Jefferson County Committee for Economic Opportunity: Difference between revisions

From Bhamwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(19 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
The '''Jefferson County Committee for Economic Opportunity''' ('''JCCEO''') is a non-profit Community Action Agency (CAA) which administrates programs in [[Jefferson County]] enabled by Title II of the federal Economic Opportunity Act of 1964. The agency distributes funds awarded through Community Services Block Grants, Low-Income Home Energy Assistance utility grants, Weatherization Assistance Program funds, Head Start pre-school programs, and other federal programs. In [[2018]] the JCCEO employed around 500 people with an annual budget of about $30 million.
[[File:JCCEO logo.png|right|200px]]
The '''Jefferson County Committee for Economic Opportunity''' ('''JCCEO''') was a non-profit Community Action Agency (CAA) which administrated federal grant-funded programs in [[Jefferson County]] from [[1965]] to [[2021]].


The committee was incorporated on [[January 21]], [[1965]] as the '''Birmingham Area Committee for Development of Economic Opportunity'''. Before it began administering programs in December of that year, it had already expanded its scope as part of an agreement between the [[City of Birmingham]] and Jefferson County. A priority of the new organization was the establishment of "Neighborhood Service Centers" with their own Neighborhood Advisory Councils. In addition to its direct impact, the JCCEO's participatory structure provides opportunities for disadvantaged residents to develop leadership and administrative skills.
The Economic Opportunity Act of 1964 was drafted by Sargent Shriver and presented to Congress as a keystone of President Lyndon Johnson's "War on Poverty" agenda. It was passed that August. As designed, the law established a network of local committees which included residents of impoverished neighborhoods rather than relying on existing local governments to distribute funding.


Since the 1990s the JCCEO has been headquartered in the former [[Graymont Elementary School]] at 300 [[8th Avenue West]], which it shares with the [[Arrington Head Start Center]]. The executive director is [[Sharon Myles]].
The '''Birmingham Area Committee for Development of Economic Opportunity''' was incorporated on [[January 21]], [[1965]]. Before it began administering programs in December of that year, it had already expanded its scope as part of an agreement between the [[City of Birmingham]] and [[Jefferson County]].


President Lyndon Johnson's "War on Poverty" legislation, as drafted by Sargent Shriver, established separate committees which included residents of impoverished neighborhoods rather than relying on local governments to distribute funding. That intent was undercut by later amendments which added more local officials and business owners to CAA boards. Many more funding cuts and legislative changes came during the Reagan and Bush administrations.
A priority of the new organization was the establishment of "Neighborhood Service Centers" with their own Neighborhood Advisory Councils. In addition to its direct impact, the JCCEO's participatory structure provided opportunities for disadvantaged residents to develop leadership and administrative skills within the organization.
 
Some of the aims of the original legislation were undercut by later amendments which added more local officials and business owners to CAA boards. Many more funding cuts and legislative changes came during the administrations of Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush.
 
In the 1990s the JCCEO moved its headquarters offices into the former [[Graymont Elementary School]] at 300 [[8th Avenue West]], which it shared with the [[Arrington Head Start Center]].
 
In its final year the agency's budget had grown to around $37 million, of which 90% was dedicated to managing Head Start programs, and the remainder going toward utility and rental assistance, and home weatherization campaigns. In [[2018]] the JCCEO employed nearly 500 people. That number was reduced due to the effects of the [[COVID-19 pandemic]]. When Head Start forced the Committee to relinquish its program grant in November [[2021]] another 258 employees were laid off, leaving only a small financial staff in place before the organization was shuttered later that year.
 
The JCCEO filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy liquidation in November [[2023]]. In the filing it listed $824,159 in debts and no assets.


==Executive directors==
==Executive directors==
* [[DePriest Waddy]], -September 2019
* [[Gayle Cunningham]], 1990-March 2013
* [[Sharon Myles]], November 2019-
* [[Marquita Davis]], March 2013-April 2017
* [[DePriest Waddy]], May 2017-September 2019
** [[Charles Faulkner]] (interim), September-November 2019
* [[Sharon Myles]], November 2019-November 1, 2021
** [[Brenda Singgellos]] (interim), November 1, 2021–


==Facilities==
==Facilities==
{|-
| valign="top" |
===Head Start Centers===
===Head Start Centers===
* [[Arrington Head Start Center]]
* [[Arrington Head Start Center]], 300 [[8th Avenue West]]
* [[Center Point Head Start Center]]
* [[Center Point Head Start Center]], 2209 [[Center Point Parkway]]
* [[Cooper Green Early Head Start Center]]
* [[Cooper Green Early Head Start Center]], 1501 [[Arthur Shores Drive]]
* [[Elyton Child Development Center]]
* [[Elyton Child Development Center]], 432 [[Center Street North]]
* [[Fairmont Head Start Center]]
* [[Fairmont Head Start Center]], 4217 [[Lewisburg Road]]
* [[Festival Head Start Center]]
* [[Festival Head Start Center]], 6701 [[Crestwood Boulevard]]
* [[St Francis Head Start Center]]
* [[St Francis Head Start Center]], 2410 [[7th Avenue North Bessemer]]
* [[Great Start Child Development Center]]
* [[Great Start Child Development Center]], 5200 [[Bessemer Super Highway]]
* [[Hard Elementary School]]
* [[Hard Elementary School]], 2801 [[Arlington Avenue]]
* [[St Joseph's Head Start Center]]
* [[St Joseph's Head Start Center]], 1105 [[30th Street Ensley]]
* [[Kingston Center]]
* [[Kingston Center]], 801 [[46th Street North]]
* [[Leeds Head Start Center]]
* [[Leeds Head Start Center]], 7335 [[Ruth Avenue]]
* [[Lipscomb Junior High School]]
* [[Lipscomb Junior High School]], 5605 [[10th Street South Lipscomb]]
* [[Midfield Elementary School]]
* [[Midfield Elementary School]], 416 [[Parkwood Street]]
* [[Craig Pouncey Head Start Center]]
| valign="top" |
* [[Sherman Heights Early Head Start Center]]
* [[Craig Pouncey Head Start Center]], 520 [[23rd Avenue Northwest]], [[Center Point]]
* [[Tarrant Elementary School]]
* [[Sherman Heights Early Head Start Center]], 2000 [[Pleasant Hill Road]]
* [[West Center Street Head Start Center]]
* [[Tarrant Elementary School]], 1269 [[Portland Street]]
* [[YWCA Birmingham]]
* [[West Center Street Head Start Center]], 1712 [[3rd Street Southwest]]
* [[YWCA Birmingham]], 309 [[23rd Street North]]
 
===Adult Day Care===
* [[Adult Day Health Care West Center Street]], 1712 [[3rd Street Southwest]]
===Senior Nutrition Centers===
===Senior Nutrition Centers===
* [[Hoopersville Senior Nutrition Center]]
* [[Hoopersville Senior Nutrition Center]], 3901 [[4th Street West]]
* [[Midfield Senior Nutrition Center]]
* [[Midfield Senior Nutrition Center]], 589 [[Bessemer Super Highway]]
* [[Wylam Senior Nutrition Center]]
* [[Wylam Senior Nutrition Center]], 4600 [[7th Avenue Wylam]]
===Other facilities===
===Other facilities===
* [[JCCEO Energy Assistance Office]]
* [[JCCEO Energy Assistance Office]], 589 [[Bessemer Super Highway]]
|}
 
==Controversies==
In [[2006]] former [[Jefferson County Commission]] member [[Jeff Germany]] was convicted of directing nearly $500,000 to allies through the JCCEO, much of which was returned to him and his son in the form of kickbacks.
 
In [[2014]] former executive director [[Gayle Cunningham]] and her daughter, [[Kelli Caulfield]] pleaded guilty in federal court of stealing nearly $500,000 in funds intended for distribution through the JCCEO.
 
[[Sharon Myles]] was named director in November [[2019]]. In March [[2020]] she fired chief financial officer [[Richard Wells]] and contracted with Ann Massa of Mississippi Early LLC to provide financial oversight services. Myles appointed [[Jacqueline Hill]] to take over as CFO in November of that year, but fired her in February [[2021]] and resumed contracting with Massa.
 
A tip from a whistleblower led the board to open an investigation into JCCEO's finances. Board attorney [[Thomas Scroggins]] hired accountants [[Shepard-Harris & Associates]] to collect and review documents. They found that Massa, listed as "key personnel", had been paid more than $79,800 between August 19 and September 24, 2021. On [[November 1]], [[2021]] the board fired Myles, Massa and four other contract employees, one of whom, [[Tommy Nsuk]], is believed to have been in a personal relationship with Myles.
 
Chief Human Resources Officer [[Brenda Singellos]] was appointed to serve as interim director. Other contracts which were questioned by the board included renting space from [[Greater Grace Church]] in [[Center Point]] for $10,000 per month and paying its pastor, [[Lawrence Jackson]], another $5,000 a month to work as a behavioral consultant. The investigation found that no pupils had been assigned to that center, and that Jackson had not performed any work.
 
Meanwhile, former board president [[T. L. Lewis]] wrote to the Head Start regional office in Atlanta, Georgia to say that Myles had been wrongfully terminated and that 10 members of the JCCEO board needed to be replaced. The dissension led Head Start officials to notify JCCEO that it would have to voluntarily relinquish its role in managing its federally-funded programs, with the next opportunity to re-apply coming no sooner than [[2026]]. Board chair [[Gary Richardson]] asked the [[City of Birmingham]] and [[Jefferson County]] to provide $3 million to keep the agency operating, but both demurred, citing concerns about mismanagement.
 
On Wednesday [[November 24]], the day before Thanksgiving, the JCCEO notified all 258 employees that they would be laid off. On Monday [[November 29]] [[Alabama Department of Economic and Community Affairs]] director [[Kenneth Boswell]] formally requested that the Committee surrender all state and federal grant funds as it coordinated the replacement of its programs. The JCCEO's board voted on [[December 1]] to comply with the request, and also empowered Richardson to refer its internal investigations to the [[Alabama Ethics Commission]] and the [[Attorney General of Alabama]]. A class action lawsuit was filed by [[Veronica Kemp]] on behalf of all the JCCEO employees terminated.
 
JCCEO's Head Start programs resumed in [[Irondale]], [[Kingston]], [[Graymont]] and [[Center Point]] under the management of the Community Development Institute of Denver, Colorado. CDI offered new positions to 160 Of the 218 Head Start staff laid off, but with significantly reduced wages. The nonprofit [[Childcare Resources]] is another provider operating Head Start and Early Head Start programs in Jefferson County.
 
==References==
* Faulk, Kent (March 26, 2014) "Former JCCEO executive director Gayle Cunningham sentenced to 2 years in prison for $500,000 theft from agency." {{BN}}
* Rebman, Stephanie (November 15, 2019) "JCCEO names new executive director." {{BBJ}}
* Johnson, Roy S. (November 1, 2021) "Jefferson County Committee for Economic Opportunity fires executive director, 5 others." {{BN}}
* Johnson, Roy S. (November 22, 2021) "With $2 million deficit, layoffs imminent at Jefferson County Committee for Economic Opportunity." {{BN}}
* Johnson, Roy S. (November 22, 2021) "Jefferson County Committee for Economic Opportunity ‘dead’ without $3 million from city, county: board chair." {{BN}}
* Johnson, Roy S. (November 26, 2021) "JCCEO executive’s firing followed financial inconsistences, alleged relationship with contractor." {{BN}}
* "Turmoil hits antipoverty group as report questions contracts." (November 29, 2021) Associated Press / WBHM.org
* Dionne, Brittany (November 29, 2021) "Center Point pastor defends receiving thousands of dollars from JCCEO after being accused of not fulfilling the contract." WBRC.com
* Johnson, Roy S. (November 29, 2021) "Jefferson County Committee for Economic Opportunity board slashed, new CFO hired." {{BN}}
* Collins, Alan (November 30, 2021) "JCCEO Board Chairman: The agency will be going out of business." WBRC.com
* Johnson, Roy S. (December 1, 2021) "As JCCEO heaves its final breath, harvest its heart, start the autopsy." {{BN}}
* Tryens-Fernandes, Savannah (December 15, 2021) "Two JCCEO Head Start centers reopen, but former employees are still unpaid." {{BN}}
* Tryens-Fernandes, Savannah (December 15, 2021) "Former Alabama Head Start employee sues over layoff at JCCEO." {{BN}}
* Denham, Hannah (September 1, 2023) "[https://www.al.com/education/2023/09/changes-ahead-for-jefferson-county-head-start-programs-following-scandal-shutdown.html Changes ahead for Jefferson County Head Start programs following scandal, shutdown]" {{AL}}
* Johnson, Roy S. (November 9, 2023) "[https://www.al.com/news/2023/11/two-years-after-demise-jcceo-files-chapter-7-bankruptcy-cites-more-than-800k-in-debt.html Two years after demise, JCCEO files Chapter 7 bankruptcy, cites more than $800k in debt]." {{AL}}


==External links==
==External links==
* [https://www.jcceo.org/ JCCEO] website
* [https://www.jcceo.org/ JCCEO] website


[[Category:JCCEO|*]]
[[Category:1965 establishments]]
[[Category:1965 establishments]]
[[Category:2021 disestablishments]]
[[Category:8th Avenue West]]
[[Category:8th Avenue West]]

Latest revision as of 11:38, 15 November 2023

JCCEO logo.png

The Jefferson County Committee for Economic Opportunity (JCCEO) was a non-profit Community Action Agency (CAA) which administrated federal grant-funded programs in Jefferson County from 1965 to 2021.

The Economic Opportunity Act of 1964 was drafted by Sargent Shriver and presented to Congress as a keystone of President Lyndon Johnson's "War on Poverty" agenda. It was passed that August. As designed, the law established a network of local committees which included residents of impoverished neighborhoods rather than relying on existing local governments to distribute funding.

The Birmingham Area Committee for Development of Economic Opportunity was incorporated on January 21, 1965. Before it began administering programs in December of that year, it had already expanded its scope as part of an agreement between the City of Birmingham and Jefferson County.

A priority of the new organization was the establishment of "Neighborhood Service Centers" with their own Neighborhood Advisory Councils. In addition to its direct impact, the JCCEO's participatory structure provided opportunities for disadvantaged residents to develop leadership and administrative skills within the organization.

Some of the aims of the original legislation were undercut by later amendments which added more local officials and business owners to CAA boards. Many more funding cuts and legislative changes came during the administrations of Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush.

In the 1990s the JCCEO moved its headquarters offices into the former Graymont Elementary School at 300 8th Avenue West, which it shared with the Arrington Head Start Center.

In its final year the agency's budget had grown to around $37 million, of which 90% was dedicated to managing Head Start programs, and the remainder going toward utility and rental assistance, and home weatherization campaigns. In 2018 the JCCEO employed nearly 500 people. That number was reduced due to the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. When Head Start forced the Committee to relinquish its program grant in November 2021 another 258 employees were laid off, leaving only a small financial staff in place before the organization was shuttered later that year.

The JCCEO filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy liquidation in November 2023. In the filing it listed $824,159 in debts and no assets.

Executive directors

Facilities

Head Start Centers

Adult Day Care

Senior Nutrition Centers

Other facilities

Controversies

In 2006 former Jefferson County Commission member Jeff Germany was convicted of directing nearly $500,000 to allies through the JCCEO, much of which was returned to him and his son in the form of kickbacks.

In 2014 former executive director Gayle Cunningham and her daughter, Kelli Caulfield pleaded guilty in federal court of stealing nearly $500,000 in funds intended for distribution through the JCCEO.

Sharon Myles was named director in November 2019. In March 2020 she fired chief financial officer Richard Wells and contracted with Ann Massa of Mississippi Early LLC to provide financial oversight services. Myles appointed Jacqueline Hill to take over as CFO in November of that year, but fired her in February 2021 and resumed contracting with Massa.

A tip from a whistleblower led the board to open an investigation into JCCEO's finances. Board attorney Thomas Scroggins hired accountants Shepard-Harris & Associates to collect and review documents. They found that Massa, listed as "key personnel", had been paid more than $79,800 between August 19 and September 24, 2021. On November 1, 2021 the board fired Myles, Massa and four other contract employees, one of whom, Tommy Nsuk, is believed to have been in a personal relationship with Myles.

Chief Human Resources Officer Brenda Singellos was appointed to serve as interim director. Other contracts which were questioned by the board included renting space from Greater Grace Church in Center Point for $10,000 per month and paying its pastor, Lawrence Jackson, another $5,000 a month to work as a behavioral consultant. The investigation found that no pupils had been assigned to that center, and that Jackson had not performed any work.

Meanwhile, former board president T. L. Lewis wrote to the Head Start regional office in Atlanta, Georgia to say that Myles had been wrongfully terminated and that 10 members of the JCCEO board needed to be replaced. The dissension led Head Start officials to notify JCCEO that it would have to voluntarily relinquish its role in managing its federally-funded programs, with the next opportunity to re-apply coming no sooner than 2026. Board chair Gary Richardson asked the City of Birmingham and Jefferson County to provide $3 million to keep the agency operating, but both demurred, citing concerns about mismanagement.

On Wednesday November 24, the day before Thanksgiving, the JCCEO notified all 258 employees that they would be laid off. On Monday November 29 Alabama Department of Economic and Community Affairs director Kenneth Boswell formally requested that the Committee surrender all state and federal grant funds as it coordinated the replacement of its programs. The JCCEO's board voted on December 1 to comply with the request, and also empowered Richardson to refer its internal investigations to the Alabama Ethics Commission and the Attorney General of Alabama. A class action lawsuit was filed by Veronica Kemp on behalf of all the JCCEO employees terminated.

JCCEO's Head Start programs resumed in Irondale, Kingston, Graymont and Center Point under the management of the Community Development Institute of Denver, Colorado. CDI offered new positions to 160 Of the 218 Head Start staff laid off, but with significantly reduced wages. The nonprofit Childcare Resources is another provider operating Head Start and Early Head Start programs in Jefferson County.

References

  • Faulk, Kent (March 26, 2014) "Former JCCEO executive director Gayle Cunningham sentenced to 2 years in prison for $500,000 theft from agency." The Birmingham News
  • Rebman, Stephanie (November 15, 2019) "JCCEO names new executive director." Birmingham Business Journal
  • Johnson, Roy S. (November 1, 2021) "Jefferson County Committee for Economic Opportunity fires executive director, 5 others." The Birmingham News
  • Johnson, Roy S. (November 22, 2021) "With $2 million deficit, layoffs imminent at Jefferson County Committee for Economic Opportunity." The Birmingham News
  • Johnson, Roy S. (November 22, 2021) "Jefferson County Committee for Economic Opportunity ‘dead’ without $3 million from city, county: board chair." The Birmingham News
  • Johnson, Roy S. (November 26, 2021) "JCCEO executive’s firing followed financial inconsistences, alleged relationship with contractor." The Birmingham News
  • "Turmoil hits antipoverty group as report questions contracts." (November 29, 2021) Associated Press / WBHM.org
  • Dionne, Brittany (November 29, 2021) "Center Point pastor defends receiving thousands of dollars from JCCEO after being accused of not fulfilling the contract." WBRC.com
  • Johnson, Roy S. (November 29, 2021) "Jefferson County Committee for Economic Opportunity board slashed, new CFO hired." The Birmingham News
  • Collins, Alan (November 30, 2021) "JCCEO Board Chairman: The agency will be going out of business." WBRC.com
  • Johnson, Roy S. (December 1, 2021) "As JCCEO heaves its final breath, harvest its heart, start the autopsy." The Birmingham News
  • Tryens-Fernandes, Savannah (December 15, 2021) "Two JCCEO Head Start centers reopen, but former employees are still unpaid." The Birmingham News
  • Tryens-Fernandes, Savannah (December 15, 2021) "Former Alabama Head Start employee sues over layoff at JCCEO." The Birmingham News
  • Denham, Hannah (September 1, 2023) "Changes ahead for Jefferson County Head Start programs following scandal, shutdown" AL.com
  • Johnson, Roy S. (November 9, 2023) "Two years after demise, JCCEO files Chapter 7 bankruptcy, cites more than $800k in debt." AL.com

External links