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NOW Takes Leading Role in Saving Social Security By Lisa Bennett, Communications Director, and Heather Gain, Communications Intern January 7, 2005 In keeping with our commitment to protect women, particularly those in the most vulnerable circumstances, NOW is taking a leadership position in the fight to save Social Security. NOW is co-chair of the National Council of Women's Organization's Task Force on Women and Social Security, and has joined with the Campaign for America's Future, AFL-CIO, NAACP, the Alliance for Retired Americans and other prominent progressive groups to form a broad coalition working to stop George W. Bush's plan to privatize Social Security. Protecting Social Security is an issue of special importance to women. And not just retired women-but also young women, disabled women, lesbians, household workers and others. In its Spring 2002 issue, the National NOW Times offered the real stories of three women whose lives were affected by the program. Their stories may be even more relevant and moving today as the Bush administration marches closer toward dismantling the program.
Tobi Hale
"It's not a lot," says Miller, "but it pays the rent." The discrepancy in check amounts between those who registered immediately and those who did not propelled Miller to found the Household Technicians Union, which works to ensure equal rights for women who work mainly in "under-the-table" jobs, such as maids, nannies, and cooks. The union also pressures employers to comply with the Federal Minimum Wage Act of 1972. Miller strongly urges household workers, especially immigrants, to know their rights. She ran a workshop for Project Open Doors that brought to light the similarities and shared concerns of homemakers and household workers. By breaking down the barriers of class and race, Miller sought to show participants that all of them needed to have access to the same benefits in old age. Similarly, information and education must be more readily available, proclaims Miller, to avoid the tragedy of elderly women in poverty. As past president of the National Congress of Neighborhood Women and also the first chair of NOW's Women of Color Task Force, Miller is no stranger to activism. One of her many concerns is the enforcement of Social Security laws for all employees, in and out of the home. Miller has recently been appointed Chair of NOW's national committee on Eliminating Racism. Tyra Brown
When Brown was fifteen, her mother and sole provider died of heart failure. This tragic loss put her in her grandmother's care and money became tight. Brown's mother, who had earned a middle-class income, had paid into Social Security for her retirement. However, she died before she became eligible to enjoy those benefits. The money she paid in, however, did not go to waste. Instead, her Social Security became her daughter's security. Brown and her grandmother received Social Security Survivor's Insurance checks each month, as well as her grandmother's retirement benefit checks. "We could count on that income every month, and without it, we wouldn't have made it," said Brown. These two incomes also enabled her to attend college. Brown graduated from Howard University in Washington, D.C. and now spends much of her time organizing to protect the future of Social Security. The Oklahoma native has spoken before the President as well as the Social Security Subcommittee of the House Committee on Ways and Means. She is aware that her story is one of a million similar stories of young people across the nation, and she struggles to secure and strengthen social security for generations to come.
If you have a story to tell about how Social Security affected your life or the life of someone close to you, please send NOW your story and let us know if we may share it with our members and other readers. |
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