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Agency
Mission
Community Action, Inc. mobilizes its resources and engages the community
in order to move families out of poverty and to ensure their children's
success in school.
Agency
History
Community Action Inc. of Hays, Caldwell,
and Blanco Counties (CAI) is a community based not for profit organization
that has been in continuous operation since 1965 when it was established
as part of this nation's War On Poverty led by President Lyndon Baines
Johnson. CAI operated its first Head Start program (one of the first in
the nation) in the community of Kyle in Hays County in the summer of that
year. Since that time it has grown into a large integrated health, education,
and human services agency that provides a multitude of services across
ten counties in the rural capital area of Texas. It now operates 11 Head
Start and Early Head Start centers in Hays and Caldwell counties. In 1968,
CAI began providing reproductive health services to low income women in
Hays County. By 1974, it was providing these services to low income women
in eight counties in the rural capital area. In 1986, CAI added Primary
Health Care Services in Hays, Caldwell, Blanco and Bastrop Counties and a Prescription Assistance Program
for uninsured residents of Hays County. In 1988, CAI became the major HIV/AIDS service
provider in the rural capital area offering education, testing, counseling,
and intensive case management to HIV positive individuals. CAI has been
the Breast and Cervical Cancer Control Program provider in six rural capital
area counties since 1992. Currently CAI operates ten health clinics
in Bastop, Blanco, Burnet, Hays, Lee, and Williamson counties and is the
primary medical home for thousands of low income women in the rural capital
area. CAI has operated programs for low income senior citizens in San
Marcos and Blanco and provided emergency services to families in crisis
in Hays, Caldwell, and Blanco counties for over twenty years. In 2000,
CAI became the major provider of adult literacy education, GED preparation,
and English as a second language education in the rural capital area.
It currently operates 20 education programs for educationally disadvantaged
adults in ten rural capital area counties. In 2002, CAI was one of only
thirty entities in the entire country to receive an Early Reading First
grant award from the United States Department of Education. CAI received
the second highest grant award in the nation. With the funds CAI will
establish centers of excellence in early reading and emergent literacy
in the Hays and San Marcos school districts. Community Action is governed
by a fifteen member volunteer Board of Directors. Five members are publicly
elected officials or their designees. Five are representatives of low
income communities, and five represent the private sector. Today CAI employs
247 individuals and has an operating budget of over nine million dollars.
The agency has four areas of operation: Health Services; Early Childhood
Education; Adult Literacy Education; and Family Self Sufficiency. Each
area has a leadership team that is responsible for the achievement of
specific outcomes detailed in the Agency's strategic plan. Community Action
employees mobilize resources and engage communities in order to move families
out of poverty and to help their children succeed in school.
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