The activities of the WPA are indeed varied—more varied than this brief survey can show. Its workers ply houseboats on the Yazoo River in Mississippi in order to bring books to inaccessible, remote communities, serve hot lunches to school children, probe traffic disasters in a campaign to make the highways safe in Kentucky, and build new flax-processing plants in Oregon. A panorama view of the WPA adventure cannot reveal its full human background nor properly establish the continuity of effort, it can only suggest the breadth of the program and the imagination behind it. No partisan can pretend that all has been sweetness and light in the fulfilment of the projects. So sweeping an enterprise was doomed to suffer from bureaucracy and confusion. But the enemies of work relief do not protest primarily against flaws in execution. What they fear is the impact of a dynamic federal program which, without the stimulus of private profit, has nevertheless registered sober achievement.
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
April 9, 2015
80 years ago this week, FDR did something Denocrats are too cowardly to try again
Nation - The most ambitious, visionary and progressive New Deal agency, the
Works Progress Administration enlisted millions of unemployed Americans
on major public works projects and subsidized countless artists, writers
and other cultural figures. At just 22, a very young (and avowedly
Communist) Jimmy Wechsler argued in The Nation
(December 18, 1937) that the view that the WPA’s workers were mere
“boondogglers”—and that the program was only “nourishing parasites”—was
wrong. He carefully compiled statistics on how much the program had
already achieved: “29,000 miles of new roads, 1,099 school buildings,
1,440 recreational centers, and 3,350 miles of new trunk and lateral
sewers,” and so on. His rebuke to the WPA’s opponents taunts the real
boondogglers of our own age, willing to allow the infrastructure of this
country to crumble while millions are un- and especially
under-employed.
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