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Community Action Agency Picked
Social services department to allocate state
funds.
By Suzannah
Evans
January 19, 2005
The Loudoun Human Services Network has
recommended that the Department of Social Services serve as the county's
community action agency, empowering it to pass out state money to local
non-profits.
The recommendation comes eight months after Good Shepherd
Alliance failed in its bid to be named the community action agency. Questions
had been raised by both supervisors and representatives from other non-profits
about whether the public process was being respected.
Community action
agencies are public/private partnerships intended to increase communication
between local non-profits as well as dole out state funds. While they have been
in existence since 1964, Loudoun has never named one.
In response to a
request by supervisors, Loudoun Human Services Network, which is comprised of 31
private non-profit and public agencies, formed a committee of 17 representatives
from local non-profits. The members engaged in lengthy debates about how to
choose the proper community action agency, a time investment recognized by
Supervisor Bruce Tulloch (R-Potomac) at Tuesday's Board of Supervisors
meeting.
"You guys had one heck of a debate, and I have a whole thick yellow
email file to prove it," Tulloch said.
DESPITE THE DEBATE, the committee
was unanimous in its decision to name the Department of Social Services as the
community action agency. Of the 26 localities in Virginia that use community
action agencies, only two are government-run. Both Fairfax County and the City
of Alexandria use their departments of social services.
But, eventually, Good
Shepherd Alliance will probably get the designation anyway.
After a two- to
five-year period as an "incubator," the Department of Social Services will pass
the community action agency role onto a private non-profit.
"Our intent is
that Good Shepherd Alliance is our first choice," said Dr. Judy Hanley,
immediate past chair of Loudoun Human Services Network.
For John Brothers, Good Shepherd
Alliance's executive director, the committee experience has helped draw together
local nonprofits, whose goals are all along the same vein anyway.
"All along,
Good Shepherd's goal is to try to bring more money for the homeless," he
said.