Section 12754 Of Article 6. Community Action Programs From California Government Code >> Division 3. >> Title 2. >> Part 2. >> Chapter 9. >> Article 6.
12754
. In exercising its powers and carrying out its overall
responsibility for a community action program, a community action
agency shall have, subject to the purposes of this chapter, at least
the following functions:
(a) Planning systematically for and evaluating the program,
including actions to develop information as to the problems and
causes of poverty in the community, determine how much and how
effectively assistance is being provided to deal with those problems
and causes, and establish priorities among projects, activities, and
areas as needed for the best and most efficient use of resources.
(b) Encouraging agencies engaged in activities related to the
community action program to plan for, secure, and administer
assistance available under this chapter or from other sources on a
common or cooperative basis; providing planning or technical
assistance to those agencies; and generally, in cooperation with
community agencies and officials, undertaking actions to improve
existing efforts to overcome poverty.
(c) Initiating and sponsoring projects responsive to needs of the
poor that are not otherwise being met.
(d) Establishing effective procedures by which the poor and area
residents concerned will be enabled to influence the character of
programs affecting their interests, providing for their regular
participation in the implementation of those programs, and providing
technical and other support needed to enable the poor and
neighborhood groups to secure on their own behalf available
assistance from public and private sources.
(e) Joining with and encouraging business, labor, and other
private groups and organizations to undertake, together with public
officials and agencies, activities, in support of the community
action program that will result in the additional use of private
resources and capabilities, with a view to things such as developing
new employment opportunities, stimulating investment that will have a
measurable impact in reducing poverty among residents of areas of
concentrated poverty, and providing methods by which residents of
those areas can work with private groups, firms, and institutions in
seeking solutions to problems of common concern.