SXSW: How Benevolent Gives a Voice to People Who Aren’t Usually Heard

While others talked about cloud robotics, tried on wearable technology, or watched a 3-D printer spit out custom-made Oreos, Megan Kashner focused her SXSW Interactive session on video interviews with low-income Americans and the lessons that we can learn from listening to people in need.
Kashner, a clinical social worker, is the founder of Benevolent.net, a website that helps low-income people raise funds for things they need. “We at Benevolent are not the only people talking about listening, and not just listening, but following the lead of low-income Americans,” she said of the motivation behind her panel “Listening to People in Need: Lessons for America.”
On Benevolent, people tell their stories and describe what stands in the way of their success. The platform also aims to provide a simple way for those who want to help “to step into the stories of those who are trying to reach their goals” by donating to individuals whose videos and needs are featured.
Here is what we learned from the video interviews with John, Tasha, Kris, Melissa, and Danielle:
Lesson #1: “Getting and keeping a job is expensive.” The costs of uniforms and tools needed for certain jobs are costly and can be a barrier for low income Americans needing work to improve their situation.
Lesson #2: “Transportation is a huge issue.” Sometimes public transportation is the only option — given the cost of buying and maintaining a car. But it can prevent someone with good intentions and a great work ethic from making it to work or class on time.
Lesson #3: “Being employed is not enough.” Finding work is only half the battle, as low wages and high costs of living mean that many people who are working long hours still need food stamps, subsidized energy and childcare, and housing assistance to provide for their families.
Lesson #4: “Kids need more than a roof over their heads.” Housing instability can hold kids back from getting the most out of their education. And beyond a safe place to life, kids also need a parent who can pick them up if they stay after school for activities, who can help them with homework, and who can pack them a school lunch.
Lesson #5: “We need to change the rules.” By listening to the stories of low-income Americans and learning from them, we can fix the systemic problems that lead to poverty.
As Kashner wrote in a Huffington Post piece, where she previewed the five lessons she discussed at SXSW, “How would we re-structure supports and employment practices to make it possible for low-income Americans to set their goals, get help overcoming hurdles, and know that people believed in them? Let’s start that conversation and stop the vitriol that has marked recent conversations about poverty and progress.”
Through these stories — both in the session and on the site — Benevolent is able to simplify an issue as complex as how to pull an individual out of poverty. How does the site do it? By breaking it down in human terms. The story of John, who needed steel-toed boots and precision instruments for his job as a machinist, brought a human face to the American issue of, as Kashner put it, “people needing to spend money they don’t have to take a job they desperately need.” The video featuring Tasha, who was able to escape domestic violence only by moving to a shelter two hours away from where her kids went to school, brought life to this statistic: Low- to moderate-income households spend 42 percent of their total annual income on transportation.
The last lesson built off of a video of Danielle, who looked to Benevolent donors when she needed money for a security deposit in order to live in a safer place with her son. Danielle, who cuts railroad tracks for a living, quoted Robert Reich on how being poor is the hardest job in America. “And I gotta tell you as a poor person, as a working poor person, it definitely is,” she said.
When NationSwell asked what is working when it comes to changing the rules, and who beyond Benevolent is listening to the stories low-income Americans, Kashner mentioned the Family Independence Initiative, which weaves together these experiences with hard data to challenge the stereotypes holding low-income families back, and LIFT, an organization that connects trained advocates and community members to help low-income Americans get ahead.
“They are pioneering some really interesting ways to listen to and shape their policy positions and their programmatic approach based on what their clients are telling them,” Kashner said of the LIFT team.
“The people who are doing the real work everyday to help and walk alongside low-income families as they try and reach their goals are small, local organizations,” she added — saying the solutions lie not with one organization but with the numerous school counselors, social workers, pastors, and others who listen to these stories and use them to change the rules.
Watch one of the videos from the session above then let us know what you think about some of the questions Kashner posed: What would our nation be like if we listened to what low-income Americans had to say? How might that change our approach as a country, as policymakers, as employers, as voters, and as community members?

These High School Students Came Together to Help Their Seriously Ill Math Teacher

Between the fancy dresses and tuxedos, limo rides, and the actual event tickets, attending prom can be quite a costly affair. But the expense of the evening didn’t stop the students of Pine Ridge High School in Deltona, Florida, from wanting to help a much-loved teacher.
These class act teens donated not only a portion of their prom funds, but also they raised thousands of dollars  to help Charlie Lundell, the popular math-rapping teacher battle lung and liver cancer. (A Dancing with the Teachers was one such fundraising event.) As FOX affiliate WOFL reports, the longtime math and college readiness teacher had to leave his position to undergo his third round of chemotherapy and radiation. On top of his rising medical costs, he and his wife are expecting twins, which is bound to increase the financial burden on them even more.
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“He really cares about helping people learn and really wants us to be our full potential,” said junior class president Katie Buday. “It’s one of the great teachers out there.”
Yahoo! News reports that another school teacher is also very ill and currently in the hospital, and so now students are fundraising for both educators. Despite the tragic situation, students said that their efforts have raised school spirits to an all-time high.

How One Rice Farmer Ensures No One in His Community Goes Hungry

Every year since 1984, a Brazoria County, Tex., rice farmer has been donating a portion of his rice harvest to the Houston Foodbank. According to Houstonia magazine, 70-year-old John Travis ‘Jacko’ Garrett of Garrett Farms has provided more than 11 million servings of rice each year thanks to his nonprofit, Share the Harvest, that bands rice farmers in the region together to help fight hunger. To date, the organization has donated nearly 6 million pounds of rice. “It is a huge donation that isn’t replaceable for us,” Houston Foodbank CEO Brian Greene said.
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Although the big-hearted septuagenarian has fed millions, he remains concerned about the future of his organization. Garrett hopes that young rice farmers will step up and continue his legacy. As Houstonia reported, Garrett is also working with the Foodbank to promote farmland purchases. A tiny investment can go a long way, as Garrett said, “If you wanted to buy an acre of rice to provide the funds for Share the Harvest, for about $1,200 you could provide nearly 80,000 meals.” If you’d like to support Garrett and his organization’s fight against hunger in Houston, you can check out the link here.

What This School District Administrator Did Will Warm Your Heart

Wisconsin’s Two Rivers School District will keep the services of their superintendent for absolutely no money at all. According to the Associated Press, school official Randy Fredrikson has given up his entire $170,000 salary and benefits for the school year.
Instead, the 58-year-old grandfather will be working for free as a thank you to the district that employed him and his wife for 26 years. “I came to Two Rivers and I thought, ‘Oh, I’ll be here three to five years,’ and here we are,” he told the AP. “It was good for our family, certainly the school board always treated me well. It just worked out. I thought, well, I can do this in return.”
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Fredrikson won’t be receiving health or dental insurance, but since he’s officially retired, he’ll be getting state pension. He’ll also keep his $3,270 stipend as the varsity boys basketball coach. Fredrikson’s move to forgo his salary — believed to be a first in the state — was not intended to draw attention. As School Board President Bob Bergeon told the AP, “He kind of quietly just goes about and does a lot of charitable things, noble things, and nobody knows about it.” Well, we certainly noticed and, hopefully, others will too.