Domestic Volunteer Service Act of 1973 (Vista)
Domestic Volunteer Service Act of 1973 (VISTA)
Lawrence Schlam
The idea of VISTA (Volunteers in Service to America) arose in 1963, when President John F. Kennedy expressed the desire to create a domestic volunteer program modeled after the Peace Corps, created in 1961.
In 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson granted Kennedy's wish when he signed the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964, an act that created the Volunteers in Service to America. Congress founded VISTA under the belief that it had solved the biggest problems of the nation with the help of citizen volunteers, and that by providing the people of impoverished communities with volunteers from across the country, it would help empower the poor to raise their standards of living.
By the end of 1965, VISTA had volunteers working to build homes in the Appalachian Mountains, supporting migrant workers in California, and helping the poor in Connecticut. By the end of the 1960s, VISTA had helped begin the first Head Start programs to provide early preparation for preschoolers, and Job Corps camps to engage in vocational training.
VISTA also began to recruit trained professionals to serve in low-income neighborhoods. Doctors set up free clinics in areas with little or no access to health care. Architects were asked to donate time to design new low-income housing or help renovate existing housing. Lawyers assisted the poor in obtaining benefits to which they were entitled and lobbied courts and legislators for expansion of existing protections for low-income people. These lawyers also
helped start agricultural cooperatives, community groups, and small businesses.
In 1973 Congress merged VISTA with the Peace Corps under a new federal "ACTION" agency, which would run all domestic volunteer programs. Depending on the type of service the individual supplied, terms of service ran from as little as a summer, to as long as five years. Congress established the Domestic Volunteer Service Act of 1973 (P.L. 93-113), in part, to provide funding and regulations for the operation of VISTA. Senator Alan Cranston introduced the act on March 9, 1973, with the support of several other prominent senators and President Richard M. Nixon.
Proponents of the act cited the long-standing importance of volunteerism throughout American history, and sought greater involvement on the part of both young and older citizens in this tradition. In the words of the enacting legislation:
The purpose of this [Act] is to foster and expand voluntary citizen service in communities throughout the Nation in activities designed to help poor, disadvantaged, the vulnerable, and the elderly. In carrying out this purpose, the Corporation for National and Community Service shall utilize to the fullest extent the programs authorized under this chapter, coordinate with other Federal, State, and local agencies and utilize the energy, innovative spirit, experience, and skills of all Americans.
The statute detailed the requirements, goals and funding for VISTA, expanded testing and development of innovations in volunteer activities, and specified that health services, housing, the environment, educational development, manpower, and community planning would be the main areas of focus of VISTA activities.
Among the innovative provisions in the act were those addressing the University Year for VISTA, which provided academic credits for full-time volunteer services in anti-poverty projects, and new voluntary activities and demonstration programs providing alternatives to incarceration for youthful offenders, services and opportunities for returning veterans, and communitybased peer counseling for the drug and alcohol addicted.
In addition, the act created a Retired Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP) and a Foster Grandparents (FGP), both geared towards providing services to the elderly and to use retired citizens as volunteers. Title III of the Act restated the divisions of responsibility between ACTION and the SCORE/ACE volunteers. SCORE is the Service Corps of Retired Executives, and ACE is the Active Corps of Executives, comprised of both businesspersons and volunteer organizations.
SUBSEQUENT LEGISLATION AND COURT RULINGS
The Domestic Volunteer Services Act has under gone many amendments since 1973. In the 1980s, VISTA began to encourage less outside volunteerism, and instead emphasized community self-help. In 1986, amendments established the VISTA Literacy Corps and "literacy councils" intended to expand adult education. A large majority of VISTA's work was then focused on trying to raise the literacy rates throughout the nation. In 1990, VISTA
returned to its roots of national volunteerism for all of the needs of the poor when President George H.W. Bush formed the Commission on National and Community Service as part of his "Thousand Points of Light" program.
In 1993 President Bill Clinton created AmeriCorps and merged it with VISTA, creating AmeriCorpsVISTA to develop new programs to meet the changing needs of the impoverished. The new agency developed tenant-owned, cooperative low-income housing, and expanded Individual Development Accounts to assist poor individuals in saving money to help adjust to the transition from welfare to work.
The most significant case interpreting the act has been Cook County Legal Assistance Foundation v. Pauken (1983). This case dealt with the rights, responsibilities, and ability of agencies sponsoring volunteers to recover reimbursement for actions done on behalf of VISTA. VISTA failed to renew a legal aid corporation as a VISTA sponsor because, although VISTA's objective was to have sponsors direct community organizations toward self-help, the plaintiff legal agency was providing "direct services." The court ruled that sponsors were not constitutionally entitled to refunding once the term of funding had expired, and that neither the Administrative Procedure Act nor Domestic Volunteer Service Act conferred any right to money damages against the United States. Other court decisions have dealt with whether VISTA volunteers should claim their VISTA stipends as income, whether states could include VISTA workers as part of their worker's compensation schemes.
On October 30, 2000, VISTA's thirty-fifth anniversary, Senator Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia entered in the congressional record a written statement by a prominent former VISTA volunteer, John Gherty, CEO of Land-o-Lakes, who described the impact VISTA has had on society and the important learning experience that VISTA can offer volunteers. The statement included comments concerning the value of taking responsibility and creating opportunities, the essential role of teamwork and team building, the importance of building effective alliances, strength in diversity, and the need to identify leaders and build leadership skills in America.
See also: Economic Opportunity Act of 1964; Peace Corps Act of 1961.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Committee on Education and Labor. Domestic Volunteer Service Act of 1973: Report (to Accompany H.R. 7265). Washington, D.C.: GPO, 1973.
Committee on Labor and Public Welfare. Domestic Volunteer Service Act of 1973: Report (to Accompany S. 1148). Washington, D.C.: GPO, 1973.
Robinson, Dale H. Domestic Volunteer Service Act Programs. Washington, D.C.: GPO, 1994.
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
"La Bellissima Maniera": Alessandro Vittoria e la Scultura Veneta del Gin quecenro.(Review)
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 3/22/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...La Bellissima Maniera": Alessandro Vittoria e la Scultura Veneta del Cinquecento...08-1. Thomas Martin. Alessandro Vittoria and the Portrait Bust in Renaissance...Martin points out on his first page, Vittoria was, together with his contemporary...
|
|
Obituary: FRANDSEN, VITTORIA
Newspaper article from: Deseret News (Salt Lake City); 8/19/2009; 607 words
; Vittoria Frandsen 2001 ~ 2009 Vittoria Guilia Frandsen, born August 23, 2001, at 5:46 p.m...at 5:46 p.m. just one week shy of her eighth birthday. Vittoria was born with Neonatal Marfan Syndrome. She courageously faced...
|
|
Hamlet of Vittoria provides perfect setting to celebrate Loyalist Day 2008.(Branch News: Highlights)( UELAC Central West Regional Branches )
Magazine article from: The Loyalist Gazette; 9/22/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...West Regional Branches came together in Vittoria on Sunday afternoon, June 22nd, to...Church (Anglican) 1844 in the hamlet of Vittoria, guests were greeted by Grand River...presented to Ernie Racz, Chairman of the Vittoria Foundation, and to Jim Wies of the Christ...
|
|
Avis board elects Vittoria as chairman, chief executive. (Joseph A. Vittoria)
PR Newswire; 9/29/1987; 700+ words
; AVIS BOARD ELECTS VITTORIA AS CHAIRMAN, CHIEF EXECUTIVE GARDEN...28 /PRNewswire/ -- Joseph V. Vittoria was elected chairman and chief executive...ownership plan, Avis announced today. Vittoria had been president and chief operating...
|
|
Puradyn Appoints Joseph V. Vittoria as Chairman and CEO.
Business Wire; 10/25/2006; 700+ words
; ...today announced that Chairman Joseph V. Vittoria has been appointed by the Board of Directors...obligations of directing a public company. Joe Vittoria is highly respected in the business arena...the reins as Chairman and CEO." Mr. Vittoria has an extensive business background...
|
|
Setting the record straight: Titian's Pieta and Vittoria's Zane Altar.(Alessandro Vittoria)(Critical essay)
Magazine article from: Aurora, The Journal of the History of Art; 1/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...Martin in his 1998 monograph on Alessandro Vittoria's portrait busts, where he noted that "[Vittoria's] Zane Altar [Fig. 2] in the Frari...1526), and the Assunta (1518)]. Vittoria's altar thus automatically, purely by...
|
|
Drawing Christ's blood: Michelangelo, Vittoria Colonna, and the aesthetics of reform*.
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 3/22/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...discourses intersect in the poetry of Vittoria Colonna (1490-1547), who is perhaps...pious friend and patron of Michelangelo. Vittoria Colonna was connected to many of the...scholars. In Michelangelo's drawings for Vittoria Colonna, aesthetics and reform spirituality...
|
|
Avis Chairman & CEO Joseph V. Vittoria to retire as company prepares for public offering later this year.
Business Wire; 1/13/1997; 700+ words
; ...HFS) announced today that Joseph V. Vittoria, chairman and chief executive officer...acquisition of Avis by HFS in October 1996, Vittoria, 61, agreed to stay on to manage the...lead Avis over the longer term," said Vittoria. "The company is in great shape and...
|
|
Restaurant review: Vittoria: A case of The Italian job meets The Breakfast Club
Newspaper article from: Evening News - Scotland; 2/6/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...start of another day's business at Vittoria, the Italian restaurant on the corner...friendly smile, things look promising. Vittoria's morning menu boasts nine breakfasts...the fact that it's now only 11am, Vittoria is buzzing. More tables are occupied...
|
|
FOOD: EATING OUT: VITTORIA - Italian's just the job just the job; SWEATY BETTY PILES ON THE CALORIES AT AN ALARMING RATE IN THIS JOINT THAT'S MORE THAN A VIT OF ALL RIGHT.(Features)
Newspaper article from: Daily Record (Glasgow, Scotland); 11/15/2003; 700+ words
; ...The Beverley Sisters, for example and Vittoria on Brunswick Street came up trumps...petal. All at the same time. I liked Vittoria from the moment I read the packed menu...Loren. Tell you what else I liked about Vittoria. The bottles of Diet Coke may have been...
|
|
Alessandro Vittoria
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Alessandro Vittoria , 1525-1608, Italian sculptor. A...Renaissance and a student of Sansovino , Vittoria was influenced by the mannerism of Ammanati...the restoration of the Palazzo Ducale. Vittoria worked in collaboration with Palladio...
|
|
Colonna, Vittoria (1490–1547)
Book article from: The Renaissance
Colonna, Vittoria (1490 – 1547) Italian poet and noblewoman, a significant...Avalos would be collected in 1538 under the title Rime de la Divina Vittoria Colonna Marchesa di Pescara . Her later poetry turned to religion and...
|
|
Vittoria
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Vittoria city (1991 pop. 55,280), SE Sicily, Italy; founded 1607. It is an important center of wine and olive oil production and export.
|
|
Vittoria Colonna, marchesa di Pescara
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Vittoria Colonna, marchesa di Pescara , 1492-1547, Italian poet; daughter of Fabrizio Colonna. Her love for her husband, Ferrante...
|
|
Vittoria Corombona
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
Vittoria Corombona, see White Devil, The .
|