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ACORN, the
Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, a community organizing of low- and moderate-income families that addresses housing, schools, neighborhood safety, health care, job conditions, and other social issues that affect its members. With a membership of over 350,000, ACORN is organized into more than 850 neighborhood chapters in over 100 cities across the United States, as well as in Argentina,
Canada,
Mexico, and Peru. The organization was born out of the
American Civil Rights Movement (1955-1968). ACORN was founded by Wade Rathke, a community and
Labor union organizer, in 1970.http://www.sonoma.edu/users/w/wallsd/community-organizing.shtml Walls, David. The Workbook. 1996. Maude Hurd has been National President of ACORN since 1990.
ACORN groups work through
direct action, negotiations, and with public officials.
Issues and actions
Predatory lending
ACORN has fought lending practices that it sees as
predatory lending by targeting the national companies that practice them, working for stronger state laws against predatory practices, organizing against local financial scams, and steering individuals toward loan counseling.
Following a three-year campaign to reform the lending practices of Household International, one of the largest subprime lenders in the country, on
November 25, 2003, ACORN and Household (now owned by HSBC and renamed
HSBC Finance) announced a proposed settlement of a national class-action lawsuit that ACORN brought against the company in
2002 which created a $72 million Foreclosure Avoidance Program to provide relief to Household borrowers who are at risk of losing their homes.http://www.acorn.org/index.php?id=8500 This settlement came on the heels of an earlier $484 million settlement between Household, attorney generals, and bank regulators from all 50 US states.http://www.atg.wa.gov/householdfinance/facts.shtml
In early 2003, ACORN began efforts to seek similar reforms from Wells Fargo. At ACORN's national convention in 2004, three thousand ACORN members presented Wells Fargo with a lawsuit. Recently, ACORN and Wells Fargo settled a lawsuit over the company's lending practices in California.
As foreclosures began to escalate in 2007, ACORN members launched a campaign to call for a temporary moratorium on foreclosures. The organization also created a "Stop Foreclosures Hotline" to assist and organize borrowers falling behind on their mortgages.
Living wages
Living wage ordinances require private businesses, usually only those that do business with the government, to pay their workers a wage that enables them to afford basic necessities. ACORN is a leader in the national living wage movement and has passed local living wage laws in fifteen cities including Chicago, Illinois, Oakland, California, Denver, Colorado, and New York City. ACORN maintains the Living Wage Resource Center, which provides strategy and logistical assistance to organization nationwide.http://www.livingwagecampaign.org/ Living Wage Resource Center
ACORN, partnering with unions, has also been instrumental in campaigns for a number of
minimum wage increases.http://www.commondreams.org/views06/1111-24.htm The American Prospect, November 11, 2006
Katrina Relief
ACORN members across the country, particularly those in the Gulf region, have organized fundraising and organizing drives to ensure that victims of Hurricane Katrina will receive assistance and the right of return to affected areas. The Home Cleanout Demonstration Program has gutted and saved over 1,450 homes with the help of volunteers.http://www.cornellsun.com/node/19172 ACORN works to repair areas damaged by both Hurricanes Katrina and Rita The ACORN Katrina Survivors Association formed in the aftermath of the storm is the first nationwide organization for Katrina survivors and has been fighting for equitable treatment for victims. Thousands of displaced citizens were bused into the city for the New Orleans primary and general elections. ACORN Housing Services have helped more than 2,000 homeowners affected by the storm and is an official planner working with the city on reconstruction.http://www.acorn.org/index.php?id=9703 ACORN's Katrina Relief Work
Education
ACORN pushes education reform usually in the form of organizing neighborhood groups and "community" or "ACORN schools". In Chicago, ACORN has advocated for a certified teacher to be in every classroom. In California ACORN has documented the need for textbooks and school repairs. ACORN works with teachers unions to get money for school construction and more funding for schools.http://www.acorn.org/index.php?id=2660 ACORN's Education Work
ACORN opposes
charter schools and for-profit schooling initiatives (most notably the proposed
Edison Schools takeover of the New York City public schools in 2001).http://www.acorn.org/index.php?id=2660 ACORN's Education Work
Affordable housing
ACORN has organized tenant unions, pushed for inclusionary zoning, and sought fair and increased access to low-interest home loans.
In the 1980s, ACORN members fought banks that were refusing to give home loans to people living in low income and minority neighborhoods. The practice is called redlining, and is now illegal as a result of campaigns by ACORN and other organizations.
Additionally, ACORN created a loan counseling program called ACORN Housing. ACORN Housing is distinct organization from ACORN, though the two work closely together to increase home ownership.http://www.nhi.org/online/issues/77/acorn.html National Housing Institute
Voter registration
ACORN has engaged in large-scale voter registration projects in several states, most notably
Florida and
Pennsylvania, where the proportion of minorities voting has been less than their proportion of the population. In
2004, ACORN registered over one million voters throughout the United States. Acorn's employees have been indicted in several states for voter fraud. See Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now#Allegations of voter registration misconduct.
Gun Control
In 2006, ACORN Intervened on behalf of
Jersey City in a lawsuit brought against the town challenging a local ordinance limiting handgun purchasers to one gun a month. Ultimately, the ordinance was ruled to violate the New Jersey Constitution's Equal Protection clause as well as a New Jersey statute which prohibited towns and municipalities from enacting firearm legislation.http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1166448999875
History
1970-1975: Founding and early growth
ACORN was founded by Wade Rathke when he was sent to
Little Rock, Arkansas by the National Welfare Rights Organization (NWRO) in
1970 as an organizer. Gary Delgado and George A. Wiley were also instrumental to ACORN's founding. The first campaign was aimed at helping welfare recipients attain their basic needs, such as clothing and
furniture. This drive, inspired by a clause in the
Arkansas Welfare (financial aid) laws, began the effort to create and sustain a movement that would grow to become the Arkansas Community Organizations for Reform Now – the original ACORN.
ACORN's goal was to unite welfare recipients with
working poor around issues of free school lunches, unemployment issues, Vietnam veteran, and
emergency room care. The broad range of issues did not stop there as the organization grew throughout Arkansas. ACORN organized Agriculture to take on
Environmentalism issues concerning sulfur emissions.
Meanwhile, in
1972 back in Little Rock, ACORN was holding neighborhood rallies on a variety of issues, endorsing candidates for local office and eventually had members running for office themselves in
1974.
1975-1980: Growth of the movement
In 1975, ACORN became a multi-state organization with new branches in
Texas and
South Dakota. On December 13, sixty leaders from the three ACORN states elected the first associate Executive Board and the first ACORN president, Steve McDonald, to deal with matters beyond the scope of the individual city and state boards. Each year thereafter saw three or more states join ACORN with a total of twenty states in
1980.
The great expansion of the organization led to multi-state campaigns beginning with a mass meeting of 1,000 members in
Memphis, Tennessee in 1978. At the end of the conference, ACORN convention delegates marched on the
United States Democratic Party conference with the outline of a nine-point “People’s Platform" which would go on to become the foundation of the organization's platform when it was ratified in 1979.
ACORN was heavily involved in the
U.S. presidential election, 1980 with the "People's Platform" serving as its standard bearer.http://www.umsl.edu/~whmc/guides/whm0040.htm Creation of the People's Platform
Demonstration (people) aimed at both major party candidates including demands to meet with
Jimmy Carter, marching on the president's campaign finance committee chair's home, and presenting the platform to the
United States Republican Party platform committee.
1980-1988: Reagan Era
ACORN’S staff was stretched thin by the demands of meeting the goal of expanding to twenty states by 1980. Much of its resources and energy had been dedicated to participating in the presidential primaries and national conventions of the Republican and Democratic Parties. ACORN launched a campaign to obtain affordable housing which resulted in
squatting campaigns. ACORN took the concept a step further though by encouraging people to move into a vacant, usually poorly kept house and to refit it for comfortable living. It also involved the risk of arrest for breaking and entering and
trespassing.
In June of
1982 ACORN sponsored "
Ronald Reagan Ranches" in over 35 cities believing the president's focus to be on military as opposed to social spending. "Reagan Ranches" were tent cities erected nationally for two days and met with serious resistance from the National Park Service who tried repeatedly to evict ACORN tenters. The protesters remained and then marched on the White House and testified before a
United States Congress about what they described as the housing crisis in America. The Republican Convention in
Dallas, Texas in 1984 was the culminating "Reagan Ranch".
In addition to protesting ACORN also developed and strengthened its political action committees and encouraged its members to run for office. For the U.S. presidential election, 1984 ACORN wanted to endorse a candidate, setting a 75% support in polls among members as its requirement. No candidate reached that level, though there was strong support for
Jesse Jackson. A legislative office was also established in Washington, DC.
During this period ACORN also focused on local election reform in a number of cities, including
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Columbia, South Carolina, and Sioux Falls, South Dakota encouraging the change of at-large legislative bodies to district representation.
ACORN grew to twenty-seven states, adding chapters in New York City, Washington, DC, and Chicago, Illinois by the end of Reagan's first term.
During the U.S. presidential election, 1988 ACORN held its National Convention in the same city as the Democratic Convention -- Atlanta, Georgia. During the preceding four years ACORN had strengthened its ties with Jesse Jackson and accounted for thirty Jackson delegates. They also sponsored a march at the convention.
ACORN's membership grew to 70,000 plus in twenty-eight states during this time. The organization increased its legislative lobbying efforts in Washington and strengthened its PACs. It also developed what it called the
Affiliated Media Foundation Movement (AM/FM). Starting with station KNON in Dallas, AM/FM moved on to establish radio stations, UHF television and cable television programming. It also sought and received appointments to the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC) which was formed to dissolve the assets of failed
Savings and loan resulting from the
Savings and Loan crisis.
1988-1998: Focus on housing
While some of ACORN’s most notable efforts were in the area of housing, it has counted health, public safety, education, representation, work and workers’ rights and communications concerns among its victories.
The 1990 ACORN convention in Chicago focused on the fast-breaking housing campaign. It featured a squatting demonstration at an RTC house which was reclaimed for use in an ACORN neighborhood. Later, ACORN members demanded cooperation from banks about providing loan data on low- and moderate-income communities and compliance with 1977
Community Reinvestment Act (CRA).
ACORN fought weakening of the CRA in
1991, when ACORN staged a two-day takeover of the House Banking Committee hearing room. It also established ACORN Housing Corporation to service people moving into homes under the housing campaign, rehabilitated hundreds of houses addressed by CRA.
The ACORN convention in New York in 1992, the “ACORN-Bank Summit,” was organized to make deals with giant banks. When
Citibank, the nation’s largest bank, did not participate conventioneers protested at Citibank’s downtown Manhattan headquarters, and won a meeting to negotiate for similar programs.
ACORN supported and lobbied for the National Voter Registration Act of 1993. After its passage, ACORN members attended Bill Clinton signing ceremony. ACORN then pursued new registration laws in Arkansas and
Massachusetts and filed suit in Illinois, Louisiana, Michigan,
Missouri, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania as a result of the act.
In
1993, ACORN also began a national campaign to fight insurance redlining, a practice that put the gains made in other housing campaigns at risk. The campaign targeted Allstate, hitting sales offices in fourteen cities and a stockholders meeting. Allstate agreed to negotiate and signed an agreement in
1994 for a $10 million partnership with ACORN and NationsBank for below-market mortgages to low-income homebuyers. Travelers Insurance agreed to a Neighborhood and Home Safety Program, linking access to insurance and lower rates to public safety programs.
1998-2004: Building progressive capacity
ACORN's recent activities have included its "Living Wage" programs, voter registration, and Grassroots democracy. In 1998 ACORN helped form the Working Families Party in New York which counts increasing the minimum wage as its centerpiece issue. ACORN has also strengthened its ties with the Service Employees International Union, who donates over two million dollars to ACORN each year,http://online.wsj.com/article/SB116113323291895978-search.html?KEYWORDS=ACORN+%2B+union&COLLECTION=wsjie/6month often working collaboratively on issues (including health insurance costs and the minimum wage) and even sharing office space.
In 2004, Florida ACORN helped to raise Florida's minimum wage by $1.00 an hour, bringing it to $6.15 by lobbying for a minimum wage amendment to be placed on the ballot. Over 1 million Florida employees will be affected by the raise, which will occur every year as the wage is adjusted for inflation.
The organization continues its multi-issue focus however, pursuing a wide range of issues while building grassroots strength and
progressivism capacity.
In 2003, ACORN opened operations in 20 new cities, including 5 state capitals.
2004 saw ACORN become an international organization, opening offices in
Canada, Peru, and beginning work in Dominican Republic. Since then offices have opened in
Mexico and Argentina.
Criticisms
Misguided policies
Some observers claim that ACORN contributed to the
2007 Subprime mortgage financial crisis as they are staunch supporters of the Community Reinvestment Act, which critics say forces banks to lend to otherwise uncreditworthy consumers.
Inaccurate data
In March 2007, ACORN was accused of using dubious information in their publication,
A Conflict of Interest: How Canada's Largest Banks Support Predatory Lending, in an attempt to criticize the two largest banks in Canada.
Employee relations
A
March 27,
2003 decision of the National Labor Relations Board found that ACORN attempted to thwart
Labor union efforts within its own organization by laying off two workers who were attempting to organize. The two workers, both field organizers with ACORN, began discussions with the Service Employees International Union and later sought to organize under Industrial Workers of the World in response to their $16,000 annual salary for a 54-hour work week. The NLRB ordered the two employees be reinstated in their former jobs and ACORN cease from interrogating employees about organizing activity.
ACORN filed a lawsuit in California seeking to exempt itself from the state's minimum wage of $4.25 per hour in 1995. The court denied ACORN's petition; the denial was sustained on appeal. ACORN alleged in its complaint that "its workers, if paid the minimum wage, will be less empathetic with ACORN's low and moderate income constituency and will therefore be less effective advocates."Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now v. Department of Industrial Relations, 41 Cal. App. 4th 298, 301 (Cal. Ct. App. 1995).
Allegations of voter registration misconduct
On
September 7, 2004, a Columbus, Ohio
grand jury indictment ACORN employee and felony parolee Kevin Eugene Dooley for election fraud. The indictment charges Dooley Forgery a signature to a voter registration form.Reported at and elsewhere, original story was here:
During the 2004 election, Mac Stuart was working as a coordinator for minority voter outreach for its voter registration effort in Miami-Dade County for ACORN. In the course of his job, Stuart saw ACORN workers copying voter registration form (which was illegal under Florida law) and segregating voter registration forms for Republicans that were not subsequently turned into the County. After Stuart reported these irregularities to the election officials, ACORN fired him. Stuart filed suit against ACORN in May, 2005 for wrongful termination. ACORN countersued for defamation.http://www.ac4vr.com/reports/072005/exhibitQ.pdf Stuart's lawsuit was dismissed on the grounds that he couldn't prove in court that he was terminated for reporting the allegations of fraud to the authorities.http://www.sptimes.com/2005/12/15/State/Voter_fraud_charges_c.shtml
In August 2004 a lawsuit was filed in
Albuquerque, New Mexico alleging that the policies of the
New Mexico Secretary of State, Rebecca Vigil-Giron, improperly exempted individuals who registered to vote through canvassers from requirements that some new registrants submit ID at polling places. In a court case, ACORN director Matt Henderson invoked his Fifth Amendment rights regarding if his group made illegal copies of voter registration cards before submitting them though the
Albuquerque Tribune claims he told them this was done.Opinion Journal, Wednesday, September 22, 2004.
In January 2005 two ex-ACORN workers were convicted in Denver, Colorado of
perjury for submitting false voter registrations."Briefing," Rocky Mountain News, 1/4/05, cited at http://discoverthenetwork.org/Articles/acornbackgro.html Some other investigations responding to fraud allegations ended in Colorado, Wisconsin, Florida, and Ohio after finding no evidence of pervasive voter fraud.
On November 1, 2006, four part time ACORN employees were indicted in Kansas City, Missouri for voter registration fraud, after being caught, fired, and turned in by ACORN. Federal indictments allege two counts each of voter registration fraud. Prosecutors said the indictments are part of a national investigation. ACORN said in a press release that it is in large part responsible in these individuals being caught, and has cooperated and publicly supported efforts to look into the validity of the allegations. ACORN applauds FBI steps to investigate
ACORN is also being investigated for submitting false voter registrations in
St. Louis, Missouri,
Missouri. 1,492 fraudulent voter registrations have been identified, some from dead and others for underage voters who were not aware they had been registered by ACORN.
In King County, Washington, ACORN is being investigated for filing false registrations. An elections department employee called 400 phone numbers that were provided on the cards from a sample of those turned in by ACORN. Of the 400 phone numbers, all but two were not good numbers, and those two people denied filling out voter registration cards. The registrations were turned in after the deadline to register and the registrations were not processed for the 2006 election. Reform group turned in 2000 suspicious voter registrations, "Seattle Post Intelligencer", February 23, 2007 On July 26, 2007, felony charges were filed against seven ACORN employees including supervisors for filing 1762 false registrations. Felony charges filed against 7 in state's biggest case of voter-registration fraud, "The Seattle Times", July 26, 2007
Bibliography
- Gary Delgado, Organizing the Movement: The Roots and Growth of ACORN (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1986). ISBN 0-87722-393-9
External links
- ACORN
- ACORN Canada
- Kansas City Star: "Attorney denies politics had role"
- ACORN Living Wage Resource Center
- Heartland Institute article about ACORN's business practices
Notes
ACORN, the
Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, a community organizing of low- and moderate-income families that addresses housing, schools, neighborhood safety, health care, job conditions, and other social issues that affect its members. With a membership of over 350,000, ACORN is organized into more than 850 neighborhood chapters in over 100 cities across the United States, as well as in
Argentina,
Canada,
Mexico, and
Peru. The organization was born out of the
American Civil Rights Movement (1955-1968). ACORN was founded by
Wade Rathke, a community and
Labor union organizer, in
1970.http://www.sonoma.edu/users/w/wallsd/community-organizing.shtml Walls, David. The Workbook. 1996. Maude Hurd has been National President of ACORN since 1990.
ACORN groups work through
direct action, negotiations, and with public officials.
Issues and actions
Predatory lending
ACORN has fought lending practices that it sees as
predatory lending by targeting the national companies that practice them, working for stronger state laws against predatory practices, organizing against local financial scams, and steering individuals toward loan counseling.
Following a three-year campaign to reform the lending practices of Household International, one of the largest subprime lenders in the country, on November 25, 2003, ACORN and Household (now owned by HSBC and renamed HSBC Finance) announced a proposed settlement of a national class-action lawsuit that ACORN brought against the company in
2002 which created a $72 million Foreclosure Avoidance Program to provide relief to Household borrowers who are at risk of losing their homes.http://www.acorn.org/index.php?id=8500 This settlement came on the heels of an earlier $484 million settlement between Household, attorney generals, and bank regulators from all 50 US states.http://www.atg.wa.gov/householdfinance/facts.shtml
In early 2003, ACORN began efforts to seek similar reforms from
Wells Fargo. At ACORN's national convention in
2004, three thousand ACORN members presented Wells Fargo with a lawsuit. Recently, ACORN and Wells Fargo settled a lawsuit over the company's lending practices in California.
As foreclosures began to escalate in 2007, ACORN members launched a campaign to call for a temporary moratorium on foreclosures. The organization also created a "Stop Foreclosures Hotline" to assist and organize borrowers falling behind on their mortgages.
Living wages
Living wage ordinances require private businesses, usually only those that do business with the government, to pay their workers a wage that enables them to afford basic necessities. ACORN is a leader in the national living wage movement and has passed local living wage laws in fifteen cities including Chicago, Illinois, Oakland, California, Denver, Colorado, and
New York City. ACORN maintains the Living Wage Resource Center, which provides strategy and logistical assistance to organization nationwide.http://www.livingwagecampaign.org/ Living Wage Resource Center
ACORN, partnering with unions, has also been instrumental in campaigns for a number of minimum wage increases.http://www.commondreams.org/views06/1111-24.htm The American Prospect, November 11, 2006
Katrina Relief
ACORN members across the country, particularly those in the Gulf region, have organized fundraising and organizing drives to ensure that victims of
Hurricane Katrina will receive assistance and the right of return to affected areas. The Home Cleanout Demonstration Program has gutted and saved over 1,450 homes with the help of volunteers.http://www.cornellsun.com/node/19172 ACORN works to repair areas damaged by both Hurricanes Katrina and Rita The ACORN Katrina Survivors Association formed in the aftermath of the storm is the first nationwide organization for Katrina survivors and has been fighting for equitable treatment for victims. Thousands of displaced citizens were bused into the city for the New Orleans primary and general elections. ACORN Housing Services have helped more than 2,000 homeowners affected by the storm and is an official planner working with the city on reconstruction.http://www.acorn.org/index.php?id=9703 ACORN's Katrina Relief Work
Education
ACORN pushes
education reform usually in the form of organizing neighborhood groups and "community" or "ACORN schools". In Chicago, ACORN has advocated for a certified teacher to be in every classroom. In California ACORN has documented the need for textbooks and school repairs. ACORN works with teachers unions to get money for school construction and more funding for schools.http://www.acorn.org/index.php?id=2660 ACORN's Education Work
ACORN opposes
charter schools and for-profit schooling initiatives (most notably the proposed
Edison Schools takeover of the New York City public schools in
2001).http://www.acorn.org/index.php?id=2660 ACORN's Education Work
Affordable housing
ACORN has organized tenant unions, pushed for
inclusionary zoning, and sought fair and increased access to low-interest home loans.
In the 1980s, ACORN members fought banks that were refusing to give home loans to people living in low income and minority neighborhoods. The practice is called redlining, and is now illegal as a result of campaigns by ACORN and other organizations.
Additionally, ACORN created a loan counseling program called ACORN Housing. ACORN Housing is distinct organization from ACORN, though the two work closely together to increase home ownership.http://www.nhi.org/online/issues/77/acorn.html National Housing Institute
Voter registration
ACORN has engaged in large-scale voter registration projects in several states, most notably
Florida and
Pennsylvania, where the proportion of minorities voting has been less than their proportion of the population. In 2004, ACORN registered over one million voters throughout the United States. Acorn's employees have been indicted in several states for voter fraud. See
Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now#Allegations of voter registration misconduct.
Gun Control
In 2006, ACORN Intervened on behalf of
Jersey City in a lawsuit brought against the town challenging a local ordinance limiting handgun purchasers to one gun a month. Ultimately, the ordinance was ruled to violate the New Jersey Constitution's Equal Protection clause as well as a New Jersey statute which prohibited towns and municipalities from enacting firearm legislation.http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1166448999875
History
1970-1975: Founding and early growth
ACORN was founded by Wade Rathke when he was sent to Little Rock, Arkansas by the National Welfare Rights Organization (NWRO) in
1970 as an organizer. Gary Delgado and George A. Wiley were also instrumental to ACORN's founding. The first campaign was aimed at helping welfare recipients attain their basic needs, such as clothing and furniture. This drive, inspired by a clause in the
Arkansas Welfare (financial aid) laws, began the effort to create and sustain a movement that would grow to become the Arkansas Community Organizations for Reform Now – the original ACORN.
ACORN's goal was to unite welfare recipients with
working poor around issues of free school lunches,
unemployment issues,
Vietnam veteran, and emergency room care. The broad range of issues did not stop there as the organization grew throughout Arkansas. ACORN organized
Agriculture to take on
Environmentalism issues concerning
sulfur emissions.
Meanwhile, in 1972 back in Little Rock, ACORN was holding neighborhood rallies on a variety of issues, endorsing candidates for local office and eventually had members running for office themselves in
1974.
1975-1980: Growth of the movement
In
1975, ACORN became a multi-state organization with new branches in
Texas and South Dakota. On
December 13, sixty leaders from the three ACORN states elected the first associate Executive Board and the first ACORN president, Steve McDonald, to deal with matters beyond the scope of the individual city and state boards. Each year thereafter saw three or more states join ACORN with a total of twenty states in
1980.
The great expansion of the organization led to multi-state campaigns beginning with a mass meeting of 1,000 members in Memphis, Tennessee in
1978. At the end of the conference, ACORN convention delegates marched on the
United States Democratic Party conference with the outline of a nine-point “People’s Platform" which would go on to become the foundation of the organization's platform when it was ratified in
1979.
ACORN was heavily involved in the
U.S. presidential election, 1980 with the "People's Platform" serving as its standard bearer.http://www.umsl.edu/~whmc/guides/whm0040.htm Creation of the People's Platform
Demonstration (people) aimed at both major party candidates including demands to meet with Jimmy Carter, marching on the president's campaign finance committee chair's home, and presenting the platform to the United States Republican Party platform committee.
1980-1988: Reagan Era
ACORN’S staff was stretched thin by the demands of meeting the goal of expanding to twenty states by 1980. Much of its resources and energy had been dedicated to participating in the presidential primaries and national conventions of the Republican and Democratic Parties. ACORN launched a campaign to obtain affordable housing which resulted in
squatting campaigns. ACORN took the concept a step further though by encouraging people to move into a vacant, usually poorly kept house and to refit it for comfortable living. It also involved the risk of arrest for breaking and entering and
trespassing.
In June of
1982 ACORN sponsored "
Ronald Reagan Ranches" in over 35 cities believing the president's focus to be on military as opposed to social spending. "Reagan Ranches" were tent cities erected nationally for two days and met with serious resistance from the
National Park Service who tried repeatedly to evict ACORN tenters. The protesters remained and then marched on the White House and testified before a
United States Congress about what they described as the housing crisis in America. The Republican Convention in Dallas, Texas in
1984 was the culminating "Reagan Ranch".
In addition to protesting ACORN also developed and strengthened its
political action committees and encouraged its members to run for office. For the U.S. presidential election, 1984 ACORN wanted to endorse a candidate, setting a 75% support in polls among members as its requirement. No candidate reached that level, though there was strong support for Jesse Jackson. A legislative office was also established in Washington, DC.
During this period ACORN also focused on local election reform in a number of cities, including Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Columbia, South Carolina, and Sioux Falls, South Dakota encouraging the change of at-large legislative bodies to district representation.
ACORN grew to twenty-seven states, adding chapters in
New York City, Washington, DC, and Chicago, Illinois by the end of Reagan's first term.
During the U.S. presidential election, 1988 ACORN held its National Convention in the same city as the Democratic Convention -- Atlanta, Georgia. During the preceding four years ACORN had strengthened its ties with Jesse Jackson and accounted for thirty Jackson delegates. They also sponsored a march at the convention.
ACORN's membership grew to 70,000 plus in twenty-eight states during this time. The organization increased its legislative lobbying efforts in Washington and strengthened its PACs. It also developed what it called the Affiliated Media Foundation Movement (AM/FM). Starting with station
KNON in Dallas, AM/FM moved on to establish radio stations, UHF television and cable television programming. It also sought and received appointments to the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC) which was formed to dissolve the assets of failed Savings and loan resulting from the Savings and Loan crisis.
1988-1998: Focus on housing
While some of ACORN’s most notable efforts were in the area of housing, it has counted health, public safety, education, representation, work and workers’ rights and communications concerns among its victories.
The 1990 ACORN convention in Chicago focused on the fast-breaking housing campaign. It featured a squatting demonstration at an RTC house which was reclaimed for use in an ACORN neighborhood. Later, ACORN members demanded cooperation from banks about providing loan data on low- and moderate-income communities and compliance with
1977 Community Reinvestment Act (CRA).
ACORN fought weakening of the CRA in
1991, when ACORN staged a two-day takeover of the House Banking Committee hearing room. It also established ACORN Housing Corporation to service people moving into homes under the housing campaign, rehabilitated hundreds of houses addressed by CRA.
The ACORN convention in New York in 1992, the “ACORN-Bank Summit,” was organized to make deals with giant banks. When Citibank, the nation’s largest bank, did not participate conventioneers protested at Citibank’s downtown Manhattan headquarters, and won a meeting to negotiate for similar programs.
ACORN supported and lobbied for the
National Voter Registration Act of 1993. After its passage, ACORN members attended Bill Clinton signing ceremony. ACORN then pursued new registration laws in Arkansas and
Massachusetts and filed suit in
Illinois, Louisiana, Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey, and
Pennsylvania as a result of the act.
In
1993, ACORN also began a national campaign to fight
insurance redlining, a practice that put the gains made in other housing campaigns at risk. The campaign targeted Allstate, hitting sales offices in fourteen cities and a stockholders meeting. Allstate agreed to negotiate and signed an agreement in
1994 for a $10 million partnership with ACORN and NationsBank for below-market mortgages to low-income homebuyers. Travelers Insurance agreed to a Neighborhood and Home Safety Program, linking access to insurance and lower rates to public safety programs.
1998-2004: Building progressive capacity
ACORN's recent activities have included its "Living Wage" programs, voter registration, and Grassroots democracy. In
1998 ACORN helped form the
Working Families Party in
New York which counts increasing the minimum wage as its centerpiece issue. ACORN has also strengthened its ties with the Service Employees International Union, who donates over two million dollars to ACORN each year,http://online.wsj.com/article/SB116113323291895978-search.html?KEYWORDS=ACORN+%2B+union&COLLECTION=wsjie/6month often working collaboratively on issues (including health insurance costs and the minimum wage) and even sharing office space.
In 2004, Florida ACORN helped to raise Florida's minimum wage by $1.00 an hour, bringing it to $6.15 by lobbying for a minimum wage amendment to be placed on the ballot. Over 1 million Florida employees will be affected by the raise, which will occur every year as the wage is adjusted for inflation.
The organization continues its multi-issue focus however, pursuing a wide range of issues while building grassroots strength and
progressivism capacity.
In 2003, ACORN opened operations in 20 new cities, including 5 state capitals.
2004 saw ACORN become an international organization, opening offices in
Canada,
Peru, and beginning work in Dominican Republic. Since then offices have opened in
Mexico and
Argentina.
Criticisms
Misguided policies
Some observers claim that ACORN contributed to the 2007 Subprime mortgage financial crisis as they are staunch supporters of the
Community Reinvestment Act, which critics say forces banks to lend to otherwise uncreditworthy consumers.
Inaccurate data
In March 2007, ACORN was accused of using dubious information in their publication,
A Conflict of Interest: How Canada's Largest Banks Support Predatory Lending, in an attempt to criticize the two largest banks in Canada.
Employee relations
A
March 27, 2003 decision of the
National Labor Relations Board found that ACORN attempted to thwart
Labor union efforts within its own organization by laying off two workers who were attempting to organize. The two workers, both field organizers with ACORN, began discussions with the Service Employees International Union and later sought to organize under Industrial Workers of the World in response to their $16,000 annual salary for a 54-hour work week. The NLRB ordered the two employees be reinstated in their former jobs and ACORN cease from interrogating employees about organizing activity.
ACORN filed a lawsuit in
California seeking to exempt itself from the state's minimum wage of $4.25 per hour in
1995. The court denied ACORN's petition; the denial was sustained on appeal. ACORN alleged in its complaint that "its workers, if paid the minimum wage, will be less empathetic with ACORN's low and moderate income constituency and will therefore be less effective advocates."Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now v. Department of Industrial Relations, 41 Cal. App. 4th 298, 301 (Cal. Ct. App. 1995).
Allegations of voter registration misconduct
On September 7,
2004, a Columbus, Ohio grand jury
indictment ACORN employee and felony parolee Kevin Eugene Dooley for election
fraud. The indictment charges Dooley
Forgery a signature to a voter registration form.Reported at and elsewhere, original story was here:
During the 2004 election, Mac Stuart was working as a coordinator for minority voter outreach for its voter registration effort in Miami-Dade County for ACORN. In the course of his job, Stuart saw ACORN workers copying voter registration form (which was illegal under Florida law) and segregating voter registration forms for Republicans that were not subsequently turned into the County. After Stuart reported these irregularities to the election officials, ACORN fired him. Stuart filed suit against ACORN in May, 2005 for wrongful termination. ACORN countersued for defamation.http://www.ac4vr.com/reports/072005/exhibitQ.pdf Stuart's lawsuit was dismissed on the grounds that he couldn't prove in court that he was terminated for reporting the allegations of fraud to the authorities.http://www.sptimes.com/2005/12/15/State/Voter_fraud_charges_c.shtml
In August 2004 a lawsuit was filed in
Albuquerque, New Mexico alleging that the policies of the
New Mexico Secretary of State, Rebecca Vigil-Giron, improperly exempted individuals who registered to vote through canvassers from requirements that some new registrants submit ID at polling places. In a court case, ACORN director Matt Henderson invoked his Fifth Amendment rights regarding if his group made illegal copies of voter registration cards before submitting them though the Albuquerque Tribune claims he told them this was done.Opinion Journal, Wednesday, September 22, 2004.
In January 2005 two ex-ACORN workers were convicted in Denver, Colorado of perjury for submitting false voter registrations."Briefing," Rocky Mountain News, 1/4/05, cited at http://discoverthenetwork.org/Articles/acornbackgro.html Some other investigations responding to fraud allegations ended in Colorado, Wisconsin, Florida, and Ohio after finding no evidence of pervasive voter fraud.
On November 1,
2006, four part time ACORN employees were indicted in
Kansas City, Missouri for voter registration fraud, after being caught, fired, and turned in by ACORN. Federal indictments allege two counts each of voter registration fraud. Prosecutors said the indictments are part of a national investigation. ACORN said in a press release that it is in large part responsible in these individuals being caught, and has cooperated and publicly supported efforts to look into the validity of the allegations. ACORN applauds FBI steps to investigate
ACORN is also being investigated for submitting false voter registrations in
St. Louis, Missouri,
Missouri. 1,492 fraudulent voter registrations have been identified, some from dead and others for underage voters who were not aware they had been registered by ACORN.
In
King County, Washington, ACORN is being investigated for filing false registrations. An elections department employee called 400 phone numbers that were provided on the cards from a sample of those turned in by ACORN. Of the 400 phone numbers, all but two were not good numbers, and those two people denied filling out voter registration cards. The registrations were turned in after the deadline to register and the registrations were not processed for the 2006 election. Reform group turned in 2000 suspicious voter registrations, "Seattle Post Intelligencer", February 23, 2007 On July 26, 2007, felony charges were filed against seven ACORN employees including supervisors for filing 1762 false registrations. Felony charges filed against 7 in state's biggest case of voter-registration fraud, "The Seattle Times", July 26, 2007
Bibliography
- Gary Delgado, Organizing the Movement: The Roots and Growth of ACORN (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1986). ISBN 0-87722-393-9
External links
- ACORN
- ACORN Canada
- Kansas City Star: "Attorney denies politics had role"
- ACORN Living Wage Resource Center
- Heartland Institute article about ACORN's business practices
Notes