NCOC Featured Discussion
![]() Supporters of the Act say the volunteer activities are important to build the morale, skills, and networks of job seekers. Additional volunteers can also supplement gaps in support felt by nonprofits. “When you're helping our citizens serve other people and serve charities, only good can come of it,” Senator Albers told CNN. Opponents say the unemployed can’t afford the time away from their job search, and the required transportation costs could add undue financial stress. "I do charity work," Joyce Wilson told CBS Atlanta. "I don't need anyone to tell me to do it and if they are going to make it mandatory, they need to give me a little something for my gas.” CBS Atlanta asked job seekers how they felt about the proposed bill. One job seeker who supported the measure, Arnie Isaacson, commented "If you are unemployed, 24 hours is nothing - you have 80 hours just sitting around. If it helps the state, if it helps the system, we all need to chip in. These are very difficult times." Another job seeker, Kezia Holston, seemed unsure, saying "community service is a good thing, but I don't know if it is the right thing at the time." Georgia is currently experiencing unemployment rates above the national average (10.2% statewide vs. 9.0% nationally in October). This is an ongoing trend for the state-- Georgia has surpassed the national unemployment rate for 51 consecutive months. Civic health research found that Georgia is one of the bottom-ranked locations when it comes to volunteering; it is ranked 41st out of 50 states with a rate of 23.9% (national average is 26.5%). NCoC research has suggested a connection between civic engagement rates and a community’s unemployment levels. A 2011 issue brief, “Civic Health and Unemployment: Can Engagement Strengthen the Economy?” found that areas with high civic health had experienced a smaller overall growth in unemployment. While these preliminary findings are encouraging, NCoC plans to explore the data and this connection further. We want to hear from you... Are bills such as this a win-win for the unemployed, nonprofits, and communities writ large? Or is it an unfair mandate on citizens already experiencing great personal challenges? If you like this kind of content, sign up for an NCoC.net account and we'll customize your homepage recommendations based on your interests..
By NCoC staff at 4:31 PM on Dec 15th, 2011
In an attempt to aggregate some of the feedback we're hearing on this legislation, the following represent some comments submitted on Facebook and Twitter:
-- "What a great idea!" -- "For God's sake, trying to find work is a freaking full time job as it is. No one is getting rich on unemployment checks." --"No way. It's not the fault of the worker that they are unemployed. I think it should be encouraged and there should be a vehicle to make volunteering easy and accessible, but not mandatory. It's like a double smack in the face to folks who have done nothing wrong in the first place." With a follow-up comment that said "Completely agree ... talk about class warfare." -- "We can't have a full-fledged public works program, so we make volunteering punitive? Why not have a public works program and let those job seekers continue working on finding private sector jobs?" -- "It would be nice if the "service" opportunities could be aligned with the career aspirations of the individuals." -- "This is not a good idea. Making people spend time away from the job hunt or doing something entrepreneurial and making them spend money to get to these "volunteer" opportunities is not going to help the unemployed. Who develops any marketable skill doing 24 hours of forced volunteering? What this is, is a great way for the state to renege on it's obligations to its citizens under the guise of helping them." -- "Every person that I know that is on unemployment is not looking for a job because (and I quote) "why would I look for a job when I get a check from the government every month for NOT working." I hate to say it, but unemployment benefits is one of the most taken advantage of government entitlements there is." --"It sounds perfectly logical to pair up people getting unemployment checks with vocation based volunteer work if they are unable to secure work after trying for 3 months." Interesting, important, and diverse opinions. Keep 'em coming. |
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