[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 173 (Tuesday, December 1, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8200-S8201]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RECOGNIZING THOMAS G. COUSINS
Mr. ISAKSON. Mr. President, last Thursday was Thanksgiving in
America. Like every Member of the Senate and every American, I paused
to give thanks for the many blessings we have in the country, the
blessings I have as a father and grandfather, and the blessings we
enjoy from all those who serve in harm's way around the world who keep
us safe and in peace.
I also took a second to participate in some charitable activities for
those less fortunate and, in doing so, stopped to pause and give thanks
for those people who on the day of Thanksgiving were giving of their
time and their money to make the lives of those less fortunate better.
One of the people in my State I want to talk about who has done
exactly that for five decades is a man by the name of Thomas G.
Cousins, a real estate developer greatly renowned in Atlanta and,
really, around the world, and who amassed millions and millions of
dollars in the Cousins Foundation and invested that money in trying to
solve the problems of poverty, crime, unemployment, and health care.
Thomas G. Cousins founded the Cousins Foundation to see to it that
Atlanta, GA, and the State of Georgia were a better State. But he
became frustrated. He recognized that of the 72 million children in the
United States of America, 40 percent of them lived in poverty. He
became frustrated because he found that isolated neighborhoods of
concentrated poverty created unemployment, poor performance by
students, and greater crime rates in the city of Atlanta. Worst of all,
he found that the entrepreneurial gifts of charity trying to alleviate
these problems often got consumed but never made a fundamental change.
He thought it was time for his charitable money to become
entrepreneurial, not just a giveaway. So in the decade of 1990, Tom
Cousins decided to do something about making the Cousins Foundation
investment make a meaningful difference in the lives of Americans
around the country. He did exactly that.
He heard Dr. Todd Clear, a professor at Rutgers University, give a
speech in New York City, where he had done research on the prison
population of the State of New York and researched where they came from
to find, amazingly, that three out of every four prisoners in the New
York State prison system came out of eight neighborhoods in New York
City. Concentrated poverty created concentrated crime and concentrated
criminals. There was a never-ending cycle of crime, poverty, and poor
educational performance in those neighborhoods.
So Tom Cousins decided that, instead of giving his money away in
small, incremental bits to make a minor difference, he would become a
charitable entrepreneur. He would go to a neighborhood of concentrated
crime and poverty and try to make a meaningful difference. He found a
neighborhood called East Lake Meadows in the 1990s in Atlanta, GA. It
was the home of Bobby Jones and Charlie Yates, famous golfers of the
1920s, but had gone to seed, was dilapidated, and became a neighborhood
of crime. In fact, it had become known as the Little Vietnam of
Georgia. Police would not enter the area because of the crime rate.
Drew Elementary School was the worst performing elementary school in
the State of Georgia.
Tom Cousins came to the State board of education--and I know this
because I was the chairman--and asked us to go to the city of Atlanta
to get them to issue a charter for Drew Elementary School and a 99-year
lease to the Cousins Foundation. Tom Cousins went in and built a new
Drew Elementary School, hired Georgia State University to bring in a
professor to be the principal there and manage the education of those
children. Drew Elementary School went from being one of the worst
performing schools in the State of Georgia to one of the best.
But he didn't stop with the school. He improved the neighborhood. He
improved the facilities. He built a YMCA. He took a holistic approach
to East Lake Meadows and turned it into a shining city once again in
the State of Georgia. But he didn't do it just because he gave money.
He did it because he invested his money in the lives of these people.
I will give some idea of the changes made in East Lake Meadows and
Drew Elementary School. Drew Elementary went from 5 percent of its
fifth graders reading and performing in math levels where they should,
to where 90 percent of the fifth graders exceeded the math standards of
the State of Georgia. Where the median income of the families in East
Lake Meadows was $4,536 when Tom Cousins went in, 15 years later it was
$17,260. There was a 90-percent reduction in the crime rate, to the
point where it was 50 percent lower than the city's overall crime rate.
He transformed the neighborhood because he invested his money
entrepreneurially in trying to solve the problems and the poverty of
these people.
He went to Warren Buffett, a leading entrepreneur of America, and
formed a new organization called Purpose Built Communities, which is
based on three fundamental discoveries they made at East Lake Meadows.
No. 1, it can be done. How many times have people walked by declining
neighborhoods of poverty, crime, and failing schools, and said: There
is nothing we can do; we
[[Page S8201]]
cannot solve that problem. Tom Cousins proved that any problem, no
matter how great, is solvable if you are willing to dedicate yourself
to doing so.
Second, it takes a holistic approach--not just schools, not just
playgrounds, not just housing, not just jobs but everything. The
transformation of East Lake Meadows was a holistic approach for the
entire community. Lastly, mixed-income housing was important to bring
employed people back into the neighborhood. So they had mixed-use
housing all throughout East Lake Meadows.
The result was a purpose-built community that is now home to the PGA
FedEx Championship, a restored East Lake Golf Club, and a community
that is proud of itself and one of the shining stars of the city of
Atlanta.
Because a man with purpose, Thomas G. Cousins, invested his money,
public purpose-built communities are now all over the country being
started as renovation projects in Indianapolis, New Orleans, and in
cities around the United States of America.
So we should all pause to give thanks for those who have done so much
to make our States and our country better. I pause to thank Thomas G.
Cousins for the great investment he made in the city of Atlanta, the
children of our State, and the United States of America.
I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to speak for up to
20 minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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