Until year-end 2002, our HAMAA Center was a no-frills facility of some 7,025 square feet, of which we presently utilize two-thirds of the available footage for office space and the remainder for meeting space. In December, 2002, we made our move to and commenced renovation of the C.P. Building in Near North (five blocks away) in order to meet space needs for a rapidly growing youth department. In both cases, the building is a simple, single floor construction requiring approximately $10.00 per square foot to maintain and operate.
All social service agencies would avail themselves of the opportunity to note their impoverishment given a willing ear. We are no different. But we have numbers on our side that speak volumes for our work.
We must consider that the MFIP program does not pay the secondary and tertiary wage earner to the agency who places other workers in addition to the principal wage earner. Most of the time the MFIP program maintains a high concern only on the primary wage earner of the family. We do not given the obvious and growing needs of our families to meet basic housing and food income requirements. Yet even as we meet these real needs, we are hampered by more recent City of Minneapolis and Federal programs directing funds for utilization only within limited boundary of servicing in the inner city. We feel compelled to invite legislators to visit and perform the same task for even one day without throwing up their hands in despair.
Culturally and customarily ethnic minority groups that possess limited English proficiency have always gone to the organizations where they will find their friends and relatives sharing those same attributes to help in the job assistance hunt. Naturally even with its hands tied by placement rules, HAMAA is at first flooded and now overwhelmed with clients from the twin cities. Our precious dollars are stretched ever further to meet all of the needs.
For our labors, HAMAA is paid a contract rate by the City of Minneapolis Employment and Training Program of $1,020 per Client, amounting to some $152,000 annually. The net savings, in terms of taxes not reused to continue the employment activity is $244,000 (the same figure we so often note to foundations from which we request annual operating assistance). Of course, if we talk only of “dollars matching dollars” then the government agencies have not come close to matching our activities yet. |