Governor Brewer Announces Additional Weatherization Funding

Final $28.5 Million in Stimulus Funds Received; 1,930 Homes Weatherized

PHOENIX – Governor Jan Brewer today announced Arizona’s Weatherization Assistance

Program will receive $28.5 million, the final phase of funding from the U.S. Department of Energy as

part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) of 2009. This is the third phase of

funding of the $57 million awarded to the State Energy Office at the Arizona Department of

Commerce. (First phase of $5.7 million was awarded in March and second phase of $22.8 million

was awarded in June of 2009.) Additional_Weatherization_Funding.pdf

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Tempe Community Action Agency, Inc ("TCAA") is a nonprofit social service organization that helps families and individuals who are in need, from before birth to age 100+.  The agency's mission is to empower our community members to address basic needs to live with dignity, self-reliance, and optimum health. 

History: In 1966, TCAA started as “Operation Grassroots” as a food buying coop., tortilla factory, neighborhood credit union, post-office and community garden.  Incorporated as a 501(c)3 in 1971, TCAA has been the community's primary social service organization, serving elderly and low income community members. The agency is governed by an Executive Director and a volunteer Board of Directors.  TCAA is supported by grants, contracts and private contributors including Maricopa County Human Services Department, Area Agency on Aging Region One, the cities of Tempe and Scottsdale, Valley of the Sun United Way, Arizona Department of Health Services, foundations, corporations, and private citizens. The agency's small professional staff of fewer than 30 paid employees is assisted by over 250 community volunteers.

Click here to view the TCAA Video.

For a tour or more information, please contact Executive Director, Beth Fiorenza

Foundations of Community Action:

The “community action” concept was established by Congress with the passage of the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964. That legislations—the cornerstone of President Lyndon Johnson’s “war on poverty”—provided that new “community action agencies” should be established throughout the nation in order to

“… stimulate a better focusing of all available local, state, private and federal resources upon the goal of enabling low-income families and low-income individuals of all ages, in rural and urban areas, to attain the skills, knowledge and motivations and secure the opportunities needed for them to become self-sufficient.”

Though federal oversight and funding has changed over the succeeding years, Community Action Agencies (CAAs) continue today to be characterized by their primary catalytic mission—to make the entire community more responsive to the needs and interests of the poor by mobilizing resources and bringing about a greater sensitivity.

A significant responsibility of most CAAs today is to serve as the local administrative agency for a variety of federal- and state-funded assistance programs, including those for energy assistance, home weatherization, food banks, emergency shelters, and other general assistance programs funded by the Community Services Block Grant (CSBG) program.

Strengthened by their unique status among human services agencies, CAAs generally share the following core characteristics:
  • They are broad in scope, cutting across all needs, population groups and community sectors to develop comprehensive solutions to poverty concerns.
  • They are locally-controlled with a board of directors composed of elected public officials, private businessmen, and service recipients.
  • They perform an “incubator” function, fostering the development of new programs and service-delivery models.
  • They seek to collaborate with other human service agencies to avoid duplication of services and effectively advocate for the interests of all low-income residents.
Last Updated on Wednesday, 05 August 2009 15:03