’s grip grows in Central Ohio, November 3, 2011 www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2011/11/03/povertys-grip-grows.html 10. Columbus Dispatch, Poverty’s grip grows in Central Ohio, November 3, 2011 www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2011/11/03/povertys-grip-grows.html 11. Huffington Post, JPMorgan Bailout Repayment Completed with $936 million Sale of Warrants www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/12/11/jpmorgan-bailout-repaymen_n_389345.html 12. 2012 not yet publicly released 13. SEC 10-K Filing. 2012 year profits not yet released. 14. 2012 Compensation not yet public. 15. Columbus Public Schools, Columbus first year teacher salary $40,990 salary and benefits http://columbuspublicschools.org/modules/groups/homepagefiles/cms/1307635/File/district/Master_%20Agreement_%202011_12.pdf 16. US Dept of Agriculture, School Lunch Program Payments http://www.fns.usda.gov/cnd/Governance/notices/naps/NAPs12-13Chart.pdf 17. Columbus Dispatch, Jobs, busing may feel ax as Columbus Schools face $25 million shortfall, March 6, 2013 www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2013/03/06/columbus-schools-may-cut-jobs-busing.html 18. Health Policy Institute of Ohio, Ohio Medicaid Program Basics, http://a5e8c023c8899218225edfa4b02e4d9734e01a28.gripelements.com/pdf/publications/basics2011_execsummary.pdf 19. Office of Ohio’s Consumers’ Council, 2013 HEAP Guidelines, http://pickocc.org/publications/assistance_programs/HEAP_Guidelines.pdf 20. Ohio Dept Job and Family Services, Ohio Medicaid Eligibility Guidelines, http://jfs.ohio.gov/ohp/consumers/docs/FPLs_general.pdf 21. US Dept of Agriculture, Federal Registrar, www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2012-03-23/pdf/2012-7036.pdf 22. US Dept of Agriculture, Federal Registrar www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2012-03-23/pdf/2012-7036.pdf 23. USDA Food and Nutrition Service, WIC Guidelines www.fns.usda.gov/wic/howtoapply/incomeguidelines.htm 24. USDA Good and Nutrition Service, SNAP Guidelines www.fns.usda.gov/snap/applicant_recipients/eligibility.htm#income 25. Ohio Head Start, Benefits.gov www.benefits.gov/benefits/benefit-details/1932 26. US Dept Housing and Urban Development, Income Guidelines. Qualify at “Very Low Income” Threshold www.huduser.org/portal/datasets/il/il12/oh.pdf 27. Columbus Dispatch, Report: Neighborhoods segregated by income, www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2012/08/01/economically-segregated-neighborhoods.html 28. US Census Bureau, American Community Survey, Poverty Rate in the Past 12 Months www.census.gov ★ COLUMBUS AT A CROSSROADS FACTBOOK 11 WHO ARE WE? SEIU Local 1 unites more than 50,000 service workers in 10 cities across the Midwest. This year, Local 1 janitors are bargaining union contracts in Columbus, Cincinnati, Indianapolis, and Milwaukee and hundreds more janitors are organizing to join Local 1 to secure fair wages and affordable health care. The security officers who protect many of the same downtown buildings that Local 1 janitors clean in Detroit, Indianapolis, Cincinnati, and Columbus are uniting in SEIU Local 1 for the first time to create a path toward good jobs and safer buildings. SEIU Local 1 members are committed to: • Advocating for the quality services the public deserves and the good jobs our communities need; • Using our collective strength to hold politicians accountable to working families; • Building an economy that works for all of us—not just the richest 1%. SEIU Local 1 ¨ D PRINTIN G UNION LABEL COUNCIL LIE AL TRADES CHICA O, IL G 458 33 N. 3rd Street, Suite 300, Columbus, OH 43215 www.seiu1.org facebook.com/SEIULocal1 ★ COLUMBUS AT A CROSSROADS FACTBOOK