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Completed applications may be delivered to the following locations:
Watauga- 225 Birch Street Suite#2, Boone, NC 28607
Avery- 723 Cranberry Street, Newland, Nc 28657
Mitchell- 496 A Balsam Ave, Spruce Pine, NC 28777
Yancey- 20 Academy Street, Burnsville, NC 28714
THE MISSION AND HISTORY OF W.A.M.Y COMMUNITY ACTION
OUR MISSION: Partnering with families and communities to provide the disadvantaged the support and tools they need to become self-sufficient.
WHAT IS COMMUNITY ACTION? In 1964, The Great Society, as envisioned by President Lyndon Johnson, was a sweeping plan to improve the lives of all Americans, regardless of their circumstances. In August of that same year, the Economic Opportunity Act was signed into law by President Johnson, creating the nationwide Community Action Network.
THE WAR ON POVERTY In Johnson’s first State of the Union address on June 8, 1964, he called for an unconditional war to defeat poverty. He expanded and revised the proposals and developed the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964. This act included a variety of initiatives:
Head Start Job Corps Work-Study program for University students VISTA (Volunteers in Service to America) - a domestic version of the Peace Corps. Neighborhood Youth Corps Basic Education and Adult Job Training CAPS (Community Action Programs) - CAPS turned out to be the most controversial part of the package, as it proposed the “maximum feasible participation” by poor people themselves to determine what would help them the most. CAPS were a radical departure from how government had run most social reform programs in the past.
Community Action was a bold idea, especially for the Federal government. It handed over control to the local level so that programs were geared specifically for the target population's needs. In October 1964, President Johnson selected Sargent Shriver, head of the Peace Corps, to lead the newly formed “Office of Economic Opportunity”.
Community Action was modeled after two fairly successful urban renewal projects, one undertaken by the Ford Foundation and the Mobilization for Youth, a program aimed at juvenile delinquency. Inspiration was also taken from Chicago's “Back of the Yards” program. The key component was that low-income citizens played an active role in program design and administration, or “maximum feasible participation”. The Economic Opportunity Act was amended (known as the Green Amendment) in 1967 to mandate the board structure of Community Action Agencies including low-income participation.
In 1981, President Ronald Reagan introduced the Community Service Block Grant(CSBG), which changed the way federal funding was distributed. Programs including Community Action, would now receive funding through the State Office of Community Action/Services. WAMY Community Action now worked more closely with the North Carolina Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity to implement the Community Service Block Grant (CSBG) and worked to build a strong partnership to provide robust services to WAMY’s low-income residents.
Community Action remains an important safety net for many vulnerable individuals and families. Beginning in 2001, Community Action has improved their reporting through the Results Oriented Management and Accountability (ROMA) framework and continuously seeks ways to improve outreach and services. The National Community Action Partnership now encourages all Community Action Agencies to embrace the National Standards of Excellence as a pathway to improve and empower agency operations.