[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 9 (Thursday, January 24, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S275-S276]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO JOE HUBBARD
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I want to take a moment to thank a man
that some in my hometown of East St. Louis call a saint and others call
``Reverend Joe'' although he is not a minister.
Joe Hubbard is the man you call in East St. Louis when you need help
and have nowhere else to turn. When Joe was born his parents wanted to
name him Raymond Lee. But the Irish priest who baptized him said he
should have a good Irish name and so declared him Joseph Patrick, after
St. Joseph the Worker. It turned out to be a fitting choice because Joe
Hubbard has spent nearly his entire life doing the Lord's work.
He started 50 years ago as a volunteer with the St. Vincent DePaul
Society in East St. Louis. Joe was 20 years old back then. He was
working as a bookkeeper for the East Side Levee and Sanitary District
to help support his widowed mother, but his real joy was helping the
poor. Every minute that Joe wasn't working, he was volunteering with
St. Vincent DePaul.
After a while Joe quit his job to volunteer full-time to help the
people he calls ``God's broken people,'' the poor, the homeless and the
friendless of East St. Louis. He did this for a decade.
In 1972, about a dozen priests, nuns and lay leaders in the Roman
Catholic Diocese of Belleville drafted a petition that was later signed
by every priest then serving East St. Louis. The petition asked the
bishop of the diocese to create a small salary for Joe so that he could
continue his good works under the auspices of the Catholic Church. Thus
was born in 1973 a new social service agency, Catholic Urban Programs
or CUP, as it is sometimes called--with Joe Hubbard as coordinator and
sole employee.
CUP's purpose is to perform the works of mercy that Jesus asked of
his followers when he told them, ``For I was hungry and you gave me
food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink, a stranger and you welcomed
me, naked and you clothed me, ill and you cared for me, in prison and
you visited me.''
CUP helps ``the in-between people.'' It fills needs that other
organizations, public and private, don't address. In the beginning
CUP's services included emergency help, prison ministries and advocacy
and guardianships for people who could not manage their own affairs.
Over the decades its programs have grown to include shelters for
homeless women, children and families in East St. Louis, a food pantry
and a neighborhood law office to provide poor people with legal
assistance. Another program, the Griffin Center, offers tutoring and
afterschool programs for more than 450 children living in four housing
projects in East St. Louis.
On any given day, Joe might give someone money for bus tickets, visit
a lonely person in a nursing home, tell stories to children at a day
care center, find housing for a family that has been evicted, serve
meals at a soup kitchen, attend a funeral and sit up all night at the
bedside of someone who is dying and alone.
Above all, what CUP and Joe Hubbard offer is unconditional love. Joe
does not hesitate to do work that others might consider too menial or
dirty. He will mop up after a sick alcoholic. Twenty years ago, Joe and
his right-hand man at CUP, Gerry Hasenstab, found a man living in his
car. He was in his 50s and dying. He had open sores and maggots in his
arms. His only wish was not to die dirty, in a car. Joe and Gerry got
him admitted to a hospital to spend his last hours in a clean bed.
Support for the programs comes from churches and individuals,
including many who have been helped by CUP agencies in the past. One
woman gave part of her first paycheck to CUP after she got a job. A
widow paid CUP back for the money it gave her to help with her
husband's funeral.
After the Mississippi River overflowed its banks in 1993, CUP gave a
farmer $400 to buy seed and school supplies. That farmer has sent CUP
$100 every quarter--$400 a year every year for the last 20 years.
Joe's compassion for others is partly rooted in his own family's
misfortune.
Joe is the youngest of four children of Edward and Olga Hubbard. His
dad was a steamfitter. When Joe was in grade school his father was
badly injured on the job. He lived with constant wrenching pain for 8
years before dying of cancer.
The loss of his father's income hit Joe's family hard. Men and women
from the St. Vincent de Paul Society brought food and coal to help the
Hubbards survive. Joe said those volunteers inspired him.
He said, ``I remember the dedication they showed, the way they
reached out and helped others in need through their love of Christ. And
I appreciated that they did it in a quiet manner that enabled people to
keep their dignity. Their love of God and love of people inspired me to
want to do God's work, too.'' And that is what Joe Hubbard has done his
entire life.
In early November, after 40 years of selfless service, Joe Hubbard
announced that he was stepping down as coordinator of CUP. At 70, Joe
is starting to get a little tired. He's got diabetes, high blood
pressure and bad feet, and the arthritis that has pained him his whole
life is getting worse.
On Jan. 1, Gerry Hasenstab, Joe's right hand man at CUP for the last
36 years ago, took over as the agency's new coordinator. But don't
think for a minute that Joe Hubbard is finished helping people. Joe
also still maintains the Belleville Diocese's two cemeteries. And he
still volunteers regularly for the St. Vincent DePaul Society and has a
small office in their building, which is right next door to CUP.
When CUP started, they got about two dozen calls a day for help. Now
they get about 60 calls a day. Last year, CUP programs helped more than
24,000 people in East St. Louis and St. Clair County.
In a letter announcing his decision to step down, Joe wrote: ``As I
sit here and realize how the times have changed over the past 40 years
of Catholic Urban Programs' existence, I am both amazed and
discouraged. Technology has made our lives so much easier and efficient
in so many ways. High-efficiency furnaces lower our utility bills. But
if a family can't pay for the gas or electric, they are useless.''
Technological advances are great for some, Joe added. But they've
made life even harder for the needy because nonskilled jobs they used
to count on to make a living have nearly disappeared.
A couple years ago, Joe noticed violets blooming on a hill near a
burned-out house. He thought it was a sign of hope.
He said: ``You have to be a believer to be a survivor.''
Joe's belief is that God is in every person and that it is not just a
responsibility but a privilege to help those he calls ``God's broken
people.'' That belief has defined his life and it has made
[[Page S276]]
life kinder and better for countless others in East St. Louis and St.
Clair County.
Besides helping people, Joe's other great joy in life is eating good
meals with good friends in small, locally owned restaurants. On
Saturday, about 400 of Joe's friends will gather at one of Joe's
favorites, Fischer's Restaurant in Belleville, to celebrate his
retirement as head of CUP. More than that, they will celebrate Joe's
unconditional love and unbreakable faith. I want to add my thanks to
theirs.
In closing, I would like to read a short editorial about Joe that ran
in this past Sunday's Belleville News-Democrat.
Martin Luther King Jr. would have considered Joe Hubbard a
kindred spirit. King and Hubbard both spent their careers
championing the cause of social justice. King focused on the
spirit while Hubbard helped provide for people's physical
needs in East St. Louis and throughout the metro-east.
Hubbard is retiring after leading Catholic Urban Programs for
40 years.
King considered service to others to be a measure of
greatness: ``You don't have to have a college degree to
serve. . . . You only need a heart full of grace. A soul
generated by love.''
Hubbard has the sort of heart and soul that King
envisioned. Even in retirement, we have no doubt that he will
continue his life of service to the poor of our area.
Thank you to Hubbard. May the rest of us learn from his
example.
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