The Commonwealth of Massachusetts
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PETITION OF:
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In the Year Two Thousand and Seven.
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An Act establishing a state association for settlement houses and neighborhood centers. |
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:
. CHAPTER 23C.
STATE ASSOCIATION FOR SETTLEMENT HOUSES AND NEIGHBORHOOD CENTERS.
Section 1. The Central Court
finds that public policy experts and state and local agencies have been
searching for a model of service delivery that will insure programmatically
effective and cost-effective delivery of services to families and
neighborhoods, and that the emerging consensus is that the best models provide
comprehensive, coordinated neighborhood-based and family-focused services. The
General Court further finds that the commonwealth’s existing network of
settlement houses can contribute to providing these comprehensive, coordinated
neighborhood-based and family focused services in a cost-effective manner, and
that the capacity of these settlement houses to provide and enhance these
services can be increased if the settlement houses are provided with additional
resources to implement greater neighborhood outreach, to direct individuals and
family members to appropriate settlement and community-based resources, to
monitor the progress of these individuals, and to plan and coordinate
intra-agency and community services so that community residents have easy
access to a range of services that respond to the varied and often multiple
needs of individuals and families.
It is the express intent of the General Court to increase funds available to
settlement houses for the purpose of providing a comprehensive range of
services to the residents of the neighborhoods they serve and that the funds
provided pursuant to this chapter will be complemented by privately-raised
contributions to the settlement houses for the program services funded pursuant
to this chapter. The General Court does not intend that these funds be used as
a substitute for any funds currently available from federal, state, or local
sources for the provision of neighborhood-based service delivery programs
provided by settlement houses.
Section 2. Definitions. As used in this chapter the following words and terms
shall have the following meanings:—
“Program Services”, may include, but are not limited to, several of the
following services:
(a) early childhood services, including child care, child development services,
early childhood education, early intervention, health information and referral
for pre-school children and child welfare services including programs designed
to prevent child abuse and neglect;
(b) youth services, including teen centers and school-age programs which
provide recreation, homework assistance, preparation for employment, counseling
and meals;
(c) education programs, including remedial education, tutoring, homework
assistance, General Education Development (GED), family literacy and English
language training;
(d) family programs, including home management, parent aid homemaker services,
food pantries, parenting skills training, teen parent services and programs for
seniors;
(e) arts and cultural activities;
(f) employment progress, including summer youth employment apprentice programs,
job training programs and displaced homemaker programs;
(g) case management including family counseling, crisis counseling, group and
individual counseling;
(h) emergency response systems for crisis situations;
“Secretary”, secretary of human services.
“Settlement House”, an independent, voluntary, not-for-profit organization
engaged in community work and social services delivery in a defined
neighborhood in a city or town of the commonwealth which provides
comprehensive, coordinated, family-focused, multi-generational human services
such as child care, employment training, housing assistance counseling, youth
development, educational services, senior services, and arts and cultural
activities, based on the needs of the neighborhood or neighborhoods served and
which:
(a) has been incorporated for at least 30 years;
(b) is qualified as a tax-exempt organization pursuant to section 501(c)(3) of
the Internal Revenue code;
(c) provides services to all those who live in the neighborhood or
neighborhoods served without regard to race, creed, religious practice, color,
sex, age, national origin, economic status, disability or affectional
preference;
(d) has an independent, autonomous board of directors, which meets at regular
intervals, has full authority over the policies and operations of the
organization, and the membership of which includes more that fifty percent
community residents;
(e) employs appropriate staff including a position of chief executive officer;
(f) has a budget which is adopted on an annual basis by the board of directors,
utilizes an accepted accounting system and has prepared an annual fiscal audit
by a certified public accountant not connected with the organization; and
(g) can demonstrate that one of its primary purposes is to improve and expand
the relationships among groups of different cultural, economic, religious, and
social groups in the community through a variety of individual, group, and
inter-group activities.
Section 3. (1) The Secretary is hereby authorized to issue grants for the
purpose of enhancing and coordinating activities and programs, expanding
programs to serve more individuals and families, and promoting inter-agency
coordination with other neighborhood organizations offering complementary
services.
(2) Funds awarded to settlement houses pursuant to the provisions of
sub-section one of this section shall be used to supplement and not to supplant
other federal, state, or local funds.
(3) The secretary shall issue requests for applications to all settlement
houses in the commonwealth and shall specify that applications include a
description of the nature of the services to be provided, a discussion of the
relatedness of the services to the purpose of the settlement house as defined
in section one of this chapter and an estimate of the number and composition of
clients to be served. Such applications may include a discussion of plans to
develop or enhance outreach services to individual and families, institute or
augment assessments of individual and family needs, coordinate services,
develop links with neighborhood organizations, develop employment initiatives,
mentoring programs and other cooperative programs with unions, neighborhood
businesses, and community corporations, and identify sources of private
funding. Such applications shall also include at least the following:
(a) appropriate accounting and fiscal control procedures that assure that funds
are expended in accordance with this chapter, including the filing of an annual
financial statement by each provider; and
(b) appropriate written records regarding the number of individuals and
families served and the type and extent of services rendered by the settlement
house.
(4) The secretary shall solicit and select applications for the provision of
programs and services funded pursuant to this chapter. It is necessary that
settlement houses receiving funding pursuant to this chapter demonstrate a plan
to raise one dollar for each two dollars of state grants received. Subsequent
year funding may be adjusted to reflect prior years’ experience.
(5) The secretary may issue a request for applications to the extent finds are
available on a multi-year basis.
(6) The secretary shall make grants subject to appropriations of up to one
hundred thousand dollars to settlement houses following approval of an
acceptable plan submitted pursuant to the request for applications.