Economic Opportunity Act of 1964

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Economic Opportunity Act of 1964

Stephen J. Pollak


Excerpt from the of Economic Opportunity Act of 1964

Findings and Declaration of Purpose:

Although the economic well-being and prosperity of the United States have progressed to a level surpassing any achieved in world history, and although these benefits are widely shared throughout the Nation, poverty continues to be the lot of a substantial number of our people. The United States can achieve its full economic and social potential as a nation only if every individual has the opportunity to contribute to the full extent of his capabilities and to participate in the workings of our society. It is, therefore, the policy of the United States to eliminate the paradox of poverty in the midst of plenty in this Nation by opening to everyone the opportunity for education and training, the opportunity to work, and the opportunity to live in decency and dignity. It is the purpose of this Act to strengthen, supplement, and coordinate efforts in furtherance of that policy.


Congress adopted the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964 (EOA) (P.L. 88-452, 78 Stat. 508) when President Lyndon Johnson was in office. In his first State of the Union message, President Johnson declared the EOA would launch the "war on poverty." At the signing ceremony, the president said the American people were making history:

For so long as man has lived on this earth poverty has been his curse. On every continent in every age men have sought escape from poverty's oppression. Today for the first time in all history of the human race, a great nation is able to make and is willing to make a commitment to eradicate poverty among its people.

The philosophy behind the statute was not wealth distribution, but the belief that government can and must provide poor people with opportunities to earn a decent living and maintain their families in a comfortable living standard. President Johnson identified the constitutional basis for the legislation, stating, "The Congress is charged by the Constitution 'to provide ... for the general welfare of the United States.'"

The act employed two mechanisms to reach its lofty goal. First, it established eleven new programs that the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) would operate or supervise. The new programs included:

  1. The Job Corps, which provides work, basic education, and training in separate residential centers for young men and young women, ages sixteen to twenty-one;
  2. Neighborhood Youth Corps, which provides work and training for young men and women, ages sixteen to twenty-one, from impoverished families and neighborhoods;
  3. Work Study, which provides grants to colleges and universities for part-time employment of students from low-income families who need to earn money to pursue their education;
  4. Urban and Rural Community Action, which provides financial and technical assistance to public and private nonprofit agencies for community action programs developed with "maximum feasible participation" of the poor and giving "promise of progress toward elimination of poverty";
  5. Adult Basic Education, which provides grants to state educational agencies for programs of instruction for persons eighteen years and older whose inability to read and write English is an impediment to employment;
  6. Voluntary Assistance for Needy Children, which establishes an information and coordination center to encourage voluntary assistance for deserving and needy children;
  7. Loans to Rural Families, which provides loans not exceeding $2,500 that will assist low income rural families in permanently increasing their income;
  8. Assistance for Migrant Agricultural Employees, which provides assistance to state and local governments, public and private nonprofit agencies or individuals in operating programs to assist migratory workers and their families with housing, sanitation, education, and day care of children;
  9. Employment and Investment Incentives, which provides loans and guarantees, not in excess of $25,000 to a single borrower, for the benefit of very small businesses;
  10. Work Experience, which provides payments for experimental, pilot, and demonstration projects to expand opportunities for work experience and needed training of persons who are unable to support or care for themselves or their families, including persons receiving public assistance; and
  11. Volunteers in Service to America (VISTA), which recruits, selects, trains, and refers volunteers to state or local agencies or private nonprofit organizations to perform duties in combating poverty.

Second, recognizing that there were already many federal programs addressing problems of the poor, the statute empowered the OEO Director to coordinate the anti-poverty efforts of all federal agencies. It directed those agencies to cooperate with the director and established an Economic Opportunity Council, chaired by the director and composed of the members of the president's Cabinet, to consult with the director in carrying out his functions.

CIRCUMSTANCES LEADING TO THE ADOPTION OF THE EOA

The 1960s were a period of reform, sometimes referred to as the "Second Reconstruction." Michael Harrington, a prominent writer on social issues, graphically described the plight of the poor in 1962 in The Other America: Poverty in the United States, a book said to have made a significant impression on both President Kennedy and President Johnson. President Kennedy's brother, Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, visited pockets of poverty in Appalachia, in urban slums, and on Native American reservations, and spoke out for remedial action. The President's Council of Economic Advisers' Annual Report published in January 1964 focused on the "Problem of Poverty in America," pulling together compelling statistics and showing that in a period of unprecedented prosperity, one-fifth of all families and nearly one-fifth of the total U.S. population33 to 35 million peoplewere poor, having incomes below the poverty line (then $3,000 for a family of four), and that nearly one-half of all non-whites were living in poverty. It also revealed that, despite the decline from generation to generation in the proportion of the poor in the adult population, there were groups (for example, farm families and families headed by women) where the poverty rate was stubbornly stable and "the cruel legacy of poverty is passed from parents to children."

In January 1964 the president asked R. Sargent Shriver, the head of the successful Peace Corps, which provided volunteers to assist poor people outside the United States, to head a Cabinet-level task force charged with developing a bill to carry on the war against poverty here at home. In March the president transmitted to the Congress the administration's bill, which was introduced in the House by Representative Phil M. Landrum, Democrat of Georgia, a southern conservative, and in the Senate by Senator Pat McNamara, Democrat of Michigan, a northern liberal. Subcommittees of the House Education and Labor Committee and a subcommittee of the Senate Labor and Public Welfare Committee held hearings, and each committee reported the bill favorably, with some amendments, but substantially intact. After debating the bill for two days, the full Senate passed it, with limited amendments, on July 23, 1964, by a vote of sixty-one to thirty-four, with ten of thirty-two Republicans voting for it and the southern Democrats split eleven to eleven. The House debated the Senate-passed bill over four days in August, and by a vote of 226 to 185 adopted that bill, with a few amendments, on August 8, 1964. Twenty-two Republicans, 144 northern Democrats, sixty southern Democrats voted for the bill, while 145 Republicans and forty southern Democrats opposed it. On the same day, the Senate, by a voice vote, adopted the House-passed bill. The president signed the bill on August 20, 1964.

Floor debate in the House, where the outcome of the final vote was in doubt, was highly partisan, according to the Congressional Quarterly. There was fierce competition for the votes of southern Democrats. The powerful Democratic chairman of the House Rules Committee, Howard W. Smith of Virginia, had delayed granting a rule for floor action, saying that the legislation was "too vague and indefinite." He questioned Representative Landrum, manager of the bill, about racial integration at Job Corps centers. With Republican Representative Peter H. B. Frelinghuysen, Jr. of New Jersey, ranking member of the House Education and Labor Committee, taking the lead, Republicans in the House accused the administration of putting "unprecedented pressure" on members to vote, and of being locked out in developing a bipartisan bill. They emphasized the far-reaching authority given the OEO Director over other federal programs and in funding of projects within states and local jurisdictions without the approval of governors, mayors, and county executives. Opponents attacked the job training and work experience provisions of the bill for focusing on low-skilled jobs or make-work, when the economy needed highly skilled workers.

States' rights were a driving force behind opponents' arguments in both the Senate and the House. Two similar states' rights amendments were accepted during floor debate in the Senate. One gave the governors veto power over establishment of Job Corps centers in their states, provided they acted within thirty days of notice. The second gave the governors veto power over any Job Corps center or National Youth Corps or Community Action project contracted between the federal government and private agencies within their states. The House extended the governors' veto to Community Action projects contracted with public agencies. Reflecting the opponents' views was a Republican-sponsored alternative to the administration's bill, which would have authorized $1.5 billion in grants to be expended over a three-year period (196567) through existing governmental agencies. Consistent with the Republicans' opposition to expansion of the federal bureaucracy, their alternative did not provide for creation of any new anti-poverty operating or coordinating agency.

The fact that the bill did not preclude aid to poverty projects sponsored by sectarian schools or institutions was also debated. An amendment to bar grants to sectarian schools was defeated in the Senate.

During the time the bill was being debated, President Johnson was running for re-election, and the Republicans were selecting their candidate, Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona, to run against him. The anti-poverty program was frequently discussed during the presidential primaries and in the fall campaign. Senator Goldwater was a leader in opposing the bill and its reliance upon the federal government to address the problems of the poor. He accused the president of "playing politics with poverty."

EXPERIENCE UNDER THE ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY ACT

Congress funded the programs authorized by the EOA on the last day of the 1964 congressional session, October 8, with $800 million for fiscal year 1965, 15 percent less than the $947.5 million authorized. On November 25, 1964, OEO Director Shriver announced the first 119 projects, budgeted at $35 million, including thirty-two Job Corps camps and an urban training center; fourteen Neighborhood Youth Corps projects serving 10,500 youths in thirteen states; community action grants in twelve cities, six rural areas and one Native American reservation; work experience programs for unemployed parents in two cities and two counties; and work-study programs for needy college students at thirty-one colleges. Using the flexibility afforded by the statute for community action projects, OEO in 1965 inaugurated four innovative programs: Head Start, to assist preschool children from deprived families to enter kindergarten and first grade; Upward Bound, to prepare talented poverty-stricken youths for college; Neighborhood Legal Services, to provide free legal counsel for the poor in civil matters; and Foster Grandparents, to train unemployed elderly poor to care for neglected children and bedridden sick persons.

From the beginning, Republicans, often with the support of southern Democrats, attempted to dismantle the OEO and transfer its operating programs to "old-line" departments and agencies. While Congress ultimately repealed the Economic Opportunity Act in 1981, the first year of the presidency of Ronald Reagan, many of the programs established by the 1964 act or created by OEO have survived, often with enhanced budgets and changes in name and configuration. Examples include Head Start and Work-Study which are administered by the Department of Education; and Legal Services which is now a federally funded corporation under a presidentially appointed board.

Neither the act nor OEO ever had the profound impact on society envisioned by President Johnson and the proponents of the legislationbringing about the elimination of poverty. Commentators have strongly debated the reasons for this result. According to Michael Harrington in The New American Poverty, the act failed to achieve its purpose "to eliminate the paradox of poverty in the midst of plenty" because of the Vietnam War and the lack of funding. For the first five fiscal years (196569), Congress appropriated a total of $7.634 billion to fund all EOA programs. The Council of Economic Advisers, in its January 1964 report, had stated that "about $11 billion a year would bring all poor families up to the $3,000 income level we have taken to be the minimum for a decent life." Other commentators say the anti-poverty program was misdirected. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, a member of the poverty task force (later Senator representing New York), has pointed to the lack of any provision for the employment of adult men as a crucial decision. Another critic, James L. Sundquist, also a task force member, says that Sargent Shriver mistakenly opted for OEO to be an operating agency, focusing on administering programs such as Job Corps and VISTA, rather than coordinating the many programs of the federal government impacting poverty.

On balance, while the label "war against poverty" reflected the hyperbole of politics, the Economic Opportunity Act focused the attention of the nation and the agencies of the federal government on poverty and the need for coordinated, multidimensional approaches to reduce, if not to eliminate, its root causes. The statute launched several effective programs that demonstrated what could be accomplished and challenged the citizenry and government not to accept the adage that the "poor will always be with us."

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Douglas, Paul H. In Our Time. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, Inc., 1968.

"Economic Opportunity Act of 1964, S. Rep. No 1458 (1964)." United States Code Congressional and Administrative News, 88th Cong., 2d Sess. (1964): 290089.

Ferman, Louis A. "Evaluating the War on Poverty." Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science (September 1969).

Galbraith, John K. The Affluent Society. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1958.

Harrington, Michael. The Other America. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1963.

Harrington, Michael. The New American Poverty. New York: Viking Penguin, 1984.

Kershaw, Joseph A. Government against Poverty. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution, 1970.

Levitan, Sar A. The Great Society's Poor Law. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1969.

Moynihan, Daniel P. On Understanding Poverty. New York: Basic Books, 1968.

Moynihan, Daniel P. Maximum Feasible Misunderstanding. New York: The Free Press, 1969.

Moynihan, Daniel P. "The Professors and the Poor." Commentary (August 1968): 19.

Plotnick, Robert D., and Skidmore, Felicity. Progress against Poverty: A Review of the 19641974 Decade. New York: Academic Press, 1975.

"President's 'War on Poverty' Approved." Congressional Quarterly 4 (1964): 208.

Sundquist, James L. Making Federalism Work. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution, 1969.

Sundquist, James L. On Fighting Poverty. New York: Basic Books, 1969.

Economic Opportunity Act

views updated May 29 2018

ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY ACT


In 1964 President Lyndon Johnson (19631969) announced in his first State of the Union address: "This administration today, here and now, declares unconditional war on poverty." This announcement was predated a few months earlier by a wave of urban riots in U.S. cities. The announced "War on Poverty" became a reality in August 1964 when Congress enacted the Economic Opportunity Act (EOA). This federal act created the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) and gave it the responsibility of administrating the Community Action Program (CAP) and the Job Corps. The CAP was designed to administer services to the poor, coordinate poverty functions of the federal, state, and local governments, and to create areas in the program where the poor would have some direct responsibility and power over those new programs. The Job Corps as another part of the EOA was a job training program aimed at disadvantaged youth in the United States. Though both programs were theoretically color-blind the EOA seemed likely to focus on the needs of many urban African Americans. Despite the major initiatives of the EOA the threatening racial tensions in the United States only worsened. Despite urban riots that began in 1967 and continued through the rest of the 1960s President Johnson continued in his efforts to wage war on poverty in the United States through the EOA. Responding to the riots in Detroit, Michigan, in 1967 he said that the only long-range solution for urban poverty was to continue EOA efforts to reduce the conditions of poverty: "ignorance, discrimination, slums, disease, and the joblessness." EOA efforts disappeared with the Richard Nixon (19691974) presidency.

See also: Great Society, Poverty

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