To strengthen America's "armies of compassion," the Initiative:
- Trained more than 150,000 social entrepreneurs on how to increase the impact of their work.
- Supported amendments to the tax code that provide greater incentives for charitable giving and activities.
- Established the Compassion Capital Fund to provide grants and training designed to increase the effectiveness of grassroots nonprofits.
The Faith-Based and Community Initiative "has fundamentally changed the government's strategy for improving the lives of the downtrodden.... [D]ue to the achievements of faith-based charities that have received Federal aid, the partnership between government and religious organizations will continue to strengthen." - Peyton Miller, Harvard Political Review, 11/5/08
The Faith-Based And Community Initiative Joined With The Armies Of Compassion To Wage A Determined Attack On Need
Access to Recovery (ATR) program: Provided nearly 270,000 recovering addicts with vouchers that enabled them to choose from an expansive network of faith-based and other community organizations (FBCOs) for the clinical and supportive services that best met their individual needs.
Thousands of participating FBCOs helped produce results that outperform many national programs on multiple measures.
The President's Prisoner Re-entry Initiative: Links returning nonviolent offenders with FBCOs that help them find work and avoid relapse into criminal activity. Participants' rate of re-arrest within one year of release is 15 percent, less than half the national average.
Disadvantaged Students: More than 515,000 children received after-school tutoring annually through Supplemental Educational Service providers, including FBCO partners.
Community Health Services: The President's Community Health Center Initiative exceeded its goal of creating or expanding 1,200 community-based health centers, many of which are operated by FBCO grantees. The number of low-income individuals receiving medical services from these centers annually has increased by 5.8 million since 2001.
Homelessness: Federal partnerships with FBCOs have been greatly expanded to combat homelessness, contributing to a nearly 30 percent reduction in chronic homelessness (approximately 50,000 individuals) from 2005 to 2007. The estimated number of homeless veterans was cut by nearly 40 percent from 2001 to 2007.
Global Health: In FY 2007 alone, 87 percent of partners in the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) were local organizations, mostly faith-based and community groups. The latest results show that PEPFAR now supports life-saving treatment for more than 2 million people worldwide.
Sources: http://www.whitehouse.gov