Reauthorization of The Community Services Block Grant Program
Reauthorization of The Community Services Block Grant Program
Reauthorization of The Community Services Block Grant Program
108299
HEARING
BEFORE THE
ON
Printed for the use of the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions
(
U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
88414 PDF WASHINGTON : 2004
(II)
C O N T E N T S
STATEMENTS
ADDITIONAL MATERIAL
Statements, articles, publications, letters, etc.:
Wade F. Horn .................................................................................................... 30
David A. Bradley .............................................................................................. 32
Phillip McKain .................................................................................................. 71
Michael Saucier ................................................................................................ 74
Patsy C. Lewis .................................................................................................. 75
National Association for State Community Services Programs .................... 77
Letter to Senator Dodd, dated June 30, 2003, from Patricia A. Wilson-
Coker, Commissioner, Connecticut Department of Social Services .......... 81
(III)
REAUTHORIZATION OF THE COMMUNITY
SERVICES BLOCK GRANT PROGRAM
U.S. SENATE,
SUBCOMMITTEE ON CHILDREN AND FAMILIES,
OF THE COMMITTEE ON HEALTH, EDUCATION, LABOR, AND
PENSIONS,
Washington, DC.
The committee met, pursuant to notice, at 3:20 p.m., in room
SD430, Dirksen Senate Office Building, Senator Alexander (chair-
man of the subcommittee) presiding.
Present: Senators Alexander, Dodd, and Jeffords.
OPENING STATEMENT OF SENATOR ALEXANDER
Senator ALEXANDER. The hearing will come to order.
First let me apologize to the witnesses and those who are in the
audience for the delay. I was presiding, and we had a vote, both
of those things, so it took me a few minutes to get here to get start-
ed. But we are looking forward to todays hearing, and I thank you
very much for coming.
I want to welcome everyone. This is, as most of you know, the
reauthorization of the Community Services Block Grant Program.
That program is important. It helps low-income individuals and
their families achieve dignity and self-sufficiency, and it accom-
plishes this by block grants to States, which then distribute the
funds to local groups called community action agencies. These
agencies in turn use the funds in many different ways to provide
a number of social services to help low-income individuals and
their families achieve a better quality of lifesuch things as find-
ing a good job, getting an adequate education or a decent place to
live, finding ways to improve household income.
In Tennessee last yearthe State I know the most aboutthe
CSBG program served over 100,000 individuals and more than
60,000 families, and of those, 40 percent were elderly or disabled
families living on a fixed income, and 90 percent were living below
the Federal poverty level.
The Federal poverty level for an individual is about $9,000; for
a family of two, about $12,000; for a family of three, about $15,000.
So those are the Americans that we are talking about.
Of those who are involved in the CSBG program, about three-
quarters who sought housing assistance last year moved from a
level of substandard housing to stable housing, and more individ-
uals and more than 500 families moved away from homelessness.
(1)
2
About four out of 10 people who became involved with these pro-
grams and who were seeking better jobs obtained better jobs, and
two-thirds of those obtained health care benefits that came along
with those jobs.
We are interested today in learning not just about the success of
the program, of which there are many, but about ways to improve
the program. I am especially interested in hearing more from Mr.
Horn and others about ways we can help individuals find new and
better jobs. We live in a prosperous time on the one hand and a
difficult time on the other. There are a great deal of jobs being cre-
ated, and there are a great many jobs being lost.
I would be interested, for example, to hear how the CSBG pro-
gram affects those who might have been laid off or lost a job.
We have two panels of witnesses. The first panel is Dr. Wade
Horn, Assistant Secretary for Children and Families within the De-
partment of Health and Human Services. His administration with-
in HHS is responsible for administering this program. He has a
wide range of responsibilities and a well-known background of re-
form and helping children and families. We are looking forward to
his testimony.
On our second panel, whom I will introduce now, and we will ask
you to come up after Dr. Horn, the first witness is David Bradley,
executive director of the National Community Action Foundation,
who has been involved with this program for a long, long time.
Our next three witnesses are individuals who have actually used
the services of CSBG and can tell us a little bit about the program
on a first-hand basisNathaniel Best, from Knoxville, TN; Michael
Saucier, from Berlin, NH; and Winifred Octave, from Worcester,
MA.
Our final witness is Mr. Phillip McKain, who is president and
CEO of CTE, Inc., which provides CSBG services in the State of
Connecticut.
I want to thank everyone again for coming. This is an interesting
and diverse group of witnesses who will give us a first-hand per-
spective. Several of you have statements which you have already
prepared; we will take those for the record and ask you to summa-
rize your statements.
First, Dr. Horn, we thank you for coming, and we look forward
to your taking whatever time you need to talk with us about the
program, its successes, and ways that you think it might be im-
proved as we seek to reauthorize it.
Before we begin I have statements from Senators Kennedy and
Harkin.
[The prepared statements of Senators Kennedy and Harkin fol-
low:]
PREPARED STATEMENT OF SENATOR KENNEDY
Im pleased that Ms. Winifred Octave, a graduate of the Worces-
ter Community Action Council is testifying before the subcommit-
tee today. The Council has achieved remarkable successes in its
programs, and Ms. Octave is one of these success stories.
There are 1,000 community action agencies across the country.
They serve 34 million people, and almost every county has one. The
majority of participants are extremely poor, living at or below 75
3
everything, and nobody had even stopped to think about the fact
that we were mixing up in effect the church and the State in our
little social services activity there.
Then, someone wrote me a letter and said that the First Amend-
ment, the Separation of Church and Powers provision, was in-
tended to apply to the Federal Government, that looking back to
Europe where there was a central government and a central
church, that our Founders were trying to stay away from that, that
our Scotch-Irish pioneers got tired of paying taxes to support the
Bishop of the Church of England, and they didnt want a central
church.
So my practical experience is that it is fairly easy to work out
relationships with faith-based organizations if you are working
within a community. Whenever you elevate the whole discussion to
Washington and begin to have a Federal application of that, every-
one begins to get a little nervous.
I wondered how you thought this mightyour idea here about
involving faith-based agenciesmight work.
Mr. HORN. As a point of clarification, first, under the CSBG, com-
munity action agencies already can be faith-based organizations. In
fact, as you know, there is a charitable choice provision in the
CSBG Act.
What we are suggesting is under the discretionary program that
is a direct Federal to local grantee program, the Community Eco-
nomic Development Program, that currently, the only eligible appli-
cations are community economic development corporations, and
they are not the only ones, however, that have a history of working
in local communities on poverty reduction and economic develop-
ment. There are other community-based organizations and faith-
based organizations that also have a history of doing that.
All that we are suggesting is that when it comes to competing
these grants that we open up the eligible pool so that we get the
best agencies who have the best record in helping local commu-
nities in terms of economic development. And this is not a knock
against community economic development corporations; it is simply
trying to expand the pool.
Clearly, there are church and State issues when you are talking
about providing direct funding from the Federal Government to a
local faith-based organization. Certainly a faith-based organization
who was successful in getting these moneys could not, for example,
discriminate on the basis of somebodys personal faith perspective
in delivery of services. A faith-based organization could not use the
money to proselytize.
But as you know, the President feels very strongly that we ought
to level the playing field wherever it is appropriate to ensure that
faith-based organizations are not necessarily shut out from com-
petition in becoming partners with the government in delivering
services, and the question ought to be are they effective, not are
you faith-based or not faith-based.
But at the same time, it is clear that there are limitations on
those faith-based organizations who apply, and we take as our re-
sponsibility as overseers of these programs that if a faith-based or-
ganization is successful in applying for Federal funds that we make
sure they understand that there is a deal here to be had, that in
12
especially today; and we have Mr. McKain from the State of Con-
necticut, who provides those services. So we have testimony al-
ready, but if you might summarize your testimony or tell your sto-
ries, we will start with Mr. Bradley and go to Mr. McKain next,
and then we look forward to hearing from the three of you.
Mr. Bradley, welcome.
STATEMENTS OF DAVID A. BRADLEY, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR,
NATIONAL COMMUNITY ACTION FOUNDATION; PHILLIP
McKAIN, PRESIDENT AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, CTE,
INCORPORATED, AND PRESIDENT, CONNECTICUT ASSOCIA-
TION FOR COMMUNITY ACTION; NATHANIEL BEST, KNOX-
VILLE, TN; WINIFRED OCTAVE, WORCESTER, MA; AND MI-
CHAEL SAUCIER, BERLIN, NH
Mr. BRADLEY. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank you Senator
Dodd. I have testimony that I would like to just submit for the
record and give some brief oral comments.
I must express my gratitude for not only the invitation to appear
here today but even more for this subcommittees history of concern
and support of community action, the Community Services Block
Grant, and most important, the low-income communities it serves.
Since its beginning in 1964 through the creation of the Commu-
nity Services Block Grant in 1981 and up to today, every reauthor-
ization that this committee has worked on has resulted in the
strengthening, improvement, and further focusing of the Commu-
nity Action Program.
We know that it can be further improved, and as always, we
have some proposals that we are presenting to you in anticipation
of a strong bipartisan reauthorization effort.
There is much that we agree with the administration, but I must
say that as an important partner in fighting poverty, there are a
couple of things that overall are disappointing about the adminis-
trations views on the Community Services Block Grant.
First, in the budget submission, there was discussion that com-
munity action agencies are a static group of agencies. The word
static can mean a couple of thingsone, community action agen-
cies are not updating their programs to address the poverty condi-
tions of today. Our witnesses and the panelists here today will tell
a different story about how community action agencies and the
Community Services Block Grant makes a real difference in todays
lives.
For the record, I have prepared innovative approaches going on
in every State, for every member of the subcommitteeexamples
of the laboratory innovation of meeting todays needs. I would like
to also submit that for the record.
The other meaning of static is the same old organizations get-
ting CSBG funds. This complaint could reflect an honest mistake
about the role of Congress and how they have assigned community
action agencies their unique responsibilities in the low-income com-
munity.
In 1964, the Nation decided to establish permanent local institu-
tions run by boards that represent a partnership with the low-in-
come community, business, and private nonprofits including reli-
gious communities and local government. Board structure was en-
17
which low-income persons can come through so they can then take
a look at the array of services that their family needs. If they need
DHHS eligibility for services, we get them there; if they need an-
other sort of service, we get them there. But we keep a case man-
agement system going where we can in fact work with that family
all the way through to self-sufficiency.
That is what we are doing with CSBG funds, and it could not
have happened without CSBG. So when you read the commis-
sioners letter, and you see the examples, you will see what the
value of community services is all about, and what Dave Bradley
is talking about when he talks about what we are all about.
We are about change at the State level and bringing about inno-
vation, but also more important, I want to talk to you about how
we go about community change at the local level through CSBG.
I can talk about my situation in Stamford. The Senator is correct.
I am part of almost every board and commission in Stamfordbut
that is for a reason. The reason is because that is what the mission
of the Community Services Block Grant isto mobilize private and
public resources to address the basic causes of poverty, and we do
that.
So the local community, for example, recently turned to us be-
cause Stamford, which is a highly affluent area, had a very serious
issue related to affordable housing. They asked the community ac-
tion agencies to bring together the business community, faith-based
community, public officials, the nonprofit housing developers, the
private developers, to bring about a situation where we can take
a look at how do we create affordable housing for the working
poorthe nurses aides, the teachers aides, even some of the local
policemen, who have not been able to live in the community.
What we did through that collaborative that we usedand CSBG
dollars were involvedwe were at the place where they met, we
provided the food, the minutes of the meetings, and we kept every-
body on task because everyone comes at things a different way. But
that is the beauty of the Community Services Block Grant is bring-
ing the community together to create an environment so that the
needs of low-income people are not just met on the direct service
level, but the environment is created in the community so that
there is sensitivity to those needs. And as a result of that, Stam-
ford has a zoning law. The mayor created a task force, and we now
have recommendations for affordable housing; we have an
inclusionary zoning law that in fact requires that at least 12 per-
cent of the housing that is developed in Stamford, whether it is
through a private developer or a nonprofit developer, has an afford-
ability requirement along all the areas of income that exist, be-
cause as the Senator knows, in Stamford, CT, if you just do it by
the standard HUD definition, a lot of people will still be left out.
So we were able to be creative and create an income tier that in
fact creates affordable housing as a result.
This has not hurt the housing market. The developers are devel-
oping housing. We have created housing for, as I said, nurses and
nurses aides and teachers aides. In fact, we have a goal of creating
300 units a year, and we are working on that. But that would not
have happened, Senators, without a CSBG-funded entity having
the trust of that community to bring this issue together.
21
She said, Well, if you are not going to do it for yourself first,
then you are really just wasting your time. When she said that to
me, a light just went off on me, and I said, Oh, my God, this is
what it is about. I have to want it. So it just sparked something
in me.
So I went through the class, and I did get my G.E.D., and they
were very kind to me during that time. They made me feel like I
was family. It was not just an organization. They made me feel like
family. And I wanted to be a part of it even after I got my G.E.D.
So once I got that, it sparked up so much energy in me until I
went out and started doing other things in music, and I was able
to do that movie. Since that time, I was put in two Halls of Fame,
I was able to sing at the Grand Ole Oprythings that I have al-
ways wanted to do as a child I was able to accomplish because of
what I had gotten from them in that program. They pushed me in
an area that I did not think I could go any more.
After that, I wanted to be a part of it, so my wife and I started
a scholarship fund in Nashville at Metropolitan Action, and it is
designed for children who get their G.E.D., but they do not have
enough money to get their books for school. So my wife and I want-
ed to do a scholarship fund for that purposes, and every year at
the graduation, I go to Nashville and provide services as far as a
system for the graduations. I just want to be a part of it.
I was listening to what was being said today about the faith-
based organizations, and I am a pastor, and I always look to see
how the church can do more for the community. But when I heard
that, I got to thinking about the fact that we have a lot of pastors
and churches that will put people in positions for these types of
things because they know themI know you, and you are my
friend, so I will put you therebut they do not really have the
knowledge to be in those positions. That is why I feel really close
to Metro Action, because they take time. And then, the Bible says
Study to show thyself approve unto God; a workman needeth not
be ashamed, but rightly dividing the word of truth.
I believe that these people who brought me through the program
really care about what they are doing, and they study to make sure
that you know what you are doing when you leave there.
So I just want to say that whatever I can do to assist them, I
want to be in there all the way, and I am very honored to be here
to speak on their behalf.
Senator ALEXANDER. Thank you, Pastor Best. That was 2nd Tim-
othy 2:15, right?
Mr. BEST. That is right. Second Timothy 2:15, that is right.
Senator DODD. I am not going to challenge that, I want you to
know. If we had a little more time, we would have you sing for us
right here in the committee room.
Senator ALEXANDER. I want you to know that we were working
yesterday in the Senateand I am sure that Senator Dodd is all
for thiswe were working yesterday in the Senate on an anti-pi-
racy bill so that when your records or your movies play, you get
paid for itand the scholarship fund might grow more.
Mr. BEST. Oh, great. Thank you.
Senator DODD. I am all for it. In fact, I have a billI have an
idea on that as well that I want to share with you.
23
I put my things in storage and did not have anywhere to stay. But
I stayed on the board and kept learning everything that I could
learn about it.
Then, the CDC developed a new home, and they had a lottery,
so I applied for the new home. I did not have any money at that
time, but I was saving with the budgeting I learned at the school;
I started putting a little something on the side. The Worcester
Community Action staff helped me, and when I applied, I was se-
lected to get the house.
Now I live in a two-family house. I own my own house with my
three kids, and I am very happy because of Worcester Community
Action Council.
Now I am a mouthpiece for Worcester Community Action Coun-
cil. I go around telling people; people come to me asking me about
the different services, because Worcester Community Action Coun-
cil has prevented me and my children from being dependent on the
Statethat is one of the things. Right now, I am very happy, and
when I look back, I think that it was like a husband that I did not
have, because you need another hand, but they came right at the
same time to help me, and I am very proud for all of those things.
Senator DODD. That is a wonderful description.
Senator ALEXANDER. Not all husbands are that helpful.
Senator DODD. I know, yes. [Laughter.] It is going to become a
popular husband when you compare it to some of those out there.
Ms. OCTAVE. They have helped me so much and changed my life.
At the board, since I live in the neighborhood and I know what the
community and the neighborhood problems are, when I sit at the
board meetings, I share and I give little solutions on how to maybe
correct some of the problems in the community.
One of the things that I am working on now isI live in the Bel-
mont Street area, and there is nothing for the young kids in my
neighborhood to do, so they hang out on the streetsso we have
invited agencies and all the neighbors in the community to come
in and talk so we can find out some ways to have a youth center
for the youth in the program. I am working very hard to get that
in the area.
I think that as a WCAC board member, I can help others like
I have helped myself very much. Because of the services I received,
I am self-sufficient, and I am very proud of WCAC. Yesterday, my
daughter said, Mommy, do you know what? I am so proud of you
that you are going to see Senator Kennedy and all those big Sen-
ators. Maybe if you did not get laid off and WCAC was not around,
there is no way you would be going there. She is so happy for that,
and she said, I want to become a member of the board of WCAC.
She is only 13, but she sees how it has helped me and changed my
life, so she wants to be a member.
Another thing I am doing nowat Worcester Community Con-
nections, we have different little committees, and one of the com-
mittees deals with DSS. I found out that they needed foster par-
ents in the Worcester area, so I signed up, I completed an 8-week
class with DSS, and I am waiting for my first foster child.
I am speaking for the board of directors at WCAC, and I want
to thank you for the support of the Community Services Block
25
Grant and for making it possible for millions of families like myself
to have a better life. And once again, thank you.
Senator ALEXANDER. Thank you.
Senator DODD. Thank you.
Senator ALEXANDER. Thank you very much for coming.
Mr. Saucier, Senator Judd Gregg is the chairman of our full com-
mittee, and he is from New Hampshire.
Senator DODD. You must have spent some time up there.
Senator ALEXANDER. I did spend a little time. [Laughter.] I even
know that Mr. Saucier is from Berlin; is that right?
Mr. SAUCIER. Yes, and that is the correct pronunciation.
Senator ALEXANDER. And not many people know how to say Ber-
lin.
We welcome you. Please introduce yourself. We look forward to
hearing what you have to say.
Mr. SAUCIER. Thank you, Mr. Chairman and Senator. I just want
to thank you for the honor of being here. I keep getting the feeling
that any time now, I will wake up, and I will be back in my cubicle
at workit is like a dream to me to be here.
I feel very strongly about giving my testimony about what impact
Community Action had in my community and in my life personally.
I am from northern New Hampshire, from a small community,
and the community has always been largely dependent on one in-
dustry. Until a couple of years ago, everything was going fine. Ev-
erybody goes about their daily lives, and I was able to have employ-
ment in the local paper mill, bring up a family; everything was nor-
mal, I had two kids in collegeand all of a sudden, the bottom just
dropped right out from under us.
The bill that I was working for filed for bankruptcy, and we were
almost 900 people who were out of work all of a sudden. It hap-
pened very quicklylike 1 week you are at work, life is normal,
and a couple of weeks later, you are all standing in line at the em-
ployment department, wondering what do we do next, what is
going to happen.
One day while I was at the employment department getting some
counseling as to how to prepare my resume and look for work, I
had an encounter with a person who worked for Community Ac-
tion. There were so many people there, I had to make an appoint-
ment to meet with him. I was not quite sure what Community Ac-
tion programs actually did, because I was never unemployed and
never had anything to do with Community Action programs.
I found out that no matter who you are, things can happen very
quickly, and sometimes you find yourself being in need of some di-
rection.
When I met with this Community Action employee, he started
asking me what plans I had for my life, what I had planned for
my future, what direction I wanted to take, and what I needed, my
immediate needs and my future needs, because he was telling me
that they had programs in place to help people who were in need.
It is hard to explain what it is like to all of a sudden be in a
place where you need some public assistance, but it could happen
to anyone. I am here to testify to that.
Community Action helped me to figure out what I want to do
with my future, that I still did have a future, and that I was not
26
ADDITIONAL MATERIAL
PREPARED STATEMENT OF WADE F. HORN
Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee, I appreciate the opportunity to
testify before you today on the Presidents plan to reauthorize the Community Serv-
ices Block Grant (CSBG) Act programs. Community Services programs help individ-
uals and families attain and retain self-sufficiency. They provide flexibility to meet
the unique needs of individual communities and work in concert with other pro-
grams and multiple funding streams emphasizing Federal, State, and local public
and private partnerships.
The Administration strongly supports the concept of community-based solutions
to issues related to individuals in poverty and reauthorization of the CSBG Act. Our
reauthorization proposal includes important recommendations the Administration
believes will significantly improve the delivery of service under the Community
Services authority within the existing community-based framework.
Before I discuss the details of our reauthorization proposal, I would like to briefly
describe the programs currently funded under the Community Services Block Grant
Act.
BACKGROUND
CSBG is designed to alleviate poverty by funding initiatives that fight its causes,
especially unemployment, inadequate housing, and lack of education opportunity.
Services are administered in localities across the country primarily by entities called
Community Action Agencies or CAAs, in coordination with other neighborhood-
based entities. A network of 1,100 Community Action Agencies delivers a broad
array of programs and services tailored to low-income Americans in each commu-
nity.
The CSBG program is uniquely designed to foster integrated problem solving. To
focus and concentrate resources on those areas where action is most critical, CAAs
conduct community needs assessments. The assessments direct how local agencies
mobilize and allocate resources to plan, develop and integrate programs to meet
community needs.
Along with the block grant, the CSBG Act provides the Secretary with discre-
tionary authority to use up to nine percent of the Community Services Block Grant
funds to support employment or community development activities. We have used
this authority to support funding for the Urban and Rural Community Economic
Development program (URCED) and the Rural Community Facilities program
(RCF).
The URCED funds competitive grants to locally-initiated, private, non-profit com-
munity organizations called Community Development Corporations, or CDCs, for
projects that create employment, training and business opportunities for low-income
residents. This program allows for a multifaceted approach to addressing poverty in
communities through projects that support individual and commercial development
in economically distressed communities.
The Rural Community Facilities program provides grant assistance to State and
local government agencies, and private, non-profit entities to help low-income com-
munities develop affordable, safe water, and waste water treatment facilities. Activi-
ties supported by this grant facilitate the development and management of water
and utility facilities in rural areas.
The CSBG Act provides additional funding for two other discretionary programs
the Community Food and Nutrition Program (CFN) and the National Youth Sports
Program (NYSP). The Community Food and Nutrition Program provides funding to
States, tribes and territories, and public and private non-profit agencies to admin-
ister community-based, statewide, and national programs that identify, coordinate
and disseminate food and nutrition resources. The National Youth Sports Program
provides physical and educational development for low-income youth in communities
across the nation. Funding under this authority has been awarded to the National
Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) since the programs inception in 1968. NCAA
operates this grant through its collegiate network to serve approximately 80,000
youth, ages 10 through 16, at 200 colleges in 46 States.
In fiscal year 2003, $704.2 million was appropriated for Community Services Act
Programs. The preponderance of these funds ($645.8 million) were provided for the
block grant; $27 million for Community Economic Development; $7.2 million for
Rural Community Facilities, $16.9 million for National Youth Sports; and, $7.3 mil-
lion for Community Food and Nutrition.
I would like to turn to our proposal for addressing reauthorization of the pro-
grams supported by these funds.
31
REAUTHORIZATION
The main office of the Worcester Community Action Council is located in down-
town Worcester, MA, across from the Worcester City Hall. The office area is a cen-
tral location for several of our major programs including Fuel Assistance, Weather-
ization, Youth Education (GED, high school student support, Americorps/Cityworks,
the Computer Technology Center/ComputeRise, ESOL, The Community Mediation
Center, The Consumer Council of Worcester County and Worcester Community Con-
nections. Other programs, including Head Start/Early Head Start and Healthy Fam-
ilies are located at various sites throughout Southern Worcester County. We have
more than 130 full time employees who work for these and other services. Several
of our employees are graduates of our own education and training programs.
FUNDING
WCAC has a diversified funding base, with approximately 90% of the 2002-03 rev-
enue of $12 million originating with federal sources. Another 5% comes from state
funds and the remaining 5% reflects United Way, corporate and foundation support.
Community Services Block Grant (CSBG) is the core funding for WCAC and our
most important source of support. CSBG is used to leverage other public and private
funds ($20 for each $1 from CSBG), pilot new programs, support important serv-
ices that are not funded (or are under-funded) and support community services be-
yond the Worcester Community Action Council. Here are some examples:
Three years ago WCAC piloted a 12 week Energy Auditors Training program to
prepare low-income and unemployed residents for positions in utility companies and/
or energy conservation programs. CSBG was the funding source for developing the
curriculum and supporting staff. Of our first class of four, three graduates imme-
diately found employment in energy related fields. Two months ago one of the grad-
uates of our second class responded to our ad for an auditor. She just started to
work for WCAC as an Energy Auditor and she will be an excellent addition to the
staff and the Energy field. CSBG made her employment possible.
In collaboration with four other Massachusetts Community Action agencies,
WCAC received a grant from the Office of Community Services to start an Individ-
ual Development Account (IDA) project to assist 25 low-income families save toward
home ownership. The coordinator for the project is paid from CSBG and the money
raised from federal and private sources goes toward the matched savings accounts.
77
United Way of Central Massachusetts provides limited support for a very success-
ful, open entry, open exit GED preparation program, Project Excel. Thirty-five to 40
young adults participate every year in academic classes, workshops and computer
training. The United Way support has gradually decreased in recent years, but be-
cause of the importance of this program (and the outcomes), CSBG is used to keep
the support at an adequate level.
WCAC does not use the entire CSBG allocation for in-house programs. We pro-
vide CSBG funds to the Main South Community Development Corporation and the
South Worcester Neighborhood Center to provide housing opportunities for low-in-
come families, We provide CSBG funds to the Worcester County Food Bank to sup-
port food distribution to families in need.
For several years WCAC operated Customer Service/Computer Training program
for low income and unemployed residents. The program, funded initially by JTPA
and then WIA combined classroom instruction with internships in local companies,
life skills workshops and job search activities. The program received national atten-
tion. One of the private sector companies we worked with, National Grid/Massachu-
setts Electric, was selected as one of the countrys 100 best employers for their Wel-
fare to Work employment record. Public funding gradually decreased and WCAC
kept the program going until 2001 with CSBG support. There are hundreds of
former welfare recipients now working in Central Massachusetts because of this
particular program. And because of CSBG.
Other federal funding for WCAC originates with LIHEAP, the Dept. of Energy/
Weatherization Assistance Program, Head Start/Early Head Start, Americorps, and
the Dept. of Education. State funding includes: The Massachusetts Office of the At-
torney General, Childrens Trust Fund, Local funders include: the City of Worcester,
the Worcester Public Schools, United Way of Central Massachusetts and corporate
and local foundations.
This summary is a sample of our work and of our collaborations in the commu-
nity. We reach into neighborhoods, into churches, into schools and into homes. We
do not see ourselves as providing safety nets so much as providing ladders out
of poverty and doors to self-sufficiency. We recognize our responsibility for ac-
countability and efficiency, and our board of directors understands their special re-
sponsibility as stewards of the public trust. WCAC, along with the other commu-
nity action agencies across the country, contribute to the quality of life in the com-
munity and ensure a brighter future for low-income families. That contribution is
made possible by The Community Services Block Grant.
Again, thank you for allowing us to represent community action and to testify on
behalf of the Community Services Block Grant.
The states believe the Community Services Block Grant (CSBG) is a unique block
grant that has successfully devolved decision making to the local level. Federally
funded with oversight at the state level, the CSBG has maintained a local network
of over 1,110 agencies that coordinate over $8.5 billion in federal, state, local and
private resources each year. Operating in more than 96 percent of counties in the
nation and serving more than 13 million low-income persons, local agencies, known
as Community Action Agencies (CAAs), provide services based on the characteristics
of poverty in their communities. For one town, this might mean providing job place-
ment and retention services; for another, developing affordable housing; in rural
areas, it might mean providing access to health services or developing a rural trans-
portation system.
Since its inception, the CSBG has shown how partnerships between states and
local agencies benefit citizens in each state. We believe it should be viewed as a
model of how the federal government can best promote self-sufficiency for low-in-
come persons in a flexible, decentralized, non-bureaucratic and highly accountable
way.
Long before the creation of the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF)
block grant, the CSBG set the standard for private-public partnerships that could
work to the betterment of local communities and low-income residents. The ap-
proach is family oriented, while promoting economic development and individual
self-sufficiency. The CSBG relies on an existing and experienced community-based
service delivery system of CAAs and other non-profit organizations to produce re-
sults for its clients.
MAJOR CHARACTERISTICS OF THE COMMUNITY SERVICES NETWORK
LEVERAGING CAPACITY: For every CSBG dollar they receive, CAAs leverage
over $4.00 in nonfederal resources (state, local, and private) to coordinate efforts
that improve the self-sufficiency of low-income persons and lead to the development
of thriving communities.
79
VOLUNTEER MOBILIZATION: CAAs mobilize volunteers in large numbersIn
FY 2001, the most recent year for which data are available, the CAAs elicited more
than 32 million hours of volunteer efforts, the equivalent of nearly 15,400 full-time
employees. Using just the minimum wage, these volunteer hours are valued at near-
ly $165 million.
LOCALLY DIRECTED: Tri-partite boards of directors guide CAAs. These boards
consist of one-third elected officials, one-third low-income persons and one-third rep-
resentatives from the private sector. The boards are responsible for establishing pol-
icy and approving business plans of the local agencies. Since these boards represent
a cross-section of the local community, they guarantee that CAAs will be responsive
to the needs of their community.
ADAPTABILITY: CAAs provide a flexible local presence that governors have mo-
bilized to deal with emerging poverty issues.
EMERGENCY RESPONSE: Federal and state emergency personnel utilize CAAs
as a frontline resource to deal with emergency situations such as floods, hurricanes
and economic downturns. Individual citizens turn to the CAA to help deal with indi-
vidual family hardships, such as house fires or other emergencies.
ACCOUNTABLE: The federal Office of Community Services, state CSBG offices
and CAAs have worked closely to develop a results-oriented management and ac-
countability (ROMA) system. Through this system, individual agencies determine
local priorities within six common national goals for CSBG and report on the out-
comes that they achieved in their communities. As of FY 2001, all states and all
CAAs are reporting on their outcomes.
The statutory goal of the CSBG is to ameliorate the effects of poverty while at
the same time working within the community to eliminate the causes of poverty.
The primary goal of every CAA is self-sufficiency for its clients. Helping families be-
come self-sufficient is a long-term process that requires multiple resources. This is
why the partnership of federal, state, local and private enterprise has been so vital
to the successes of the CAAs.
WHO DOES THE CSBG SERVE?
National data compiled by NASCSP shove that the CSBG serves a broad segment
of low-income persons, particularly those who are not being reached by other pro-
grams and are not being served by welfare programs. Based on the most recently
reported data, from fiscal year 2001:
70 percent have incomes at or below the poverty level; 50 percent have incomes
below 75 percent of the poverty guidelines. In 2001, the poverty level for a family
of three was $14,630.
Only 49 percent of adults have a high school diploma or equivalency certificate.
41 percent of all client families are working poor and have wages or unemploy-
ment benefits as income.
24 percent depend on pensions and Social Security and are therefore poor, former
workers.
Only 12 percent receive cash assistance from TANF.
Nearly 60 percent of families assisted have children under 18 years of age.
WHAT DO LOCAL CSBG AGENCIES DO?