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At a recent holiday party, I tried to describe my hometown of Warren, Ohio.

"Warren?" I said. "Well, it's a lot like Detroit. With none of the perks."

Now, I might not have to work so hard at the description. My Rust Belt roots made the front page of today's Washington Post in Anne Hull's article "Beyond Repair: In Ohio's Fading Steel Towns, Workers Are Still Waiting for Economic Renewal."

As usual with national news coverage about the Mahoning Valley, it's a story of economic devastation and despair. It's a story about the history of the steel industry collapse in the early '80s, the decades of under-employment, the decaying infrastructure and health effects of long-term industrial pollution.

The Washington Post listed the facts about unemployment, the recession, etc. All of which are true. There's nothing in the piece that's factually wrong. It's just really painful to read about my hometown on the front page of a national newspaper.

Maybe what makes this news story sting is that Congress is -- as I write -- literally down the street debating health-care reform that would make a huge difference in places like Warren.

When I think about those senators fighting over health-care reform, I remember the day last spring when I sat in a Warren hospital with my family. As we gathered around my dying step-mother's bed, my dad told us the hospital had filed for bankruptcy the day before. A few days later, my sisters and I stood in the hallway stunned as the nurse explained that the pharmacy was out of the particular painkiller that was finally managing Linda's symptoms.

I remember thinking this is what it means to live in the abandoned places of America's Empire. Places like Warren, Youngstown, Detroit, and hundreds of others where hospitals close and pharmacies run out of medicine.

But it's also true that faith, courage, and hope are tested and strengthened in those "abandoned places."

So today, I'll pray through my sadness over that front page story by remembering my step-mom who taught for 35 years in Warren's public schools because she believed that education was a way forward.

I'll think about the courage of Youngstown's priests and pastors -- who in the late 1970s stood up to the steel companies by organizing with the steelworkers in an attempt to save the mills.

I'll focus on the heroes of my hometown who are working today in dozens of community, church, and civic organizations to build a new, fair economy for the Steel Valley.

Heidi Thompson is the chief marketing officer for Sojourners. She'll be spending this Christmas with her family in Warren, Ohio.

Sojourners relies on the support of readers like you to sustain our message and ministry.

by: ranfran

12-18-2009 @ 7:53pm

Yes, what Warren and other towns like it need are jobs. Someone asked what good it would do to have healthcare w/o jobs?

I'll have to find the source program but there was a multipart series on PBS and in one story they showed the difference between towns in Sweden and the US when Electrolux had to close like plants in both countries. Both had around 2,000 workers and both were major job centers in their respective small towns.

Months after the closing of both plants the American town had a very significant uptick in the usual problems of poverty, crime, suicides, treatment for depression, numbers of uninsured increased, kids that had been headed to college did not go etc.

In the Swedish town they had no such problems.

Why? In the American town the job was everything. Healthcare, money for children's college, social networks, etc. In Sweden the folks still had their healthcare and their children could still to college and Electrolux was required to pay into a local fund for training laid off workers and contribute money for local folks to use to start up businesses.

Seems the Swedes while being very good capitalist* understand its short comings and prepare for the down turns.

*I have worked for a Swedish company for ten years, traveled there many times

by: Sears Parts

01-08-2010 @ 11:48am

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by: NC77

12-18-2009 @ 9:45pm

,America has so many needs -- roads and schools to repair, bridges to fix, expanded internet access and broadband capacity -- why aren't we seriously talking about a jobs program that helps fulfill America's needs AND puts the people of Warren, and the many towns and cities just like it, to work?

Good question for Obama.

by: dgonos

12-18-2009 @ 11:18pm

First, I would like to correct the writer on one point. Although Detroit has a myriad of problems, the availability of quality healthcare institutions is not one of them. Detroit Medical Center and Henry Ford Hospital, located within the boundaries of the city, are world class facilities with excellent care. William Beaumont Hospital, located in a northern suburb, and the University of Michigan Medical Center, less than an hour's drive from the city, are internationally recognized as world class. The issue is access. I am blessed to live in one of the more prestigious zip codes in Metro Detroit. The quality of care that my wife and I have received from our local hospital has never been anything but first rate. However, several years ago, I was in a waiting room while my wife was having surgery. I watched a nurse berate two women whose mother was also being prepared by surgery. Their shortcoming? The hospital had lost test results that were necessary to prepare for and carry out the surgery! Let me reiterate. The hospital lost the tests, not these women! You see, they lived in a lesser part of town and hence were not perceived as deserving of the same respect and deference that my wife and I received. Yes, this is an anecdotal incident, but I think it demonstrates a key problem in healthcare, uneven access, and uneven quality of care.

I grew up in suburban Pittsburgh, where healthcare at the vast majority of facilities is truly world class. Indeed, since the early 1950's, many medical breakthroughs have come from Pittsburgh, including both the Salk and Sabin Polio vaccines, to say nothing of breakthrough and life saving transplant surgery.

However, travel 30 miles outside the city to the area where my wife grew up, and the quality of care is more reminiscent of third world countries. Some of my wife's relatives have had their lives jeopardized by mis-diagnosis and improper treatment. The issue is not the availability of quality care. 30 miles away, it is available. The question is uniform application. That's what's missing.

The same quality of care should be available, whether one is in an affluent area or a poor one, a metropolitan area or a rural backwater town, whether one is a government official or a welfare recipient. Yes, what I've just described is probably a panacea, but we can surely do better than we have.

by: squeaky

12-19-2009 @ 1:22am

Umm--hasn't he been saying that all along?

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01-10-2010 @ 12:00pm

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by: thebootedone

12-18-2009 @ 11:08am

your town needs jobs. how would health care reform do that.

by: ckgmail

12-18-2009 @ 2:59pm

Health Care Reform will not in itself do much to create jobs. But it will ease some of the burdens of those who lost their medical insurance when their jobs went away.

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01-13-2010 @ 9:53am

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by: Skinfood

01-12-2010 @ 5:55am

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Comments sorted by highest rated. After voting you must refresh your page to see the sort order change.

by: thebootedone

12-18-2009 @ 11:08am

your town needs jobs. how would health care reform do that.

by: thebootedone

12-18-2009 @ 11:08am

your town needs jobs. how would health care reform do that.

by: ckgmail

12-18-2009 @ 2:59pm

Health Care Reform will not in itself do much to create jobs. But it will ease some of the burdens of those who lost their medical insurance when their jobs went away.

by: ckgmail

12-18-2009 @ 2:59pm

Health Care Reform will not in itself do much to create jobs. But it will ease some of the burdens of those who lost their medical insurance when their jobs went away.

by: mjeinpenn

12-18-2009 @ 7:26pm

"Our greatest primary task is to put people to work. This is no unsolvable problem if we face it wisely and courageously. It can be accomplished in part by direct recruiting by the government itself, treating the task as we would treat the emergency of a war, but at the same time, through this employment, accomplishing greatly needed projects to stimulate and reorganize the use of our natural resources."
--Franklin Roosevelt, Inaugural Address 1933

Your town of Warren, Ohio, needs the assistance of a true economic recovery program -- nothing short of a massive jobs program. During the Great Depression, although FDR wanted private industry to hire workers, he understood the limits of capitalism and knew that, to create jobs in the short term, government needed to hire people. Roosevelt did not doubt the ability of Americans to respond to a national crisis. In a display of ingenuity and creativity not matched since, he proposed legislation establishing the Works Progress Administration, the Civilian Conservation Corps, and the Public Works Administration. Combined, these agencies funded tens of thousands of projects and put millions of people to work, building waterworks, post offices, bridges, prisons, airports, swimming pools, athletic fields, playgrounds, and railroad stations, many of which are still being used today.

America has so many needs -- roads and schools to repair, bridges to fix, expanded internet access and broadband capacity -- why aren't we seriously talking about a jobs program that helps fulfill America's needs AND puts the people of Warren, and the many towns and cities just like it, to work?

http://ehlersoneverything.blogspot.com/2009/11/...

by: mjeinpenn

12-18-2009 @ 7:26pm

"Our greatest primary task is to put people to work. This is no unsolvable problem if we face it wisely and courageously. It can be accomplished in part by direct recruiting by the government itself, treating the task as we would treat the emergency of a war, but at the same time, through this employment, accomplishing greatly needed projects to stimulate and reorganize the use of our natural resources."
--Franklin Roosevelt, Inaugural Address 1933

Your town of Warren, Ohio, needs the assistance of a true economic recovery program -- nothing short of a massive jobs program. During the Great Depression, although FDR wanted private industry to hire workers, he understood the limits of capitalism and knew that, to create jobs in the short term, government needed to hire people. Roosevelt did not doubt the ability of Americans to respond to a national crisis. In a display of ingenuity and creativity not matched since, he proposed legislation establishing the Works Progress Administration, the Civilian Conservation Corps, and the Public Works Administration. Combined, these agencies funded tens of thousands of projects and put millions of people to work, building waterworks, post offices, bridges, prisons, airports, swimming pools, athletic fields, playgrounds, and railroad stations, many of which are still being used today.

America has so many needs -- roads and schools to repair, bridges to fix, expanded internet access and broadband capacity -- why aren't we seriously talking about a jobs program that helps fulfill America's needs AND puts the people of Warren, and the many towns and cities just like it, to work?

http://ehlersoneverything.blogspot.com/2009/11/...

by: ranfran

12-18-2009 @ 7:53pm

Yes, what Warren and other towns like it need are jobs. Someone asked what good it would do to have healthcare w/o jobs?

I'll have to find the source program but there was a multipart series on PBS and in one story they showed the difference between towns in Sweden and the US when Electrolux had to close like plants in both countries. Both had around 2,000 workers and both were major job centers in their respective small towns.

Months after the closing of both plants the American town had a very significant uptick in the usual problems of poverty, crime, suicides, treatment for depression, numbers of uninsured increased, kids that had been headed to college did not go etc.

In the Swedish town they had no such problems.

Why? In the American town the job was everything. Healthcare, money for children's college, social networks, etc. In Sweden the folks still had their healthcare and their children could still to college and Electrolux was required to pay into a local fund for training laid off workers and contribute money for local folks to use to start up businesses.

Seems the Swedes while being very good capitalist* understand its short comings and prepare for the down turns.

*I have worked for a Swedish company for ten years, traveled there many times

by: ranfran

12-18-2009 @ 7:53pm

Yes, what Warren and other towns like it need are jobs. Someone asked what good it would do to have healthcare w/o jobs?

I'll have to find the source program but there was a multipart series on PBS and in one story they showed the difference between towns in Sweden and the US when Electrolux had to close like plants in both countries. Both had around 2,000 workers and both were major job centers in their respective small towns.

Months after the closing of both plants the American town had a very significant uptick in the usual problems of poverty, crime, suicides, treatment for depression, numbers of uninsured increased, kids that had been headed to college did not go etc.

In the Swedish town they had no such problems.

Why? In the American town the job was everything. Healthcare, money for children's college, social networks, etc. In Sweden the folks still had their healthcare and their children could still to college and Electrolux was required to pay into a local fund for training laid off workers and contribute money for local folks to use to start up businesses.

Seems the Swedes while being very good capitalist* understand its short comings and prepare for the down turns.

*I have worked for a Swedish company for ten years, traveled there many times

by: NC77

12-18-2009 @ 9:45pm

,America has so many needs -- roads and schools to repair, bridges to fix, expanded internet access and broadband capacity -- why aren't we seriously talking about a jobs program that helps fulfill America's needs AND puts the people of Warren, and the many towns and cities just like it, to work?

Good question for Obama.

by: NC77

12-18-2009 @ 9:45pm

,America has so many needs -- roads and schools to repair, bridges to fix, expanded internet access and broadband capacity -- why aren't we seriously talking about a jobs program that helps fulfill America's needs AND puts the people of Warren, and the many towns and cities just like it, to work?

Good question for Obama.

by: dgonos

12-18-2009 @ 11:18pm

First, I would like to correct the writer on one point. Although Detroit has a myriad of problems, the availability of quality healthcare institutions is not one of them. Detroit Medical Center and Henry Ford Hospital, located within the boundaries of the city, are world class facilities with excellent care. William Beaumont Hospital, located in a northern suburb, and the University of Michigan Medical Center, less than an hour's drive from the city, are internationally recognized as world class. The issue is access. I am blessed to live in one of the more prestigious zip codes in Metro Detroit. The quality of care that my wife and I have received from our local hospital has never been anything but first rate. However, several years ago, I was in a waiting room while my wife was having surgery. I watched a nurse berate two women whose mother was also being prepared by surgery. Their shortcoming? The hospital had lost test results that were necessary to prepare for and carry out the surgery! Let me reiterate. The hospital lost the tests, not these women! You see, they lived in a lesser part of town and hence were not perceived as deserving of the same respect and deference that my wife and I received. Yes, this is an anecdotal incident, but I think it demonstrates a key problem in healthcare, uneven access, and uneven quality of care.

I grew up in suburban Pittsburgh, where healthcare at the vast majority of facilities is truly world class. Indeed, since the early 1950's, many medical breakthroughs have come from Pittsburgh, including both the Salk and Sabin Polio vaccines, to say nothing of breakthrough and life saving transplant surgery.

However, travel 30 miles outside the city to the area where my wife grew up, and the quality of care is more reminiscent of third world countries. Some of my wife's relatives have had their lives jeopardized by mis-diagnosis and improper treatment. The issue is not the availability of quality care. 30 miles away, it is available. The question is uniform application. That's what's missing.

The same quality of care should be available, whether one is in an affluent area or a poor one, a metropolitan area or a rural backwater town, whether one is a government official or a welfare recipient. Yes, what I've just described is probably a panacea, but we can surely do better than we have.

by: dgonos

12-18-2009 @ 11:18pm

First, I would like to correct the writer on one point. Although Detroit has a myriad of problems, the availability of quality healthcare institutions is not one of them. Detroit Medical Center and Henry Ford Hospital, located within the boundaries of the city, are world class facilities with excellent care. William Beaumont Hospital, located in a northern suburb, and the University of Michigan Medical Center, less than an hour's drive from the city, are internationally recognized as world class. The issue is access. I am blessed to live in one of the more prestigious zip codes in Metro Detroit. The quality of care that my wife and I have received from our local hospital has never been anything but first rate. However, several years ago, I was in a waiting room while my wife was having surgery. I watched a nurse berate two women whose mother was also being prepared by surgery. Their shortcoming? The hospital had lost test results that were necessary to prepare for and carry out the surgery! Let me reiterate. The hospital lost the tests, not these women! You see, they lived in a lesser part of town and hence were not perceived as deserving of the same respect and deference that my wife and I received. Yes, this is an anecdotal incident, but I think it demonstrates a key problem in healthcare, uneven access, and uneven quality of care.

I grew up in suburban Pittsburgh, where healthcare at the vast majority of facilities is truly world class. Indeed, since the early 1950's, many medical breakthroughs have come from Pittsburgh, including both the Salk and Sabin Polio vaccines, to say nothing of breakthrough and life saving transplant surgery.

However, travel 30 miles outside the city to the area where my wife grew up, and the quality of care is more reminiscent of third world countries. Some of my wife's relatives have had their lives jeopardized by mis-diagnosis and improper treatment. The issue is not the availability of quality care. 30 miles away, it is available. The question is uniform application. That's what's missing.

The same quality of care should be available, whether one is in an affluent area or a poor one, a metropolitan area or a rural backwater town, whether one is a government official or a welfare recipient. Yes, what I've just described is probably a panacea, but we can surely do better than we have.

by: squeaky

12-19-2009 @ 1:22am

Umm--hasn't he been saying that all along?

by: squeaky

12-19-2009 @ 1:22am

Umm--hasn't he been saying that all along?

by: facebook-1183256698

12-23-2009 @ 5:53pm

Heidi,
I am a pastor in Warren, Ohio, and would love to talk to you about being a part of effective change in the Valley. You can e-mail me at dee.e.emmert@gmail.com.

by: facebook-1183256698

12-23-2009 @ 5:53pm

Heidi,
I am a pastor in Warren, Ohio, and would love to talk to you about being a part of effective change in the Valley. You can e-mail me at dee.e.emmert@gmail.com.

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