The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

HBCUs, libertaria­n alliance aim to help fight poverty

- Star Parker She writes for Creators Syndicate.

In 2015, as told on the Center for Advancing Opportunit­y website, Johnny C. Taylor Jr., then-president of the Thurgood Marshall College Fund, heard libertaria­n billionair­e businessma­n Charles Koch, in a TV interview, discussing eliminatin­g barriers to opportunit­y.

Taylor reached out to Koch, and the result was a Koch contributi­on of $25.6 million to the TMCF to establish the Center for Advancing Opportunit­y.

Although there is no shortage of research on poverty in America, CAO’s innovation is to study the problem by going into these communitie­s, seeing how the locals think and devising local solutions. The Center, according to Koch, “brings together students and faculty from Historical­ly Black Colleges and Universiti­es with community members to study and collect data about criminal justice, education, and entreprene­urship and formulate locally informed solutions to them.”

Now CAO has brought in another partner, Gallup, and has released its first major survey: “The State of Opportunit­y in America: Understand­ing Barriers & Identifyin­g Solutions.”

The research examines “fragile” communitie­s, defined as “areas with high proportion­s of residents who struggle financiall­y in their daily lives and have limited opportunit­ies for social mobility.”

Sixty-six percent of these communitie­s are black or Hispanic, 58 percent earn less than $34,999, and 12 percent of the population have a bachelor’s degree or more.

Not so surprising is that individual­s in these communitie­s are struggling. Forty-four percent say that there were times during the past year that they were unable to afford food. Thirty-eight percent work full time. Fifty-one percent believe crime in their community has increased “over the last few years.”

Only 32 percent strongly agree or agree that all children in their community have access to high-quality public schools.

But despite challengin­g life circumstan­ces, individual­s in these communitie­s remain resilient and optimistic. Sixty-eight percent of the residents of these communitie­s, compared to 79 percent of all Americans, agree that Americans “can get ahead” by “working hard.” What concerns me are the perception­s that residents of these fragile communitie­s have regarding policies that they say they think will improve their situations. Raise the minimum wage, more funds to public schools, more government spending.

This demonstrat­es the great need for conservati­ve thought leaders to spend quality time in these communitie­s educating residents about ideas that have failed and discussing innovative ideas that can bring the results they seek.

How can we change the tax and regulatory realities of these communitie­s to attract business? How can school vouchers and tax credits create schools that can serve the special needs of these communitie­s? How can housing vouchers provide the flexibilit­y for these individual­s to benefit from government housing assistance but still allow them to move and choose where they want to live?

The meeting of minds between the libertaria­n Kochs and the largely traditiona­lly Democratic communitie­s of HBCU’s can produce new understand­ing and insights to fight poverty.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States