Devine v. NAACP Legal Defense Fund Appendix to Respondents' Brief
Public Court Documents
January 1, 1984
Cite this item
-
Brief Collection, LDF Court Filings. Devine v. NAACP Legal Defense Fund Appendix to Respondents' Brief, 1984. dafc76c6-af9a-ee11-be37-00224827e97b. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/01678b0e-617a-4ca7-9bae-001d139dd314/devine-v-naacp-legal-defense-fund-appendix-to-respondents-brief. Accessed November 23, 2025.
Copied!
No. 84-312
Isr the
Gkmrt nf % i&tatPB
October T eem , 1984
D onald J. D evise , Director,
Office of Personnel Management,
v.
Petitioner,
NAACP L egal D efense and E ducational
F und, I nc ., ei al.,
Respondents.
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
APPENDIX TO THE RESPONDENTS’ BRIEF
Stuart J. Land
Leonard .11. Becker
B oris Feldman
Arnold & Porter
1200 New Hampshire Ave., N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20036
(202) 872-6700
W alter B. Slocombe
Geoffrey J„ V itt
Caplin & Drysdale
One Thomas Circle, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20005
(202) 862-5071
M. Carolyn Cos.
Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering-
1666 K Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20006
(202) 872-6000
Douglas B. Jordan
Wiley & Rein
1776 lv Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20006
(202) 429-7291
Julius LeV onne Chambers
James M. Nabrit, III
Charles Stephen Ralston*
NAACP Legal Defense and
Educational Fund, Inc.
99 Hudson Street
New York, N.Y. 10013
(212) 219-1900
W illiam L. Robinson
Norman J. Chachkin
Lawyers' Committee for
Civil Rights Under Law
1400 Eye Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20005
(202) 371-1212
Jorge L. B atista
R obert L. Becker
Puerto Rican Legal Defense
and Educational Fund,
Inc.
99 Hudson Street
New York, N.Y, 10013
(212) 219-3360
Attorneys for the Respondents
* Counsel of Record
I N D E X
PAGE
Executive Orders Relating to the CFO .............. ......... la
Excerpts from 1982 CFC Regulations .......................... 9a
Excerpts from 1983 CFC Regulations .......................... 37a
Excerpts from 1984 CFC Regulations ....... 47a
OPM CFC Memorandum No. 83-10 ............................. 49a
OPM CFC Memorandum No. 83-15 ................ 55a
Capital Area CFC Brochure for 1984 ...................... 59a
Honolulu CFC Brochure for 1982 ........... ..................... 63a
Executive Orders Relating to the CFG
Executive Order 10927
Abolishing the President’s Committee on Fund-Raising
Within the Federal Service and Providing for the
Conduct of Fund-Raising Activities
By virtue of the authority vested in me as President of
the United States, it is ordered as follows:
Section 1. The President’s Committee on Fund-Raising
Within the Federal Service, established by Executive Order
No. 10728 of September 6, 1957, is hereby abolished, and
that order is hereby revoked.
Sec. 2. (a) The Chairman of the Civil Service Commis
sion shall make arrangements for such national voluntary
health and welfare agencies and such other national volun
tary agencies as may be appropriate to solicit funds from
Federal employees and members of the armed forces at
their places of employment or duty stations.
(b) In making the arrangements required by subsection
(a) of this section, the Chairman of the Civil Service Com
mission is authorized to consult with appropriate interested
persons and organizations, the national voluntary agencies,
and the executive departments and agencies concerned.
Such arrangements shall (1) permit true voluntary giving
and reserve to the individual the option of disclosing his
gift or keeping it confidential; (2) designate specific periods
during which solicitations may be conducted; and (3) pro
vide for not more than three solicitations annually, except
in eases of emergency or disaster appeals for which specific
provision may be made by the Chairman of the Civil Ser
vice Commission.
Sec. 3. This order shall not apply to solicitations con
ducted by organizations composed of civilian employees
or members of the armed forces among their own members
la
2a
for organizational support or for benefit or welfare funds
for their members. Suck solicitations shall be conducted
under policies and procedures approved by the head of the
department or agency concerned.
Sec. 4. All records and property of the President’s Com
mittee on Fund-Raising Within the Federal Service are
hereby transferred to the Chairman of the Civil Service
Commission.
E xecutive Order 10927
Sec. 5. This order shall become
after its date.
effective forty-five days
J ohn F. K ennedy
T he W hite H ouse,
March 18, 1961.
3a
Executive Order 12353 of March 23, 1982
Charitable Fund-Raising
47 F.R. 12785
By tlie authority vested in me as President by the Consti
tution of the United States of America, and in order to
support and facilitate fund-raising on behalf of voluntary
agencies through on-the-job solicitations of Federal em
ployees and members of the uniformed services, and to
ensure that the recipient agencies are responsible in the
uses of the monies so raised, it is hereby ordered as
follows:
Section 1. The Director of the Office of Personnel Man
agement shall make arrangements for such national volun
tary health and welfare agencies and such other national
voluntary agencies as may be appropriate to solicit con
tributions from Federal employees and members of the
uniformed services at their places of employment or duty.
These arrangements shall take the form of an annual Com
bined Federal Campaign in which eligible voluntary agen
cies are authorized to take part.
Sec. 2. The Director shall establish criteria for determin
ing the eligibility of voluntary agencies that may partici
pate in each of the annual Combined Federal Campaigns.
Sec. 5. In making arrangements for the Combined Federal
Campaign, the Director is authorized, in his discretion, to
consult with the Departments and agencies concerned, rep
resentatives of the employees and members to be solicited,
and, to the extent practicable, representatives of voluntary
agencies seeking to participate in a Combined Federal
Campaign.
Sec. 4. The arrangements made by the Director shall (a)
ensure that all contributions are voluntary, that there is
no coercion, and that individuals have the option of dis
closing their contribution or keeping it confidential, (b)
designate the specific period during which the annual
solicitation may be conducted, and (c) permit only one
annual solicitation except in cases of emergency or disaster
appeals for which specific provision shall be made by the
Director.
Sec. 5. Subject to such rules and regulations as he shall
prescribe, the Director may authorize a local principal
combined fund organization to manage a local Combined
Federal Campaign. Such authorization shall, if made, en
sure at a minimum that the local principal combined fund
organization operates subject to the direction and control
of the Director and such local Federal coordinating entities
as he may establish; manages the local compaign fairly
and equitably; consults with and considers advice from
interested parties and organizations; and publishes reports
of its management of the local campaign.
Sec. 6. The forms for the solicitation of funds shall clearly
specify the eligible agencies and provide a direct means to
designate funds to such agencies. Where allocation of un
designated funds by the local principal combined fund or
ganization is authorized by the Director, prominent notice
of the authorization for such allocation shall be provided
on the solicitation forms.
Sec. 7. This Order shall not apply to solicitations con
ducted by organizations composed of civilian employees or
members of the uniformed services among their own mem
bers for organizational support or for the benefit of wel
fare funds for their members. Such solicitations shall be
conducted under policies and procedures approved by the
head of the Department or agency concerned.
4a
Executive Order 12353
Executive Order 12353
Sec. 8. The Director shall prescribe such rules and regula
tions as may be necessary to implement this Order.
Sec. 9. Executive Order No. 10927, as amended, is revoked.
Notwithstanding that revocation, directives issued under
that Order shall continue in effect until revoked or modified
under the provisions of this Order.
/ s / R onald R eagan
T he W hite H ouse,
March 23, 1982.
6a
Executive Order 12404
Charitable Fund-Raising
By the authority vested in me as President by the Con
stitution of the United States of America, and in order to
lessen the burdens of government and of local communities
in meeting needs of human health and welfare, it is hereby
ordered as follows:
Section 1. Executive Order No. 12353 of March 23, 1982,
is amended as follows:
(a) By deleting Section 1 of that Order and inserting
in its place the following provision:
“ Section 1. The Director of the Office of Personnel Man
agement shall make arrangements for voluntary health and
welfare agencies to solicit contributions from Federal em
ployees and members of the uniformed services at their
places of employment or duty. These arrangements shall
take the form of an annual Combined Federal Campaign
in which eligible voluntary agencies are authorized to take
part.”
(b) In Section 2 insert “ (a)” after the Section number
and add the following new subsection after the existing
provision:
“ (b) In establishing those criteria, the Director shall be
guided by the following principles and policies:
“ (1) The objectives of the Combined Federal Campaign
are to lessen the burdens of government and of local com
munities in meeting needs of human health and welfare;
to provide a convenient channel through which Federal
public servants may contribute to these efforts; to minimize
or eliminate disruption of the Federal workplace and costs
to Federal taxpayers that such fund-raising may entail;
and to avoid the reality and appearance of the use of
Federal resources in aid of fund-raising for political ac
tivity or advocacy of public policy, lobbying, or philan
thropy of any kind that does not directly serve needs of
human health and welfare.
“ (2) To meet these objectives, eligibility for participa
tion in the Combined Federal Campaign shall be limited
to voluntary, charitable, health and welfare agencies that
provide or support direct health and welfare services to
individuals or their families. Such direct health and wel
fare services must be available to Federal employees in
the local campaign solicitation area, unless they are ren
dered to needy persons overseas. Such services must di
rectly benefit human beings, whether children, youth, adults,
the aged, the ill and infirm, or the mentally or physically
handicapped. Such services must consist of care, research
or education in the fields of human health or social adjust
ment and rehabilitation; relief of victims of natural dis
asters and other emergencies ; or assistance to those who
are impoverished and therefore in need of food, shelter,
clothing, education, and basic human welfare services.
“ (3) Agencies that seek to influence the outcomes of
elections or the determination of public policy through
political activity or advocacy, lobbying, or litigation on
behalf of parties other than themselves shall not be deemed
charitable health and welfare agencies and shall not be
eligible to participate in the Combined Federal Campaign.
“ (4) International organizations that provide health and
welfare services overseas, and that meet the eligibility
criteria except for the local services criterion, shall be
eligible to participate in each local solicitation area of
the Combined Federal Campaign.
“ (5) Local voluntary, charitable, health and welfare
agencies that are not affiliated with a national agency or
federation but that satisfy the eligibility criteria set forth
7a
Executive Order No. 12404
8a
in this Order and by the Director, shall be permitted to
participate in the Combined Federal Campaign in the local
solicitation areas in which they provide or support direct
health and welfare services.”
Section 2. All rules, regulations, and directives continued
or issued under Executive Order No. 12353 shall continue
in full force and effect until revoked or modified under the
provisions of this Order.
/ s / R onald R eagan
E xecutive Order No. 12404
T he W hite H ouse,
February 10, 1983
Excerpts From 1982 CFC Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
9a
Excerpts From 1982 CFC Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
§950.101 Definitions.
For purposes of this Part:
(a) The term “national voluntary health and welfare
agencies and such other national voluntary agencies as
may be appropriate” means national entities that:
(1) Meet all eligibility requirements established in this
Part, except as limited hereinafter;
(2) Are not “action” organizations within the meaning
of 26 CFE §1.501 (c )(3 )- l(c ) (3) and are eligible to receive
tax deductible contributions under 26 U.S.C. §170; and
(3) Provide or substantially support one or more of the
following services:
(i) Relief of needy, poor or indigent children and of
orphans, including adoption services;
(ii) Relief of needy, poor or indigent adults; and of
the elderly;
(iii) Delivery of health care to the needy, poor, indigent,
ill or infirm;
(iv) Education and training of personnel for the delivery
of health care to the needy, poor and indigent;
(v) Health research;
(vi) Education, training, care and relief of physically
and mentally handicapped persons;
(vii) Delivery of legal services to the poor and indigent,
and defense of human and civil rights secured by law;
(viii) Relief of victims of crime,, war, casualty, famine,
natural disasters, and other catastrophes;
(ix) Treatment, care, rehabilitation, and counseling of
juvenile delinquents, criminals, released convicts, persons
10a
who abuse drugs or alcohol, persons who are otherwise in
need of social adjustment and rehabilitation, and the fam
ilies of such persons;
(x) Assistance, consistent with the mission of the De
partment of Defense, to members of the armed forces and
their families;
(xi) Protection of families in short or long-term need
of family and child care services, child and marriage coun
seling, foster care, and management and maintenance of
the home;
(xii) Neighborhood and community-wide services which
assist the needy as part of the whole community, including
provision of emergency relief and shelter, recreation, safety,
transportation, and the preparation of delivery of meals;
(xiii) Information and counseling with respect to the
obtaining of any of the foregoing services; or
(xiv) Lessening the burdens of government with respect
to the provision of any of the foregoing services.
(b) Campaign terms:
“Director” shall mean the Director of the United States
Office of Personnel Management, or his delegate;
“Employee” shall mean any person employed by the
Government of the United States or any branch, unit, or
instrumentality thereof, including persons in the civil ser
vice and in the uniformed services;
“ Combined Federal Campaign” or “ Campaign” or “ CPC”
shall mean the fundraising program established and ad
ministered by the Director pursuant to Executive Order
12353, and any subsidiary units of such program;
# # *
E xcerpts From 1982 CFG Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
11a
§950.103 Summary Description of the Program.
(a) Eligibility of National Voluntary Agencies. National
voluntary agencies apply to the Director each year for on-
the-job solicitation privileges in the Federal Government.
Early each calendar year, the Director issues a list of
agencies that have met the prescribed standards as to pro
gram objective, eligibility, administrative integrity, and
financial responsibility.
E xcerpts From 1982 CFG Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
* # #
•(c) Combined Federal Campaign. At locations where
there are 200 or more Federal personnel, all campaigns
must be consolidated into a single, annual drive, known as
the Combined Federal Campaign. The campaign is man
aged by the organization designated as the Principal Com
bined Fund Organization, in accord with section 950.509
of this Part, under the supervision of the local Federal
Coordinating Committee and the Director. Such campaigns
are conducted under administrative arrangements that pro
vide for individual voluntary agency recognition, descrip
tion of each voluntary agency’s services, and allocation of
contributions in accordance with specific designations by
donors.
(d) Decentralised Operations. The federalism principle
shall guide Campaign organization. Following designation
of a Principal Combined Fund Organization, local repre
sentatives of that Organization initiate campaigns in their
local community by direct contact with the heads of Federal
offices and installations. Each agency conducts its own
solicitation among its employees, using campaign materials,
supplies, and speakers furnished by or through the Princi
pal Combined Fund Organization, under the direction of
the local Federal Coordinating Committee and the Director.
12a
(e) Solicitation Methods. Employee solicitations are con
ducted during duty hours using methods that permit true
voluntary giving and reserve to the individual the option
of disclosing any gift or keeping it confidential.
(f) Off-the-Joh Solicitation. Many worthy voluntary
agencies do not participate in the on-the-job program be
cause they do not wish to join in its coordinated arrange
ments or because they cannot meet the requirements for
eligibility. Such voluntary agencies may solicit Federal
employees at their homes as they do other citizens of the
community, or appeal to them through union, veteran, civic,
professional, political, legal defense, or other private or
ganizations. In addition, limited arrangements may be
made for off-the-job solicitations on military installations
and at entrances to Federal buildings.
# * *
§950.107 Preventing Coercive Activity.
True voluntary giving is basic to Federal fund-raising
activities. Actions that do not allow free choices or even
create the appearance that employees do not have a free
choice to give or not to give, or to publicize their gifts
or to keep them confidential, are contrary to Federal fund
raising policy. The following activities are not in accord
with the intent of Federal fund-raising policy and, in the
interest of preventing coercive activities in Federal fund
raising, are not permitted in Federal fund-raising cam
paigns :
(a) Supervisory solicitation of employees supervised;
(b) Setting 100% participation goals;
(c) Providing and using contributor lists for purposes
other than the routine collection and forwarding of contri
butions and installment pledges;
E xcerpts From 1982 CFC Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
13a
(d) Establishing personal dollar goals and quotas; and
(e) Developing and using lists of noncontributors.
§950.201 Development of Policy and Procedures.
(a) Director, U.S. Office of Personnel Management. Un
der Executive Order 12353, Charitable Fund-Raising, the
Director is responsible for establishing fund-raising poli
cies and procedures in the Executive Branch. With the
advice of appropriate interested persons and organizations
and of the executive departments and agencies concerned,
he makes all basic policy, procedural, and eligibility deci
sions for the program. The Director may authorize the
conduct of demonstration projects in one or more CFC loca
tions to test alternative arrangements from those specified
in this Part for the conduct of fund raising activities in
Federal agencies.
(b) Eligibility Committees. A National Eligibility Com
mittee shall consist of a chairman and such other members
selected by the Director as he deems necessary, who shall
serve at the pleasure of the Director. Local eligibility
shall be determined by the local Federal Coordinating Com
mittees. The National Eligibility Committee is responsible
for recommending to the Director:
(1) Eligibility determinations on national federations
and national voluntary agencies;
(2) Modification of eligibility standards and require
ments as needed; and
(3) Any other matters as requested by the Director.
§950.203 Program Administration.
(a) Federal Agency Heads. The head of each Federal
executive department and agency is responsible for:
E xcerpts From 1982 CFG Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
14a
(1) Seeing that voluntary fund-raising within the Fed
eral department or agency is conducted in accordance with
the policies and procedures prescribed by this Part;
(2) Designating a top-level representative as Fund-
Raising Program Coordinator to work with the Director
as necessary in the administration of the fund-raising pro
gram within the Federal agency;
(3) Assuring full participation and cooperation in local
fund-raising campaigns by all installations of the Federal
agency;
(4) Assuring that the policy of voluntary giving and
clear employee choice is upheld during the fund-raising
campaign; and
(5) Providing a mechanism to look into employee com
plaints of undue pressure and coercion in Federal fund
raising. Federal agencies shall provide procedures and
assign responsibility for the investigation of such com
plaints. Personnel offices shall be responsible for inform
ing employees of the proper organization channels for
pursuing such complaints.
(b) Fund-Raising Program Coordinators. The responsi
bilities of Federal agency Fund-Raising Program Coordi
nators are to :
(1) Cooperate with the Director, the local Federal Co
ordinating Committee, and the Principal Combined Or
ganization in the development and operation of the pro
gram ;
(2) Maintain direct liaison with the Office of the Director
in the administration of the program;
(3) Publicize program requirements, throughout the Fed
eral department or agency;
E xcerpts From 1982 CFC Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
15a
(4) Answer inquiries about the program from officials
and employees and from external sources; and
(5) Investigate and arrange for any necessary corrective
action on complaints that allege violation of fund-raising
program requirements within the Federal agency.
§950.207 Local Voluntary Agency Representatives.
Federated and national voluntary agencies provide their
State and local representatives with policy and procedural
guidance on the Federal program. The local representa
tives are responsible for furnishing educational mate
rials, speakers, and campaign supplies as may be required
and appropriate to the Federal program.
§950.209 Local Federal Agency Heads.
The head of the Federal department or agency provides
the heads of the local Federal offices and installations with
copies of the Federal fund-raising regulations. The local
Federal agency heads are responsible fo r :
(a) Cooperating with representatives of the local Fed
eral Coordinating Committee, the Principal Combined
Fund Organization, and local Federal officials in organizing-
local Federal campaigns;
(b) Undertaking official campaigns within their offices ox-
installations and providing active and vigorous support
with equal emphasis for each authorized campaign;
(c) Assuring that personal solicitations on the job are
organized and conducted in accordance with the procedures
set in these regulations;
(d) Assuring that authorized campaigns are kept within
reasonable administrative limits of official time and ex
pense.
Excerpts From 1982 CFG Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
16a
§950.211 Local Federal Coordinating Committees.
(a) . . . The local Federal Coordinating Committee is
authorized to make all decisions within the provisions and
policies established in this Part on all aspects of the local
campaign, including eligibility and the supervision of the
local community campaign and the Principal Combined
Fund Organization. Such decisions may be appealed, how
ever, to the Director.
Excerpts From 1982 CFC Regulations
(5 G.F.R. Part 950)
# # #
(3) Fund-Raising Program Coordinating Committees.
These committees are established in communities where
there is no Federal Coordinating Committee in existence.
Leadership in organizing such a committee is the responsi
bility of the head of the local Federal installation that has
the largest number of civilian and uniformed services per
sonnel. Local Federal agency heads or their designated
representatives serve on the committee and determine all
organizational arrangements.
(c) Employee union representation. In order to ensure
employee participation in the planning and conduct of the
CFC, employee representatives from the principal employee
unions of local Federal installations should be invited to
serve in whatever organization exercises local coordinating
responsibilities.
(d) Fund-raising responsibilities. Within the limits of
the policies, procedures, and arrangements made nationally,
the fund-raising responsibilities of local Federal Coordinat
ing Committees are to :
(1) Facilitate local campaign arrangements. The Fed
eral Coordinating Committee (i) names a high-level chair
man for the authorized Federal campaigns, (ii) provides
17a
lists of Federal activities and their personnel strength,
(iii) cooperates on interagency briefing sessions and kick
off meetings, and (iv) supports appropriate publicity
measures needed to assure campaign success.
(2) Administer program requirements. The Coordinat
ing Committee is responsible for organizing the local Com
bined Federal Campaign, supervising the activities of the
Principal Combined Fund Organization, and acting upon
any problems relating to a voluntary agency’s noncompli
ance with the policies and procedures of the Federal fund-
raising program.
(3) Develop understanding of campaign program policies
and procedures and voluntary agency programs. The local
Federal Coordinating Committee serves as the central me
dium for communicating program, policies and procedures
of the Campaign and for understanding the organizations
employees are being asked to support and how employees
can obtain services they may need from these organizations.
(e) Principal Combined Fund Organisation. The local
Federal Coordinating Committee will supervise a local
Principal Combined Fund Organization. The Principal
Combined Fund Organization will raise money from Fed
eral employees and administer the local campaign, under
the direction of the local Federal Coordinating Committee.
# # #
§950.301 Types of Voluntary Agencies.
Voluntary agencies are private, nonprofit, self-governing
organizations financed primarily by contributions from, the
public. Some are national in scope, with a national organi
zation that provides services at localities through State or
local chapters or affiliates. Others are primarily local, both
in form of organization and extent of services.
Excerpts From 1982 CFC Regulations
(5 G.F.R. Part 950)
18a
§950.303 Types of Fund-Raising Methods.
(a) The methods used by voluntary agencies in public
fund-raising will be either federated or independent. A
national federated group must meet the same eligibility
criteria as a national agency, and have at least 10 local
voluntary agency presences in at least 200 local combined
campaigns. In federated campaigns, local voluntary agency
representatives join contractually into a single organiza
tion for fund-raising purposes. A local United Way, united
fund, community chest, or other local federated group may
be considered and supported as a single agency. Local
chapters or affiliates of national agencies can form local
federations or be admitted as additional participating mem
bers of national federated groups.
(b) An independent campaign is one conducted by a local
unit of a national voluntary agency through its own fund
raising organization. National voluntary agencies may con
duct independent campaigns or participate in a federation.
§950.305 Considerations in Making Federal Arrangements.
(a) On-the-Job-Solicitation. In order to have only one
on-the-job solicitation, i.e., a Combined Federal Campaign,
individual appeals must be combined into a single joint
campaign of eligible health and welfare organizations in
conformance with the policies and procedures prescribed
in this Part.
(b) Campaign Arrangements Established Nationally.
Basic campaign arrangements are established by the Direc
tor. Local Federal agency heads and Coordinating Com
mittees are not authorized to vary from the established
arrangements except to the extent that local variations are
expressly provided for in this Part.
(c) Number of Solicitations. Not more than one on-the-
job solicitation will be made in any year at any location
Excerpts From 1982 CFG Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
19a
on behalf of voluntary agencies, except in the case of an
emergency or disaster appeal for which specific prior ap
proval has been granted by the Director.
(d) Responsible Conduct. In the event a national volun
tary agency fails to adhere to the eligibility requirements
or to the policies and procedures of the Federal program,
solicitation privileges may be withdrawn by the Director
at any time after due notice to the voluntary agency and
opportunity for consultation.
§950.309 Federated and Overseas Campaigns.
(a) Authorized Federated Groups.
(1) United Way of America and any local United Way,
united fund, community chest, or other local federated
group that is a member in good standing of, or is recog
nized by, United Way of America and that meets the
eligibility requirements in these regulations is authorized
on-the-job solicitation privileges in its local campaign area
on behalf of any of its member voluntary agencies that
also meet these requirements. Certifications as to the eligi
bility requirements on behalf of local United Ways, united
funds, and community chests and each member voluntary
agency will be made by United Way of America to the
Director.
(2) The American Red Cross, the National Health Agen
cies, the International Service Agencies, the National Ser
vice Agencies, and such other federated groups which shall
meet the eligibility standards under this Part, as deter
mined by the Director, shall be authorized on-the-job solici
tation privileges on behalf of their member voluntary agen
cies that also meet all requirements of this Part. Certifica
tion for each subunit that they meet such requirements
will be made to the Director.
Excerpts From 1982 CFG Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
20a
(3) A member voluntary agency of a federated group
need meet only the specific eligibility requirements of Sec
tion 950.405. Failure by a member voluntary agency to
meet the requirements will disqualify the federated group
that certified such voluntary agency from soliciting contri
butions, unless after notice to the group of intent to cancel,
corrective action is taken to the satisfaction of the Director.
If appropriate corrective action is not taken, the Director
may disqualify the federated group.
§950.311 Off-the"Job Solicitation at Places of Employment.
Voluntary agencies that are not recognized for the on-
the-job program may be authorized off-the-job solicitation
privileges at places of Federal employment under such
reasonable conditions as may be specified by the local head
of the Federal installation involved, provided that such
conditions are not inconsistent with this Part. Dual solicita
tion is not authorized, so this privilege cannot be made
available to any voluntary agency that is included in the
on-the-job program.
(a) Family Quarters on Military Installations. Volun
tary agencies may be permitted to solicit at private resi
dences or at similar on-post family public quarters in un
restricted areas of military installations at the discretion
of the local commander. However, such solicitation may
not be conducted by military or civilian personnel in their
official capacity during duty or non-duty hours, nor may
such solicitation be conducted as an official command-
sponsored project. This restriction is not intended to pro
hibit or to discourage military and civilian personnel from
participating as private citizens in voluntary agency activi
ties during their off-duty hours.
(b) Public Entrances of Federal Buildings and Installa
tions. Voluntary agencies that engage in limited or spe
Excerpts From 1982 CFG Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
21a
cialized methods of solicitation—for example, the use of
“poppies” or other similar tokens by veterans organiza
tions—may be permitted to solicit at entrances or in con
courses or lobbies of Federal buildings or installations nor
mally open to the general public. Solicitation privileges
will be governed by the rules issued by the General Ser
vices Administration pursuant to the Public Buildings Co
operative Use Act of 1976 or later modification, or other
applicable Government legal authority.
§950.401 Purpose.
These eligibility requirements are established to ensure
that:
(a) Only responsible and worthy voluntary agencies are
permitted to solicit on the job in Federal installations;
(b) The funds contributed by Federal personnel will be
used effectively and for the announced purposes of the
soliciting voluntary agencies; and
(c) All recognized national voluntary agencies meet re
quirements of Executive Order 12353 of March 23, 1982.
§950.403 General Requirements for National Agencies.
(a) Type of Agency. Only nonprofit, tax-exempt, char
itable organizations, supported by voluntary contributions
from the general public and providing direct and substan
tial health and welfare and other appropriate national
voluntary services through their national organization,
affiliates or representatives are eligible for approval. All
such services must be consistent with the policies of the
United States Government.
(b) Integrity of Operations. Only voluntary agencies
having a high degree of integrity and responsibility in the
Excerpts From 1982 CFG Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
22a
conduct of their affairs will be approved. Funds contrib
uted to such organizations by Federal personnel must be
effectively used for the announced purposes of the volun
tary agency.
(c) National Scope. A national voluntary agency must
demonstrate that:
(1) It is organized on a national scale with a national
board of directors that represents its constituent parts,
and exercises close supervision over the operations and
fund-raising policies of any local chapters or affiliates.
(2) It has earned good will and acceptability throughout
the United States, particularly in cities or communities
within which or nearby are Federal offices or installations
with large numbers of personnel.
(3) It has national scope, that is, scale, goodwill, and
acceptability; this may be demonstrated as follows:
(i) By a voluntary agency’s provision of a service in
many (c. one quarter) States, or in several foreign coun
tries, or in several parts of one large foreign nation;
(ii) By derivation of contributor support from many
parts of the Nation;
(iii) By the extent of public support and the number
and the geographical spread of contributors; and
(iv) By the national character of any public campaign,
which may be shown by a large number (c. 75) of local
chapters, affiliates, or representatives which promote such
a campaign.
(d) Type of Campaign. Approval will be granted only
for fund-raising, campaigns in support of current opera
tions. Capital fund campaigns are not authorized.
Excerpts From, 1982 CFC Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
23a
§950.405 Specific Requirements.
(a) Eligibility. To be eligible for approval by the Direc
tor for participation in the Combined Federal Campaign,
a national voluntary agency must be one :
(1) That is either a health or welfare or other appro
priate voluntary agency, as defined in section 950.101 of
this Part;
(2) That is voluntary and broadly supported by the
public, meaning (i) that it is organized as a not-for-profit
corporation or association under the laws of the United
States, a State, a territory, or the District of Columbia;
(ii) that it is classified as tax-exempt under Section
501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as
amended; and (iii) that, with the exception of voluntary
agencies whose revenues are affected by unusual or emer
gency circumstances, as determined by the Director, it has
received at least 50 percent of its revenues from sources
other than the Federal Government or at least 20 percent
of its revenues from direct and/or indirect contributions
in the year immediately preceding any year in which it
seeks to participate in the Combined Federal Campaign
(organizations founded within the past three years par
ticipating in the CFG before this Part became effective
will have three (3) years, and all other organizations in
the CFC will have one (1) year to comply with the 50
percent./20 percent requirement);
(3) That is directed by an active board of directors, a
majority of whose members serve without compensation;
that adopts and employs the Standards of Accounting and
Financial Reporting for Voluntary Health and Welfare
Organisations; that prepares and makes available to the
general public an annual financial report prepared in ac
cordance with the Standards of Accounting and Financial
Excerpts From 1982 CFG Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
24a
Reporting for Voluntary Health and Welfare Organiza
tions and is certified, using the form in Appendix B to
this Subpart, by an independent certified public accountant;
that provides for an annual external audit by an indepen
dent public accountant;
(4) That can demonstrate to the Director, if its fund
raising and administrative expense is in excess of 25 per
cent of total support and revenue, that its actual expense
for those purposes is reasonable under all the circumstances
in its case;
(5) That ensures that its publicity and promotional ac
tivities are based upon its actual program and operations,
are truthful and nondeceptive, and include all material
facts; and
(6) That has a direct and substantial presence in the
local campaign community, meaning that employees in the
solicitation area, or their families, should be able to re
ceive services from a particular voluntary agency within a
reasonable distance from their employment stations, or re
ceive benefits from national voluntary agencies which can
be shown to affect a large number of local employees, with
specific demonstratable assistance. Such presence shall be
demonstrated to the Director or local Federal Coordinat
ing Committee documenting that the services are known to
and accessible to Federal employees in the local community;
examples of direct and substantial services are: providing
local services; personal counseling in health, welfare or
other appropriate services (if by telephone, with a local
phone number); local disease prevention programs or in
oculations; local representatives in a cooperating attorney
or referral network; screening for detection of problems
or need for services or referrals; treatments (of illnesses,
poverty, and handicaps); and local educational or informa
Excerpts From 1982 CFC Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
25a
tional services. However, international organizations that
provide health and welfare services overseas, which meet
the eligibility criteria except for the direct and substan
tial present criterion, shall be eligible to solicit funds from
Federal personnel.
# # #
§950.407 Application Requirements.
(a) Federated Groups. The American Red Cross, United
Ways and local community chests or united funds that are
members in good standing of or are recognized by United
Way of America, the National Health Agencies, the Inter
national Service Agencies, the National Service Agencies,
and such other federated groups shall be recognized under
Subpart C, do not need to apply separately as National
Agencies. For purposes of this Part, the American Red
Cross and its chapters are recognized as operating an ac
counting and financial system in substantial compliance
with the Standards of Accounting and Financial Reporting
for Voluntary Health and Welfare Organizations and cer
tification to this effect by local chapters is not required.
(b) National Agencies. In order to be considered for
solicitation privileges in domestic or overseas campaigns
in the Federal service, each national voluntary agency
must file an application annually. National voluntary agen
cies that have already been approved for fund-raising
privileges in the Federal service are not required to sub
mit the information requested in paragraphs (f)(1 ), (2),
(3), (4), and (8) of this section, except where there has
been a substantial or significant change in these items;
for example, a change in purpose of the organization or
a decline in chapter coverage or activity. They are re
quired to furnish information in paragraphs (f)(5), (6),
(7), (9), (10), (11), and (12).
Excerpts From 1982 CFC Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
26a
(c) Time and Place of Filing. Applications must be filed
with the Office of the Director, United States Office of
Personnel Management, Washington, D. C. 20415. Appli
cants are urged to file as early as possible in each calendar
year.
(d) National Eligibility. The Director, with the assis
tance of a National Eligibility Committee of government
officials, employee organization leaders, and private citi
zens, uses the information filed with the agency’s applica
tion and derived from other responsible sources to make
his decision on an agency’s eligibility. The National Eligi
bility Committee shall consider the applications fairly, hold
meetings and hearings as appropriate, and make recom
mendations to the Director. National eligibility shall only
give a presumption of local eligibility; voluntary agencies
must also meet the requirements of section 950.405(a)(6).
Where a local chapter of an eligible national voluntary
agency is denied participation in a local campaign, it may
appeal to the Director, whose decision shall be final.
(e) Notice of Decision. Applicants for national eligi
bility are to be notified of the decisions as soon as possible
after filing. If dissatisfied with the Director’s decision, the
applicants may request reconsideration of the decision by
the Director. The Director’s decision upon reconsideration
will be final.
* *
§950.505 Responsibility of Local Federal Coordinating
Committees.
Each Federal Coordinating Committee is required to
organize a Combined Federal Campaign in the local area
for which it has fund-raising responsibility. The heads
of Federal departments and agencies will request their
local officials to cooperate fully with the decisions of the
Excerpts From 1982 CFC Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
27a
Federal Coordinating Committee in all aspects of CFC ar
rangements. The Federal Coordinating Committee makes
all final decisions on the local campaign, subject to appeal
to the Director.
§950.507 Local CFC Plan.
(a) CFC as Uniform Fund-Raising Method. The Com
bined Federal Campaign is the only authorized fund-raising
method in all areas in the United States in which 200 or
more Federal employees are located. All voluntary agen
cies wishing to participate in fund-raising within the Fed
eral service must do so within the framework of a local
Combined Federal Campaign.
(b) Non-Participation. In the event that any voluntary
agency does not follow these regulations for participation
in a local CFC, fund-raising privileges in local Federal
establishments are forfeited during that fiscal year. Volun
tary withdrawal will not prejudice eligibility for the next
year’s Campaign.
* # *
§950.509 Organizing the Local Campaign: The Principal
Combined Fund Organization.
The Local Federal Coordinating Committee shall organ
ize the local community campaign. It will appoint a cam
paign chairman who will carry out campaign duties in
conformance with the policies and procedures prescribed
in this Part. From among the federations approved for
participation in the local CFC, the local Federal Coordinat
ing Committee shall select a Principal Combined Fund
Organization to manage the campaign and to serve as fiscal
agent. In doing so the Federal Coordinating Committee
shall select whichever applicant organization it finds to be
the local federated group in the CFC geographic area that
Excerpts From 1982 CFG Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
28a
provides through one specific, annual public solicitation for
funds the greatest support for charitable agencies that
depends on public subscriptions for support; that, in the
judgment of the Federal Coordinating Committee, can most
effectively provide the necessary campaign services and ad
ministrative support for a successful Campaign.
* # #
(i) CFC Committee. Where necessary, the local Fed
eral Coordinated Committee may designate a committee
from among its principal members, called the CFC Com
mittee, to give top leadership and direction to the planning,
conduct and evaluation of the local combined campaign.
The Federal Coordinating Committee, however, may not
redelegate any final authority for the campaign to the CFC
,Committee. The Chairman of the Campaign need not be
the Chairman of the organization designated as the local
Federal Coordinating Committee.
(j) Action Steps by the Local Federal Coordinating
Committee
(1) The Chairman of the local Federal Coordinating
Committee is not authorized to establish a Local Joint
Work Group of Federal representatives and representa
tives of the Principal Combined Fund Organization. The
Chairman shall direct the Principal Combined Fund Or
ganization to assemble necessary information and data,
and to submit a plan detailing materials and a timetable
for campaign arrangements. This shall include the dates
for preparation, printing and distribution of materials,
kick-offs, training sessions, report meetings and award
ceremonies. All of these, including the specific materials
to be used, shall be submitted to the full local Federal
Coordinating Committee for approval on a day to be an
nounced broadly to participating voluntary agencies and
Excerpts From 1982 CFC Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
29a
federated groups and to the Director. An adequate period
shall be provided for participating federated group and
voluntary agencies to review and comment on all proposals.
(2) The local Federal Coordinating Committee will set
a date or dates each year for local eligibility hearings.
Such meeting or meetings shall be reported to the Director,
and given wide publicity in the local community and to
the voluntary agencies and federated groups which have
applied for eligibility.
(k) Loaned Executive Program. One or more loaned
Federal executives may be used in a Combined Federal
Campaign. The Loaned Executive Program was author
ized by President Nixon in a memorandum to heads of
departments and agencies dated March 3, 1971. A Loaned
Executive may be detailed from his agency on a full or
part-time basis, for a specific period of time, to conduct
or assist in the operation of a Combined Federal Campaign.
The employing agency will decide who will serve as a
Loaned Executive, if anyone, and the length of the detail.
Executives may not be loaned or assigned to any specific
voluntary organization but only to the official Combined
Federal Campaign group. When assigned to the CFG, the
executive shall be placed on administrative leave.
§950.511 Basic Local CFC Ground Rules.
(a) The arrangements outlined in sections 950.511
through 950.525 constitute basic ground rules for the local
Combined Federal Campaign. Certain local variations are
permissible if specifically authorized in this Subpart. How
ever, any modification of ground rules in specific instances
must be requested by Federal Coordinating Committees
from the Director. Modifications will be granted only in
the most exceptional circumstances.
Excerpts From 1982 CFG Regulations
(5 G.F.R. Part 950)
30a
(b) The local Federal Coordinating Committee will ap
prove the:
(1) Campaign Name. The name will include the words
“ Combined Federal C am paignthe year for which contri
butions are solicited; and approximate identification of
the locality; as for example: “ 1981 San Antonio Area
Combined Federal Campaign.”
(2) Campaign Period. The solicitation period may be
any period between September 1 and November 30.
(3) Campaign Area. The exact geographical area to be
covered by the combined campaign will be determined na
tionally, taking into account past practice and the feasible
scope for a single, coordinated campaign. The jurisdiction
of the organization named as the local Federal Coordinat
ing Committee will set the basic area of the Campaign,
based upon past practices. Any changes in campaign area
must be approved by the Director.
§950.513 Contributions.
(a) The contributor’s information leaflet will clearly
state that the Federal employee is encouraged to direct his
gift to specific voluntary agencies. A single form of pledge
card and leaflet-brochure will be produced under standards
set in this Part, and approved by the Director. The leaflet
will explain that when such gifts are earmarked to a specific
voluntary agency, the Principal Combined Fund Organiza
tion will remit such funds, minus approved administrative
costs, directly to that agency (or to its federation if all
members of that federated group agree) as those funds
are collected. The leaflet will also clearly state that when
the Federal employee decides not to designate, the gift
will be deemed designated to the Principal Combined Fund
Organization for distribution.
E xcerpts From 1982 CFC Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
31a
(b) Several boxes will be provided on the pledge form
so that the donor may indicate his choice, if any, of one
or more of the voluntary agencies listed to receive all or
part of his gift. A minimum of five boxes for such pur
poses will be shown on the face of and on all copies of
the pledge card itself. Separate designation slips are not
authorized under any circumstances. The pledge card must
be arranged so that each Federal employee receives the
pertinent CFG and voluntary agency information and the
pledge card as a single package (as examples, inserted in
a slot or pocket in the contributor’s information leaflet).
(c) If contributions are designated to organizations not
participating in the local CFG, they will not be accepted
but will be returned to the contributor.
§950.519 Central Receipt and Accounting for Contributions.
(a) The Principal Combined Fund Organization shall
provide and administer the Central Receipt and Account
ing Point or it may arrange for an appropriate financial
institution to provide such service on its behalf, under
the direction of the local Federal Coordinating Committee.
Any charges by such institution to provide the necessary
services are the responsibility of the Principal Combined
Fund Organization and should be included in the latter
organization’s administrative costs factor.
(b) The central accounting point will tabulate all con
tributions designated to specified agencies on the pledge
card and then tabulate the contributions designated to the
Principal Combined Fund Organization. The amounts pay
able to the specified voluntary agencies are subject to de
duction “ shrinkage” and of the approved percentage, if
any, for reimbursement of administrative costs to the
Principal Combined Fund Organization.
Excerpts From 1982 CFG Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
32a
(c) Provision must be made by the Principal Combined
Fund Organization for the audit of CFO funds. If the
CFC is over $100,000, an independent audit must be per
formed. Copies of the audits must be submitted to ap
propriate local Federal officials and made available for
inspection by any voluntary agency or federation par
ticipating in the CFC.
(d) In addition to the usual method of cash contribu
tion and direct payment of pledges, the use of voluntary
payroll withholding is authorized for members of the uni
formed services and civilian personnel at CFC locations.
Local voluntary agencies may decide whether or not to
provide for direct payment of pledges; however, cash con
tributions must be permitted. Keyworker collection of in
stallment pledges is prohibited.
§950.521 Campaign and Publicity Materials.
(a) Campaign and publicity materials will be developed
in the local area under direction of the local Federal Co
ordinating Committee, and will be printed and supplied
by the Principal Combined Fund Organization. All dis
putes over materials will be resolved by the local Federal
Coordinating Committee, except that failure to follow this
Part or other directive of the Director may be appealed
to the Director. All publicity materials must have the ap
proval of the local Federal Coordinating Committee before
being used.
(b) Distribution of any bona fide educational material
of the voluntary agencies or provision of other services
to employees at Federal establishments must be handled
through the Federal agency occupational health units, and
not, the CFC coordinators. While there is no intent to
restrict the normal educational or service activities that
E xcerpts From 1982 CFG Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
33a
voluntary agencies provide in Federal agencies, no special
distribution of materials or services should be planned
during the campaign, nor should promotional efforts be
made that would have the effect of giving undue publicity
to a particular voluntary agency or category of voluntary
agencies during the campaign period. Violation of this
requirement by any voluntary agency may be grounds for
the local Federal Coordinating Committee to disqualify
the voluntary agency from further participation in the
local CFC for that year after due notice to the voluntary
agency concerned.
(c) A single Contributor’s Information Leaflet, a one-
part list of participating voluntary agencies, and a single,
joint Pledge Form and Payroll Withholding Authoriza
tion (the latter two preferably to be placed in an insert
slot or otherwise assembled in the former) are to be dis
tributed by keyworkers to each potential contributor. The
Pledge Form and Payroll Withholding Authorization must
be one form. All CFC literature, keyworker solicitors,
and materials released as a part of the campaign must
inform employees of their right to make a choice and wflll
provide full information about the voluntary agencies,
federated groups and the Principal Combined Fund Or
ganization. Employees will be informed that while the
Federal Government encourages its employees to make a
choice, it does not mandate that they choose.
(d) Campaign materials must constitute a simple and
attractive package that has fund-raising appeal and essen
tial working information. Treatment should focus on the
combined campaign and homogeneous appeal without un
due use of voluntary agency symbols or other distractions
that compete for the contributor’s attention. Extraneous
instructions concerning the routing of forms, tallying of
E xcerpts From 1982 CFG Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
34a
contributions, etc., which are primarily for keyworkers,
must be avoided.
(e) Specific campaign and publicity materials:
(1) Contributor’s Leaflet.
(1) This will be the only informational material dis
tributed to individual contributors. It will describe the
CFC arrangement, explain the payroll deduction privilege,
and will include the information required by section 950.513
of this Part. The leaflet should be constructed to contain
a pocket or a slot to hold the CFC pledge card.
(ii) The leaflet will provide instructions about how an
employee may obtain more specific information about vol
untary agencies participating in the campaign, their pro
grams, and their finances. It will also inform employees
of their right to pursue complaints of undue pressure or
coercion in Federal fundraising activities. The leaflet will
advise civilian employees to consult with their personnel
offices and military personnel with their commanding
officers to identify the organization handling such com
plaints in their respective Federal agency.
(iii) A Privacy Act notice must be printed on the leaflet.
(2) Separate list of participating voluntary agencies.
(i) This brochure will list each voluntary agency ap
proved by the appropriate Federal officials for participa
tion in the CF’C with a brief statement of about 30 words
on its programs. Opposite the name of each voluntary
agency a number will be provided beginning with the num
ber 101 so that contributors desiring to indicate a choice
of agency or agencies to whom they wish their gift to be
directed may insert such number or numbers in the desig
nation boxes provided for that purpose on the pledge card.
Each voluntary agency which is a member of a federated
E xcerpts From 1982 CFC Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
35a
group shall be entitled, at its local option, to have that
group designation added, in parenthesis, at the end of its
statement.
(ii) The listing of voluntary agencies will also include
therein the following generic titles reflecting the approved
categories of services as a means to assist employees in
making rational designations: children and family services,
community coordination services, local federal personnel
services, provision of basic needs and economic oppor
tunity, health services/services to handicapped, interna
tional services, neighborhood services, acquisition of knowl
edge and skills, youth and recreation services, specialized
and miscellaneous services. The order of assignment of
these categories, and the order of voluntary agencies under
them, will be reassigned by lot each year by the local
Federal Coordinating Committee.
(iii) Federated groups will be listed, in an order set by
lot each year, at the end of the list of voluntary agencies,
under the title “ Campaign Groups,” with identification
numbers keyed to the numbers of their participating fed
erated groups. The federated group which is the Principal
Combined Fund Organization will be so identified.
(f) Other campaign materials that are authorized in
clude :
(1) Chairman’s Guide. For use of campaign chairmen
in individual Federal installations;
(2) Keyworker’s Guide. Instructions for keyworkers
about CFC arrangements, solicitation methods, and for
warding procedures;
(3) Keyworker’s Report Envelope. With tally sheets
(which may be printed on the envelope) on which the key
E xcerpts From 1982 CFG Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
36a
worker will list the names of contributors or the number
of confidential envelopes enclosed;
(4) Miscellaneous Campaign Items. Contributor’s re
ceipts, window stickers, posters, progress charts, awards,
etc.;
(5) Publicity Items. News stories and fillers for the
local press and house organs, employee letters, speeches
of campaign leaders, division chairmen, films, television
and radio material supporting the campaign; and
(6) Awards. To recognize campaign achievements by
Federal agencies, Federal agency chairmen, etc. Awards
should be identified as “ Combined Federal Campaign”
awards. The presentation of awards and plaques by indi
vidual voluntary agencies or categories of voluntary agen
cies for CFC accomplishments is not permitted.
(g) National materials provided and made available for
use by local CFCs will be developed by an organization
named by the Director. The Director will provide oppor
tunity for comment on such materials by interested parties
prior to approval. He must approve all material prior to
use.
E xcerpts From 1982 CFG Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
Excerpts From 1983 CFC Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
§950.101 Definitions.
(a)(1) The terms “voluntary agency,” “voluntary health
and welfare agency,” “voluntary charitable agency,” and
“voluntary charitable health and welfare agency” mean an
organization that:
(1) Is organized and operated for the purpose of ren
dering, or of materially or financially supporting the ren
dering of, one or more of the following services directly
to, and for the direct benefit of, human beings:
(A) Delivery of health care to ill or infirm individuals;
(B) Education and training of personnel for the de
livery of health care to ill or infirm individuals;
(C) Health research for the benefit of ill or infirm in
dividuals ;
(D) Delivery of education, training, and care to phys
ically and mentally handicapped individuals;
(E) Treatment, care, rehabilitation, and counseling of
juvenile delinquents, criminals, released convicts, persons
who abuse drugs or alcohol, persons who are victims of
intra-family violence or abuse, persons who are otherwise
in need of social adjustment and rehabilitation, and the
families of such persons;
(F) Belief of victims of crime, war, casualty, famine,
natural disasters, and other catastrophes and emergencies;
(G) Neighborhood and community-wide services that di
rectly assist needy, poor, and indigent individuals, includ
ing provision of emergency relief and shelter, recreation,
transportation, the preparation and delivery of meals, ed
ucational opportunities, and job training;
(H) Legal aid services that are provided to needy, poor,
and indigent individuals solely because of the inability to
E xcerpts From 1983 CFC Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
38a
afford legal counsel and without a policy or practice of
discrimination for or against the kind of cause, claim, or
defense of the individuals;
(I) Protection of families that, on account of need, pov
erty, indigence, or emergency, are in long-term or short
term need of family, child care, and maternity services,
child and marriage counseling, foster care, and guidance
or assistance in the management and maintenance of the
home and household;
(J) Relief of needy, poor, and indigent infants and
children, and of orphans, including the provision of adop
tion services;
(K) Relief of needy, poor, and indigent adults and of
the elderly;
(L) Assistance, consistent with the mission of the De
partment of Defense, to members of the armed forces and
their families;
(M) Assistance, consistent with the mission of the Fed
eral agency or facility involved, to members of its staff
or service who, by reason of geographic isolation, emer
gency conditions, injury in the line of duty, or other ex
traordinary circumstances, have exceptional health or wel
fare needs; or
(N) Lessening of the burdens of government with re
spect to the provision of any of the foregoing services;
(ii) Meets all eligibility requirements established in this
Part; and can show that it met all such requirements for
the full fiscal year of the organization for the period im
mediately preceding the closing date established by the
Director for the submission of its application for admis
sion to .the Combined Federal Campaign for a particular
year;
Excerpts From 1983 CFC Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
39a
(iii) Is an organization described in, and qualifying
under, 16 U.S.C. 501(e)(3); is not an “action organiza
tion” within the meaning of 26 OFR 1.501(c) (3 )- l(3 ) ; and
is eligible to receive tax-deductible contributions under 26
U.S.C. 170;
(iv) Does not participate in, or intervene directly or
indirectly in, any political campaign on behalf of or in
opposition to any candidate for public office, or on behalf
of any side or position in a public referendum, initiative,
or similar procedure; and
(v) Except as provided in 5 CFR 950.101(a)(4), has
articles of organization that do not expressly empower
the organization to, and the organization does not, expend
more than the proportions set forth in 5 CFR 950.101(a) (2)
of its total expenditures on any or all of the following
activities ;
(A) Activities that are not in furtherance of the pur
poses set forth in 5 CFR 950.101(a) (l) ( i ) ;
(B) Activities (other than activities directly related to
the organization’s participation in the Combined Federal
Campaign) for purposes of influencing legislation or rule-
making at any level of Federal, State, or local government;
and
(C) Activities for purposes of litigation (including con
tributing to the expenses thereof), other than litigation
undertaken as a necessary part of the provision of legal
aid services as set forth in 5 CFR 950.101(a) (1) (i) (H ) ;
provided that the activities described in this paragraph
(5 CFR 950.101(as) (12) (v) (C) shall not include activities
to protect the existence of the organization, its tax exempt
status, its participation in the Combined Federal Cam
paign, or its own direct and private interests, as opposed
Excerpts From 1983 CFG Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
40a
to the interests of the causes or policy goals that it sup
ports.
(2) the maximum level of expenditures permitted by
5 CFR 950.101(a) (1) (v) without disqualifying an organi
zation from participation in the Combined Federal Cam
paign shall be 15% of the organization’s total annual ex
penditures; provided that the level of expenditures thus
made in the aggregate, on any and all activities identified
in 5 CFR 950.101(a) (1) (v) may not, in any one year, ex
ceed the sum of $1,000,000; and provided further that no
more than one fourth of the maximum level of expenditures
thus made may be expended in any one year as grass roots
expenditures.
(3) For purposes of the preceding paragraph (5 CFR
950.101(a) (2) )1, the following definitions shall apply:
(i) The term “ influencing legislation” shall have the
same meaning that it has in 16 U.S.C. 4911(d);
(ii) The term “ influencing rulemaking” shall have the
same meaning that the term “ influencing legislation” in
16 U.S.C. 4911(d) would have if the term “ rulemaking”
were substituted therein for the term “legislation” , and
the term “government agency” were substituted therein for
the term “legislative body” ;
(iii) The term “ rulemaking” shall have the same mean
ing that the term “ rule making” has in 5 U.S.C. 551(5);
(iv) The term “expenditures” shall mean all money ex
pended or debts incurred by the organization;
(v) The term “ total annual expenditures” shall mean all
expenditures made by the organization in its fiscal year;
and
(vi) The term “ grass roots expenditures” shall mean all
expenditures made by the organization for the purposes
E xcerpts From 1983 CFC Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
41a
described in 26 U.S.C. 4911(d)(1)(A) and for the pur
poses that would be described in 26 TJ.S.O. 4911(d) (1) (AS)
if the term “ rulemaking” were substituted therein for the
term “legislation.”
(4) An organization that has been notified by the Direc
tor that it does not satisfy the requirements of 5 CFR
950.101(a) (1) (v) may nonetheless petition the Director for
inclusion in the Combined Federal Campaign. The Direc
tor shall, from time to time, announce through the Federal
Personnel Manual System or other appropriate instru
ments the time, place, and manner in which such a peti
tion shall set forth specific facts and circumstances in
support thereof. The Director shall grant the petition if
he determines that the organization’s activities described
in paragraphs (A), (B), and (C) of 5 CFR 950.101(a)(1)
(v), taken as a whole;
(i) Do not significantly exceed the limits described in
5 CFR 950.101(a)(2), taking into account other indices
of activity not adequately accounted for by the measure
ment of expenditures (such as the use of volunteer services
or inkind contributions); and
(ii) Are in direct furtherance of the organization’s ac
tivities described in 5 CFR 950.1021(a) (1) (i). Any such
determination by the Director shall be in writing, shall
succinctly state the basis for the determination, and shall
be available to the public.
§950.403 General Requirements for National Agencies.
# # #
(c) National Scope. A national voluntary agency must
demonstrate that:
% #
Excerpts From 1983 CFG Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
42a
(3) It has national scope, that is, scale, goodwill, and
acceptability; this may be demonstrated as follows:
^ # #
(iv) By the national character of any public campaign,
which may be shown by an applicant having at least 200
local chapters, affiliates, or representatives that promote
its campaign.
§950.405 Specific Requirements.
(а) Eligibility. To be eligible for approval by the Di
rector for participation in the Combined Federal Cam
paign, a national voluntary agency must be one:
# # #
(б) That has a direct and substantial presence in the
local campaign community, meaning that Federal em
ployees and their families are able to receive, within a
reasonable distance from their duty stations or homes,
services that are directly provided by the voluntary agency
or that demonstrably depend upon, or derive from the
specific research, educational, support, or similar activities
of the particular voluntary agency. Demonstration of
direct and substantial presence in the local campaign
community, including adequate documentation thereof, shall
at all times, and for all purposes, be the burden of the
voluntary agency. Such direct and substantial presence
shall be determined in light of the totality of the circum
stances in each case, including, but not necessarily limited
to, consideration of the following factors:
(i) The availability of services, such as examinations,
treatments, inoculations, preventative care, counseling,
training, scholarship assistance, transportation, feeding,
institutionalization, sheltering, and clothing, to persons
working and living in the local campaign comunity.
Excerpts From 1983 CFC Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
43a
(ii) The presence within the local campaign community,
or within reasonable commuting distance thereof, of a
facility at which services are rendered or through which
they be obtained, such as an office, clinic, mobile unit, field
agency, or direct provider; or specific demonstrable effects
of research, such as personnel or facilities engaged therein
or specific local applications thereof.
(iii) The availability to persons working or residing in
the local campaign community of communication with the
voluntary charitable agency by means of home visits, trans
portation, or telephone calls, provided by the voluntary
agency at no charge to the recipient or beneficiary of the
service.
(iv) Awarness within the local Federal community of
the existence, activities, and services of the voluntary
charitable agency.
Provided, that voluntary charitable health and welfare
agencies whose services are rendered exclusively or in sub
stantial preponderance overseas, and that meet all the eligi
bility criteria set forth in this Part except for the require
ment of direct and substantial presence in the local cam
paign community, shall be eligible to participate in each
local solicitation area of the Combine Federal Campaign.
§950.501 Authorized Local Voluntary Agencies.
(a) A local voluntary agency shall meet the same cri
teria as a national voluntary agency, except national scope,
and shall be evaluated under the criteria set forth in this
Part by the local Federal Coordinating Committee recog
nized by the Director for that local community.
(b) A local affiliate of an eligible national agency shall
be given a presumption of eligibility for admission to the
local campaign by the local Federal Coordinating Com
Excerpts From 1983 CFG Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
44a
mittee, but it must also meet the local presence criterion
of 5 CFR 950.405(a)(6).
(c) Local non-affiliated voluntary health and welfare
agencies shall be evaluated separately by the local Federal
Coordinating Committee to determine whether they are
eligible under this Part.
(d) If a local non-affiliated voluntary agency receives
less than $3,000 in designated contributions in a local cam
paign for a single year, then the local Federal Coordinating
Committee may, in its discretion, debar the local non-
affiliated voluntary agency from participating in the local
campaign for a period not to exceed three (3) years there
after.
(e) An on-base morale, welfare and recreational activity
authorized by a military base commander may be sup
ported from CFC funds.
§950.525 National Coordination and Reporting.
# # #
(e) Any decision of a local Federal Coordinating Com
mittee that is appealed to the Director by any charitable
agency or charitable federated group or by any applicant
for solicitation privileges in a local compaign shall be
given due weight by the Director. Any such appeal shall
be looked upon with disfavor unless it raises a substantial
question of fairness, construction of these regulations, or
application of the policies, procedures, directives, and
guidance of the Director. Unless the Director orders other
wise, all burdens of proof, of persuasion, and of going
forward shall be borne by the appellant. An appeal may
be dismissed as untimely unless it is received by the Direc
tor within the ten (10) days next following after the ap
pellant has received actual or constructive notice of the
E xcerpts From 1983 CFC Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
45a
decision from which the appeal is taken. Every appeal
shall be submitted in writing; shall set for -a concise state
ment of the decision from which the appeal is taken, the
grounds for the appeal, and the relief sought by the ap
pellant; and shall be accompanied by written proof that
copies thereof have been served upon the local Federal
Coordinating Committee and any other proper party in
interest may respond to the appeal. Every response, to be
timely, shall be received by the Director within the five (5)
days next following after the respondent has received ac
tual or constructive notice of the appeal. Every response
shall be submitted in writing; shall set forth a concise
statement of the facts and arguments that the respondent
believes are material; and shall be accompanied by written
proof that copies thereof have been served upon the ap
pellant and any other proper party in interest. The Direc
tor may, for good cause, extend or shorten the time limits
herein set forth and waive requirements for written sub
missions and proofs of service. The Director may, in his
sole discretion, review any decision of a local Federal
Coordinating Committee and stay any decision of a local
Federal Coordinating Committee pending his review
thereof. All decisions of the Director shall be final, and
shall be executed forthwith by the local Federal Coordinat
ing Committee or by such other person or entity as the
Director may direct to do so.
E xcerpts From 1983 CFC Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
46a
[This Page Left Blank Intentionally]
Excerpts From 1984 CFG Regulations
47a
§950.101 Definitions.
(a) The terms “voluntary agency,” “voluntary health and
welfare agency,” “voluntary charitable agency,” and “vol
untary charitable health and welfare agency” mean an
organization that is organized and operated for the pur
pose of rendering, or of materially or financially supporting
the rendering of, one or more of the following services
directly to, and for the direct benefit of, human beings:
(1) Delivery of health care to ill or infirm individuals;
(2) Education and training of personnel for the delivery
of health care to ill or infirm individuals;
(3) Health research for the benefit of ill or infirm in
dividuals ;
(4) Delivery of education, training, and care to phys
ically and mentally handicapped individuals;
(5) Treatment, care, rehabilitation, and counseling of
juvenile delinquents, criminals, released convicts, persons
who abuse drugs or alcohol, persons who are victims of
intra-family violence or abuse, persons who are otherwise
in need of social adjustment and rehabilitation, and the
families of such persons;
(6) Relief of victims of crime, war, casualty, famine,
natural disasters, and other catastrophes and emergencies;
(7) Neighborhood and community-wide services that di
rectly assist needy, poor, and indigent individuals, includ
ing provision of emergency relief and shelter, recreation,
transportation, the preparation and delivery of meals, edu
cational opportunities, and job training;
(8) Legal aid services that are provided to needy, poor,
and indigent individuals solely because of their inability
to afford legal counsel and without a policy or practice of
E xcerpts From 1984 CFC Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
48a
discrimination for or against the kind of cause, claim, or
defense of the individual;
(9) Protection of families that, on account of need, pov
erty, indigence, or emergency, are in long-term or short
term need of family, child-care, and maternity services,
child and marriage counseling, foster care, and guidance
or assistance in the management and maintenance of the
home and household;
(10) Relief of needy, poor, and indigent infants and
children, and of orphans, including the provision of adop
tion services;
(11) Relief of needy, poor, and indigent adults and of
the elderly;
12) Assistance, consistent with the mission of the De
partment of Defense, to members of the armed forces and
their families;
(13) Assistance, consistent with the mission of the Fed
eral agency or facility involved, to members of its staff
or service who, by reason of geographic isolation, emer
gency conditions, injury in the line of duty, or other ex
traordinary circumstances, have exceptional health or wel
fare needs;
(14) Lessening of the burdens of government with re
spect to the provision of any of the foregoing services; or
(15) Any other health and welfare service rendered by
a charitable health and welfare entity organized, qualified,
and recognized by the Internal Revenue Service, under 26
U.S.C. 501(c)(3).'
Excerpts From 1984 CFC Regulations
(5 C.F.R. Part 950)
OPM CFC Memorandum No. 83-10
49a
United States
Office of
Personnel Management Washington, d .c . 2<mis
CFC MEMORANDUM NO. 83-10
MEMORANDUM FOR CHAIRMEN AND CHAIRWOMEN, FEDERAL COORDINATING COMMITTEES
SUBJECT: Amendment to CFC Memorandum No. 83-9, National Voluntary Agency and
As you were informed in CFC Memorandum No. 83-6, CFC applicants determined on
September 1, 1983 to be ineligible to participate in the fall 1983 CFC as
national voluntary agencies were given an opportunity to request reconsideration
of those decisions. Several agencies requested reconsideration.
Following is a revised list of national voluntary agencies and national
federated groups approved for participation in the fall 1983 Combined Federal
Campaign. Organizations approved for the first time are Indicated by an
asterisk. Organizations admitted on appeal are indicated by a “t". These
organizations will have until the close of business, September 19, 1983, to file
applications demonstrating a direct and substantial local presence. Other
changes from CFC Memorandum No. 83-9 are indicated by a
1. Local United Ways, United Funds. Community Chests and Other Federated Groups
that are"members in good standing of, or are recognized by, the United Way of
America.
2. National Health Aqencies - Approved for participation in both the domestic
and overseas areas. (Must apply to local Federal Coordinating Clommittees
demonstrating local presence before being admitted to CFCs in the domestic
area.)
AMC Cancer Research Center and Hospital
American Cancer Society
American Diabetes Association
American Heart Association
American Kidney Fund
•American Liver Foundation
American Lung Association
American Paralysis Association
•American Parkinson Disease Association
American Social Health Association
•American Tinnitus Association
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Society of America
Arthritis Foundation
Association.for Retarded Citizens of the United States
tCity of Hope
•Conwittee to Combat Huntington's Disease
Cooley's Anemia Foundation
Cystic Fibrosis Foundation
•Deafness Research Foundation
Federation Eligibility
CON
50a
2
Epilepsy Foundation of America
‘Institute of Logopedics
Juvenile Diabetes Foundation International
leukemia Society of America
tLittle City Foundation
‘Little People's Research Fund
‘Lupus Foundation of America
March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation
Medic Alert Foundation International
Muscular Dystrophy Association
Myasthenia Gravis Foundation
‘National Alliance for the Mentally 111
National Association for Sickle Cell Disease
‘National Center for the Prevention of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome
National Easter Seal Society
National Foundation for Ileitis and Colitis
National Hemophilia Foundation
National Hospice Organization
National Huntington's Disease Association
National Jewish Hospital and Research Center/Natlonal Asthma Center
National Kidney Foundation
National Mental Health Association
National Multiple Sclerosis Society
•National Parkinson Foundation
National Reye's Syndrome Foundation
National Society for Autistic Children
National Society to Prevent Blindness
National Spinal Cord Injury Associated
•National Sudden Infant Death Syndrome Foundation
Research to.Prevent Blindness
RP Foundation Fighting Blindness
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
‘Tourette Syndrome Associatiation
Tuberous Sclerosis Association of America
United Cerebral Palsy Associations
3. International Service Agencies - Approved for participation in both the
domestic and overseas areas. (Applications to local Federal Coordinating
Committees demonstrating local presence not required.)
‘ACCION Internationa1/AITEC
African Medical S Research Foundation
Africare
American Near East Refugee Aid
CASE
♦Catholic Relief Services
51a
3
Church World Service/CRQP
Direct Relief International
Foster Parents Plan
foundation for the Peoples of the South Pacific
'Heifer Project International
Helen Keller International
'Hunger Project
Internationa! Eye Foundation
International Human Assistance Programs
Internationa! Rescue Committee
International Social Service/American Branch
'Institute for International Development
t*Leonard Wood American Leprosy Foundation
Meals for Mi 11ions/Freedom from Hunger Foundation
Oxfam America
*Pan American Development Foundation
Pearl S. Suck Foundation
People-to-People Health Foundation (Project HOPE)
Project Concern International
♦Project ORBIS
'Salvation Army World Service Office
Save the Children Federation
Technoserve
Unitarian Uni versa list Service Committee
United Seamen’s Service
United States Committee for UNICEF
'Winrock International Livestock Research and Training Center
World Education
World Wildlife Fund - US
'Youth for Understanding
4. International Service Agencies - Overseas Area - Except as otherwise noted,
participate only in the overseas area.
Armed Services YMCA
Boy Scouts o f America, Overseas Councils
'Boys Clubs of America
Sirl Scouts of America, Overseas Affiliates
Goodwill Industries International
National Recreation and Park Association [NSA]
United Service Organizations [NSA]
52a
5. National Service Agencies - Approved for participation in the domestic area
only"! (Must apply to local federal Coordinating Committees demonstrating local
presence before being admitted to CFCs in the domestic area.)
The following agencies are approved as satisfying all eligibility criteria
of 5 CFR Part 950, Including the “human health and welfare" requirements of 5
CFR § 950.101(a)(1):
■' f*America the Beautiful Fund <i- •
'American Foundation for the Blind
,*B1g Brothers/Big Sisters of America
nfChi ldren1 s Defense Fund
-*LULAC National Educational Service Centers
•■Martin Luther King, Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change
-NAACP Special Contribution Fund
^National Association for Visually Handicapped
♦National Black Child Development Institute
•National Black United Fund
•National Committee for Prevention of Child Abuse
'♦National HomeCaring Council
•National Recreation and Park Association [ISA overseas also]
^•Recording for the Blind
-Special Olympics
'♦The 52 Association
♦United Black Fund of America
United Negro College Fund
United Service Organizations [ISA overseas also]
•United States Olympic Committee *
-Vietnam Veterans of America Foundation
•Wilderness Society
The following agencies are approved on the basis of the decisions of the
United States District Court for the District of Columbia in NAACP legal Defense
and Educational Fund, Inc, v. Devine, Planned Parenthood Federation oTlieHca
v. Devine, and related cases, this approval binds all domestic local federal
Coordinating Conwittees as to the national eligibility of these organizations.
The agencies would not have been eligible for admission to the CFC as agendas
rendering or supporting “human health and welfare" services as set forth in 5
CFR § 950.101(a)(1).
Some of them would also have been ineligible because of failure to meet other
regulatory criteria. The dted judicial decisions, however, are difficult to
interpret, and seem to require the granting of national eligibility to these
organizations. Given an opaque legal situation, 0PM grants national eligibility
to these agencies solely for purposes of the 1983 CFC, and without prejudice to
the rights and authority of the Government to enforce Executive Order No. 12404
and regulations thereunder in future campaigns. In the event that the cited
5 3a
court orders are reversed on appeal, or otherwise modified or set aside, and if
such reversal or modification 1s administratively timely, then the national
eligibility o f these agencies will be revoked and their solicitation of funds in
the CrC will not be permitted.
‘••Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith
•Capital Legal Foundation
Center for Auto Safety
.Center for Science in the Public Interest
Conservative legal Defense and Education Fund
Federally Employed Women Legal and Education Fund - "■’»
•Food Research and Action Center
'‘Gray Panthers Project Fund
Indian Law Resource Center
Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law
♦Mental Health Law Project
■♦Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund
?*Moral Majority Foundation
■NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund
-National Audubon Society
-National Child Labor Committee
♦National Committee for Citizens in Education
•♦National Council of La Raza
-National Parks and Conservation Association
■National Right to Life Educational Trust Fund
-National Right to Work Legal Defense and Education Foundation
•Native American Rights Fund
Natural Resources Defense Council
■NOW Legal Defense and Education Fund
••Pacific Legal Foundation
♦Public Citizen Foundation
Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund
-Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund
54a
s
6. National Federated Groups - Groups are automatically eligible to participate
in each CFC in which member agencies of the federated group participate. The
American Red Cross participates either as a federated group or a member of a
local United Way.
American Red Cross
International Service Agencies
International Service Agencies/Combined Federal Campaign-Overseas Area
National Health Agencies for the Combined Federal Campaign
National Service Agencies
National Voluntary Organizations Campaign Committee
United Service Organizations [Overseas area only]
United Way of America
Donald J. Devine
Director
OPM CFC Memorandum No. 83-15
[Excerpts]
55a
W ’S, United States
Office of
Personnel Management Washington, d .c . 20415
in fteptv Rete? To
NOV 2 8 m
Vou7 Referent*
CFC MEMORANDUM NO. 83-15
MEMORANDUM FOR CHAIRMEN AND CHAIRWOMEN, FEDERAL COORDINATING COMMITTEES
SUBJECT: Fall 1983 CFC Reports; Fall 1982 CFC Results
Fall 1983 CFC Reports
Attached Is 0PM Form 1417 for reporting the results of your fall 1983 CFC.
Please have your Principal Combined Fund Organization complete the form and
return it to us as soon as possible, but no later than January 27, 1984. The
additional form should be completed by the Federal Coordinating Committee and
should be returned separately, but also by January 27, 1984.
In completing Form 1417, please have your PCFO note the following:
- Section C should reflect the gross distribution of contributions, not
the distribution net of campaign costs.
- In section C, the individual figures in the column "Designated Amount"
should include the contributions designated to the federated group plus the
contributions designated to each member agency of the group. The “Total Amount"
column should include both designated amounts and the share of the
deemed-designated contributions allocated by the CFC's PCFO to each federated
group and its member agencies.
- Each entry should be completed.
Please also be sure that each of the federated groups is informed by January 27,
1984 of the amounts designated to each of its member agencies and to itself as
well as the amount of deemed-designated funds allocated by the PCFO to the
group.
Fall 1982 Results
Attached is a copy of the complete report of the fall 1982 CFC. Despite your
having had to conduct that Campaign under completely new regulations and with
the uncertainty caused by litigation, it is an immense credit to your hard work
and to the generosity of Federal civilian employees and members of the Armed
Forces that the CFC did so well.
Donald J. Devine
Director
CO* " « ?« i
>9#0
FALL 1982 COMBINED FEDERAL CAMPAIGNS
TABLE 1 SUMMARY RESULTS
1983 RECEIPTS 198 1 PERCENT PERCENT PER CAPITA AVERAGE GIFT
(ALL GROUPS) CFC CHANGE PART1CIPATION GIFT
TOTAL 100)739.667 94.659.485 * 6.42 67.65 25.82 u OB
ALABAMA
OOO 1 CALHOUN-TALLADEGA AREA 254.652 184,523 * 38.01 46.2 1 ’ 15.92 34.45
0002 BIRMINGHAM 296.585 275.807 ♦ 7.53 73.83 42.32 57.32
0003 WIREGRASS 209.033 171,188 * 22.11 53.56 14.10 26.32
0004 HUNTSVILLE 648. 145 576.235 ♦ 12.48 60.00 36.45 60.76
0005 MONTGOMERY 406.768 347.826 ♦ 16.95 85. 18 42.87 50.33
0006 MOBILE 114.646 1 14.422 . 20 65.84 35.93 54.57
OOO? FLORENCE-MUSCLE SHOALS 57.800 62,936 - 8 . 16 33.67 2 1.02 62.42
0008 SELMA 1.649 2,121 22.25 37.50 17. 18 45.8 1
0009 DECATUR 918 0 ♦ .00 21.91 5.16 23.54
0010 TUSCALOOSA 55.000 52.639 ♦ 4.49 76.70 38.95 50. 78
001 1 TUSKEGEE 24.464 24.227 * .98 61.92 17.68 28.55
0012 SCOT TS80R0 13,401 10.258 •f 30.64 11.85 3.35 28.27
ALASKA
0030 SOUTH CENTRAL 508.305 454.227 * 11.91 49.75 21.94 44 . 10
0031 NORTHERN ALASKA 169.140 132.265 ♦ 27 88 69.29 28.43 4 1.03
0032 JUNEAU 60.513 54.878 ♦ 10. 27 44.65 25.68 57.52
ARIZONA
0050 FLAGSTAFF 35,926 30.426 + 18.08 31.57 14.32 45.36
005 1 FORT HUACHUCA 102.334 82.501 ♦ 24.04 26.76 10.23 38.24
0052 MARICOPA COUNTY 550,530 492.446 11.79 54.29 24.70 45.49
0053 TUCSON-PIMA COUNTY 323,576 282.517 * 14.53 68.93 30.34 44.02
0054 YUMA 78,013 65.705 ♦ 18.73 43.04 13.57 31.52
0055 PRESCOTT 11,955 13,398 - 10.77 38.86 17.87 45.98
005S GRAHAM COUNTY 1,871 1,298 ♦ 44 . 14 23.46 11.55 49.24
ARKANSAS
0070 8LYTHEVILLE 68.240 51.896 * 31.49 7 1.20 22. 16 31. 12
007 1 FAYETTEVILLE 12,095 12.708 - 4.82 4 7.50 17.79 37.45
007 2 LITTLE ROCK 319.4 18 291.805 + 9.46 63.11 24.32 38.53
0073 PINE BLUFF 74,447 67.270 ♦ 10.67 72.56 44.90 61.88
0074 FT SMITH 6,151 8,654 - 28.92 72.58 14.54 20.04
0075 HOT SPRINGS 9.872 9.386 4 5. 18 5 1.41 23. 17 45.08
0076 JONESBORO 9.728 11,011 11.65 53.98 28.70 53. 16
CALIFORNIA
0090 KERN-EOWARDS 175.211 141.405 4 23.91 37.55 23.05 61.39
009 1 MOJAVE VALLEY-BARSTOW 100.236 74,477 4 34.59 52.35 19. 13 16.54
0092 CHINA LAKE 168,895 135.288 ♦ 24.84 53.67 39.28 73. 18
0093 CORONA-NORCO 25.942 25.771 4 . 66 8 1.42 33.01 40.53
0095 FRESNO 110.467 101.403 4 8.94 33 . 16 13.8 1 4 1.64
0096 LOS ANGELES 2,034.629 1.969.035 . 4 3.33 59.60 29.02 48.70
56a
TO TAL R A I S E D
TOTAL 1 0 0 . 7 3 9 . 6 6 7
ALABAMA
0 0 0 1 C A L M O U N - t a l LAOEOA AREA 2 5 4 . 6 5 2
0 0 0 2 B IR M I N G H A M 2 9 6 . 5 8 5
0 0 0 3 w fR E G R A S S 2 0 9 . 0 3 3
0 0 0 4 H U N T S V I L L E 6 4 8 . 145
0 0 0 5 MONTGOMERY 4 0 6 . 7 6 8
0 0 0 6 M O B IL E 1 * 4 . 6 4 6
0 0 0 7 F L O R E N C E -M U S C L E S N O A IS 5 7 . 8 0 0
0 0 0 8 SELMA 1 . 6 4 9
0 0 0 9 DECA TUR 9 1 8
0 0 * 0 TUS CA LOOSA 5 5 . 0 0 0
0 0 * 1 TUSKEGEE 2 4 . 4 6 4
0 0 1 2 S C O T T S 8 0 R 0 1 3 . 4 0 *
ALA SKA
0 0 3 0 SOUTH CE NTRAL 5 0 8 . 3 0 5
0 (3 3* NORTHERN ALA S KA 1 6 9 . 1 4 0
0 0 3 2 JUNEAU 6 0 . 5 1 3
A RIZO NA
0 0 5 0 f l a g s t a f f 3 5 , 9 2 6
0 0 5 1 FORT HUACMUCA 1 0 2 . 3 3 4
0 0 5 2 M ARIC OPA COUNTY 5 5 0 . 5 3 0
0 0 5 3 T U C S O N -P IM & COUNTY 3 2 3 . 5 7 6
0 0 5 4 YUMA 7 8 . 0 1 3
0 0 5 5 PRESCOTT 1 1 . 9 5 5
0 0 5 6 GRAHAM COUNTY 1 . 8 7 1
ARKANSAS
0 0 7 0 B L Y T H E V I L L E 6 3 . 2 4 0
0 0 7 1 F A Y E T T E V I L L E 1 2 . 0 9 5
0 0 7 2 L I T T L E ROCK 3 * 9 . 4 1 8
0 0 7 3 P IN E BLU FF 7 4 . 4 4 7
0 0 7 4 FT S M IT H 6 . 1 5 1
0 0 7 5 HOT S P R IN G S 9 . 8 7 2
0 0 7 6 JONESBORO 9 . 7 2 8
C A L I F O R N I A
0 0 9 0 KERN-EOWARDS 1 7 5 . 2 1 1
0 0 9 1 MOJAVE V A L L E Y -B A R S T O V 1 0 0 . 2 3 6
» 9 0 2 C O M B I N E D F F O F R A L C A M P A I G N S
TABLE 6 C O S T S OF C A M P A I G N S
COST PE RC EN T OF TOTAL
4 . 3 6 1 . 9 0 9 4%
1 0 . 0 9 6 47,
5 . 0 4 4 27.
3 . 5 7 2 2%
4 . 6 3 6 I t
4 . 8 0 2 17.
2 . 3 7 0 2 t
3 . 6 6 3 67.
0 07.
6 0 7%
8 15 I t
9 5 2 47.
O 07,
2 6 . 3 3 2
1 0 . 0 7 6
2 . 4 5 0
57.
6 74y.
2 . 1 2 3 67.
1 . 0 8 5 I t
1 5 . 7 9 8 37.
1 2 . 0 1 2 4%
1 , 6 19 27,
5 0 3 47.
27 7 157,
7 17
4 9 0
2 6 . 8 2 1
1 . 127
5 3 3
6 3 . 0 0 0
8 0 2
17.
47.
• 87.
! 27.
97,
6 3 8 7 .
87.
1 5 . 7 6 9 97.
8 . 0 7 2 87.
5 7a
58a
(This Page Left Blank In te n tio n a lly )
Capital Area CFG Brochure for 1984
59a
1984 COMBINED FEDERAL CAMPAIGN AGENCY LISTING
HEALTH SERVICES/SERVICES TO THE
HANDICAPPED
101 PREVENTION OF BLINDNESS SOCIETY OF
METROPOLITAN WASHINGTON: Public educa
tion on eye care, health/safety; information, counsel
ing and referral services, children's screening pro
gram; glaucoma tests; glasses for indigents; lending
library of cataract glasses. (UW)
102 PRINCE GEORGE'S VOLUNTEER HEALTH
CLINIC: Counseling, treatment, referral/education
services in the areas of reproductive health, venereal
disease,' general medical problems, routine physical
examinations, hypertension and pediatric services.
(UW)
103 RAP: Provides a drug-free re-education, residential
environment for former drug abusers, addicts, ex
offenders and others with alienated and/or criminal
lifestyles. Assists crime victims. (UW)
104 REALITY: Licensed residential center for rehabilita
tion of alcoholic persons. Provides group, family and
individual counseling services in both residential and
aftercare programs. (UW)
105 REHABILITATION OPPORTUNITIES: Evaluation,
work adjustment, individual, family and group
counseling to retarded, mentally and physically
handicapped. Primary goals are industrial placement
and sheltered employment. (UW)
106 RESEARCH TO PREVENT BLINDNESS, INC:
Research to Prevent Blindness is the world's leading
voluntary organization in support of scientific
roceamh into the causes, treatment, cure and
prevention of all blinding diseases. (NHA)
107 THE ROCK CREEK FOUNDATION: National Model
Program working with dually disabled, mentally
handicapped/emotionally disturbed adults. Provides
psychiatric, vocational, residential and socialization
services enabling individuals to be integrated in com
munity as contributing citizens. (Local Non-Affiliated
Agency)
108 RP FOUNDATION FIGHTING BLINDNESS: The
goal of the Foundation is to discover the cause of
blinding retinal degenerative diseases and to find the
treatment and prevention of these diseases. (NHA)
109 SHELTERED O CCUPATIO NAL CENTER OF
NORTHERN VIRGINIA: Provides vocational pro
grams to assist handicapped adults achieve optimum
level of vocational development and self-sufficiency.
Work adjustment training, sheltered employment/
job placement assistance services. (UW)
110 ST. JUDE CHILDREN'S RESEARCH HOSPITAL: St.
jude Children's Research Hospital LEADS the bat-
tie against childhood cancer. Cancer kills more
child.en than any other disease. Research at bt. Jude
aims at stopping this tragic waste (NHA).
111 STODDARD BAPTIST HOME: A comprehensive
residential care facility which maintains and im
proves the physical well-being and functioning of the
elderly. (UW)
112 TOURETTE SYNDROME ASSOCIATION: is a volun
tary agency dedicated to the prevention, control,
and cure of Tourette Syndrome and to the welfare
of people with TS.(NHA)
113 TUBEROUS SCLEROSIS ASSOCIATION OF
AMERICA (TSAA): Provides information, referrals,
counseling and supports research in Tuberous
Sclerosis (TS), a disease causing epilepsy, mental
retardation, and physical handicaps in children and
adults. (NHA)
114 UNITED CEREBRAL PALSY: Affiliates provide varied
programs for children and adults with cerebral palsy,
designed to develop participants maximum poten
tial and answer the needs of each geographic area.
115 UNITED OSTOMY ASSOCIATION, METROPOLI
TAN WASHINGTON CHAPTER: Promotes men-
tal/physical rehabilitation of persons who will
undergo or have undergone ostomy surgery;
disseminates information for public education con
cerning ostomy surgery and rehabilitation. (UW)
116 VISITING NURSE ASSOCIATION OF NORTHERN
VIRGINIA: Intermittent home health services; skill
ed nursing and home health aide care, physical,
speech and occupational therapies; specialty staff;
medical social workers; I.V. therapy; 24-hour
coverage. (UW)
117 VISITING NURSE ASSOCIATION OF W ASHING
TON, D.C.: Short or long term in-home nursing
care: physical, speech, occupational therapy, home
health aide, social work, and hospice-type care
under the direction of patient's physician. (UW)
118 VOLUNTEERS FOR THE VISUALLY HANDI
CAPPED: Volunteers provided for reading, visiting,
and tape recording. Information/referral. counseling
for newly-blinded persons; White Cane shop, Braille
classes, and cane travel instruction. (UW)
119 W ASHINGTON AREA COUNCIL O N ALCOHOL
ISM AND DRUG ABUSE (WACADA): Seeks to
reduce alcohol and drug problems through educa
tion, information/referral and social action: acts as
an advocate for addicted individuals and watchdog
in the public interest. (UW)
120 WASHINGTON HEARING AND SPEECH SOCI
ETY: Lip-reading classes, speech, auditory training,
hearing test/evaiuation; consultation; referrals, social
rehabilitation; hearing aids fitted, free hearing aids
for indigent; multi-handicapped deaf/school for
retarded. (UW)
121 WOODLEY HOUSE: Living arrangement between
hospital/home for persons with psychological prob
lems; apartment program for low-fixed income per
sons; alternative to psychiatric hospitalization for
persons experiencing emotional crisis. (UW)
122 ZACCHEUS MEDICAL CLINIC: Provides free quali
ty health care with dignity to the destitute. Includes
drug and alcohol abuse counseling, educational ser
vices in nutrition, first aid, prenatal care, childbirth
care, diabetes and hypertension. (UW')
123 AMC CANCER RESEARCH CENTER fights cancer
on several fronts—laboratory and clinical research,
free nationwide cancer detection screenings and
other prevention and control programs. National
toll-free information/counseling service. (NHA)
1 24 AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY, DISTRICT OF CO
LUMBIA DIVISION: Participates in the United Way
through your designations. A voluntary organization
dedicated to the control/eradication of cancer. Pro
grams include research, education, service to cancer
patients and their families. (UW)
125 AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY, MONTGOMERY
COUNTY UNIT: Participates in the United Way
through your designations. A voluntary organization
dedicated to the control and eradication of cancer.
Programs include research, education, service to
cancer patients and their families. (UW)
126 AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY, NORTHERN
VIRGINIA AREA OFFICE: Participates in the United
Way through your designations. A voluntary organ
ization dedicated to the control and eradication of
cancer. Programs include research, education, ser
vice to cancer patients and their families. (UW)
127 AM ERICAN CAN CER SOCIETY, PRINCE
GEORGE'S COUNTY AREA OFFICE: Participates in
the United Way through your designations. A volun
tary organization dedicated to the control and
eradication of cancer. Programs include research,
education, service to cancer patients and their
families. (UW)
128 AMERICAN DIABETES ASSOCIATION: A nation
wide nonprofit voluntary health organization serv
ing America's eleven million diabetics and their
families through research, community services, and
patient, public and professional education. (NHA)
129 AMERICAN FOUNDATION FOR THE BLIND:
Helps blind and visually handicapped Americans by
improving the quality of the special education, reha
bilitation and other services they need, by training
workers for the blind and by developing unique
products and programs for blind persons. (NSA)
130 AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION, LOUDOUN
COUNTY VIRGINIA CHAPTER: Participates in the
United Way through ynur designations. Voluntary
health agency dedicated to reduction of premature
death and disability due to cardiovascular disease
through public and professional education, com
munity service and research. (UW')
1 31 AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION, MONTGOM-
ERY COUNTY MARYLAND CHAPTER: Participates
in the United Way through your designations. Volun
tary health agency dedicated to reduction of pre
mature death and disability due to cardiovascular
disease through public and professional education,
community service and research. (UW)
132 AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION, NATION'S
CAPITAL AFFILIATE: Participates in the United Way
through your designations. Voluntary health agen
cy dedicated to reduction of premature death and
disability due to cardiovascular disease through
public and professional education, community ser
vice and research. (UW)
133 AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION, NORTHERN
VIRGINIA CHAPTER: Participates in the United
Way through your designation'-. Voluntary agent y
dedicated to reduction of premature death and
disability due to cardiovascular disease through
public and professional education, community ser-
vice-and research. (UW')
134 AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION, SOUTHERN
MARYLAND CHAPTER: Participates in the United
Way through your designations. Voluntary health
agency dedicated to reduction of premature death
and disability due to cardiovascular disease through
public and professional education, community ser
vice and research. (UW)
135 AMERICAN KIDNEY FUND: Provides the follow
ing services in the local community; direct financial
assistance to needy kidney patients; establishes
emergency funds and transportation pools at dialysis
units; provides educational material; facilitates organ
donation. (NHA)
136 THE AMERICAN LIVER FOUNDATION: A National
organization devoted to creating public awareness
of liver diseases, their prevention, and generating
public support for liver research. (NHA)
137 AMERICAN LUNG ASSOCIATIONS: Seek preven
tion and control of disabling lung diseases through
promotion of risk reduction and lifestyle wellness:
provide patient services, support medical education
and needed research. (NHA)
138 AMERICAN PARALYSIS ASSOCIATION: Dedicated
to funding medical and scientific research, for cure
on spinal cord paralysis. Successful central nervous
system regeneration will benefit victims of other
neurological disorders. (NHA)
139 THE AMERICAN PARKINSON DISEASE ASSOCIA
TION: Sponsors pioneering medical research and
offers support assistance, literature and community
education to patients, their families and the public.
(NHA)
140 AMERICAN RED CROSS-ALEXANDRIA CHAPTER:
Provides military and veteran family services, disaster
assistance, health care volunteers, health and first
aid instruction. Transports elderly. Operates
volunteer blood services. (UW)
141 AMERICAN RED CROSS-ARLINGTON CHAPTER:
Provides military and veteran family services, disaster
assistance, health care volunteers, health and first
aid instruction. Transports elderly. Operates
volunteer blood services. (UW)
142 AMERICAN RED CROSS-DISTRICT OF CO LUM
BIA CHAPTER: Provides military and veteran fami
ly services, disaster assistance, health care
volunteers, health and first aid instruction. Transports
elderly. Operates volunteer blood services. (UW)
143 AMERICAN RED CROSS-FAIRFAX COUNTY
CHAPTER: Provides military and veteran family ser
vices, disaster assistance, health care volunteers,
health and first aid instruction. Transports elderly.
Operates volunteer blood services. (UW)
144 AMERICAN RED CROSS-LOUDOUN COUNTY
CHAPTER: Provides military and veteran family ser
vices, disaster assistance, health care volunteers,
health and first aid instruction. Transports elderiy.
Operates volunteer blood services. (UW)
145 AMERICAN RED CROSS-MONTGOMERY CO UN
TY CHAPTER: Provides military and veteran family
services, disaster assistance, health care volunteers,
health and first aid instruction. Transports elderly.
Operates volunteer blood services. (UW)
146 AMERICAN RED CROSS-PRINCE GEORGE'S
COUNTY CHAPTER: Provides military and veteran
family services, disaster assistance, health care
volunteers, health and first aid instruction. Transports
elderly. Operates volunteer blood services. (UW)
147 AMERICAN RED CROSS-PRINCE WILLIAM
CHAPTER: Provides military and veteran family ser
vices, disaster assistance, health care volunteers,
health and first aid instruction. Transports elderly.
Operates volunteer blood services. (UW)
148 AMERICAN SOCIAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION:
Herpes affects over 20 million Americans. The
American Social Health Association is the only na
tional volunteer health agency providing research,
education, and information for herpes and other
epidemic venereal diseases. (NHA)
149 AMERICAN TINNITUS ASSOCIATION: Supports
tinnitus research, furnishes education and informa
tion about tinnitus, and provides a worldwide net
work of patient services through clinics and self-help
groups. (NF1A)
150 AMYOTROPHIC LATERAL SCLEROSIS SOCIETY
OF AMERICA (ALSSOA): ALSSOA sponsors research
seeking the cause and cure of "Lou Gehrig's
disease.",-Provides information and literature on care
of AI.S patients. Holds patient/famiiy meetings.
Organizes friends of ALSSOA groups. (NHA)
151 ANCHOR MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION: Aids
mentally and emotionally disabled adults to avoid
hospitalization/re-hospitalization. Work training,
group transitional living, social activities to help
clients achieve highest level of independence. (UW)
152 ANDROMEDA, HISPANO MENTAL HEALTH
CENTER: Serves Hispanic population in out-patient
mental health therapy, alcohol and drug abuse treat
ment, domestic violence counseling including,.safe-
homes, and Spanish-speaking 24-hour Crisis In
tervention Hotline. (UW)
153 ARDMORE DEVELOPMENTAL CENTER: Operates
pre-vocational program, two workshops and six
group homes for people who have developmental
disabilities. (UW)
154 ARLINGTON COMMUNITY RESIDENCES: Pro
vides a continuum of communitv-based residential
services to mentally ill and mentally retarded adults
aged 18 or older. (UW)
155 ARTHRITIS FOUNDATION: Promotes public infor
mation and education, provides patient services for
over 450.000 area residents (adults and children)
with arthritis; supports local and national research
for the nation's # 1 crippling disease. (NHA)
156 ASSOCIATION FOR RETARDED CITIZENS, D.C.:
Legal/legislative advocacy and direct services to
mentally retarded citizens. Information/referral;
sheltered workshop; vocational training; job place
ment; counseling; residential services; volunteer ad
vocacy services, (UW)
157 ASSOCIATION OF RETARDED CITIZENS, EAST
ERN PRINCE WILLIAM: Services for the handi
capped; Woodbridge Adult Activity Center and
Muriel Humphrey Respite Day-Care Center; recrea
tional activities: transportation program; informa
tion/referral services; advocacy; parent support.
(UW)
158 ASSOCIATION OF RETARDED CITIZENS, MONT
GOMERY COUNTY: Pre-school programs for
deveiopmentally delayed children; adult prevoca-
tional/community-living skills; recreational activities;
resources information/assistance; community educa
tion; group homes. (UW)
159 ASSOCIATION FOR RETARDED CITIZENS,
NORTHERN VIRGINIA: Supports establishment of
life-span services for retarded chsldren/aduits; intor-
mation/referral to families needing services: friends
to-retarded; adult transportation service: supports
five special programs. (UW)
160 ASSOCIATION FOR RETARDED CITIZENS,
PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY: Individual care ad
vocacy services: adult community-based residential
programs; information/referral to parents: public in
formation: continuing education programs for men
tally retarded adults. (UW)
161 BLUE RIDGE SPEECH AND HEARING CENTER OF
LOUDOUN COUNTY: Speech, hearing/language
evaluations/therapy. hearing-aid evaluations,
repairs/dispensing; aural rehabilitation classes,
speech/hearing consultation to hospitals, nursing
homes/homebound clients; industrial hearing con
servation services/supplies including audiometric
testing. (UW)
162 BOWIE THERAPEUTIC NURSERY CENTER: Educa
tion and therapy to.emotionally, behaviorally and
deveiopmentally handicapped children ages 2-5
years old. Counseling for parents and siblings. (UW)
163 CENTER FOR SCIENCE IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST:
Nutrition Action/Cenler lor Sc ience. Publishes Nutri
tion Action magazine. Provides counseling on diet
and eating better for less. Promotes fewer food ad
ditives. safer food, better food labeling, and other
nutrition issues. (NSA)
164 CAPITAL CHILDREN'S MUSEUM: A participatory
educational/cultural facility designed to serve
children of all abilities; nearly 10,000 handicapped
children visit annually and participate in programs.
(Local Non-Affiliated Agency)
165 CENTERS FOR THE HANDICAPPED: Services for
handicapped; special education, psychological and
vocational evaluation; physical, speech and occupa
tional therapy; sheltered workshop, work activities
program; residential, and recreational programs.
(UW)
166 CITIZENS ASSOCIATION OF THE AREA D CO M
MUNITY MENTAL HEALTH CENTER: Enhances
and sustains the capacity of patients discharged from
in-patient ram at St Elizabeth's Hospital, to func
tion in the community. (UW)
167 CITY OF HOPE: CITY OF HOPE/Cancer and Major
Diseases Center: Free patient care for victims of
cancer; heart, blood, chest, hereditary and metabolic
disorders. Second opinion services. Pioneering
research in catastrophic diseases. (NE1A)
168 THE COMMITTEE TO COMBAT HUNTINGTON'S
DISEASE educates the public and health profes
sionals about Huntington's Disease, assists affected
families, and promotes research into the cause and
cure of the disease. (NHA)
169 COMMUNITY SERVICES FOR AUTISTIC ADULTS
AND CHILDREN: Provides residential, educational
and vocational programs and services to autistic
adults and adolescents to teach them to live and
work in the community. (UW)
170 CONCERNED CITIZENS ON ALCOHOL ABUSE:
Fosters educational programs on the prevention and
treatment of alcoholism and alcohol abuse. (UW)
171 COOLEY'S ANEMIA FOUNDATION, INC: Under
writes medical expenses, provides support services,
educates medical professionals and funds research
studying Cooley's anemia, a fatai blood disorder
which strikes children and young adults. (NHA)
172 CYSTIC FIBROSIS FOUNDATION, METROPOLI
TAN D.C. CHAPTER: Participates in the United Way
through your designations. Supports research, public
and professional education, patient/famiiy services;
fights the number one genetic disease. Support three
CF area clinics. (UW)
173 THE DEAFNESS RESEARCH FOUNDATION is the
only national voluntary health organization ex
clusively supporting research on the treatment and
prevention of deafness and other hearing disabilities.
(NHA)
174 D.C. INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HYGIENE: Provides
broad-based psychiatric and psychological out
patient mental health care on short and long term,
individual and group basis for all age groups. (UW)
175 D.C. MENTAL RETARDATION ADVOCATES
ASSOCIATES: Guides and assists the mentally retard
ed in each phase of the Court proceedings through
volunteer advocates to protect the rights of the men
tally handicapped. (UW)
176 D.C. SPECIAL OLYMPICS: A program designed to
promote athletic and recreational activities and com
petition for mentally retarded children and adults.
(UW)
177 DEAFPRIDE: Offers programs for deaf persons and
their families; provides minority leadership develop
ment, advocacy training, workshops and Sign
Language classes, interpreter and tele-communica
tions assistance. (UW)
178 DIDLAKE OCCUPATIONAL CENTER: Assists
handicapped individuals to reach highest level of
vocational potential through evaluation, work ad
justment training, sheltered employment and job
placement. (UW)
179 EASTER SEAL SOCIETY: Five rehabilitation centers
serve over 3,000 disabled children and adults and
their families in special education, physical, occupa
tional speech and hearing therapy and medical
clinics. (NHA)
180 EPILEPSY FOUNDATION FOR THE NATIONAL
CAPITAL AREA: Information and referral services;
employment counselng/job placement; self-help for
epileptics and parents; independent living skills train
ing, advocates against discrimination in jobs/sebools.
(UW)
181 EPISCOPAL CENTER FOR CHILDREN: Five-day
residential and day treatment for emotionally disturb
ed children ages 5 1/2 to 10 1/2. Schooling and
psychotherapy for children, and casework for
families. (UW)
182 EVERY CITIZEN HASAN OPPORTUNITY (ECHO):
A comprehensive rehabilitation program providing
evaluation, training, facility employment, job place
ment, follow-up and support services for disabled
adults. (UW)
60a
18) GREATER BADEN MEDICAL SERVICES: Offers
primary medical care services through a clinic, physi
cian, nursing, laboratory and referral services. (UW)
184 HEBREW HOME OF GREATER WASHINGTON:
Licensed facility offering long-term comprehensive
care for aged dependent persons: short stay-respite
care available. Health facilities, physical and occupa
tional therapy, social service/recreationa! programs.
(UW)
183 HOMEMAKER HEALTH AID SERVICE OF THE NA
TIONAL CAPITAL AREA: Employs, trains and pro
fessionally supervises homemaker health aides to
provide planned in-home care to elderly, ill and
disabled adults, and dependent children. (UW)
186 THE HOSPITAL FOR SICK CHILDREN: A special
ty Children's hospital which provides chronic care,
terminal care, rehabilitation, and special education
to multi-handicapped and developmental^ impaired
children. (UW)
187 HOW ARD UNIVERSITY CANCER RESEARCH
CENTER: Provides diagnosis, treatment, clinical
education, graduate research training, community
information on health-care relating to all forms of
cancer, especially the high risk cancer groups among
Blacks. (UW)
188 HOW ARD UNIVERSITY CENTER FOR SICKLE
CELL DISEASE: Provides comprehensive health-care
for victims of sickle cell disease, diagnostic laboratory
services, screening, genetic counseling, education,
and research on the bio-medical/social-economic
aspects of the disease. (UW)
189 INDEPENDENT LIVING FOR THE HANDICAP
PED: Independent Living for the Handicapped pro
vides accessible housing, independent life skills train
ing, and support services to severely physically
disabled adults. (Local Non-Affiliated Agency)
190 INSIGHT: Provides 24-hour residential services to
mentally retarded adults. Includes training in self
help skills, socialization, housekeeping, budgeting
and the utilization of community resources. (UW)
191 THE INSTITUTE OF LOGOPEDICS is a residential
facility with comprehensive programs for the habili-
tation and rehabilitation of persons with handicaps
affecting their ability to communicate. (NHA)
192 JUVENILE DIABETES FOUNDATION, NORTH
ERN VIRGINIA CHAPTER:
JUVENILE DIABETES FOUNDATION, PRINCE
WILLIAM DIVISION: Participates in the United Way
through your designations. Brings hope to diabetics
and their families through counseling, emotional
support, education and by funding research to find
cure. (UW)
193 JUVENILE DIABETES FOUNDATION, WASHING
TON METRO CHAPTER: Participates in the United
Way through your designations. Brings hope to
diabetics and their families through counseling, emo
tional support, education and by funding research
to find a cure. (UW)
194 KIDNEY FOUNDATION, NATIONAL CAPITAL
AREA NATIONAL: Participates in the United Way
through your designations. Supports research,
public-professional education, community and the
"Gift-of-Life” Organ Donor Programs. Funds patient-
emergency programs for dialysis and transplant pa
tients. (UW)
195 LEUKEMIA SOCIETY OF AMERICA, INC: Funds
will benefit the Leukemia Society of America, Inc.
in conducting programs of medical research, finan
cial assistance to patients, and public and profes
sional education. (NHA)
196 LIFE SKILLS CENTER: Day program helps severely
and profoundly retarded adults achieve greater in
dependence. Home training program serves severe
ly, profoundly, multi-handicapped retarded adults
not enrolled in full-time program. (UW)
197 LITTLE PEOPLE S RESEARCH FUND provides sup
port for medical research in orthopedic disabilities
of dwarfism, and funds for patient care and the train
ing of medical personnel. (NHA)
198 LUPUS FOUNDATION OF AMERICA: Patient
oriented, dedicated to public awareness, education
and research. Helps over 500,000 American lupus
patients. LUPUS: incurable, sometimes fatal, affects
predominantly women in the child-bearing years.
(NHA)
199 MARCH OF DIMES BIRTH DEFECTS FOUNDA
TION. The March of Dimes is saving babies. . .With
prevention and treatment, through research and
education, we fight America's number one child
health problem—birth defects. (NHA)
200 MEDIC ALERT: Provides a life-protecting service-
bracelet (or necklace), wallet card, 24 hour ''hot
line"--to assure proper emergency treatment for
people with hidden medical conditions (such as
diabetes, allergies, heart conditions, etc.) (NHA)
201 M ELW O O D HORTICULTURAL TRAINING
CENTER: Trains mentally handicapped adults in hor
ticultural, custodial, residential, daily living and
recreational skills. (UW)
202 MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION IN ALEXAN-
DRIA:Advocacy, social action and information and
referral for mentally ill; public information and com
munity education on mental health and mental ill
ness issues. (UW)
203 MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION OF THE
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Enhances the care and
treatment of mentally ill; improves methods of pre
vention and promotes mental health basically
through social action, education and counseling.
(UW)
204 MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION OF MONT
GOMERY COUNTY: Information/referral; youth
programs and volunteer service opportunities; social
and vocational rehabilitation programs. Works
toward positive treatment of mentally ill and promo
tion of mental health, (UW)
205 MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION OF NORTHERN
VIRGINIA: Vocational rehabilitation services; infor
mation and referral; public education programs and
forums; advocacy for individuals and public policies.
(UW)
206 MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION OF PRINCE
GEORGE'S COUNTY: Social action and education
programs related to mental health/mental illness. In
formation and referral services. Sponsors Alternative
Community Living Program and P.G. Hotline. (UW)
207 THE MENTAL HEALTH LAW PROJECT: Provides
legal aid to mentally disabled people, to protect
them from abuse in institutions and help them ob
tain needed services in the community. (NSA)
208 MOBILE MEDICAL CARE: Full out-patient services,
medical and therapeutic care; referral or consultant
follow-up if indicated, to medically indigent. (UW)
209 THE MORAL MAJORITY FOUNDATION, INC. Ac
tivities include the support of programs and educa
tional services with respect to abortion counseling,
alcohol and drug abuse counseling, meals for elderly
persons and medical services for pregnant women.
(NSA)
210 M U SCU LAR DYSTROPHY ASSOCIATION:
Muscular Dystrophy Association is dedicated to find
ing cures for 40 neuromuscular diseases while pro
viding, without charge and means test, care and
related services to patients and their families. (NHA)
211 MYASTHENIA GRAVIS FOUNDATION: The
Chapter contributes to national research, provides
a clinic, drug bank, medical advisory board, hotline
telephone service, outreach programs, and ongoing
public information activities. (NHA)
212 NATIONAL ALLIANCE FOR THE MENTALLY ILL
(Threshold Pathways to independence) Provides
emotional and educational supports to families cop
ing with severely mentally ill relatives—the 10 million
Americans afflicted with schizophrenias and manic
depressive disorders. (NHA)
213 NATIONAL CENTER FOR THE PREVENTION OF
SUDDEN INFANT DEATH SYNDROME: The Na
tional Center battles 'crib death', a leading killer of
infants. The National Center is dedicated to
eliminating SIDS by increasing public awareness and
supporting medical research. (NHA)
214 NATIONAL CHILDREN'S CENTER: Residential/day
programs for retarded, developmentally disabled
and multi-handicapped infants through adults; family
counseling; diagnostic services; infancy pre-school,
deaf vocational services. (UW)
215 NATIONAL FOUNDATION FOR ILEITIS AND
COLITIS: Supports education and research on
Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis, chronic in
testinal disease afflicting two million Americans.
(NHA)
216 NATIONAL HEMOPHILIA FOUNDATION: Pro
vides financial support to research and local
hemophilia patients. Youth camperships and limited
scholarships are available. Call for help or informa
tion. (NHA)
217 NATIONAL HOSPICE ORGANIZATION: Hospice
programs provide home care, inpatient care and
bereavement care to help terminally-ill patients and
their families face the special concerns of dying and
bereavement. (NHA)
218 NATIONAL HUNTINGTON'S DISEASE ASSOCIA
TION: Fights the "genetic time bomb" disease, a
fatal neurological illness. NHDA provides patient ser
vices nationwide and funds medical research. (NHA)
219 NATIONAL JEWISH HOSPITAL/NATIONAL
ASTHMA CENTER: Is a nonsectarian medical center,
specializing in lung, allergic and immunological
diseases, that serves local communities through its
treatment, research, professional training and educa
tion programs. (NHA)
220 NATIONAL MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS SOCIETY:
Agency provides broad range of services to patients
in metropolitan area and helps fund national re
search program to eliminate crippling neurological
disease of young adults. (NHA)
221 NATIONAL REYE'S SYNDROME FOUNDATION:
In the Z'' ‘tropolifa.o D.C. area promotes and supports
public and medical professional education about
Reye's Syndrome (RS) and research into cause, treat
ment and cure. (NHA)
222 NATIONAL SOCIETY FOR AUTISTIC CHILDREN:
NSAC provides educational and support services to
the 4,600 children and adults with autism in
Metropolitan Washington, their families, and pro
fessionals serving them. (NHA)
223 NATIONAL SPINAL CORD INJURY ASSOCIA
TION: Serves .500,000 Americans now paralyzed by
spinal cord injuries and the 20,000 more paralyzed
annually. Goals: cure of and care for paralyzed peo
ple. (NHA)
224 NATIONAL SUDDEN INFANT DEATH SYN
DROME FOUNDATION: Provides services to
families of SIDS victims and infants monitored at
home: educates re SIDS' promotes SIDS related
research. (NHA)
225 OTIS HOUSE, HEALTH CARE FOUNDATION FOR
THE DEAF; Residential programs for deaf persons
with emotional and social adjustment problems; pro
vides intake, referrai/care management services, in
dependent living skills programs and counseling ser
vices for multi-Handicapped deaf persons. (UW')
CHILDREN A N D FAMILY SERVICES
226 MY SISTER'S PLACE: Offers emergency shelter and
services for battered women and their children, and
provides referral* and counseling through its 24-hour
telephone hotiine. (Local Non-Affiliated Agency)
227 NATIONAL BLACK CHILD DEVELOPMENT IN
STITUTE: The Institute works to improve services
delivered to Black children in child care, child
welfare and education through direct services and
research. (NSA)
228 NATIONAL COMMITTEE FOR CITIZENS IN
EDUCATION: Improving public schools and help
ing children by empowering parents and citizens
through publications (English and Spanish), training,
free telephone assistance. Contributions matched by
Challenge Gift. (NSA)
229 NATIONAL COMMITTEE FOR PREVENTION OF
CHILD ABUSE: A volunteer-based organization of
concerned citizens working on the community,
state, and national level to develop primary preven
tion child abuse programs. (NSA)
230 NEW IMAGE CHILD DEVELOPMENTAL CENTER:
Provides an educational component which offers
skill development in reading, writing, mathematics
and science, as well as cultural/social enrichment
for children 18 months-6 years of age. (UW)
231 ORPHAN FOUNDATION: Operates a volunteer
based intervention program for orphaned and foster
children who are leaving the child welfare system.
Assists them in making a smooth transition to in
dependent adulthood. (UW)
232 PARENT CHILD CENTER, WASHINGTON* D.C.:
Provides services to families with young children in
cluding infant stimulation, general child develop
ment, basic education skill development (GED), nu
trition, and on-the-job training and special needs
programming. (UW)
233 PIERCE-WARWICK ADOPTION SERVICE: Serves
older black children, handicapped children, and
brothers and sisters needing homes together;
children who would otherwise grow up without per
manent families of their own. (UW)
234 SAINT ANN 'S INFANT AND MATERNITY HOME:
Residential care for abused, neglected, dependent
children ages birth to 10; residential maternity pro
gram; residential aftercare program for teenage
mothers and babies; pre-school day-care. (UW)
235 UNITED SERVICE ORGANIZATION, NATIONAL
CAPITAL AREA: Serves military personnel and
dependents via on and off base programs and ser
vices including information and referral, free group
tours, theatre tickets and housing information. (UW)
236 WHIPPER HOME, IONIA R: A comprehensive,
therapeutic residential facility for abused, neglected
and abandoned adolescent females, ages 12-17.
(UW)
237 W OMEN 'S LEGAL DEFENSE FUND, INC: WLDF
assists victims of domestic violence and those need
ing counseling and legal aid because of employment
and other sex discrimination, or domestic relations
problems. (Local Non-Affiliated Agency)
238 ASSOCIATES FOR RENEWAL IN EDUCATION:
Provides educational and employment opportunities
in child care services to residents in public housing
via the House School concept. (UW)
239 BIG BROTHERS OF THE NATIONAL CAPITAL
AREA: Guidance, counseling, and friendship to
fatherless boys ages 8-17. Opportunities for further
growth/developmental progress through positive
relationships with careftally screened/matched
volunteer big brothers. (UW)
240 BIG SISTERS OF THE WASHINGTON METRO
AREA: Offers guidance, friendship and companion
ship to girls 8-18 years of age through one-to-one
relationships with trained women volunteers. (UW)
241 BOYS' AND GIRLS' HOMES OF MONTGOMERY
COUNTY: Residential group and foster care, basic
child care; family therapy, counseling, education/
recreation to dependent neglected children, those
needing supervision, and juvenile Court-placed
delinquents. (UW)
242 CAPITOL EAST CHILDREN'S CENTER: Parent con
trolled child care center concerned with the provi
sion of quality full-time child care for children of
working parents in the multi-cultural community.
(UW)
243 CATHOLIC CHARITIES OF THE ARCHDIOCESE
' OF WASHINGTON, ASSOCIATED: Family/in-
dividual counseling: casework, geriatric centers and
. .group homos for-ihoolderly^foUcr-catrg-adoption^-
day-care: limited financial assistance; refugee and
community services. (UW)
244 CATHOLIC CHARITIES OF THE DIOCESE OF
ARLINGTON: Marital, family, individual counsel
ing; services to elderly and to unmarried parents;
infant foster care; adoption; emergency/financial
assistance; day-care; migration and refugee services.
(UW)
245 CHARLEE Program, The: Offers a viable alternative
to prolonged institutionalization/incarceration of
neglected, abandoned, abused and handicapped
children by providing community-based family care
homes in loving, stable family environments. (UW)
246 CHILD CARE SYSTEMS: An innovative pre-school
and developmental day-care center for minority
children. Offers a summer mini-camp, field trips,
horseback riding, ice skating and swimming. (UW)
247 THE CHILDREN'S DEFENSE FUND: Provides an ef
fective voice for millions of American children who
go without adequate health care, food, education,
and housing—especially poor, minority, and handi
capped children. (NSA)
248 CITY WIDE LEARNING CENTER: A comprehensive
community service agency offering job referral and
counseling, community information/service, youth
counseling, health referrals and day-care center for
pre-schoolers. (UW)
249 D.C. BLACK CHURCHES FOR CHILDREN'S SER
VICES: Advocates for improvement of the quality
of service for children receiving foster care. (UW)
250 FAMILY A N D CH ILD SERVICES OF
WASHINGTON, D.C.: Famiiy/individual counsel
ing, foster home child pfacement/adoption; foster
family day-care; camping; Retired Senior Volunteer
Program (RSVP) in D.C.; Multi-purpose Senior
Center. (UW)
251 FAMILY SERVICE OF MONTGOMERY COUNTY:
Individual, family/group counseling; outreach/
counseling for youth/their families, prevention pro
grams for delinquents from institutionalization,
family life development groups, rehabilitation of
mentally handicapped. (UW)
252 FAMILY SERVICE, NORTHERN VIRGINIA:
Counseling for marriage and family relationships;
one parent families, unmarried mothers, alcohol and
drug abuse; family life education; neighborhood
development; refugee services. (UW)
253 FAMILY SERVICE OF PRINCE GEORGE'S CO UN
TY: Counseling for marital/famiiy discord, parent-
child relationships, personality adjustment, drug ad
dicts, teenagers, deaf, advocacy for deaf, aged rural
families,' psychiatric services. Sliding fee scale and
insurance accepted. (UW)
254 FAMILY STRESS SERVICES OF DC: FACT* Hotline:
24-hr. comprehensive crisis/referrai for DC & metro
area; child abuse prevention: free information,
materials, networking, advocacy; Parents
Anonymous: self-help/support; DC Chapter, National
Committee for Prevention of Child Abuse. (Local
Non-Affiliated Agency)
255 FILMORE EARLY LEARNING CENTER: Progressive
day-care learning center for multi-racial, inner-city
pre-schoolers. Enables children to learn basic educa
tional skills necessary for a successful start in school.
(UW)
2d6 GEORGETOWN CHILDREN'S HOUSE: Subsidiz
ed day-care for children of low-income working
mothers whose income is necessary for family sup
port. Pre-schoolers developmental program; before
and after school care for D.C. children ages 6-11.
(UW)
257 INDOCHINESE COMMUNITY CENTER: Provides
social services to area Indochinese refugees. Includes
crisis intervention/counseiing, information/referral,
interpreiations/translations, English as a Second
Language, job placement, food and clothing distribu
tion, and citizenship training. (UW)
258 JEWISH SOCIAL SERVICE AGENCY: Casework,
home health care, child welfare/guidance; adoles
cent mentai health service; foster home placement;
adoption; counseling, services to the aging, the
disabled and their families. (UW)
259 KEY DAY CARE CENTER: 5erves as a day-care
center for present and potential Aid for Dependent
Children (AFDC), families in the District of Colum
bia community. (UW)
260 KOREAN COMMUNITY SERVICE CENTER OF
GREATER WASHINGTON: Helps Korean im
migrants integrate into their new American Life; in
formation/referral; family, legal counseling; transla
tion, visa, housing, employment, emergency help;
medical clinics. (UW)
261 LUTHERAN SOCIAL SERVICES OF THE NA
TIONAL CAPITAL AREA: Adoption, emergency ser
vices; life enrichment, pastoral care, refugee and
volunteer services; offender and ex-offender ser
vices; ministry to the aging/homeless, housing
counseling services and pre-trial sponsorship. (UW)
ACQUISTSON OF KNOW LEDGE A N D SKILLS
262 SIGN OF THE TIMES: A viable showcase where the
community can gather to receive training and ex
change ideas in an artistic environment. Provides
visual and performing arts exposure for area youth.
(UW)
263 SPANISH EDUCATION DEVELOPMENT CENTER:
Bilingual educational services for limited English
speakers of all ages; programs include day-care/pre-
school, multi-cultural summer school, remedial
tutoring, early reading for pre-schoolers, English and
conversational Spanish for adults, career counsel
ing. (UW)
264 UNITED NEGRO COLLEGE FUND: Your gift to
UNCF gives thousands of disadvantaged students
their only chance to earn a college education. Their
■actTtevrmcrrrsTJrove tfrat ~zrmind Is a feTnWFffimg
to waste". (NSA)
265 THE WILDERNESS SOCIETY: The Society works to
preserve wilderness, broaden awareness of the
natural environment, and assure that federal lands,
including national parks and forests, are managed
for the public good. (NSA)
266 AFRICAN HERITAGE DANCERS & DRUMMERS: A
community arts organization designed to give
students and area residents a greater appreciation
of traditional African arts, dance, and music through
educational community-based workshops. (UW)
267 ANACOSTIA INFORMATION CENTER TUTORIAL
PROGRAM/UNFOLDMENT: Program meets in
dividual needs for improving basic reading skills of
students who are working below grade level and are
recommended to the program by school authorities.
(UW)
268 CLOSE-UP: An alternative means of political educa
tion structured to teach high school students about
government. Provides opportunities for involvement
to aid students when deciding on their political
futures. (UW)
269 D.C. READING IS FUNDAMENTAL: Increases in-
depth community interest in books and reading
through bookfairs, libraries and bookmobiles. Pro
gram focuses on early readers, encouraging paren-
tal/chiid involvement in. order to foster good reading
habits. (UW)
270 D.C. STREET ACADEMY: An accredited means for
former students to achieve a high school educa-
tion/diploma through GED examination. Programs
include testing, instruction, counseling and program
development. (UW)
271 DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA MUSIC CENTER: Pro
vides the opportunity for understanding and ap
preciation of the Fine Arts through study and per
formance. (UW)
61a
272 HIGHER ACHIEVEMENT PROGRAM: Provides
educational assistance in the area of mathematics
and reading to students who have outstanding
academic potential. (UW)
273 LULAC NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL SERVICE
CENTER, INC. Since 1973, LNESC has assisted 10%
of the 1.1 million Hispanics who have enrolled in
college. Educational services include postsecondary
preparation, college admissions, scholarships, career
preparation and professional development. (NSA)
274 THE NATIONAL AUDUBON SOCIETY: Provides
educational/research services nationwide to protect
the health/welfare of persons by reducing air/water
pollution, controlling hazardous wastes, conserving
natural resources and teaching people to use energy
efficiently. (NSA)
275 NATIO NAL PARKS A N D CONSERVATION
ASSOCIATION: The National Parks & Conservation
Association, a private, non-profit, membership
organization, is the only national conservation
organization solely dedicated to the protection, im
provement and promotion of America's national
parks. (NSA)
276 THE NATIONAL RIGHT TO LIFE EDUCATIONAL
TRUST FUND: The foundation and its local affiliate
promote respect for all human life through publica
tions, seminars and programs opposing abortion, in
fanticide and euthanasia and through adoption and
other referral services for problem pregnancies.
(NSA)
277 NEW EDUCATIONAL WAYS (ALLEY LIBRARY):
Developmental center keeping area children actively
supervised after school. Remedial reading, arts,
crafts, nutrition and cooking demonstrations and
field trips are offered as well as Summer program/day
camp. (UW)
278 NEW THEATRE OF WASHINGTON: Provides op
portunities for Black and other minority artists and
audiences to attain high level training and perfor
mance experiences in all aspects of musical theatre
including opera. (UW)
279 PROJECT AWARENESS: An innovative educational
program which enhances the education of disadvan
taged minority youth through career educational
clinics and an awareness of the world of work. (UW)
280 PROJECT IMAGE: Offers youth assistance and
tutorial services; outreach, career development,
cultural, educational and recreational enrichment
programs. (UW)
281 RECORDING FOR THE BLIND, INC.: RFB provides
free recorded textbooks to blind and perceptually
handicapped students at ail academic levels. We cur
rently serve ail fifty states and U.S. citizens in 47
foreign countries. (NSA)
282 REP, INCORPORATED: Provides a forum for train
ing and educating writers, actors, theatrical direc
tors, and other theater craftsmen. (UW)
CO M M U N ITY CO O RD INATIO N SERVICE
283 ALEXANDRIA UNITED WAY: Information/referral
services; assesses Alexandria's social service needs
and resources, coordinates private agencies' human
care service delivery with public sector; advocate
on human care services. (UW)
284 ALEXANDRIA VOLUNTEER BUREAU: Recruits and
places volunteers in agencies serving the communi
ty. Placement and monitoring of offenders ordered
by the Courts to do community service. (UW)
285 ARLINGTON UNITED WAY: Information/referral
services; assesses Arlington's social service needs
and resources, coordinates private agencies' human
care service delivery with public sector; advocate
on human care services. (UW)
286 BETTERMENT FOR UNITED SENIORS: Seniors
working together urging private and governmental
institutions to recognize and provide essential pro
grams. (UW)
287 D.C. CITY WIDE WELFARE RIGHTS ORGANIZA
TION: Identifies and addresses the problems of
deprived persons by referring them to community
resources for assistance in housing, health, educa
tion and consumer economics. (UW)
288 D.C. UNITED WAY: Information/referral services;
assesses the District's social service needs and
resources, coordinates private agencies’ human care
service delivery with public sector; advocate on
human care services. (UW)
289 FAIRFAX-FALLS CHURCH UNITED WAY: Informa
tion/referral services; assesses Fairfax-Falls Church's
social service needs and resources, coordinates
private agencies' human care services with public
sector; advocate on human care services. (UW)
290 LOUDOUN UNITED WAY: Information/referral ser
vices; assesses Loudoun's social service need and
resources, coordinates private agencies' human care
service delivery with public sector; advocate on
human care services. (UW)
291 METROPOLITAN WASHINGTON PLANNING
AND HOUSING ASSOCIATION: Seeks to eliminate
discrimination in housing and increase quality and
quantity of housing for low and moderate income
persons; creates better communities through sound
planning process. (UW)
292 MONTGOMERY UNITED WAY: Information/refer
ral services; assesses Montgomery's social service
needs and resources; coordinates private agencies'
human care service delivery with public sector; ad
vocate on human care services. (UW)
293 PRINCE GEORGE'S UNITED WAY: Informa
tion/referral services; assesses Prince George's social
service needs and resources, coordinates private
agencies' human care service delivery with public
sector; advocate on human care services. (UW)
294 PRINCE W ILLIAM UNITED WAY: Informa
tion/referral services; assesses Prince William's social
service needs and resources, coordinates private
agencies' human care service delivery with public
sector; advocate on human care services. (UW)
295 SOUTHEAST VICARIATE CLUSTER: Enables com
munity residents to effectively join together to ad
dress common problems and concerns in areas of
crime, housing, city services, youth, elderly, taxes,
utilities, health, employment/nursing homes. (UW)
296 UNITED BLACK FUND: Management and consulta
tion services and special grants to member and non
member agencies; coordinates programs of UBF
agencies with United Way, D.C. and Federal govern
ment. (UW)
297 UNITED COMMUNITIES AGAINST POVERTY: Ser
vices offered to improve the general welfare of low-
income residents; housing, transportation, recrea
tion, nutrition, education, employment/training,
energy, technical assistance, information/referral,
outreach and day-care. (UW)
298 VOLUNTEER CLEAR IN G HO U SE OF THE
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA: Recruits, encourages
and mobilizes volunteers; matches volunteer interest
to 600 D.C. agencies, assists agencies through in
dividual counseling and management of volunteer
programs. (UW)
SPECIALIZED A N D MISCELLANEOUS
SERVICES
299 ANTI-DEFAMATION LEAGUE OF B'NAI B'RITH:
The Anti-Defamation League, a human relations
organization, combats anti-Semitism and discrimina
tion, implements inter-group education and preju
dice reduction programs for industry, government,
schools, universities and monitors anti-democratic-
hate organizations. (NSA)
300 AYUDA: Provides iegal assistance and advocacy ser
vice to Spanish-speaking indigent population.
Volunteers recruited, trained and coordinated
toward these objectives. (UW)
301 BONABOND: Operates as a third party custody
agency seeking pre-trial release of persons accused
of a crime who cannot pay bond or qualify for per
sonal recognizance release. (UW)
302 BUREAU OF REHABILITATION OF THE NA
TIONAL CAPITAL AREA: Residential/out-client ser
vices for adult and juvenile offenders, ex-offenders,
substance abusers; individual, group, family counsel
ing; drug treatment; educational and vocational
assistance; housing and limited financial assistance.
(UW)
303 CAPITAL LEGAL FOUNDATION: A public policy
law firm that promotes a fair, compassionate free
market approach to federal regulation litigation.
(NSA)
304 CENTER FOR AUTO SAFETY: Seeks to reduce toll
of traffic accidents (50,000 deaths; $60 billion costs)
through safer, more reliable vehicles and highways.
Helps consumers with auto problems through ad
vice, attorney referrals, class actions. (NSA)
305 CONSERVATIVE LEGAL DEFENSE AND EDUCA
TION FUND: Aggressive, conservative leadership
through services, research/education regarding vic
tims rights, judicial excesses, reform of welfare
abuses, limited government, individual liberty,.pro
tection of traditional family values, free enterprise
and personal opportunity. (NSA)
306 D.C. LAW STUDENTS IN COURT PROGRAM: Free
legal assistance and representation by qualified third-
year law students, and supervised by full-time at
torneys to indigent per^oe* with landlord-tenant,
consumer, criminal or other legal problems. (UW)
307 EFFORTS FROM EX-CONVICTS: Provides assistance
to ex-offenders in transition back into the community
through EFEC Halfway House, EFEC. Emergency
Shelter House', EFECtivity, Inc., and EFEC Security
Agency. (UW)
308 FE D E R A L L Y E M P L O Y E D W O M E N ’S LEGA L &
EDUCATION FUND: (FEW LEF) Organized ex
clusively to eliminate all forms of unlawful
discrimination against any Federal employee through
publication of educational materials, conducting
training, and providing legal assistance. (NSA)
309 FRIENDS OF W OMEN PRISONERS (GUEST
HOUSE): Community based rehabilitation service
for women charged with or convicted of a crime.
Incarceration alternative or halfway house for
women returning to the community from jail or
prison. (UW)
310 THE LAWYER'S COMMITTEE FOR CIVIL RIGHTS
UNDER LAW: Established at the request of Presi
dent John F. Kennedy to involve lawyers in the civil
rights struggle. Your donation will help secure equal
opportunities for blacks, women, Hispanics, other
minorities and the poor. (NSA)
311 LEGAL AID SOCIETY OF THE DISTRICT OF COL
UMBIA: Provides legal assistance and consultation
in civil matters to indigent persons. (UW)
312 LEGAL SERVICES OF NORTHERN VIRGINIA: Pro
vides a variety of iegal services in civil matters to eligi
ble clients and iow-income residents of Northern
Virginia. (UW)
313 THE MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR. CENTER FOR
NONVIOLENT SOCIAL CHANGE, INC.: The na
tional memorial established to eliminate all forms of
violence in our society for people experiencing
health and welfare disabilities and social disorders,
which prevent them from living meaningful and pro
ductive lives. (NSA)
314 THE MEXICAN AMERICAN LEGAL DEFENSE AND
EDUCATION FUND: The Mexican American Legal
Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF) protects
U.S Hispanics' civil rights in education, employ
ment. voting rights and health and provides leader
ship training. (NSA)
315 THE NATIONAL RIGHT TO W ORK LEGAL
DEFENSE FO UN D ATIO N : Providing legal
assistance to employees suffering from abuses of
compulsory unionism arrangements. (NSA)
316 PUBLIC CITIZEN FOUNDATION: Public Citizen
Foundation is a not-for-profit organization which
supports research and educational activities in the
areas of public health and safety, energy and
resource management, and consumer rights. (NSA)
317 NATIVE AMERICAN RIGHTS FUND: NARF pro
vides requested legal representation and back-up
support to Indian tribes, groups and individuals in
matters of major significance to Indian people na
tionwide. (NSA)
318 THE NOW LEGAL DEFENSE FUND: (LDEF) defends
women and offers services to organizations, institu
tions and individual women and men to help them
achieve equal opportunities for women. (NSA)
319 OFFENDER AID AND RESTORATION: Organizes,
fosters, and provides offenders and ex-offenders free
community based programs and service leading to
rehabilitation/reduced recidivism rates. (UW)
320 PACIFIC LEGAL FOUNDATION: Conservative
public interest law firm litigating nationwide for free
enterprise, private property rights and personal
freedoms. PLF challenges unreasonable regulatory
requirements, unlawful activities, government waste
and abuse. (NSA)
321 SIERRA CLUB LEGAL DEFENSE FUND: Defends
the natural and human environment. Brings legal ac
tions nation-wide to stop air and water pollution,
protect against toxic contamination, and preserve
public lands and wildlife. Represents individuals and
groups. (NSA)
322 UNITED LABOR AGENCY OF GREATER WASH
INGTON: Information and referral for workers
needing health and welfare assistance; co-sponsors
joh placement program; constituency consists of
area union members but is not limited to those
members. (UW)
323 UNITED WAY/UNITED BLACK FUND MANAGE
MENT SERVICES CORPORATION: Provides
management assistance, training, and related
technical assistance to member agencies of the
United Way and United Black Fund and to other
non-profit social service organizations. (UW)
324 UNIVERSITY LEGAL SERVICES: Legal services to
low-income persons with housing problems, enabl
ing them to maintain control of their housing. (UW)
325 VIETNAM VETERANS OF AMERICA FOUNDA
TION: A national voluntary organization meeting the
special physical, psychological, employment, and
educational needs of Vietnam era veterans through
direct service, public information programs,
research, and referral to other service providers.
(NSA)
326 VISITORS SERVICES CENTER: Serves the personal,
human needs of individuals incarcerated in D.C. jails
and Lorton Reformatory. Involves the public as
volunteers to work with inmates and their families.
(UW) fl
327 WASHINGTON PARENT GROUP FUND: Promotes
parent involvement in public education with special
emphasis on enrichment programs in reading/math.
Field trips/special tutoring at schools in poorer
neighborhoods is offered. (UW)
YO UTH A N D RECREATIONAL SERVICES
328 SASHA BRUCE YOUTHWORK: Assists troubled
youth through individual, group, family counseling.
Short and long term shelter, home/educationa! pro
grams; job counseling and referral; advocacy within
schools and courts with appropriate referrals. (UW)
329 SECOND MILE/YOUTH RESOURCES CENTER:
Emergency shelter to runaways and other homeless
youth; comprehensive counseling to youth and
families including aftercare. Maintains 24-hour
HOTLINE. (UW)
330 STUDENT ASSISTANCE ’ PROJECT: Assists area
minority students in gaining equal access to public
school educational opportunities. Serves as a youth
advocacy center; assesses student rights information,
school administrative policies and procedures. (UW)
331 UNITED STATES OLYMPIC COMMITTEE: The na
tion's single coordinating body for development of
Olympic and Pan American Games sports. Through
its member organizations, the USOC provides the
Olympic opportunity to as many youth as possible.
(NSA)
332 URBAN CONSORTIUM FOR COMMUNITY AC-
TION/PASS THE BUCK PROGRAM: Award-winning
program helping highly motivated, low-income
youths achieve. economic self-sufficiency. Par
ticipants are carefully selected, trained, counseled,
ana placed in jobs with a future. (Local Non-
Affiliated Agency)
333 YMCA OF METROPOLITAN WASHINGTON:
Develops character and leadership; provides com
munity centers and camping facilities; recreational
activities and programs in schools, churches, home
and on playgrounds. (UW)
334 YWCA OF THE NATIONAL CAPITAL AREA: Social
action and volunteer services to women, girls and
families. Child-care, pre-schools, career develop
ment. health, physical education and recreation. In
formation/referral, specialized youth programs.
(UW)
335 BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA, NATIONAL CAPITAL
AREA COUNCIL: Reaches boys ages 8-18 through
community institutions by organizing Cub Packs,
Troops and Co-ed Explorer Career Interest Programs;
trains leaders to direct local scouting programs. (UW)
336 BOYS' AND GIRLS' CLUB, KINGMAN: Physical,
social, educational, cultural, drug referral, counsel
ing and guidance, employment, on-the-job training,
summer day camp and educational media center
programs for youth. (UW)
337 BOYS' AND GIRLS' CLUB, LANGLEY PARK: Social,
recreational, athletic and educational programs for
area youth. Various programs serving adults and total
community. Administers senior citizens lunch pro*
gram and senior activity center. (UW)
338 BOYS' A N D G IRLS ' CLUBS OF D .C .,
METROPOLITAN POLICE: Provides supervised
skills training and activities including sports, social,
educational, crafts and music for youngsters between
ages 6-18. Operates a camp in Scotland, Maryland;.
(UW)
339 BOYS A N D GIRLS CLUBS OF GREATER
WASHINGTON: Enhances character development
of boys and girls through wholesome, constructive
activities in health, physical education, social, voca
tional and educational programs. (UW)
340 CAMP FIRE, POTOMAC AREA COUNCIL: Leader
ship training, camping and program assistance for
youth up to age 21, emphasis on ages 6-18. Specific
programs for retarded and handicapped. (UW)
341 CAPITOL EAST DRUG PREVENTION A N D
EDUCATION CENTER: A liaison center for juvenile
justice System to prevent unnecessary detention of
youth involved in non-status offenses; provides
rehabilitation and youth advocacy programs. (UW)
342 COLUMBIA HEIGHTS YOUTH CLUB: Recreation,
athletics, drug and delinquency prevention, drug in
formation and educational programs for building
character and citizenship among boys and girls ages
6-18. (UW)
343 D.C. STRIDERS: Structured programs for promising
high school field and track athletic competitors. Of
fers scholarship assistance for those with potential
to achieve in track as well as academics. (UW)
344 4-H YOUTH PROGRAM AT THE MARYLAND
COOPERATIVE EXTENSION SERVICE: Provides
youth services in the areas of jobs, careers, com
munity development, home and family.resources.
Emphasis is placed on reaching disadvantaged, low-
income and neglected youth. (UW)
345 GIRL SCOUT COUNCIL OF THE NATION'S
CAPITAL: Informal educational program seeks to
develop self awareness, increase skills in interper
sonal relationships, and establish values. (UW)
346 JEWISH COMMUNITY CENTER OF GREATER
WASHINGTON: Serves 13,000 members plus
thousands of others in the community through a
year-round program of social and health Services,
educational ana recreational activities, classes and
cultural events. (UW)
347 JUNIOR CITIZENS CORPS: Correction and re
direction of anti-social behavior of delinquent/prob-
lem youth, job development, group social rehabili
tation, counseling and referral, social services/
remedial education. (UW)
348 LATIN AMERICAN YOUTH CENTER: Addresses the
employment needs, strengthens language and
academic abilities, and provides transitional services
to District of Columbia Latino youths. (UW)
349 NATIONAL RECREATION AND PARK ASSOCIA
TION: Seeks protection, expansion of national and
local parks, quality recreation programs for all ages
and broader recreation opportunities on America's
military bases in the U.S. and abroad. (NSA)
350 PHYLLIS WHEATLEY YWCA: Improves quality of
life for women and children through activities in
social, emotional, and economic spheres. Conducts
children's programs. Offers senior citizens work
shops, seminars and program activities. (UW)
N EIG H BO RH O O D SERVICES
351 SAUNDERS B. M O O N SENIOR CITIZENS c I$ |t
TER: Provides educational, recreational, and medical
services, meais, transportation and other needed ser
vices to senior citizens in the Mount Vernon area.
(UW)
352 SENIOR CITIZENS COUNSELING AND DELIVERY
SERVICES: Comprehensive senior citizens program
providing transportation, housing, shopping, reloca
tion; secures food stamps, medical, social security,
veterans benefits and public assistance. Counselors
visit the homebound. (UW)
353 SHILOH BAPTIST CHURCH HUM AN SERVlCt
CENTER: Provides counseling services to communi
ty members in area of individual, family and marital
problems, health, housing, drug misuse, and con
sumer education. (UW)
354 SOUTHEAST NEIGHBORHOOD HOUSE: Com
prehensive social service; juvenile/family counsel
ing; nutrition; delinquency prevention, youth and
community development; aay-care/after school pro
grams for children 5-12; geriatric day care. (UW)
355 SOUTHWEST COMMUNITY HOUSE: Guidance for
families with problems; individual counseling ancf
informal education. Neighborhood development
programs focusing on changes in attitudes and
policies that are of citizen ana community interest.
(UW)
356 SPANISH CATH O LIC CENTER: Assists
Spanish-speaking community in adaptation and self-
actualization within the American society. Educa
tional, recreational, social, dental and medical ser
vices are offered. (UW)
357 UNITED COMMUNITY MINISTRIES: Emergency
food, clothing, furniture and shelter; advocacy, men
tal health crisis intervention and senior cstizen/youth
outreach; thrift clothing/furniture store; communi
ty development in Huntington and Fairhaven. (UW7)
358 W OODROW WILSON INTERNATIONAL CEN
TER: Information and referral, education, youth pro
grams, translations, volunteer coordination, social
service delivery, emergency food and linen, and job
bank placement. (UW)
62a
359 BARNEY NEIGHBORHOOD HOUSE: Educational,
social and recreational activities and counseling ser
vices for youth, senior citizens and mentally im
paired adults. (UW)
360 CENTER CITY COMMUNITY CORPORATION:
Assists in obtaining needed health, welfare, hous
ing, education, employment, senior and youth ser
vices. Provides tutorial and eviction assistance; emer
gency assistance with food, clothing and household
items. (UW)
361 COMBINED COMMUNITIES IN ACTION OF
PRINCE GEORGE'S COUNTY: Offers senior citi
zens basic education/educational program. Renders
emergency service, provides transportation services
to meet basic needs of seniors. Offers tutorial and
recreational programs for youth. (UW)
362 D.C. HOTLINE: Provides referral services and in
formation in basic human needs such as food, finan
cial assistance, medical care, housing and employ
ment, plus crisis intervention in life-threatening situa
tions. (UW)
363 DOWNTOWN CLUSTER'S GERIATRIC DAY CARE
CENTER: Provides disabled elderly persons a struc
tured day of therapeutic activities, as well as sup
portive and personal care, hot lunch, snacks and
transportation services. (UW)
364 EDUCATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR UNITED
LATIN AMERICANS: Offers educational, housing
assistance, drug abuse and employment programs
for children, young adults and senior citizens of the
Spanish-speaking community. (UW)
365 EMERGENCY ACTION SWITCHBOARD FOR THE
ELDERLY (E.A.S.E.) (UPO): A 24-hour refer-
ral/outreach program. Provides escorts, visits and
check cashing services for homebound seniors.
Assists in obtaining Public Benefits, emergency food
and clothing; shelter for the displaced. (UW)
366 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH COMMUNITY CENTER:
Community center offering geriatric day care, infor
mation and referral, transportation, education,
cultural arts, home help, housing repair and counsel
ing services. (UW)
367 FRIENDSHIP HOUSE ASSOCIATION: Offers day
care, senior citizen outreach, consumer education,
youth activities, housing and educational assistance.
Operates the Martin Luther King Co-op Store and
used clothing centers. (UW)
368 HOPKINS HOUSE ASSOCIATION: A settlement
house offering social work services dealing with
economic and social needs enabling people to func
tion more adequately in society. (UW)
369 HOSPITALITY HOUSE: Establishes mechanisms and
procedures for community organizations and neigh
borhood development; emergency and referral ser
vices; skills training; educational/cultural enrichment
youth activities; job development and housing
assistance. (UW)
370 MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR. COMMUNITY CEN
TER: Provides educational, recreational, social, and
employment services. Assists the Criminal justice
System as community liaison. Offers student tutorial
assistance; promotes health-care and consumer edu
cation, sponsors participation in cultural activities.
(UW)
371 NORTHWEST SETTLEMENT HOUSE: Programs de
signed to encourage self-improvement. Pre-schools;
music counseling and guidance for teenagers and
adults; athletic teams; neighborhood outreach and
developmental and elderly services. (UW)
372 PHILLIP T. JOHNSON SENIOR CITIZENS CEN
TER: Provides hot lunches, education, field trips, in
formation centers and a variety of educational and
recreational activities for senior citizens. Utilizes
senior citizens as volunteers. (UW)
373 PIC SENIOR CITIZENS CENTER: Comprehensive
program which develops social services to assist
senior citizens in areas of economic development,
job enhancement and related activities. (UW)
PROVISION OF BASIC NEEDS A N D
ECO NO M IC OPPORTUNITY *
*/,.374 THE NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE AND EDUCATION
FUND: An independent organization, brings civil
rights litigation involving fair employment, educa
tion. voting, housing, health care, etc., including
equal employment cases on behalf of federal em
ployees. (NSA)
375 THE NAACP SPECIAL CONTRIBUTION FUND:
Finances programs of the nation's largest Civil Rights
organization in education, housing, employment,
voter education/registration, military justice,
emergency relief and legal assistance. (NSA)
376 THE NATIONAL CHILD LABOR COMMITTEE: The
National Child Labor Committee's primary concern
is unemployment among disadvantaged youth. It
works to develop job opportunities, job training pro
grams, child labor protections, and migrant
children's educational opportunities. (NSA)
377 THE NATIONAL COUNCIL OF LA RAZA: The Na-
tional Council of La Raza's primary goal is to improve
living conditions for Hispanics through employment
training, social services, economic development,
health and welfare assistance, and housing. NC.LR
works directly and through affiliates. (NSA)
378 NATURAL RESOURCES DEFENSE COUNCIL: Big
gest environmental law organization in the United
Slates. Works for a strong Environmental Protection
Agency by enforcing clean air, dean water, toxic
control laws. Protects public lands and wilderness
areas. (NSA!
379 SALVATION ARMY, NATIONAL CAPITAL AREA:
Emergency finances, shelter/supplementary aid,
disaster relief; Senior Citizens Programs; Christmas
food/toys; day-care/camping; information and refer
ral; prison ministry; character building and athletics;
alcohol rehabilitation and vocational counseling.
(UW)
380 SHOE AND RUBBER FUND, D.C. CONGRESS OF
PARENTS AND TEACHERS: Provides shoes,
galoshes and clothing to D.C. public school children
who need such articles in order to make regular
school attendance possible. (UW)
381 SOME (SO OTHERS MIGHT EAT): Provides meals;
alcoholic counseling; thrift shop; dental clinic;
sheltered work program. Harvest House for senior
citizens includes shelter, community center and
clinic. (UW)
382 TRAVELERS AID SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON,
D.C.: Crisis intervention and casework services; pro
tective travel assistance; information and referrals;
limited emergency financial assistance, settling-in
services; assists stranded travelers. 24-hour tele
phone service. (UW)
383 WASHINGTON URBAN LEAGUE: Services in edu
cation, aid to the aged, job counseling, placement
and referral, youth and families. Advocacy in hous
ing, health, welfare, community development.
Latino and Labor Affairs, and minority leadership
development. (UW)
384 ACTION IN THE COMMUNITY THROUGH SER
VICE OF PRINCE WILLIAM (ACTS): Day-care for
infants and children; emergency food ana financial
assistance; temporary shelter; domestic violence pro
gram for women, men, and children. (UW)
385 AMERICA THE BEAUTIFUL FUND: Gives 'seed'
grants to volunteer efforts to grow food for the
needy, restore neighborhoods, provide better nutri
tion for (he elderly, help the handicapped and create
jobs for young people. (NSA)
386 ARLINGTO N CO M M U N ITY TEM PORARY
SHELTER: Provides temporary emergency shelter
and food in a supportive atmosphere to battered
women and children, destitute women and home
less families in crisis. (UW)
387 BREAD FOR THE CITY: Provides emergency
assistance through the provision of food and clothing
to residents of the District of Columbia. (UW)
388 CAPITAL AREA COMMUNITY FOOD BANK: Clear
inghouse for surplus/salvage food. Solicits un
marketable but edible items and distributes to
charitable agencies serving the needy. Attacks
hunger by attacking food waste. (UW)
389 COUNCIL OF CHURCHES OF GREATER W ASH
INGTON: Mobilizes resources of Protestant religious
community to bring creative improvement in the
structures and systems governing lives in the
metropolitan Washington area. (UW)
390 D.C. COMMUNITY FAMILY LIFE SERVICES, INC:
Emergency food/ciothing; personal/family counsel
ing; client support groups; crisis intervention;
emergency financial assistance; adult/child educa
tional programs; information referral; services to ex
offenders and homeless. (Local Non-Affiliated
Agency)
391 D.C. COUNCIL ON CLOTHING FOR KIDS: Pro
vides clothing to economically deprived school
children wholive in the District of Columbia. (UW)
392 DEBORAH'S PLACE: A temporary home for women
are marginally employed or unemployed; creates a
homelike atmosphere and maintains a thrift shop to
provide additional funds for the home. (UW)
393 FOOD RESEARCH AND ACTION CENTER, INC.:
FRAC works to alleviate malnutrition by providing
legal representation, legislative advocacy, nutrition
research, public education and training for local or
ganizations on federal nutrition programs that assist
low-income Americans. (NSA)
394 THE GRAY PANTHER PROJECT FUND, INC.: The
Gray Panther Project Fund, Inc. works to solve prob
lems related to ageism, such as discriminatory em
ployment practices, inadequate health care and
social security crises, through public education, ad
vocacy and model projects. (NSA)
395 HOUSE OF IMAGENE: An emergency shelter for
battered and abused spouses who are victims of
family violence. Counseling, food, and clothing, legal
and medical referral services are offered. (UW!
396 HOUSING COUNSELING SERVICES: Homeowner
and tenant assistance; problems relating to buying,
selling, refinancing, remodeling, delivery of services,
defaulting, budgeting and tenant organizing. Train
ing of housing counselors offered. (UW)
397 INDIAN LAW RESOURCE CENTER: The Indian-
controlled Indian Law Resource Center assists Native
Americans in protecting their legal rights, human
rights, cultures and religions through a program of
research, public education and litigation. (NSA)
398 JEWISH COUNCIL FOR THE AGING OF GREATER
WASHINGTON: Identifies needs of elderly and
develops programs to meet those needs. Helps older
adults help themselves, maintain dignity and remain
actively involved in the community. (UW)
399 JOINT ACTION IN COMMUNITY SERVICES
(JACS): Volunteers assist young people 16-21 years
of age. with employment and support services, in
cluding job counseling, transportation, housing,
vocational education arid consumer advice. (UW)
INTERNATIONAL SERVICES
400 OXFAM AMERICA: Breaks the chain of dependen
cy by supporting local initiative against hunger and
poverty in 33 countries overseas. Funds women's
cooperatives in India, solar technology in Somalia,
medicine for Salvadoran refugees. (ISA)
401 PAN AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION:
Works in Latin America and the Caribbean offering
opportunities to the poor for improved health care,
vocational training and loans for small business or
farming enterprises. (ISA)
402 PEARL S. BUCK FOUNDATION: Cares for half-
Asian children abandoned by their American ser
vicemen fathers in Thailand, Taiwan, Okinawa, the
Philippines, Korea and now, Vietnam--with the help
of dedicated American sponsors. (ISA)
403 PLANNED PARENTHOOD-WORLD POPULA
TION: Supports family planning services in over 100
countries worldwide to those who need it most an'd
use it best. Emphasis on Latin America, Africa and
Asia. (ISA)
404 PROJECT CONCERN INTERNATIONAL: Is a life
saving service helping people with inadequate
medical care around the world to better health
through programs of health education and preven
tive medicine. (ISA)
405 PROJECT HOPE: Has had more than 4,000 educa
tors working in. 33 countries, training thousands of
health care personnel, who continue to teach and
to treat thousands more—in medicine, dentistry, nur
sing and allied health services. (ISA)
406 PROJECT ORBIS: A flying hospital, brings the latest
techniques in eye surgery to thousands of doctors
and their patients around the world in the crucial
fight against blindness. (ISA)
407 SAVE THE CHILDREN: Heips impoverished peo
ple in 34 countries build a better life for their children
through community seif-help, education, nutrition
and agricultural projects which increase skills and
income. (ISA)
408 TECHNOSERVE: Attacks the causes of poverty by
training needy people in Africa and Latin America
to organize small-businesses which create jobs and
produce more food. (ISA)
409 UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST SERVICE COMMIT
TEE: Helps communities in the third world achieve
self-determination and human rights. That means
better health, education, nutrition for people in the
Americas, India, Africa. (ISA)
410 UNITED SEAMEN'S SERVICE: Provides health, wel
fare, and recreation services to seafarers of American
merchant marine and other friendly nations, and to
U.S. Navy and DOD personnel overseas. (ISA)
411 UNITED STATES COMMITTEE FOR UNICEF: Sup
ports the United Nations Children's Fund as one of
(he most cost-effective and efficient international
development agencies working on behalf of the
poorest of the poor in over 100 countries. (ISA)
412 W INR0CK INTERNATIONAL: Is a private, non
profit corporation working in Latin America, Africa,
and Asia to improve people's diets and livelihood
via agricultural development research and training
in animal agriculture. (ISA)
413 WORLD EDUCATION: Assists men and women
throughout the developing world by providing
assistance in program design, implementation, and
training to literacy, nonforma! education, and com
munity development programs. (ISA)
414 WORLD WILDLIFE FUND: An international con
servation organization working to protect the
biological resources, particularly endangered
animals and plants, upon which all life on earth in
cluding human life depends. (ISA)
415 YOUTH FOR UNDERSTANDING: Promotes global
cooperation and friendship through educational
home-stay programs for American and international
students in 25 countries. Extensive counseling and
orientation services provicfed; special programs serve
handicapped and economically disadvantaged
youth. (ISA)
416 ACCION INTERNATIONAL/AITEC: Is an indepen
dent, nonprofit organization working to create
employment opportunities and a better quality of life
for low-income populations of North and South
America. (ISA)
417 AFRICAN MEDICAL AND RESEARCH FOUNDA
TION: Using small aircraft to reach isolated areas.
FLYING DOCTORS deliver health care to East
African villagers by providing surgery, immunization
of children, and air evacuation of critical patients.
(ISA)
418 AFRICARE: Helps African people grow more food,
develop good water supplies and improve health.
Africare also gives emergency assistance to refugees.
Africare helps the people of Africa help themselves.
(ISAS
419 AMERICAN LEPROSY FOUNDATION: (Leonard
Wood Memorial) Conducts scientific research
devoted to the eventual eradication of Hansen's
Disease (Leprosy! which afflicts 15 million people
throughout the world. (ISA)
420 AMERICAN NEAR EAST REFUGEE AID: ANERA
contributes funding and technical assistance to
Palestinian and Lebanese' institutions providing
health, education and community services in the
West Bank. Gaza Strip and Lebanon. USA)
421 CARE: In 37 developing countries throughout Africa.
Asia. Latin America, and the Middle East. CARE pro
vides food, tools and training to help impoverished
people work toward a better life and self-sufficiency.
(ISA)
422 CATHOLIC RELIEF SERVICES: Supports self-help
projects at village and community level; food pro
duction, health care, nutrition, training, safe water
supply; disaster/refugee/emergency aid; now in its
40th year. (ISA)
423 CHURCH W ORLD SERVICE/CROP: Meets human
needs in 70 countries through programs of social and
econom ic development, disaster/emergency
reponse, service to refugees, and global education.
(ISA)
424 DIRECT RELIEF INTERNATIONAL: A 35-year old
nonsectarian, nonprofit organization, donates
medical supplies and places volunteers in health
centers on an emergency and on-going basis in less
developed nations. (ISA)
425 FOSTER PARENTS PLAN: Helps needy children and
their families in 22 countries achieve better lives
through education, health care, farming projects,
and financial assistance. Family development and
self-help are emphasized. (ISA)
426 FOUNDATION FOR THE PEOPLES OF THE
SOUTH PACIFIC: Founded to combat malaria, and
malnutrition with programs to grow food, start small
businesses, relieve victims of earthquakes and tidal
waves. (ISA)
427 HEIFER PROJECT INTERNATIONAL: Provides
training and farm animals to needy farm families
worldwide. Participants repay the gift by passing on
one of their gift animal's offspring to a needy
neighbor. (ISA)
428 HELEN KELLER INTERNATIONAL. Works to pre
vent the tragedy of avoidable blindness for the two
million third-world people who are destined to lose
their sight this year, unless help comes. (ISA)
429 HUNGER PROJECT: Informs people about the pro
blem of world hunger and starvation through educa
tional and broad public information programs to
generate personal commitments to eliminate hunger.
(ISA)
430 INSTITUTE FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOP
MENT: Enables needy families worldwide to develop
durable solutions to their dilemma of poverty and
unemployment through small business develop
ment. Families achieve self-sufficiency through small
business financing and training programs. (ISA)
431 INTERNATIONAL EYE FOUNDATION: Provides
free sight-restoring surgery to the poorest of the poor
in the developing world and educates and trains
local health personnel in blindness prevention ac
tivities. (ISA)
432 INTERNATIONAL HUM AN ASSISTANCE PRO
GRAMS: Establishes self-help projects for the poor
and handicapped—including children of American-
Asian parentage in Korea and Southeast Asia—in
food production, health care, job training, physical
rehabilitation. (ISA)
433 INTERNATIONAL RESCUE COMMITTEE: Is
America's leading nonsectarian agency providing
relief and resettlement services for refugees fleeing
from religious, racial and political persecution. IRC
also helps homeless war victims. (ISA)
434 INTERNATIONAL SOCIAL SERVICE, AMERICAN
BRANCH: Heips in adoptions, custody, abduction,
family reunions, foster care, abuse. . .with profes
sionals in over 100 countries. ISS helps children and
families solve problems like these when they involve
more than one country. (ISA)
435 THE IRELAND FUND: Is a non-sectarian, non
political American charity which makes grants to
over 200 projects throughout Ireland, North and
South, which promote peace, culture and charity.
(ISA)
436 MEALS FOR MILLIONS/FREEDOM FROM HUN
GER FOUNDATION: Self-help, food and nutrition
programs: small scale agriculture, appropriate food
technology, nutrition education, the multiplier of
training in Latin America, the Caribbean, Africa, Asia.
(ISA)
CAM PAIG N GROUPS
4.37 INTERNATIONAL SERVICE AGENCIES (ISA) (37
CFC Agencies) Help the world's poorest people
break the cycle of poverty, hunger, disease and fear
with self-help development programs, basic human
health and welfare services and emergency disaster
aid.
438 NATIONAL HEALTH AGENCIES (NHA) (42 CFC
Agencies) Provide public and professional services
to millions of Americans who suffer the ravages of
illness and disease through medical research, patient
and community services, public professional
education.
439 NATIONAL SERVICE AGENCIES (NSA) (41 CFC
Agencies! Provide needful American, and in some
cases foreign, nationals with a wide variety of
welfare, recreational, educational, research and legal
services. NSA coordinates the participation of its
members in the CFC.
440 UNITED WAY OF THE NATIONAL CAPITAL AREA
( U W )
This group also has been designated as the Principal
Combined Fund Organization For the National.
Capital Area.
(208 CFC Agencies) United Way. its campaign par
ticipants. and United Black Fund agencies represent
the largest network of human care services in the
National Capital Area, directly touching the lives of
over a million people each year.
Honolulu CFC Brochure for 1982
63a
AGENCY LISTING
1982 Honolulu Area
Combined Federal Campaign
(This is a listing o f ail the agencies included in the CFC. This is an insert to the
General Information Folder— one copy for each employee)
N A T I O N A L HEALTH AGENCIES
101 AMERICAN DIABETES ASSOCIATION, HAWAII AFFILIATE, INC,—-A cure for the nation's leading causa of blindness and third causa of death is
A.D.A.’s ultimate goal with emphasis on detection, education, and research. (531-3266)
102 AMERICAN LUNG ASSOCIATION OF HAWAII— Fights lung diseases (asthma, emphysema, bronchitis, TB) smoking and air pollution through patient
and professional health education, grants and scholarships, environmental and occupational health programs. (537-5966)
103 crrY 0F HOPE NATIONAL MEDICAL CENTER— Provides free care for patients with cancer, leukemia, blood and chest disorders; offers free
consultation service; pioneers medical research.
104 EASTER SEAL SOCIETY OF HAWAII, INC.— Direct service programs for ail physically handicapped children and adults— rehabilitation, infant and
pre-school services, camping, recreation, residential services and respite cars. (536-1015)
105 HAWAII SOCIETY OF AUTISTIC CITIZENS— HSAC serves as the advocate for all autistic persons and operates the only vocational and independent
living program in Hawaii specifically for autistic young adults. (734-0233)
106 LEUKEMIA SOCIETY OF AMERICA, INC.— The Society, dedicated to finding a cure for leukemia and allied disease, supports programs of research,
patient aid, public and professional health education and community service. (714) 283-6131
107 MARCH OF DIMES BIRTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION-—Seeks the prevention of birth defects through improved mother and infant health care,
community education, medical grants, and research. The nation’s major child health problem. (536-1045)
108 MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY ASSOCIATION— Provides free services in Hawaii to those afflicted with 40 neuromuscular diseases including Dystrophies,
Atrophies, Friedreich's Ataxia and Myasthenia Gravis. Supports worldwide research and provides statewide clinics. (533-4211)
109 NATIONAL MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS SOCIETY— Provides direct timely support to persons having MS and related neurological diseases. Patient
aquatic programs, yoga, transportation, domicile assistance, wheeichair and other limited medical accoutrements. (531-4127)
110 NATIONAL RETINITIS PIGMENTOSA FOUNDATION, INC.— Retinitis Pigmentosa Foundation, through our Honolulu number, 308-247-0970,
provides information and referral, and funds research to treat blinding retinal degenerative diseases.
6 4a
INTERNATIONAL SERVICE AGENCIES
201 AFRICARE—-Works with the people in rural Africa, helping them produce morefood, clean water, better health care, and in emergency situations giving
assistance to refugees. (531-8585)
202 CARE— Helps millions of desperately poor families around the world to survive and work toward self-support through feeding, agricultural, school, water,
health and medical programs. (531-8585)
203 FOSTER PARENTS PLAN— is a non-sectarian, non-political agency providing support and services to impoverished children and their families
overseas through direct aid, community improvement, and self-help projects. (531-8585)
204 HELEN KELLER INTERNATIONAL— Works in impoverished countries, preventing widespread eye disease and blindness, particularly among
malnourished young children, and providing services that make blind people independent and self-supporting. (531-8585)
205 INTERNATIONAL EYE FOUNDATION— Utilizing volunteer physicians, nurses and technicians, restores sight and prevents blindness on a world-wide
basis through teaching, training, eye banks and curative services. (531-8585)
206 INTERNATIONAL HUMAN ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS—Is helping the world's most disadvantaged people during International Year of Disabled
Persons-1981. Join IHAP in support of training and jobs for the disabled. (531-8585)
207 INTERNATIONAL RESCUE COMMITTEE— Is America’s leading nonsectarian agency providing relief and resettlement services for refugees fleeing
from religious, racial and political persecution. IRC also helps homeless war victims. (531 -8585)
208 OXFAM-AMERICA— Funds self-help development and humanitarian aid projects working with grass roots groups in impoverished regions of Africa,
Asia and Latin America. (531-8585)
209 PEARL S. BUCK FOUNDATION, INC.— Provides health, education and welfare services for half-American children abandoned in Korea, Taiwan,
Thailand, the Philippines and Okinawa by their American servicemen fathers. (531-8585)
210 PROJECT HOPE— Has had 3,500 educators working in 28 countries, training thousands of health care personnel, who continue to teach and treat
thousands more. (531-8585)
211 SAVE THE CHILDREN— Helps impoverished people build a better life for themselves and their children through community self-help, education,
nutrition and agricultural projects and services, (531-8585)
212 UNITARIAN UNIVERSAUST SERVICE COMMITTEE— Helps poor third world communities achieve their human rights, health, education and nutrition
through training and pilot projects in Latin America, India, Africa. (531-8585)
213 UNITED STATES COMMITTEE FOR UNICEF— Informs the American public of the needs of children, and reuses funds for UNICEFs programs for
children in over 100 developing countries. (531 -8585)
A L O H A U N I T E D WAY
HEALTH EDUCATION AND REHABILITATION SERVICES
301 AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY— A voluntary organization dedicated to the control and eradication of cancer through research, education, and
services for the cancer patient and family. Cooperating with AUW in business, government and industry, (531-1662)
302 AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION— Spearheads progressive programs against heart attack, stroke and other cardiovascular diseases. Programs
include research and heart testing. Cooperating with AUW in business, government and industry. (538-7021)
-303 AMERICAN SOCIAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION— Conducts VD research including the search for vaccines; provides information and education' and
citizens action programs. (536-1951)
304 ARTHRITIS FOUNDATION— The only voluntary health organization fighting crippling arthritis, maintains programs of research, patient care and
education. Informative literature and patient handbooks mailed on request. (531-1920)
305 CYSTIC FIBROSIS FOUNDATION— Goal is to reduce death and disability as a result of cystic fibrosis, a disease which primarily attacks the respirator/
and digestive system. (524-5111)
306 EYE OF THE PACIFIC GUIDE DOGS AND MOBILITY SERVICES— Serves the blind, teaching independence, orientation and mobility, with guide doqs
imported or with mobility aids, supplied at no cost to the recipient, (988-6681)
307 GOODWILL VOCATIONAL TRAINING CENTERS OF HAWAII— Dedicated to providing the disabled/disadvantaged with vocational evaluation, work
adjustment training, skill training, transitional and extended employment, placement service into business and industry. (537-3978)
308 HALE HO 'OLA HOU— Walk-in medical clinic in Kalihi-Paiama that provides primary care, family planning and dental services primarily to immiqrants
and low-income families and individuals. (848-1438)
309 HAWAII ASSOCIATION FOR RETARDED CITIZENS— Provides advocacy services, public education, legislative activities and training programs to
enhance the growth and development of retarded citizens. (536-2274)
310 HAWAII COMMITTEE ON ALCOHOLISM— The oldest non-profit agency in our state dedicated to combating the disease of alcoholism and to assistina
its victims to recovery. (524-1144) H
311 HAWAII EPILEPSY SOCIETY— Provides information, referral, counseling to persons with epilepsy; educates the public for increased understanding of
the problems of such persons; promotes medical research on epilepsy. (523-7705)
312 HAWAII SERVICES ON DEAFNESS— Promotes services to hearing-impaired persons, works cooperatively with agencies and organizations which
provide services to the hearing-impaired; provides counseling, information and referral services. (845-7855)
65a
313 HEMOPHILIA FOUNDATION OF HAWAII— Helps those with hemophilia (blood dotting disorder) by providing: 1) annual evaluations; 2) physical
therapy; 3) education; and 4} financial assistance for expensive medicine. (521-5483)
314 MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION IN HAWAII— Public education for mental health, referrals for mental health problems, ‘ trouble shooters’ (case
advocates), ‘ Comunity Friends," Legislative coalition, advocacy for children's services. (521-1846)
315 THE HOUSE— Provides residential, soda! and vocational rehabilitation services to semi-recovered, qualifying psychiatric adults. Prepares them to live
independently in the community without continuation of chronic hospitalization. (737-6517)
316 UNITED CEREBRAL PALSY ASSOCIATION OF HAWAII— Operates a Child Development Center which provides therapy, special education, sensory
stimulation motor development for severely multiple handicapped children with cerebral palsy and other handicaps. (533-6435)
317 WAIKIKI HEALTH CENTER— The Waikiki Hsaith Center is a low-cost, comprehensive health and medical clinic with a wide range of outpatient
services, induding day and evening ciinics. (922-3028)
CARE OF CHILDREN AND ELDERLY
318 CATHOLIC SOCIAL SERVICE— Professional counseling for individuals, marital, child, family problems, unwed parents, adoption; outreach/
transportation for Senior Citizens; alcoholism identification, prevention services; Group Homes for Elderly; Volunteers. (537-6321)
319 CHILD AND FAMILY SERVICE— Counseling for families, individuals and children. Family Ufe Education courses. Residential and alternative
education programs for troubled youth. Shelter for Abused Spouses and Children. (521-2377)
320 KINDERGARTEN & CHILDREN’S AID ASSOCIATION— Operates 8 preschools (includes 2 kindergarten classes) for children of working parents.
Emphasis on education and child development Ages 2% to 5. Limited tuition assistance. (941-9414)
321 KUAKINI HOME— A care home for aged men and women, both private and welfare clients, providing social services help and opportunities for
recreation. (547-9208)
322 PALOLO CHINESE HOME— A care home for indigent aged and handicapped man and women of ail races and religions; provides room, board, other
basics, medical care and referrals. (737-2555)
323 PEO PLE ATTENTIVE TO CHILDREN (PATCH)— Assists child care providers in developing knowledge and skills; matches parents with providers;
recruits child car® providers and advocates for children's ricihts, (523-6436)
324 SALVATION ARMY CORPS AND RESIDENTIAL TREATMENT FACILITIES FOR CHILDREN AND YOUTH— Provides community centers, kinder
garten services, counseling to the aged, and residential treatment for emotionally troubled youngsters and unwed mothers. (988-2136)
325 WAIKIKI COMMUNITY CENTER— Provides day care for children, counseling for parents and families, programs for senior citizens, and leadership in
community organization in the Waikiki area. (923-1802)
C H A R A C T E R B U I L D I N G A N D Y O U T H SERVICES
326 ARMED FORCES DEPENDENT YOUTH ACTIVITIES— Organized to ensure the provision of comprehensive and diversified recreational programs
designed to contribute to the social, cultural, physical and mental development of dependent youths of members of the Armed Forces. (449-9941 ext. 10
or 11)
327 BIG BROTHERS/BIG SISTERS OF HONOLULU— Under professional supervision, provides mature adult volunteers as special friends for children
ages 6-16 needing a close one-to-one relationship outside their own families. (521-3811)
328 BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA, ALOHA COUNCIL— Provides educational opportunities for character development, citizenship training and personal
fitness through Cub Scouting, Boy Scouting and Exploring programs. Boys ages 8-20, girls 14-20. (595-6366)
329 BOY’S CLUB OF HONOLULU— Provides character building and leadership programs through various recreational and social adjustment activities for
boys and girls ages 7 to 17. (949-4743)
330 CATHOLIC YOUTH ORGANIZATION— Provides development and recreational activities for young people through an isiand-wide physical, social,
cultural and spiritual program. (261-4671)
331 GIRL SCOUT COUNCIL OF THE PACIFIC— Open to girls 6 to 17 who accept the G irl Scout Promise. Association with understanding and friendly adults
helps prepare today’s youth for tomorrow's resposibilities. (845-9911)
332 HALE KIRA— Temporary shelter, immediate counseling and other appropriate services to adolescent girls and boys in need. No runaway stays at the
facility without parental permission. (955-2248)
333 WAIMANALQ TEEN PROJECT— Provides programs and services to meet special needs in the Waimanaio area. Emphasizes positve youth
development for disadvantaged youth, 12-21, to reduce socially unacceptable behavior. (259-7214)
334 YOUNG BUDDHIST ASSOCIATION OF HONOLULU— Offering educational and recreational activities for individuals and groups beginning at age four
continuing through senior citizens’ programs. (537-6954)
335 YOUNG MEN’S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION OF HONOLULU— For youth and adults, fosters spiritual, mental and physical growth through dub
groups, camping and outdoor activities, physical fitness, aquatics, informal education classes, outreach programs. (531-3558)
336 YOUNG WOMEN’S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION OF OAHU— A membership movement for women and girls with its Statement of Purpose carried out
by diverse programs and numerous services in six Oahu locations. (538-7061)
C O M M U N I T Y S E R V I C E A G E N C I E S
337 AMERICAN RED CROSS, HAWAII STATE CHAPTER— Counseling and finandai aid to servicemen, veterans and their families. Nursing, first aid and
water safety classes. Facilities located in Honolulu, Ft. Shatter, Hickam, Pearl Harbor, Schofield, Tripier and Kaneohe. Assistance to disaster vidim s.
(734-2101)
338 ARMED SERVICES YM CA OF HONOLULU— Serves entire military family through temporary housing fadlites, social and educational programs.
Fadlities located in Honolulu, Aliamanu Military Reservation, R . Shatter, Wheeler AFB, Kaneohe MCAS, Barbers Point NAS, and Schofield Barracks.
(524-5600)
339 HAWAII COUNCIL OF THE NATIONAL COUNCIL ON CRIME AND DELINQUENCY— The only nation-wide non-profit organization combining
professional expertise and citizen action to improve the efficiency and humanity of the criminal justice system. (537-3126)
340 HEALTH AND COMMUNITY SERVICES COUNCIL OF HAWAII— Determines health and welfare needs of the community through research and
planning, coordinates services, assists voluntary and public agencies in program development. (521-3861)
341 KUALO A-HEBA ECUMENICAL YOUTH PRO JECT (KEY)— A community center where residents of Windward Oahu find a variety of social,
recreational, cultural and vocational training opportunities. Provides special programs for senior citizens. (239-5777)
342 MOSUL! COMMUNITY CENTER— After-school and vacation rare for children; Japanese Language School, Comprehensive Senior Programs, classes,
thrift shop, community-wide events and individual assistance services. (955-1555)
343 PALAM A SETTLEM ENT— Serving Paiama area through youth development services— preventive and treatment oriented, neighborhood
development— people oriented, and providing a centra) location for basic public services. (845-3945)
344 SUSANNAH W ESLEY COMMUNITY CENTER— Established to strengthen and enhance the family and community in Kaiihi-Palama with programs for
youth, immigrant services, outreach and senior citizens. (847-1535)
345 VOLUNTEER, INFORMATION AND REFERRAL SERVICE— Recruits and places volunteers in public and private agencies. Up-to-date information by
telephone, covering over 1,000 agencies. Immediate major crisis/suicide prevention assistance. (536-7234)
(Listings Continued on Next Page)
66a
S P E C I A L I Z E D S E R V I C E S
346 ASSETS SCHOOL— Provides academic remediation, psychological counseling for learning disabled children, 5-14 who show a discrepancy between
capability and achievement. Pre-vocation^ and gifted learning disabled programs available. (423-1720)
347 COUNCIL ON SOCIAL WORK EDUCATION— Strives to assure an adequate supply of qualified social work personnel. Sets standards, recruits and
trains faculty, develops curricular materials. (536-1951)
343 HAWAII ASSOCIATION FOR CHILDREN AND ADULTS WITH LEARNING DISABILITIES— Assists children and adults with learning disabilities
through programs and research. Furthers public awareness and understanding. Develops resources to meet needs of learning disabled population.
(536-9684)
349 HAWAII MOTHER’S MILK— Recruits and screens nursing mothers, collects, processes human milk for distribution to premature, allergic infants with
extreme feeding problems unable to tolerate non-human milk. (949-17Z3)
350 HAWAII PLANNED PARENTHOOD— Offering total family planning including community-wide education, counseling and clinical services to men and
women. Affiliated with Planned parenthood Federation of America. (521-6991)
351 HAWAII REFUGEE RESETTLEM ENT ORGANIZATION— Aids in resettlement of Indochinese refugees to reach economic self-sufficiency and social
adjustment. Involves short-term emergency needs and on-going support and services. (531-1353)
352 INTERNATIONAL SOCIAL SERVICE— Offers soda! services to individuals a id fam ilies on an international basis on behalf of clients whose problems
require assistance in more than one country. (536-1951)
353 JOHN HOWARD ASSOCIATION OF HAWAII— Rehabilitation assistance for offenders and ex-offenders. Employment assistance, counseling,
referral, and emergency shelter assistance. Legislative and community education related to corrections, crime prevention. (537-2917)
354 LEG AL AID SOCIETY OF HAWAII— Personal Rights Unit offers legai services to low-income persons in areas of family, educational, health and senior
citizens law. (536-4302)
355 NATIONAL RECREATION AND PARK ASSOCIATION— A non-profit service, research and education organization providing comprehensive
community services in all facets of the park, recreation and leisure field. (536-1951)
356 REACH, THE JOINT SERVICES RECREATION FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN WITH HANDICAPS— Therapeutic recreational facilities and
programs for dependent children of armed forces and civilian community members needing special adjunctive services because of physical or mental
differences. (533-3844)
357 SPEC IAL EDUCATION CENTER OF OAHU— Provides comprehensive individualized educational services to developmentally disabled students aged
3-20 who cannot be appropriately accommodated within the public school system. (734-0233)
358 USO OF HAWAII— Serving military personnel and dependents away from home; providing spiritual, social, recreational, educational and entertainment
needs. Operates programs at Honolulu airport. (836-3351)
359 VARIETY CLUB DIAGNOSTIC SCHOOL CENTER— Provides diagnostic, consultation, treatment and monitoring plans for children experiencing
developmental, language, motor and perceptual problems, including in-service training for parents and other professionals. (732-2835)
N A T I O N A L S E R V I C E A G E N C I E S
401 AMERICAN FOUNDATION FOR THE BUND, IN C— The American Foundation for the Blind improves services for bUnd/visuaUy impaired persons by
working with over 400 schools and agencies nationwide expanding their educational, rehabilitation, employment, technological and recreational
programs.
402 FEDERALLY EMPLOYED WOMEN’S LEG AL AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, IN C— is organized exclusively to eliminate all forms of unlawful
employment discrimination against any Federal employee through publishing educational materials, conducting training, and providing legal assistance.
403 INDIAN LAW RESOURCE CENTER— The Indian controlled, Indian Law Resource Center assists Native Americans in protecting their legai rights,
human rights, culture and religions through research, education, and litigation.
404 MEDIC ALERT FOUNDATION INTERNATIONAL— Provides a life-protecting service— bracelet (or necklace), wallet card, 24-hour “hotline”— to
assure proper emergency treatment for people with diabetes, allergies, heart conditions, etc. (209) 668-3333
405 NAACP LEG AL DEFENSE AND EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC.— An independent organization, brings civil rights litigation involving fair employment,
education, voting, housing, health care, etc., including equal employment cases on behalf of Federal employees.
406 NAACP SPECIAL CONTRIBUTION FUND— Finances programs of the nation’s largest civil rights organization in education, housing, employment,
voter education/registration, military justice, emergency relief, and legal assistance.
407 NATIONAL BLACK UNITED FUND, INC— Is a charitable self-help institution established to provide financial and technical support to minority agencies
providing services related to job development, economic development, eliminating racial prejudice, social services, and building self-sufficiency among
Black Americans.
408 NATIVE AMERICAN RIGHTS FUND (NARF)— Is the largest, private, non-profit Indian law firm, pursuing justice and welfare through the courts in cases
of major importance to all Indian people.
409 PUERTO RICAN LEG AL DEFENSE AND EDUCATION FUND, INC— The Puerto Rican Legal Defense and Education Fund, Inc. seeks to protect and
advance the civil and constitutional rights of Puerto Rican and other Hispanic persons through education, litigation and other legal processes.
410 UNITED SEAMEN’S SERVICE— Provides recreation, information, communications, assistance and guidance services to merchant mariners and U.S.
Navy personnel in 12 overseas centers. Family services through New York Headquarters.
411 NATIONAL RESOURCES DEFENSE COUNCIL— Promoting Environmental Protection through litigation, research, education, cooperation with
government agencies. Focus; energy, toxic substances, air/water pollution, transportation, w ilderness and wildlife. (212) 949-0049.
Hamilton Graphics, Inc.— 200 Hudson Street, New York, N.Y.— (212) 966-4177