Faith-Based 2.0
by
Brendan
Kelly
On
March 9, the Advisory Council of the White House Office of Faith-Based and
Neighborhood Partnerships (OFANP) submitted its report to the president.
Long-awaited if little discussed, the report comprised 64 recommendations
with which the administration would do—who knew?
The Advisory Council
represents one of a number of innovations introduced by President Obama into
the office that George W. Bush created to oversee his “faith-based
initiative” (including a name change that substi-tuted “Neighborhood
Partnerships” for “Community Initiatives.”)
Put in charge was Joshua
DuBois, the twenty-something Pentecostal minister who had directed faith
outreach for Obama’s presidential campaign. Operating under the White House
Domestic Policy Council, DuBois lacked the heft of those who directed the
Bush office—especially John DiIulio, the University of Pennsylvania expert
on faith-based social service provision who served as the office’s first
director.
Indeed, it soon became
clear that the object of the Bush exercise—facilitating faith-based
organizations’ (FBOs) access to public money to provide social services—had
become less of a priority for what now amounted to a multi-purpose White
House department of religious affairs.
A new priority seemed to
be avoiding controversy. The major source of tension under Bush—whether FBOs
should be able to restrict hiring for government-funded jobs to members of
their own faiths—was made the responsibility of the Justice Department’s
Office of Legal Counsel, where it disappeared from sight.
Not that anyone was
paying much attention. Whereas, in the pre-9/11 opening act of the Bush
administration, the faith-based initiative appeared to be the central
domestic policy interest of a president known for his religious
sensibilities, Obama’s rebooted version paled in significance beside
economic recovery, health care, and financial reform legislation.
According to a survey
conducted by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, more than five times
as many newspaper stories were devoted to Bush’s faith-based 1.0 than to its
successor in the first six months of their respective administrations.
Perhaps because of
OFANP’s lower profile and more diffuse purposes, such attention as there was
gravitated toward the Advisory Council, a rainbow array of 25 religious
leaders and social service honchos comprising evangelical, mainline, and
Catholic Christian; Jewish, Muslim, and Hindu; plus the odd head of a
secular service agency, gay activist, and church-state expert. For a year
they labored remotely and face-to face, with a couple of dozen additional
experts, in task forces on Economic Recovery and Fighting Poverty;
Interreligious Dialogue and Cooperation; Fatherhood and Health Families;
Reforming the Faith-Based Office; Environment and Climate Change; and Global
Poverty, Health and Development.
On February 3, the
Washington Post’s Michelle Boorstein and William Wan canvassed
faith-based insiders and reported that as the Advisory Council “prepares to
end its first term and issue its report, some faith leaders across the
ideological spectrum—including some Obama allies—say the operation may be
more about window dressing than results.” The complaints had less to do with
the council per se than with a sense that the office wasn’t a sufficient
White House priority, and that Obama seemed less interested in consulting
with religious leaders than he had been during the campaign, or in framing
his policy agenda in religious terms.
DuBois himself suggested
that the object of the exercise was not so much to hear from the faith
community as to get it on board; he told the Post that the council’s
first job was “to suggest ways to build bridges between faith-based groups
and the government, not to advise the president on policy. Or as Stanley
Carlson-Thies, an architect of the Bush initiative who also served on one of
the OFANP task forces, characterized the Obama message: “We’re the
government, doing wonderful things, YOU can come join US.”
On February 9, Post
religion editor David Waters piled on, contributing a post to the Post’s
Under God blog that began, “Add government funding of faith-based programs
to the list of Obama administration deficiencies identified by disaffected
parties on the left and the right.”
But in due course, the
Post, which along with the Religion News Service had the market on
mainstream media coverage pretty much cornered, decided that there might be
something to the Advisory Council’s work after all. Early drafts of the
report were readily available, and on February 22, Boorstein gave the
“Reforming the Faith-based Office” task force a positive shout-out: “The
recommendations on church-state issues broadly call for much more clarity on
things like: the difference between direct and indirect aid and what are
prohibited uses of direct government assistance.”
Although most of these
re-commendations were unanimous (or “consensus”), the members of the
“Reforming” task force could not agree on whether FBOs should be permitted
to provide federally funded services in rooms that contain religious art,
scripture, messages, or symbols; or on whether houses of worship should be
required to form separate corporations to receive direct federal social
service funds. And they were precluded by the White House from even
considering the hiring issue.
Rolled out formally two
weeks later, the report was not short of policy advice, ranging from the
platitudinous and the unobjectionable to the consequential and the
controversial. “I hope that you will look at the report and the incredibly
long list of issues where we were able to find common ground,” chairwoman
Melissa Rogers told the online Christian Post March 10.
Rev. Donald “Bud”
Heckman, who served on the council’s Inter-religious Cooperation Task Force,
told Linda Bloom of the United Methodist News Service March 12 that there
were “several dozen recommendations that will mean changes in people’s lives
for the better. Some of them are big—like changing how we measure and treat
poverty—and some of them are small—specific techniques to bolster fatherhood
and healthy families.”
Among the recommendations
from the small end of the spectrum were:
• Encourage
collaboration between faith and community-based organizations, community
colleges, and the private sector.
• Incorporate
supportive services with education and training opportunities, and
ensure nonprofit accessibility and eligibility for Federal grant
funding.
• Provide guidance
to State and local governments on how to partner with faith-based and
nonprofit organizations to retrofit and green buildings.
• Help build social
cohesion by supporting efforts to ensure that Americans have
opportunities to understand America’s increasingly diverse religious
society.
• Increase
participation of federal agencies in the funding of fatherhood
programming, especially in areas of critical importance.
In a
March 10 blog post on Huffington Post, council member Rev. Peg
Chamberlain urged adoption of the council’s important poverty measurement
recommendation, writing that “current federal guidelines for measuring
poverty have not been updated since the 1960s and are woefully inadequate in
helping assess levels of poverty in America today…a new standard is needed.”
By then, however, the Commerce Department had stolen the council’s thunder,
announcing on March 2 that it was augmenting the federal guidelines with a
supplemental definition that included the cost of housing, utilities, child
care and medical treatment along with the old cost-of-food measure.
The
report did receive two cheers from Newsweek religion editor Lisa
Miller, who in a March 10 column admitted that she had revised her initially
skeptical view of the council’s work:
“Especially serious and provocative are the task force’s recommendations on
the subject of reforming the Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood
Partnerships itself. Though bureaucratic and unsexy, these recommendations
essentially demand that the administration clarify the muddy and
inconsistent ground rules for religious groups seeking federal funds for
charitable work. This has long been a legislative and administrative
quagmire, characterized by misunderstandings, favoritism, and legal
challenges. At this moment in time, when Boston’s Catholic Charities has
closed its historic adoption agency rather than take government money and so
be required to adopt children to homosexual married couples, such
clarification would seem necessary indeed.”
The
real question, Miller said, was which of the recommendations would actually
be adopted. “If the president delays,” she concluded, “he will have
squandered considerable goodwill.”
At
the March 9 roll-out, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius
promised that the report “won’t be just a document on a shelf…this document
will become an active action plan in the Department of Health and Human
Services.” In the months since, it has been possible to find some evidence
that it was doing more than gathering dust.
In
June, for example, the White House hosted meetings on partnerships to
support economic opportunity and security and on interfaith and community
service involving higher education, and there was a presidential
announcement of the “next steps” in his “agenda on fatherhood and personal
responsibility.”
Yet
as of this writing, the hoped-for executive order setting forth the
church-state ground rules addressed by the “Reforming” task force had yet to
be issued. And there was still no word from the Office of Legal Counsel on
how the contentious hiring issue would be resolved. |