|
About
the Community Action Partnership
From the days of the earliest settlers, the spirit of helping others
has been a key element of American society. As communities
sprang
up and populations grew, the church became an important social
institution and helpmate to those less fortunate.
The Industrial Revolution in the mid-1800s witnessed the development of
the settlement house, one of the early examples of a physical facility,
other than a church, that served as a center of activity for community
problem solving.
In the early 1900s, schools began to offer formal training in the
principles and methods of social work, which led to the birth of a new
profession. The Great Depression of the 1930s overwhelmed the
nation's communities, leaving churches and voluntary social welfare
programs unable to cope with the magnitude of the existing social
problems.
The federal government stepped in to provide additional retirement
income through a new Social Security Program and to assist those
temporarily
unemployed with the Unempolyment Insurance System.
It
created new banking and labor laws to strengthen the economy.
A program to provide "temporary public assistance" to widows
and
children of men killed in industrial accidents also was created.
Social workers were hired to determine eligibility, advise
recipients about how to use the money, and help them obtain services
necessary to get them off welfare.
From the 1930s to the late 1950s, state and local governments had much
of the responsibility for administering the programs created during the
depression.
As the communications media expanded their scope across the United
States, the American public became more aware of the problems of the
aged, the effects of segregation, of poor education, of health problems
caused by malnutrition and hunger, of the need to educate people so
they might work, and of the growing difficulties of the low-income
population.
The American public soon believed that everyone could live "the good
life" and that society as a whole had a responsibility for helping
people overcome barriers that prevented them from sharing in the
benefits of American society.
The U. S. Supreme Court decision in 1954 in Brown v. Board of Education
declared that separate schools for blacks and whites in Topeka, Kansas,
did not provide an equal education; i.e., that "separate was not
equal." This landmark decision led to an expansion of federal
policymaking into what had previously been a local arena.
That decision served as a catalyst in the area of publicly
financed activity such as transportation and licensed public
accommodations, including lunch counters, restaurants, and hotels.
Citizens began to organize to guarantee their rights, and the
Civil Rights Movement expanded rapidly.
In 1961, President John F. Kennedy's "New Frontier" included support
for programs to prevent juvenile delinquency with the focal point, the
President's Council on Juvenile Delinquency, chaired by U.S. Attorney
General Robert Kennedy. In New York City, the President's
Council funded Mobilization for Youth (MFY) with the Ford Foundation
and the City of New York. MFY organized and coordinated
neighborhood councils composed of local officials, service providers,
and neighbors to develop plans to correct conditions which led to
juvenile delinquency. It also enlisted to aid of school board
and city council members to implement those plans.
It was called Community Action, and it looked like an effective and
inexpensive way to solve problems. The Ford Foundation was
funding other projects, including one in New Haven, CT, which recruited
people from all sectors of the community to come together to plan and
implement programs to help low-income people. MFY and New Haven
are often cited as the "models" for a community action agency.
Creation: 1964
|