Preview

Tamarla Owens: Product of a Failed System

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1352 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Tamarla Owens: Product of a Failed System
Tamarla Owens: Product of a Failed System

Tamarla Owens was a product of failed American policy and ideas. She is prime example of government decisions that contradict reality. From the top down the government failed to realize what they had in fact created with the Welfare to Work program and the true reality of it.
First, Tamarla Owens had several social statuses where she lived near Flint, Michigan. She was part of a group or neighborhood in this circumstance, that had nearly half of it’s population making under $15,000 a year including Tamarla at $13,000. This was group stricken with poverty. Having moved to Flint as a teenager, Tamarla was almost born into this status. Let alone other ascribed statuses that lay claim to poverty such as being an African-American, being a woman (let alone single) and living near Flint, Michigan where unemployment was over 8% and the crime rate was over triple the national average in 1999. Tamarla had achieved the status of parenthood, having her first of three children at age 20. She had also achieved the status of a hardworking tax payer, working up to 70 hours week on a state run program that stemmed from the National Welfare to Work program. One must keep in mind, even though she put forth the kind of effort most never will, she remained in poverty and worse unable to sufficiently raise her children in this state sponsored program set forth by lawmakers with no idea of what life was like for Tamarla and many others in their master status role of society. Tamarla was trying to do the best she could for her family. Under the Welfare to Work program, Tamarla received food stamp benefits and medical insurance in exchange for paying pack welfare monies she had received. The issue with this program is that when you start making more money than what you receive in benefits you get cut off from the already at “poverty level” benefits. This was the case in Tamarla’s situation. She did not even make enough to cover



References: Brehm, E. (2000) Michigan school shooting: a tragic consequence of US welfare "reform", Retrieved November 2nd, 2012 from http://www.wsws.org/articles/2000/apr2000/welf-a28.shtml Moore, M Kamer, F. (No Year) That time Michael Moore harassed Dick Clark (video), Retrieved November 2nd, 2012 from http://observer.com/2012/04/michael-moore-dick-clark-04182012/

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    In Barbara Ehrenreich’s book, Nickel-and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America, she investigates whether welfare reform programs are appropriate in aiding women in poverty and that these institutions will affect their economic and social mobility in the future.…

    • 2196 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Imagine a woman desperately scrounging for crumbs in the cupboards of her kitchen. Her face sunken with grief as she looks for anything that might quell the pleas of her starving son. Her search turns up empty-handed, and she is then forced to either let her child go hungry or find another means of obtaining food. Many scenarios like this can be found in Gerry Smith’s “How a Government Computer Glitch Forced Thousands of Families to go Hungry. It is an article about a recent event occurring back around 2010 of how faulty programs provided by the Accenture Company left many families without food on the table. Not only were food stamps affected by their flawed programing, but so were other welfare applications regarding insurances. While the topic of the core reading is interesting enough on its own the author uses a number of methods to keep the reader’s attention. Through the use of rhetorical appeals the author plays off the sympathy and moral of his audience by providing examples of individuals affected by the lack of food stamps, pointing out the lack of effort put toward computer programs designated for use by the poor, and by calling North Carolina out for its many technological problems.…

    • 1217 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The Life of Shirley Chisholm

    • 3452 Words
    • 14 Pages

    Shirley Chisholm was a “Rough Rider” straight out of the gate. Her mother said at 3 years old, she was bossing kids 3 and 4 years older than her. To know Shirley Chisholm, is to know that she was small in stature but, she had a lot of tenacity. Due to the economic situation in the United States her parents could not afford a good education, so they sent Shirley and her sisters back to Barbados to live with their maternal grandmother, for about 7 years. Her education in the strict, British-style schools of Barbados, she credits with her ease with speaking and writing. After attending those schools, when she returned to the states, she was several years ahead of her peers.…

    • 3452 Words
    • 14 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    New York. From the moment she was born, she was sexually and physically abused by her father as her mother watched. Currently, she is pregnant with her second child, both children are a product of incest by her father. Precious’s first child has down syndrome and lives with Precious’ grandmother. Precious resides with her mother, Mary and is abused emotionally and physically by her on a daily basis and at night sexually abused by her father. Both Precious and her mother live on welfare thus to receive more support from the government Precious’s mother would lie to social services, stating that she is unable to find work as well as using both her daughter…

    • 713 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    However, the policy later mandated women to work in order to continue to receive benefits. Thus, women in the program have undergone tremendous amount of limitations and stress. Davis states that “I felt that the social services practices with regard to people who need assistance constituted a peculiar regulation of poor people…the regulations are “meticulous rituals of power” that serve to discipline people into acting in certain ways” (p.230) When it is poor women are forced to wait for the services provided by the government, they lose of time and they are still expected to meet their families, job duties despite the time lost. These poor battered women are expected to keep the institutional time requirement so that they will not be denied assistance and their benefits won’t be…

    • 528 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Christmas In Room 400

    • 963 Words
    • 4 Pages

    This story speaks to the existence of inequality in America as there are many issues facing these people in poverty. Many people must face the true hardship of surviving these circumstances and avoiding being evicted to the street, shelters, or worse neighborhoods. Even within this group of poor people, the statistics highlight how some based on gender or race are more likely to suffer from these eviction situations. The cycle unfortunately continues for all the parties involved in the eviction process, and this issue remains an urgent one in our…

    • 963 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Next, we have the problems with welfare on unemployment. Welfare has a limit on how much you can make a year. Many families have actually lost their benefits because it was only a dollar over the limit for a three person income because the other partner had to get a part time job to make ends meet. When this happens the whole family struggles because they just lost $300 a month in free food when they can only pay for $100. Than they go and see all the families in the “projects” who don’t work and have 3 or 4 kids and not working at all get the benefits they deserve. Many states however, are slowly making it required that you pass a drug and…

    • 841 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Though John Scalzi never reveals his own experience with poverty like Jeanette, his biography tells us that he was spent his childhood in California in poverty and was able to work out of it similar to Jeannette Walls. John takes on a “no tolerance” attitude when it comes to stereotypes about the poor, especially victims of hurricane Katrina that hit in 2005. The reason he wrote “Being Poor” was because of the people asking why everyone did not just leave when they were told to and avoid the hurricane. He answered in his essay indirectly that these poor southern people do not have reliable transportation, live hand-to-mouth, and have nowhere else to go even if they had the means to get there. Hurricane Katrina was the costliest hurricane in the history of the United States, and the sixth strongest overall. The severe destruction left many losses of life and property damage, but for the poor it was the worst. John Scalzi wrote this essay for the ignorant people wondering why the poor in New Orleans did not just leave when the hurricane came. The details he gives describe on an everyday basis what these families are going through. “Being poor is clutching that box of Raisin Bran and trying to think of a way to make the kids understand that the box has to last” gives many details in one line. Raisin Bran is a simple type of cereal and one that can be off-brand. Trying to make the kids understand it has to last is showing that many times that box might be all a whole family has for a month. This was the largest natural disaster in the history of the United States, and people are asking the poor why they did not leave. Many think that it is easy to move out of poverty, but they have never experienced true poverty before. Many families are single-parent households who wake up and work all day,…

    • 1158 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    1996 Welfare Reform

    • 918 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Our book presentation was based on the book, $2 A Day. In the book, the authors argue that the 1996 welfare reform is incomplete with poor consequences. They argue that the new welfare reform not only cannot help the families in crisis, but also increase the number of individuals that live on only $2 a day. Throughout the book, the authors point out the flaws of the 1996 welfare reform and provide suggestions to modify it. The authors argue when we are trying to help the poor to live off poverty, we have to help them in a supportive way. Having to spend hours, days and weeks to apply and obtain cash assistance from the new welfare program when they are needed will greatly decrease their self-confidence in the society, which is very important…

    • 918 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Welfare is nothing new to the citizens of this country. It is a concept that arose over a century ago. Welfare was made famous by Bill Clinton, in 1996, and it has brought up much controversy. Arguments suggest the welfare system is highly abused by its members while others believe it is the answer to the nation’s poverty. Although the welfare system is state regulated, many people believe it is taken advantage of by underserving people. Often, people with nasty habits, sale their food stamp cards for extra cash, cigarettes, and drugs. Most of the time, these people have children that have to go without because their parent puts their government assistance towards unhealthy addictions.…

    • 1145 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    “Across the country, about 9.6 million families spend over half of their income on housing” (Vestal). Numbers like this wouldn’t be so large if these issues were paid more attention to. These families are just trying to have a home, and a roof over their heads to keep them sheltered. They shouldn’t have to go completely broke because of this. If there were more opportunities for these families to have more affordable housing there wouldn’t be so many people struggling to make ends meet. Even with the help of the state, if the family gets it, their lives will still continue to unravel without stable housing (Vestal). That is why these families keep using most of their income to pay for their home. There was a national increase in poverty…

    • 1666 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    California had a policy in place called the, “Maximum Family Grant Rule”, but it was recently repealed as the state felt it was doing more harm than good. This policy did not reduce the number of children being born to welfare recipients as they had hoped and California felt children were not getting the benefits they needed. If you are on welfare and make the decision to have another child, you should not be allowed to receive even more compensation for that child. Many women are using the system to justify having more children and see these programs as “free money.” Not to say that women are having more children because of this program but it’s not deterring them either. We need to stop throwing money at the problem and instill more programs to help people to be employed and learn how to live on their own. It goes back to the old saying that if you give a man a fish, he eats for a day, you teach him to fish and he eats for the rest of his life. The government feels like it’s doing its job by taking care of the children but it actually is putting children at a disadvantage later in life. “A study by Gordon Dahl looks at data from Norway's "disability insurance" (DI) system and finds that when a parent is allowed DI, their adult child's likelihood of participation over the next five years increases by 6%, and grows to 12% after ten…

    • 1363 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Hard Working Stereotypes

    • 1969 Words
    • 8 Pages

    The year was 1976. The presidential race was starting to pick up, with all of the nomination hopefuls attempting to make their mark. At one of the campaign stops, one of the two candidates from the Republican party, former governor of California Ronald Reagan stepped up onto the stage to speak. He knew the speech he was about to give, as he performed it at almost every stop, according to the press accounts following him. "There's a woman in Chicago," Reagan says. "She has 80 names, 30 addresses, 12 Social Security cards. She's got Medicaid, getting food stamps and she is collecting welfare under each of her names. Her tax-free cash income alone is over $150,000." With a single speech, Reagan was able to establish the single story of the “Welfare Queen”, building the stereotype that will define the working poor for the next 40 years. This narrative is always about someone, usually of the working poor or underclass, who abuses the benefits given to them.…

    • 1969 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Best Essays

    Chappell, Marisa. The War on Welfare: Family, Poverty, and Politics in Modern America. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, 2010. Print.…

    • 1580 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Good Essays

    A Poor Cousin Reflection

    • 652 Words
    • 3 Pages

    In “A Poor Cousin of the Middle Class,” it is about a woman named Caroline Payne who was a hard worker and had a lot of motivation to work and better herself. She was not viewed from a whole person perspective. She was a typical American citizen, fifty year-old, Caucasian woman. She has a two-year associate’s degree, who works at the local Wal-Mart in Muncie, Indiana. Caroline has not lived what you call the “American Dream.” She has had a challenge trying to find ways to survive for her and daughter just be fed for dinner and clothed. Caroline has been married twice and both marriages have failed. She did not grow up with her biological father and her step-father abused her. She has four kids, three boys that live with their father and one daughter, named Amber, who is disabled. Amber has a clubfoot and mild retardation because of Caroline’s emotional assaults, not eating nutritiously, and smoking cigarettes. Caroline only got a few benefits of assistance; she got Medicaid for fix her teeth that had been damaged and social security to live off of with her daughter.…

    • 652 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays