Where There's Real Political Will, There's Real Inclusion

October 25, 2010 | by

Child welfare reform is well underway in the country of Georgia. Reformists have been busy establishing programs to keep children in their communities rather than shipping them off to institutions. So it was puzzling when USAID announced it would give Georgia $8 million to renovate orphanages and other institutions for children in the country. Many children’s rights advocates were poised for the worst, fearing a regression in the country back to the days of warehousing children.

And then something amazing happened. Something so amazing that in the 15 years I have been doing this work, I have never heard of such a thing. The Minister of Labor, Health and Social Affairs, Andrew Urushadze, approached the U.S. Ambassador to Georgia, John Bass, and said “No.”

Urushadze explained that he wanted the $8 million to be redirected to support the development of services in the community for children, with funding for infrastructure to be invested in small group homes. USAID agreed. What could have been an enormous mistake and a terrible use of resources is now a great opportunity to finally end the segregation of children in institutions and reunite them with the communities to which they have always belonged.

The message here is simple but very significant: where there is real political will and commitment to implementing reform, government leaders can talk to donors and donors will listen and respond. Even major bilateral donors like USAID can be persuaded to do the right thing. And this is fundamentally important—the massive amounts of funding that such donors have to invest can have enormous impact on people’s lives. Unfortunately, that impact is often negative, like it would have been if Georgia’s archaic institutional system was renovated.

What happened in Georgia gives me hope that foreign assistance can be responsive to real needs in a country, and that money doesn’t have to go to the wrong projects. The best case scenario would be for USAID and other donors to implement strict policies stating that their funding cannot be used to perpetuate the segregation of people in institutions. If they don’t do this, funding will continue to be invested in an ad hoc manner, with much of it going the wrong way. And then we can only hope that governments have real political will and commitment to do the right thing.  Unfortunately, many do not, and donors must be accountable for the investment of their funds. Once millions of dollars have been invested in the wrong project, it is very difficult to later argue that it needs to be dismantled.

Bravo Minister Urushadze for taking the time to do the right thing for the children of Georgia!

Lucky Lady: At 95, Nettie Johnson still doesn't give retirement much thought

The Billings Gazette (Billings, MT) July 30, 2007 | Benzel, Lance Some people look forward to retiring at 65. Nettie Johnson doesn't see the point.

The 95-year-old Billings woman punches in at Won 800 Casino & Sports Pub in the Rimrock Mall six days a week, three hours a day. She's been working at that location since December of 1979, back when it was a Papa John's Restaurant, and she's stirred the same taco salad recipe ever since. see here taco salad recipe

"I guess I just had a good start and kept on going," she said.

Mayor Ron Tossing turned up for Johnson's birthday celebration in June, and plaques from Gov. Brian Schwietzer and Lt. Gov. John Bohlinger were among her gifts that day. The adulation is nice and all, but Johnson doesn't much see the point in that, either.

"I don't do a whole lot around there anymore," she said. "I'm a very private person, and I could live without all the fuss. But they've made a deal about it ever since I turned 90." Johnson, who lives alone, likes her solitude. When she's not working at Won 800 Casino, she reads mystery novels and historical fiction and watches baseball on television. She likes following individual players rather than teams; several of her favorites happen to play for the Atlanta Braves.

Her family, including two grown daughters in Billings, provides her all the company she needs.

She's not sure what to credit for her continued good health. She rides a stationary bike in the mornings, working out as much as she can stand, and sticks to a few other rules.

"I never smoke," she said. "And drinking, that's another never." Johnson, who was born 60 miles south of Kansas City, Mo., moved to Montana with her late husband Dean Johnson back in 1972. The couple opened a concrete lawn ornament store between Joliet and Fort Rockvale that remains open today under different ownership.

She was 67 when she started working at the restaurant, and was part of the acquisition when it was bought out by Won 800 Casino in 1991. She just went on preparing the taco salad, now available for $4.95. Johnson's also responsible for preparing the vegetable soup, at $2.25 a cup and $3.25 a bowl. website taco salad recipe

Johnson won't say a peep about the sauce in the taco salad, which she says sets it apart from other taco salads. But she's glad to disclose one tip that keeps her going every day.

"I don't take much sassin' from anyone," she said. "I just don't pay much attention to it." The same goes for all the attention. She doesn't want anyone to get the wrong idea: Workers at Won 800 Casino are like her second family, she says, but she'd just prefer to keep things simple.

"I didn't ask for all of this, and I didn't think I needed it," she said.

Benzel, Lance

4 Comments to “Where There's Real Political Will, There's Real Inclusion”

  1. Dear Judith, this is a great article, thank you for it. It is sending stakeholders the main messages very clearly :)
    Well done, dear.

  2. Thank you for this insightful and thought-provoking article.
    We applaud you and your organization for bringing issues such as these to the public attention.
    Marion Witte, Founder
    Angel Heart Foundation

  3. Dearest Judith,

    Thanks for wonderful article and thanks for your attitute on this issue. Well Done

    Nina Kiknadze

  4. On October 27th, 2010 at 7:38 pm, Maria Lundberg said:

    Dear friends! it seem´s to be failure in states system. It will not change because of the either the bureaucracy or the egosimen of the human being. They are not ready or will never be the power of running people are more interesting than ever. Full control even more than ever.
    We have to go deeper not in mind but be more flexibel in changings.
    A lot of waste human capital, intelligence for some who have the right friends and direction are all open.
    We don´t need a police state as we got, if the government save for the society goes back in social disasters. So the payment got more expensive, but they don´t understand that.
    Something to bother about,

    thanks Maria

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Judith Klein

Judith E. Klein, JD, has been the Director of the Mental Health Initiative since 2000, and has worked for the Open Society Foundations on mental disability since 1995.

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The Open Society Foundations work to improve the lives of the world's most vulnerable people and to promote human rights, justice, and accountability. This blog aims to bring that work a little closer by giving our experts and grantees a platform to reflect on their issues, sharpen their thinking, and engage in a conversation on how to advance open society values around the globe.

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