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About Us
 The Council of the Southern Mountains is a community action agency established in 1964 to help low-income individuals and families achieve economic, social and psychological self-sufficiency in southern West Virginia, especially McDowell County. The Council is a 501 c (3) nonprofit corporation governed by a volunteer tripartite Board of Directors. The Board is composed of individual from three areas: 1) low-income and minority, 2) elected officials and 3) community representatives. The agency serves people in the southern part of West Virginia with emphasis on McDowell County, an economically distressed area experiencing high unemployment and social disparities.
The Council of the Southern Mountains presently provides services for individuals and families to help them achieve self-sufficiency. The Council also provides programs for unemployed and underemployed individuals, high school drop-outs, unwed parents, parolees and TANF recipients as high need individuals that need CSM assistance in gaining meaningful community services that provide all measures of citizenship and dignity. CSM provides job training and other services for these individuals and strives to keep the agency functioning at a level that will provide meaningful interventions for the people targeted for help.
The agency specifically served 3,000 families in the Community Services Block Grant program this past year which provides food pantries, transportation, seasonal food allocations, clothing, infant formula for eligible families, assistance to the elderly, energy assistance and housing referrals.
CSM Program Areas Overview
The following are the present sources of funding to the agency:
Grants Number of Staff Employed
Community Services Block Grant (CSBG) 3 Federal funded program administered through the WV Governor’s Office of Economic Opportunity Annual Budget: $262,187
Foster Grandparent Program/2 Federal funded program administered through the WV Office of the Corporation for National Service Annual Budget: $323,563
Retired Senior Volunteer Program/5 Federal funded program administered through the WV Office of the Corporation for National Service Annual Budget: $109,494
Weatherization Assistance Program/3 Federal funded program administered through the WV Governor’s Office of Economic Opportunity Annual Budget: $179,000
Mentoring Children of Incarcerated Parents/2 One year demonstration project funded through the WV Attorney General’s Office (includes one V.I.S.T.A) Budget: $50,000
Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Program/ CSBG Staff Provides free tax preparation and filing for low-income individuals through the CSBG program
Youth Exposure Series/ CSBG Staff Administered by our CSBG Program to provide Meaningful educational and recreational experiences to Area youth. Examples include: transporting African- American Youth to WVU for a week long exposure to engineering; Trips to the Clay Center; local minor league baseball games, etc. Title XIX Waiver and Right From The Start/9 Staff Both programs are Meidicaid fee-for-service. Administered through the WV DHHR Annual Budget: $150,000 Aged and Disabled Waiver Program Medicaid fee-for-service Annual Budger: (projected) $100,000 Administration/4
Agency administered by an Executive Director with 30 years experience in nonprofit program operation. The finance office is under the supervision of a Director with over 17 years experience. The agency maintains the MAS 90 accounting system and meets all generally acceptable accounting procedures. (A copy of the latest agency audit is available for review.) The agency has an approved 13.4% indirect cost rate.
The annual budget for these programs is circa $1,100,000 and utilizing a 6 to 1 “roll-over” ratio of this amount shows an economic impact to this County and area of over 6 million dollars annually.
| McDowell County is located in the coalfields of southern West Virginia. The economic conditions of the 1980s resulted in the loss of jobs in the primary employment area of coal mining. Due to the economic downturn, families suffered as poverty levels increased dramatically. Since 1980, 60 percent of the population has left the County, leaving approximately 26,000 people.
According to Mission of Faith statistics about McDowell County, found at www.missionoffaith.com/mcdowell_county.htm, the following challenges exist in the County:
• McDowell is the sixth poorest area in America • It has the fifth highest child poverty rate • It has the sixth worst health status in America • Unemployment persistently doubles the state rate and more than triples the national rate • The median family income is half the national average • It has one of the lowest levels of educational achievement in the nation • It has the highest illiteracy rates among adults in West Virginia • Of its high school graduates, only 44 percent attend college • At 3.4 percent, it has one of the lowest levels of college graduates in the workforce in the nation • Most of the land and natural resources, 85 percent, are owned by absentee landowners
According to the Workforce West Virginia statistics, McDowell County had a 9.8 percent unemployment rate as of June, 2006. This figure is twice the state rate and does not account for the hundreds of individuals that have given up and no longer seek employment because they lack the necessary skills, both vocationally and socially, to achieve and maintain a job. According to the State of West Virginia BEP labor force statistics for 2003, the annual average unemployment rate for McDowell County was 13.1 percent with 910 individuals identified from a total labor force of 6, 930. Also, in regard to underemployment (having no health insurance), as previously defined, U.S. Census Bureau statistics reveal that the per capita income of County residents, based on latest figures of 1999, was $10,174 as compared to the State average of $16,477. Median household income, again using the same source, was $16,931 as compared to $29,696 for the entire State. Lack of financial resources also lead to inadequate healthcare and demonstrate the dramatic need for the services provided by the Council.
The total population of the County in 2004 was 24,273 meaning 2,646 individuals are African-American with an additional 316 people in other minority groups. These figures indicate McDowell County has a target population for this proposal of 2,962. In addition, the primary geographic location of the target group is in the eastern part of the County from the county seat of Welch to the border of the neighboring County of Mercer.
Further, the average age of County residents is 40.5 years, one of the oldest in the State. This fact is indicative of a lack of skills in modern technology and long term functional deficits that result in significant health issues. Additionally, persons living in the County below the poverty level are 37.7 percent, compared to 17.9 percent for the State, indicating further that ability to seek health education and treatment is dramatically limited in the area. These are also statistics from the U.S. Census Bureau.
Another factor contributing to significant needs of the County identified is the number of people with a diagnosed disability, age 5 and over. U.S. Census Bureau reports this number to be 10,180 individuals in 2000. With the 2000 population being 26,568 this amounted to 38 percent of the County residents. Nationally, unemployment rates for people with disabilities approaches 85 percent and higher, again demonstrating no health insurance and limited financial resources. These figures dramatically support the need for innovative interventions to overcome the economic challenges in McDowell County. | |
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