Who We Are

The Church & Society Committee at Prescott UMC in Prescott, AZ, will be using this blog to promote our agenda as specified in the Social Creed of the United Methodist Church.

Friday, September 6, 2013

Immigration Issues

Immigration Issues

With the immigration bill being considered by congress, issues surrounding immigration are in the spotlight. 

As Christians we are challenged by these issues. The short documentary, “Jasmine’s Story”, chronicles the story of a young woman, born in the U.S. to Guatemalan parents.

Her challenges and her relationship with her United Methodist church in Michigan can offer us insight and raise questions as we consider immigration issues from a Christian perspective. 

You are invited to watch the video and prayerfully consider the ways in which it speaks to you.
A few questions to consider are:

1. Considering that most of us, unless we are Native American, have an immigration story, recall your own family’s history of arriving in the United States. Were there any conditions of hardship associated with your family’s story?

2.  Which person in Jasmine’s story do you relate to most easily, and why?

3.  How did you react to the way the Ypsilanti church community responded and why?

4. What attitudes and behaviors does Christ call us to use when considering difficult and emotion filled issues such as immigration?

Thank you for taking the time to reflect on this issue.

May God, who loves us all, guide our thoughts and actions.

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Our Mission

Our Mission
To prayerfully examine issues of social justice, mercy and stewardship within our church, society and all of God's creation.
So that
We better understand God's will and gain God's strength and guidance for our actions regarding these important issues.
So that
We may become better disciples of Christ and demonstrate His love and compassion to the world.
So that
We may make disciples of Christ for the transformation of the world.

Monday, August 19, 2013

ARIZONA'S CHILDREN IN THE CROSSHAIRS OF POVERTY

For most of us who grew up in this land of plenty, it is hard to imagine how it would feel to go to bed at night hungry and to not know whether there would be any food tomorrow .  How hard would it be to pay attention in school when you are  hungry?  Believe it or not, at least twenty seven per cent of  Arizona children may have this experience on a fairly regular basis.  The most recent statistics show Arizona ranks 47th overall in the US for the economic well-being of  its children.

Ron Barnes' Hungry Kids Project has been working for the past three years to provide nutritious meals for children to take home on weekends during the school year in the Prescott and Humboldt Unified School Districts and added the Chino Valley District last fall.  This past year, they fed 142 kids in Prescott, 100 in the Humboldt District and 100 in Chino Valley.  They would have doubled those numbers if they had had the resources. Children are eligible for free school meals when their households' income level is 130% of the poverty level.  No less than 41% of all students in PUSD qualify for the federal free or reduced lunch program,  62% in HUSD, and 71% in Chino Valley.  PUSD has 50 homeless students, HUSD has 358, and CVUD has 200, according to Barnes.  His project is funded through grants and donations, which are used to buy food.  Donations can be made to each school district's educational foundation with a note in the check memo line specifying that it is for the Hungry Kids Project.

Our own Open Door delivers food bags to 520 preschool children through the Weekend Family Food Program every week during the school year and has been doing so since 2009.  Previously- available funds from First Things First have dried up, so the program is struggling this school year.  Much-needed donations may be sent to Open Door and earmarked for the Weekend Family Food Program.

The results of a plethora of studies on children and poverty are well-known.  And, according to the Arizona Partnership to End Childhood Hunger, another child is born into poverty in our state every half hour.  All the data agree that children who experience even occasional hunger because of limited resources have more health problems than kids who never go hungry, and they do worse in school, are more aggressive, and tend to have anxiety, emotional problems, and poor self-esteem.  Nutritional deficiencies in infants and toddlers can interfere with brain development, and such cognitive deficits can never be remediated sufficiently to give those children a chance at breaking the cycle of poverty as adults.

Arizona is also facing a literacy crisis in early-childhood education, primarily due to a paucity of books and other literacy experiences in disadvantaged youngsters' homes.  Early intervention is vital to future success for these children.  Unfortunately,  Head Start and publicly-funded preschool programs were hit hard this year by federal sequester cuts which took about $9.5 million from Arizona child care and preschools.  Arizona no longer funds any kind of early-childhood education, though 39 other states do.   Lawmakers imposed a waiting list for the state's child-care subsidy program four years ago.  Since then, an estimated 33,000 eligible children have been denied subsidies.

According to the Arizona Republic, our child-welfare system continues to be strained by increased  reports of abuse and neglect.  Children in foster care increased by a sobering 40% in the last three years.  “We're seeing more and more families in trouble.  They're losing every benefit that they had,” says Marsha Porter, director of the Phoenix Crisis Nursery.  Some officials have cited previous budget cuts that slashed child-care subsidies and other programs for struggling families during the Great Recession and its immediate aftermath.  In light of the societal consequences, these appear to have been very costly cuts.

Prescott United Methodist Church's outreach in the form of such events as the recent Shoes for the Shepherd are a tremendous help for impoverished children and their families, but there is so much  yet  to be done.  The eradication of childhood hunger and poverty  must become a statewide priority.

Friday, May 10, 2013

Rivers in Northern Arizona

Viva La Verde

Last night I saw a wonderful video about the Verde River in Northern Arizona.  It is one of only a few riparian rivers that remain in Arizona today, and it now runs the risk of being a dry riverbed that has water only when it rains.  The primary threat is our lowering groundwater level and a pipeline that will start extracting water from the Big Chino aquifer to the cities of Prescott, Prescott Valley and Chino Valley; this aquifer is the primary source of the Verde River.  This movie is available to view on the Citizens Water Advocacy Group website (http://www.cwagaz.org/videos/158-vivavideo) and the Vimeo page at http://vimeo.com/63984592 . The movie is about an hour long, but I think you will find it both beautiful and troubling.

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Immigration Reform



THE IMPORTANCE OF PAPERS

Imagine being so desperate for a way to feed and clothe your loved ones that you will chance giving your last money to an untrustworthy coyote to take you across the border from your native land to a hostile place where you do not speak the language and are in constant fear of being arrested, imprisoned, and/or deported--a place where you feel homesick and lonely and are doing work so hard that most Americans do not want it.  But first, you must cross a hellishly-hot, arid stretch of chaparral where you know many before you have succumbed.

The 9/11 terror attacks ushered in much stricter immigration policies, and a growing number of states adopted laws aimed at making life harder for immigrants.  Since its inception, this nation has been continually infused with the energy of newcomers.  Yet this assimilation has never been smooth.

Cincinnati, Ohio has a very good reputation for helping children with developmental delays, because of the presence of their well-known Children's Hospital and an excellent county early intervention program and therefore draws families of children with developmental challenges from all over the world.   One such  family  suffered many hardships to bring their tiny daughter with special needs to the US in the hopes of getting her the treatment and therapies she needed.  She did get wonderful help through the early-intervention program, but her mother was totally isolated due to the language barrier and fear, and she never knew whether her husband would return from his construction job each evening.  Possibly, she would not hear from him again if he were badly injured or arrested and deported, because he did not have papers.

Often, people escaping dangerous and/or chaotic political situations have sought safety in our country.  The story of Sumera, who is a naturalized US citizen and her husband of ten years, Abbas, who is a citizen of Pakistan, exemplifies the fear and heartache of separation that may result from our deportation policies.  Abbas has been in the US since 1991 and has worked hard, has filed and paid joint taxes, and has no criminal record.  He has devotedly supported and cared for Sumera, who has severe medical problems.  Because of a deportation order, Abbas has had to report to the ICE office every three months.  On his last visit, he was told to report back on March 13, 2013 with his travel ticket.  If Sumera chooses to stay in the US, she will be forced to live on welfare.  She and her husband perceive Pakistan as a very dangerous place, especially for those who are not politically connected and are seen as "rich Americans."  Kidnappings of such people are commonplace.  Sumera and Abba only wish to live out their lives in peace.  But he does not have papers.

In Arizona, many young people who were brought here by their parents and have never known their country of origin are now loyal, hard-working Americans aspiring to citizenship but are often unable to take advantage of the administration's deferred deportation plan because of the cost($465.00), political uncertainty, or mean-spirited attempts to thwart them, e.g., depriving them of drivers' licenses or in-state tuition rates.

Do we squelch these young people's enthusiasm at the outset?  Will they become discouraged and unable to contribute to society in constructive ways?  Will they become disaffected and live lives of poverty and degradation because of being barred from the American dream we enjoy through no merit of our own, because we simply had the good fortune to be born here?  Do we turn our backs on them and miss the opportunity to embrace a wonderful source of energy and diversity?

Lisa was brought to the US when she was one month old and has lived here ever since.  But her parents never "fixed her documentation," so as she grew up, she realized she was not the same as everyone else.  Her whole life, she has wanted to be a legal citizen.  2011 was  an awful year for her.  Her father was pulled over by an ICE agent, arrested, imprisoned, and ultimately deported.  She has not seen him since and knows nothing about Mexico.  Now that she is almost finished with high school, she has been looking at colleges, but many will not consider her because of her status.  She wants to be a doctor for the US armed forces but feels it is going to be a very hard road for her.  If only she had papers.

As United Methodist followers of Christ, we regard these tragedies of separated families and young people suspended in limbo, all due to lack of papers, with consternation and compassion and look to find constructive paths and leaders to heal all of us touched by this intolerable situation.  

Wednesday, April 24, 2013


A Senate in the Gun Lobby's Grip

For many with a heart to work for less violent communities, the April 17th Senate vote blocking the forward movement of legislation for expanding background checks for gun sales represents the disconnect between the voice of 90% of our population who support expanding background checks and our elected leaders in Congress. Former Congresswoman Gabby Giffords from Arizona a survivor of a gun shot wound to the head stated, "those senators made their decision based on political fear and cold calculations about the money of special interests". Please read more from the article posted by the General Board of Church and Society of the United Methodist Church by clicking the link provided. We must not give up in our efforts to reduce gun violence. Remember we are the hands and feet of Christ in this world. "I give you a new commandment, that you should love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another.  By this everyone will know that you are my disciples,.." John 13:34-35.

Thursday, April 4, 2013

A Place at the Table

A Place at the Table

This movie will be presented at the Yavapai College Performing Arts Center on April 24 at 7:30 pm.  It addresses hunger in America.