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Government and Regulation

How a Legislative Milestone For Volunteerism Has Worked Out

March 18, 2012 | Read Time: 1 minute

The Edward M. Kennedy Serve America Act, passed in 2009, was designed to greatly expand national service. The federal deficit and other public-policy concerns have kept the law from achieving much that was promised.

What It Called For What Actually Happened
140,000

Number of AmeriCorps members in 2012

250,000

Number of members in 2017

82,500

Number of AmeriCorps members in 2012

$70-Million

2012 budget for Social Innovation Fund to help charities expand effective projects

$80-Million

2013 budget for the fund

$45-Million

Social Innovation Fund budget in 2012

$50-Million

Amount President Obama proposed for 2013

$50-Million

2010 budget for fund to help charities recruit and manage volunteers

$80-Million

2013 budget for the fund

$4-Million

Volunteer-fund budget in 2012

0

Amount President Obama proposed for 2013

$5-Million

2010 budget for fund to provide management training to smaller nonprofits; same amounts to be spent in each of the following four years

$250,000

Minimum administrative payment to state national-service commisions

0

Nonprofit training fund budget for 2012

0

Amount President Obama proposed for 2013

$200,000

Minimum administrative payment to state national-service commissions in 2012

Other Efforts

• Additional college and summer service programs for students

• Offer fellowships and scholarships to encourage people 55 and older to volunteer

Other Efforts

• 2011 budget eliminated Learn and Serve America, the schools program

• No fellowships or scholarships created to help older volunteers

Related: National Service’s Fight For the Future