
March
29, 2001
UNION OF ORTHODOX
CONGREGATIONS WELCOMES
HOUSE INTRODUCTION OF FAITH-BASED INITIATIVE BILL
The
Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of
America – the nation’s largest Orthodox Jewish umbrella
organization – today welcomed the introduction of legislation in the
U.S. House of Representatives to implement President Bush’s initiative
to expand the partnership between faith and community based social service
agencies and the government. The
legislation was introduced by Congressmen J.C. Watts (R-OK) and Tony Hall
(D-OH).
Designated
the “Community Solutions Act,” the legislation contains three
components. One component
encourages charitable giving through a charitable tax deduction for the
more than 84 million Americans who do not itemize their tax returns.
Additionally, the act would allow Americans to transfer assets from an IRA
into a charitable giving plan without incurring income tax penalties, and
would encourage increased food donations through several changes in
current tax law. A second
component creates Individual Development Accounts (IDAs) to enable
working-poor families to save, build wealth, and enter the financial
mainstream, by providing a tax credit to banks for matching deposits by
low income people.
The third
component of the bill offers the expansion of “charitable choice,” the
ability of faith-based social service providers to apply for and receive
government grants to fund their good works.
The bill would expand the charitable choice concept to federal
grant programs that address juvenile delinquency, crime prevention,
housing development, child care, domestic violence and job training.
The bill safeguards the rights of service beneficiaries by
insisting that a person be notified that he may opt not to participate in
the faith-based program and will be provided with a readily accessible
alternative program should he so desire.
The bill safeguards the rights of faith-based providers by ensuring
that the government will not force them to alter their religious character
or personnel policies. And
the bill safeguards the interests of the government by insisting that
faith-based providers receiving federal grants will be subject to the same
accounting requirements as other non-governmental grantees.
Reacting
to the bill’s introduction, Nathan Diament, the Union’s public policy
director, stated that “the Watts-Hall Community Solutions Act strikes
the right balance between ensuring that faith-based social service
providers will be treated neutrally, not with hostility, by government
grant programs and ensuring that needy individuals will not be subjected
to undesired religious coercion. It
is a welcome step forward in this effort and the Union of Orthodox Jewish
Congregations looks forward to congressional hearings on this initiative
and the passage of the legislation.”
###



Union of Orthodox
Jewish Congregations of America
Institute for Public Affairs
Main Office:
11 Broadway
New York, NY 10004
Phone: 212-613-8124 Fax: 212-564-9058
E-mail: ipa@ou.org |
Washington Office:
1640 Rhode Island Ave NW
Washington, DC 20036
Phone: 202-857-2770 Fax: 202-331-916
E-mail: ipadc@ou.org |
Prof.
Richard Stone, Chairman
Nathan Diament, Director
Betty Ehrenberg, Director, International
Affairs & Communal Relations
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