海角大神

In Milwaukee, an effort to link inner-city workers with jobs outside the city

Pastor Jerome Smith Sr. runs the Joseph Project, which not only helps urban residents find work but also operates a van service to get them there. The initiative has become a conservative favorite.

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Michael McLoone/Special to 海角大神
鈥業f you鈥檙e going to change a man鈥檚 life, you鈥檙e going to need God to do that,鈥 says Pastor Jerome Smith Sr.

On a gray, drizzly Wednesday morning, a line forms early at the back of Greater Praise Church of God in Christ, a windowless storefront church on Milwaukee鈥檚 northwest side. Soon it stretches out the door, and the hiss of tires on wet pavement drifts in among the pews, where the pastor is greeting his visitors.

鈥淕ood morning, sir! How are you?鈥 he says. 鈥淲hat鈥檚 going on, girl?鈥 A short, stocky man in his mid-40s with a thick neck and close-cropped hair, he shifts easily to pastoral sternness. 鈥淔ellas!鈥 he exclaims. 鈥淭ake your hat off in the sanctuary. Please!鈥

They have come here on a weekday morning seeking not salvation, but employment. And Pastor Jerome Smith Sr., who would resist such a strict distinction, is eager to help them. For two years he has run a program to connect inner-city workers, mostly African-American men, with jobs outside the city. Called the Joseph Project after the Old Testament figure, it not only helps them find work but also runs a van service to get them there, a trip that for some takes more than an hour.

The Joseph Project is a small effort to address two big problems: high urban unemployment and a growing geographical divide between where the jobless live and where the jobs are. These problems afflict many cities but have grown acute in Milwaukee. A forthcoming study estimates that nearly half of all working-age black men in Milwaukee are jobless. Meanwhile, companies outside the city complain they can鈥檛 find enough workers.

鈥淢ilwaukee has far more people than it has great-paying jobs, and some of our outskirts have great-paying jobs but don鈥檛 have people,鈥 Pastor Smith says. 鈥淭his was a good match.鈥

More than 150 people have found jobs through the Joseph Project. They work at large manufacturing and food processing companies in places such as Sheboygan, New Berlin, and Horicon, Wis. They man assembly and packaging lines in plants that make sausages, car parts, and roofing materials. Most work the second and third shifts. From one van a year ago, the transportation fleet has grown to five.聽Vans leave the church as early as 3:45 a.m. and as late as 9:50 p.m., bound for destinations north and west of the city.

For many people, the trip is worth the trouble. The jobs are mostly entry-level, paying $12 to $18.50 an hour. Smith says that鈥檚 better than most work available in Milwaukee, which includes retail and fast-food jobs and short-term work through temp agencies. Plus, the jobs outside the city have benefits that many workers in Milwaukee can only dream of.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e getting 401(k)s,鈥 Smith says. 鈥淪ome are getting profit sharing. Health care, vision care, dental. Man, it鈥檚 unbelievable.鈥

Every Wednesday morning, Smith opens Greater Praise Church for an orientation. He selects the most promising applicants 鈥 he calls them 鈥渃andidates鈥 鈥 for a week of training in soft skills such as interviewing and financial planning.

This Wednesday鈥檚 orientation has attracted an unusually large number: Forty-one candidates line up to fill out applications, then sit for the hourlong orientation. They include Gerry Brumfield Jr., who has come with his father. 鈥淭his is my opportunity to start something new,鈥 Mr. Brumfield says. In his early 30s, married, and the father of two children, he has worked at a dollar store and for a security company, but is now unemployed. Like many in the Joseph Project, he has a criminal record.

鈥淎 lot of people give up or go back to their old way of life,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 can鈥檛. I can鈥檛 give up on myself.鈥

Smith says the biggest obstacle for candidates is drug testing. Many fail. Also, a lot of companies require a high school diploma or GED certificate, regardless of the work. A criminal record is no bar to employment, he says, but not every company is willing to overlook one.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a case-by-case basis,鈥 he says. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e honest about what鈥檚 happened in the past, and done what you had to do and learned from it, in most cases people can get around that.鈥

One company鈥檚 experience

Johnsonville, which makes sausages and other processed meat, was one of the first companies to join the Joseph Project. Headquartered in Sheboygan Falls, Wis., Johnsonville has struggled to find workers, says Heather Martin, a personnel executive. She says the social and spiritual aims of the Joseph Project appealed to the company.

鈥淥nce we understood the program and the power of the program, and the capability of the transportation, Johnsonville was all in,鈥 she says.

The company has hired 14 workers from the Joseph Project. Nine are still working for Johnsonville. Five were dismissed for reasons it would not disclose. Four have been at Johnsonville more than a year. 鈥淲e鈥檙e pleased with that,鈥 Ms. Martin says.

The Joseph Project is part of a much larger effort to help Milwaukeeans find work. Other programs offer longer training, hoping to get workers into better-paying jobs in the trades. Some specialize in 鈥渞eentry鈥 鈥 helping people coming out of prison. Construction projects that receive aid from the city are required to hire local workers.

But few programs transport workers to jobs beyond the city. One that does is the Milwaukee Careers Cooperative, which started such services in 1988 and uses 14-passenger vans to take about 300 workers to 10 work sites.

鈥淚t鈥檚 getting worse,鈥 says John Possell, the cooperative鈥檚 transportation manager, of the challenges facing inner-city workers. 鈥淭he big employers 鈥 the Amazons, the Ulines, and others 鈥 they need the large facilities, and they can鈥檛 locate those in the city. And that鈥檚 where you鈥檙e creating job numbers.鈥

Unlike other efforts, the Joseph Project is explicitly religious. Participants must promise to attend church 鈥 any church 鈥 at least twice a month. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e going to change a man鈥檚 life, you鈥檙e going to need God to do that,鈥 Smith says.

The pastor鈥檚 story

Smith knows from experience. He grew up in Chicago, in the Robert Taylor Homes, once the largest public housing project in the United States. When he was 12, his mother moved him and his sister to Milwaukee. He fathered a child, dropped out of high school, and went to work as a dishwasher operator at a pancake house.

He was better at work than school. He started a janitorial company, bought real estate, and became a mortgage broker.

In 1997, during a time of marital distress, he attempted suicide. He says the bullet from his .45 semiautomatic knocked him out and burned his chest, but otherwise left him unharmed.

He was in church the next Sunday. He became a deacon, then a minister. In 2014, he started his own church on a street聽marked by boarded-up buildings and vacant lots.

鈥淪ometimes he amazes me, considering the background we came from,鈥 says Sean Milan, a cousin who is close to him. 鈥淲e came from nothing. Our families were born with nothing. We just made do. He was able to get a job and become something.鈥

The Joseph Project鈥檚 roots

The Joseph Project has roots in politics as much as in religion. It grew out of meetings that Orlando Owens, then in charge of African-American outreach for Wisconsin鈥檚 Republican Party, held with ministers in the Milwaukee area. The problem of unemployment loomed large, and when Mr. Owens went to work for US Sen. Ron Johnson (R) of Wisconsin, he and other members of Senator Johnson鈥檚 staff helped connect Smith with businesses north of Milwaukee.

Johnson and his staff continue to work closely with the project. This connection has helped make the Joseph Project famous in Republican circles. Politicians and conservative writers have extolled it as an example of how local initiatives and not government can overcome poverty and joblessness.

For his part, Smith says he鈥檚 not a Republican or Democrat. 鈥淚鈥檓 an issue-driven individual,鈥 he says. He acknowledges that it would have been difficult to make the Joseph Project work without Johnson鈥檚 support: 鈥淗e kicks open the doors of companies.鈥

Marc Levine, a labor expert at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, says the Joseph Project is a 鈥渘oble effort鈥 to address the growing mismatch between where the workers are and where the work is. 鈥淲e should have more voluntary efforts like that,鈥 he says. But he notes that urban unemployment is a big problem with many causes, including segregation and the decline in manufacturing, and that transporting workers outside the city simply isn鈥檛 enough to solve the problem. 鈥淭he notion that you鈥檙e going to make a dent in unemployment in Milwaukee by matching people with jobs in Sheboygan is fanciful,鈥 he says.

The Wisconsin Employment Transportation Assistance Program is one source of funding for organizations that try to link up low-income workers with jobs. But the help has been small 鈥 the state has contributed less than $1 million annually in recent years 鈥 leaving the federal government and local sources to foot most of the bill.

鈥淧eople have talked about employment transportation being an important issue for at least 10 years,鈥 says Mr. Possell of the Milwaukee Careers Cooperative. 鈥淎nd yet nobody wants to put up the money to solve it.鈥

Smith admits that the reach of the Joseph Project is limited. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not trying to change the world overnight,鈥 he says. But he hopes to expand. Already he鈥檚 helped start a Joseph Project in Madison, Wis. And he鈥檚 working with people in other states.

The pastor is friendly but strict. On Wednesdays the church door locks at 10 a.m. 鈥淚f you can鈥檛 get to orientation on time, you won鈥檛 get to work on time,鈥 he says. The orientation is about more than imparting information; it鈥檚 Smith鈥檚 first chance to size up candidates. The mumbling young man in blue jeans, the wiseguy who doesn鈥檛 hear instructions 鈥 these candidates are unlikely to be invited back.

Dressing the part helps. 鈥淭urn around. Look at him, guys,鈥 Smith says of a young man in a jacket and tie and freshly shined shoes. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the way I roll when I鈥檓 looking for a job!鈥

鈥業t鈥檚 worth it鈥

Later that day, Michael Ewing, age 60, stands outside the church聽in a hooded jacket and knit cap, waiting for an afternoon ride to Nemak, an auto parts manufacturer in Sheboygan. Before the Joseph Project, he says, he worked through a temp agency at jobs offering low pay and uncertain hours. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 stable,鈥 he says.

Now he loads parts on a conveyor for what he describes as 鈥渁stronomical鈥 pay 鈥 about $17 an hour 鈥 and 鈥渢op-of-the-line benefits.鈥澛燞e says the compensation and steady work on Nemak鈥檚 second shift more than make up for the hourlong commute from Milwaukee, which comes on top of a 20-minute bus ride to get to the church each day.

鈥淚t鈥檚 worth it,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t definitely is.鈥

He says he鈥檚 surprised more people don鈥檛 know about the Joseph Project.

鈥淚鈥檇 recommend it to anyone looking for work.鈥

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