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- <text id=94TT1391>
- <title>
- Oct. 10, 1994: Congress:Hope Grows in Harlem
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 10, 1994 Black Renaissance
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE POLITICAL INTEREST, Page 41
- Hope Grows in Harlem
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Michael Kramer--With reporting by Lina Lofaro/New York
- </p>
- <p> Politicians do penance in places like Harlem and the South
- Bronx. They tour and deplore and promise, and very little ever
- changes. Last week it was Bill Clinton's turn. At a church in
- Harlem across the street from an abandoned building and down
- the block from a crack house, the master of empathy was strangely
- subdued. Perhaps because so much of his agenda is perceived
- of as dead or dying, the staple of such appearances, a litany
- of Administration accomplishments, was largely truncated. There
- was a bit of boasting ("We've done more in 20 months than anybody
- has in a month of Sundays"), but Clinton's overall tone was
- plaintive. "One of the things I ran for President about," he
- said, setting a rather minimalist goal for an activist leader,
- "was just to get us to face our problems again...and go
- to work on them instead of just talking about them all the time."
- </p>
- <p> Given his muted remarks, Clinton seemed hardly aware that some
- in Harlem are already beginning to feel the effects of his presidency,
- a definite, substantive change in direction as, however incrementally,
- Clinton refocuses government spending and moves to implement
- proposals that have languished for decades.
- </p>
- <p> Along Harlem's main thoroughfare, 125th Street, business is
- booming, a function of indigenous forces mostly but of Clinton's
- policies as well. The vacancy rate for commercial property is
- less than 2%, and space is renting for more than $30 per sq.
- ft., about the same as in midtown Manhattan, an astounding surge.
- New stores will soon dot the cross streets, and nearby housing
- units are being rehabilitated. The private investment responsible
- for most of this growth is following rising incomes and the
- return of better-off families. Perhaps most important is the
- anticipated designation of the area as one of the nation's first
- six empowerment zones. "EZs," as they are known, are the latest
- incarnation of an old idea formerly called enterprise zones.
- What Clinton's added to the notion beyond tax incentives for
- businesses is a panoply of social services (day care and job
- training being the most prominent) designed to produce a work
- force capable of staffing the enterprises likely to be attracted
- by the tax breaks. After the Harlem-South Bronx EZ is formally
- approved later this year, the Federal Government will pour $100
- million into the area, an amount New York City and State will
- match. Added to the total $300 million will be about $70 million
- in low-interest loans from Fleet Bank. "Only some corporations
- see the opportunities available," says Fleet's James Murphy.
- "Others will wake up before long and leverage the thing further.
- Harlem's coming back, and the EZ deserves a lot of the credit."
- </p>
- <p> Coming back and being back are different, of course. Harlem's
- depression is still staggering. Single female-headed households
- account for 63% of all households with children. Forty-two percent
- of the population has an income below the poverty line. Black
- men living in Harlem are less likely to reach age 65 than men
- in Bangladesh. The murder rate for males nationally is 10.2
- per 100,000 people; in Harlem it's over 100. The area's infant-mortality
- rate is 60% higher than that of New York City as a whole and
- can be attributed largely to alcohol and drug abuse by expectant
- mothers.
- </p>
- <p> Some of this horror will be alleviated by Clinton's crime bill;
- more cops will walk Harlem's streets. Increased Head Start slots
- are coming too, along with new antidrug programs and additional
- dollars for day care. Above all, the newly expanded earned-income
- tax credit, a Clinton triumph, will lift about 54,000 working-poor
- families out of poverty. When fully implemented, about $100
- million in new credits will come back to Harlem, and most of
- that money will be spent right there.
- </p>
- <p> Public education, in trouble everywhere and in crisis throughout
- New York City, is worse in Harlem, where union rules ensure
- that the least competent teachers are assigned. As a result,
- barely 40% of students are performing at or above grade levels.
- At Junior High School 43, which is fairly representative, class
- size averages more than 30 students, discipline is hit or miss,
- books are scandalously lacking and there aren't even enough
- chairs to go around. Like airlines that overbook, the school
- counts on absentees. When "too many" students miraculously show
- up, teachers negotiate among themselves for chairs. Most of
- this tragedy is due to local budget cuts. One promising program
- is Teach for America, which trains eager, idealistic college
- graduates to serve in the nation's most distressed regions.
- By including Teach for America in his National Service plan
- (which already has 20,000 Americorps volunteers, more than the
- Peace Corps ever had), Clinton will add teachers to the classrooms
- of Harlem. If he wins his fight to redistribute $11 billion
- in federal education aid according to need, those classrooms
- will get more money too.
- </p>
- <p> Jimmy Carter first visited what will soon be the Harlem-South
- Bronx EZ in 1977. Ronald Reagan toured the same streets in 1980,
- declaring he'd seen nothing "that looked like this since London
- after the blitz." Neither delivered more than rhetoric. Clinton
- has pledged the least, but at least he's delivering something.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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