EPA-600/5-75-Q12
May 1975
                           Socioeconomic Environmental Studies Series
         Minimum  Standards  for
         Quality  of Life
                                     Office of Research and Development
                                     U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
                                     Washington, D.C. 20460

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                         .REPORTING- SERIES
          reports  of the Office of 3lcsearcn- and Development,
 Enwiroiwuental protection A«ency, haves been grouped  into five
 series,   ifhese  five broad cateqories were established to
 facilitate, farther development ami application of envircmmentajs.
 technology.  Elimination of traditional <5roupi.Tig was  consciously
 planned to foster technology transfer and a maximum interface
 in related fields,   "£h<-» five series are:

      1.   Environiaentai  Health Effects Research
      2.   Environmental  Protection Technology
      3.   Ecological Research
      4*   Beviroronential  Konitorinq
      5.   SoeioecoiKsaic  Environmental Studies
     report has been assiqued to the S'OCIOFtXJN'OrilC ESV1RONHEKTAL ST^JDIKS
series.  This series describes research on the socioeconoroic impact of
«awrirtm»ental problems.  This covers recycling and other  recovery
Operations with emphasis on raonetary incentives.  The non-scientific
r«al»s of lecjaJ BysteRS, ctiltural values, and business systems are
also involved.  Because of their interdisciplinary scope,  system
c«al3oations and enviroroaental laanafjeiaeBt reports are included in this
series.
     report has been reviewed by the Office of Research  and
JS&«wtetl0]3Hient,.  Approval does not signify that the contents
•necessarily reflect the views and policies of the Environmental
f^n»b(ectdLon Agency, nor does taention of "trade names or  commercial
pirothicts constitute endorsement or recommendation for  use.
         is arwailable -to the public through the national 'Technical
            Service, ', Springfield,. Virginia 22151,

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                                EPA-600/5-75-012
                                May 1975
  MINIMUM STANDARDS FOR QUALITY OF LIFE

                   By
             O.W. Markley
             Marilyn D.  Bagley
     EPA Program Element No. 1HA098
           Grant No.  803056-01
             Roap/Task  21 BAX 02
             Project Officer

          Robert  C.  Livingston
Office of Financial and Administrative Services
    U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
           Washington,  DC  20460
             Prepared For

 Washington Environmental Research Center
    U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
           Washington, D.C.  20460

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                          TABLE OF CONTENTS
                                                                  Page

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY	       ii
LIST OF FIGURES AND TABLES     	       vi

GLOSSARY	       vii
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS  	       viii

I     INTRODUCTION   	       1
      Objectives and Scope	  .       2

      Potential Applications of the Approach	       3

      Background	       5

      Rationale for Looking at QOL from the Minimum
        Threshold Level  	       8

II    DEVELOPMENT OF A NEW APPROACH	      14

      TASK 1:  Select Sectors and Issues	      14

      TASK 2:  Develop Conceptual Framework 	      16

      TASK 3:  List Standards and Identify Data	      25

      TASK 4:  Analysis	      27

      TASK 5:  Assess Aproach and Make Recommendations. ...      28

III   PROVISIONAL FINDINGS	      30

      Intolerability Thresholds 	      31
           Economics	      31
           Health	      33

           Social and Political Environments	      34
           Natural Environment	      36
           Physical Environment 	      37

      General Observations—Higher Level Standards and Data  .      38
IV    PROVISIONAL ASSESSMENT OF QOLM APPROACH	      42

      QOL/Standards Mapping 	      42

      Reporting of Minimum Life Conditions	      44

      Technology/Environmental Impact Assessment in
        Relationship to Minimum Standards 	      49

      Simulation Modeling of Conditions in Society	      50

      Monitoring of Citizen (Dis)satisfaction 	      52

      REFERENCES	      54

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                           EXECUTIVE SUMMARY








     Most approaches to "Quality of Life" (QOL) assessment, social reporting,




or social accounting have sought to develop a general purpose set of



social indicators representative of all levels of life condition—both



high and low.  Although it would still be desirable to achieve such



objectives, efforts to do so have been very broadly scoped and have often




proven infeasible.



     This study is an exploration of an approach that may prove to be



more feasible.  Rather than focusing on general quality of life, it



focuses on quality of life minimums (QOLM)—those minimum standards for



life quality that are set by existing laws, court decisions, or common



custom.  In particular, it focuses on the most fundamental minimums beyond



which life quality may be considered intolerable.  The essential contribu-




tions of this study are thus threefold:





     (1) an exploration of the  idea that QOL assessment might become more



         feasible and useful by concentrating  (at least initially) on the



         collection of objective and subjective data that relate to minimums




         set by existing policyj



     (2) the development of a conceptual framework with which to relate



         objective and subjective data with existing minimum standards




         of various types,



     (3) the conceptualization of "intolerability thresholds" (i.e.,



         fundamental minimum standards at the  federal, state, and local



         levels) that should receive special attention for enforcement




         and monitoring.



     A wide variety of QOL concerns in six  categories were explored:



Economics, Health, Social, Political, Natural  Environment, and Physical



Environment.  Within each category three types of available information




were compiled:   (1)  public laws and other less formal understandings that



establish minimum standards,  (2) objective data  (indicators) that reflect
                                     ill

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how well those standards are being met, and  (3) subjective data that



reflect how people feel about  that aspect of  the quality of their lives.



For purposes of analysis and presentation, these types of information



were further categorized in a  matrix  according to how they related to



human needs—defined  as "basic"  (physiological, safety, or security



concerns) or "higher" (social, ego, and self-fulfillment concerns),



according to the  following four  logical levels of concern: (1) threshold



level—the setting of a substantive standard of quality, (2) security—



the provision of  safeguards that the  substantive standard will be met



through time,  (3) equal access—standards ensuring that all persons are



afforded access to safeguards, and (4) ability to influence—standards



that allow individuals to influence the setting of minimum standards and



that allow individuals their own methods for achieving tolerable life



conditions.



     The study briefly assessed the potential utility that the minimum



standards for quality of life might have for several applications:



(1) the systematic arraying of both existing minimum standards and secondary



source objective  indicators for measuring conditions of life quality at



three levels of policy concern—Federal, state and local, (2) the monitoring



and reporting of  substandard conditions in society, (3) the estimating of



impacts of emerging technologies in life quality (technology assessment),



(4) the simulation modeling of societal or environmental interactions,



and (5) the monitoring of citizen (dis)satisfaction.



     It was concluded that efforts leading to measuring QOL by focusing on



minimum standards is  immediately feasible, and with some further work



would be quite useful.  In some areas of concern,  such as economics



(unemployment) or health (drugs,  nutrition),  minimum standards and



intolerability thresholds typically emanate from the federal level and



cover all citizens of  the nation.  In others, such as education or housing,



they emanate from the  state or local level;  hence,  different populations



of the nation are covered by different minimum standards.  Therefore, any

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attempt to map minimum standards across various areas of concern must

take these levels into account.

     The accompanying table portrays a representative listing of funda-

mental minimum standards and related data.  Based on the results of this

study, we recommend that a limited set of eight to fifteen such intolera-

bility thresholds be selected for intensive monitoring and that a periodic

report be prepared that portrays the percentage of various populations

that fall below these minimum thresholds.  In certain localities (such

as inner-city poverty pockets) these data would need to be collected and

reported at a sub-SMSA level of aggregation if the true extent to which

some populations suffer from multiple conditions defined by public

policy as substandard is to be known.

     The study further concluded that technology assessment and simulation

efforts could benefit from the reporting of substandard conditions, but

the linkage between these applications is sufficiently tenuous so that

the relevance of the minimum standard approach for these two applications

is too low to be a high-priority concern.  The application of the minimum

standard concept to the monitoring of citizen (dis)satisfaction is already

partially under way in programs such as  the General Social Survey.*

However, if the reporting of substandard conditions were to become a

reality, it would be both important and  feasible to monitor citizen

(dis)satisfaction in areas covered by fundamental minimum standards to

a greater extent than is currently being done.

     The general conclusion reached by the study team was that the

approach of using public standards that  set quality of life minimums as

a general guide for QOL assessment has sufficient feasibility and potential

utility to warrant its further development.
""National Opinion Research Center, University of Chicago, National Data
Program for the Social Sciences:  The General Social Survey, Inter-
university Consortium for Political Research, Ann Arbor, Michigan
(July 1972).
                                    v

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    REPRESENTATIVE  SAMPLING OF  EXISTING FUNDAMENTAL QOLM THRESHOLDS AND RELATED OBJECTIVE CONDITIONS
Sector      Issue Area
Specific Issue
Definition of Fundamental Minimum Threshold
      (and Representative Data)
Economics
Economics
Health
Social
Political
Natural
Environment
Physical
Enviornment

Income
Employment
Nutrition
Education
Citizen
Participation
Air pollution
Housing

Adequacy
Availability
Minimum Daily
Diet
Attainment
Right to vote
Suspended
Particulates
Quality

1974 poverty threshold for nonfarm family of 4 = $4,550
[U.S. average = 11% in poverty; Portland SMSA = 7%;
Birmingham SMSA = 16%]
Unemployment threshold = 6.5% sustained in an area of
100,000 population for three months. [1974 U.S. average =
6.5% (U.S. Bureau of Labor); Portland = 5.2%; Newark,
New Jersey = 7%; San Francisco = 7.9%]
Recommended dietary allowance (RDA): minimum daily diet of
fat/vitamins/protein/minerals needed for health (for data,
see poverty level, which is used as a proxy for nutrition)
Education threshold: ability to read, write, and compute
[Average illiteracy over age 14: United States = 2.4%;
Louisiana = 6.3%; Iowa = 0.7%]
Use of any criteria other than "full" citizenship, at least
18 years of age and having a fixed residence at least 30
days for determination of eligibility (no appropriate data)
EPA primary threshold = 75 fte/md. [A ratio of 1.00 means that
the annual average ambient concentration was exactly at the
level of the primary threshold, 1973; Los Angeles 1.60,
Chicago 1.16, St. Louis 1.28 — CEQ Annual Report 1974.]
Intolerability threshold is structural soundness and minimal
plumbing, defined as "nondilapidated"; [Average population
living in "dilapidated" housing, 1970: United States = 7% —
Census data reported by OMB for all housing units);
Census data reported by MRI 
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                 LIST OF FIGURES AND TABLES
                                                              Page

Figure 1.  STUDY TASK DIAGRAM	    15

Figure 2.  A SCHEMATIC REPRESENTATION OF THE THREE
           BASIC TYPES OF QOL  INFORMATION AS RELATED
           TO ENVIRONMENTAL DECISION MAKING AND
           SOCIAL POLICY 	     19

Figure 3.  HUMAN NEEDS MATRIX   	     21
 Table 1.   ELEMENTS OF THE RATIONALE FOR A NEW APPROACH
           EMPHASIZING MINIMAL STANDARDS FOR QUALITY
           OF LIFE	     10

 Table 2.   CRITERIA FOR THE CHOOSING OF SECTORS, ISSUES,
           AND REPRESENTATIVE LIFE CONCERNS	     17

 Table 3.   QUALITY OF LIFE CONCERNS INVESTIGATED IN
           THIS STUDY	     18

 Table 4.   CELL ENTRIES IN THE HUMAN NEEDS MATRIX   ....     23

 Table 5.   REPRESENTATIVE SAMPLING  OF EXISTING FUNDAMENTAL
           QOLM THRESHOLDS AND RELATED OBJECTIVE
           CONDITIONS	     32
                             Vll

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                            GLOSSARY





The key terms used in this report are defined as follows:




• QOLM:  Quality of Life Minimum(s), an acronym for the conceptual



  orientation being explored in this study—one that relates various


  minimum standards for life quality that are set by public policy.


• Minimum Standards:  Policies set by public law, political decision,


  or common custom that state the minimum condition, which if not


  fulfilled, would be considered unacceptable for a specified


  population in a specified societal context.  A minimum threshold


  within a minimum standard is a reference point for measuring whether


  the standard is met.


• Intolerability Threshold:  The most fundamental condition, which


  if not fulfilled, would be considered intolerable for a specified


  population at all times; intolerability thresholds are a subset of


  minimum standards.


• Objective Conditions:   Numerical indicators of a physical situation


  (e.g., air pollution in ppm,  SO ,  percentage of open space used
                                 £t

  for recreation), a sociological situation (e.g., divorce rate,


  crime rate, number of ethnic minority groups), or an economic


  situation (e.g., consumer price index, personal income averages,


  welfare programs in dollars).


• Subjective Attitudes:   An individual's understanding and interpre-


  tation of a stimulus that can be assessed from his statement in


  regard to direction (polarity of effect) and magnitude (strength,


  degree,  or favorability) of disclosure.


• Quality of Life:  A multidimensional variable that expresses the


  degrees of well-being of persons in the society.  Although


  essentially an intangible variable, it is a function of the


  objective conditions appropriate to a selected population and the


  subjective attitude toward these conditions held by persons in the


  society.



                              viii

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                             ACKNOWLDGEMENTS







     This study was administered by SRI's Urban and Social Systems Division,




Harvey L. Dixon, Executive Director.  Willis W. Harman, Director of SRI's




Center for the Study of Social Policy was Project Supervisor;  0. W. Markley




and Marilyn D. Bagley were Coproject Leaders.



     The primary team for the data collection and analysis reported here



included Patricia A. Lynch, Michael Reynolds, Joan Rosenbaum,  Sally Sherman,




and Marilyn Smulyan.



     SRI professionals who reviewed and critiqued the draft material



throughout the study were Arnold Mitchell, Senior Social Economist; Eric



Duckstad, Director of the Urban and Regional Studies Department; Allen



Zink, Legal Social Scientist; Francis W.  Dresch, Senior Economist;



Ernest C. Harvey, Senior Economist; Peter Schwartz, Policy Analyst;



Duane Elgin, Policy Analyst; Thomas F. Mandel,  Policy Analyst; and Noreen



W. Pedrick, Health Planning Analyst.



     SRI is grateful to the following selected experts from outside the



Institute who reviewed the draft report:  Daniel Tunstall, visiting scholar,



and Stephen Withey, of the Institute for Social Research, University of




Michigan; and Tom Logothetti, private consultant.



     Finally, the support of the project by  the Washington Environmental



Research Center, Environmental Protection Agency,  and the help provided  by




Robert C. Livingston, Grant Project Officer, and Peter W. House, Director,



Environmental Studies Division, is most gratefully acknowledged.

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                            I  INTRODUCTION


     Over the past several years "Quality of Life" (QOL)  has become the
popularized term for referring to a state of societal well-being.  A
number of major countries including the United States, Canada, Japan,
Sweden, and France have actively pursued an analytical approach to QOL
in an attempt to provide a tool to improve understanding of social issues
and to develop social policy.  Most efforts to date have concerned them-

selves with ways to identify attributes of "the good life" and to develop

methods for measuring QOL in terms of positive attainments and ideals.

These efforts have met with considerable difficulty, as the following
suggests:

     Quality of Life is a very personal expression of one's sense
     of well-being.  In a very real sense it expresses that set
     of  things  which, when taken in the aggregate, makes the
     individual happy.  Yet, it is also probably true that if asked
     to express the details of this aggregate, an individual would
     provide a somewhat different set each time he is queried.  (EPA,
     Quality of Life Concept, 1973).

     For a variety of reasons, attempts to survey individual well-being
on a national scale now seems both economically infeasible and analytically

unproductive.  This is not to say, however, that the issue of quality of

life is unworthy of attention.  Major governmental programs and a massive
commitment of resources are allocated daily toward the goal of improving
the quality of life for Americans.  However, without adequate delivery
system tools, governmental decision makers face a formidable challenge
when establishing policy and programs and allocating resources in ways

that significantly impact the quality of life of different groups of
people in different ways.

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     Recognizing the need for improving the tools available to decision
makers responsible  for protection of life quality, and the practical

problems associated with past approaches to QOL assessment, the Environ-

mental Protection Agency (EPA) awared SRI a grant to explore the feasi-

bility of orienting QOL assessment toward minimum levels of fulfillment.


Objectives and Scope

     The objectives of this study were:
    • To survey and illustrate the types of existing policies that
      set minimum QOL standards in various sectors of concern.

    • To identify types of indicator data that are or could be used
      with standards as currently exist, and to deduce implications
      for the art of QOL assessment.

    • To make a provisional assessment of the potential utility of
      pursuing a minimum standard approach to QOL assessment, in-
      cluding identification of potential negative aspects.

To pursue these objectives, however, we found it necessary to specify

two additional objectives:

    • Identification of potentially feasible applications of the
      minimum standards approach being explored by the study.

    • Development of a conceptual framework for holistically por-
      traying existing minimum standards with related objective and
      subjective data.

     As the study is an exploratory one, its scope is oriented more to

the development and assessment of an approach than to the production of

substantive information.  In keeping with this scope, the study includes

a preliminary survey of a wide variety of standards and related indicator

data, but looks in  any depth at only a few illustrative case issues in-

cluding nutrition,  education, employment, income, housing, and air and

water quality.

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Potential Applications of the Approach

     Before describing the development of the minimum standards approach,

it may be helpful to consider several applications to which the approach

might be put — all of which would have either direct or indirect rele-

vance to the improvement of public policy.  By so doing, we will have a

more concrete basis on which to later assess the approach .

     QOL/Standards Mapping

     Because QOL/standards mapping is essentially an application of the

procedures to be described in Section II, this application is described

on page  16  of this report .

     Annual Reporting of Basic QQL Attainment

     The most direct application of this approach would be the prepara-

tion of a report at the three levels of policy concern (Federal, state,

local) that would identify certain basic minimum standards that define

thresholds for unacceptable life quality, and that would further portray

the degree to which these minimal conditions are fulfilled within appro-

priate jurisdiction.  This might be done either in addition to or as an

alternative way of structuring the Social Indicators series now being

produced by OMB (Tunstall, 1974) .  The levels of aggregation included in

such a report might span  from the census tract level to the national

level, and national percentages of various populations (e.g., those in

poverty and various minority groups) would be included.

     Such data could be quite useful at all levels of government and to

various citizen interest groups for a variety of purposes,  not the least

of which would include needs assessment of deprived populations to ob-

jectively justify funding of antipoverty programs.

     Technology and Environmental Impact Assessment in Relationship to
     Minimum Standards

     Suppose that the reporting described above was being performed in a

satisfactory manner.  It then might be feasible to require that all major

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technology  and  environmental  impact  assessment studies address the



question:   "How might the  proposed application of this technology impact



on  the  attainment of  the  following minimum  standards?"  By virtue of



having  a defined standard  for minimal  life  quality and the time-series



data  that would become available  for each minimum standard-indicator,



it  should  (theoretically)  be  possible  to (1) have a practical set of



standards  for life quality to be  used  in the technology assessment, and



(2) have an operational set of indicators that would reflect changes in



the designated  qualities of life  that  might or might not be due to the



later application of  that  technology (again leading to improved methods



of  establishing accountability for impacts).



      Modeling and Simulating  Societal  Interactions



      A  fourth application  to  be considered  in the development and assess-



ment  of this approach is its  use  in various societal modeling and simu-



lation  efforts.  In the next  section we argue that the lack of knowledge



about cause/effect relationships  between sectors of society is one of the



difficulties preventing further development of the art of social account-



ing.  Studies that try to  model the dynamic interrelationships of parti-



cular variables such  as energy consumption, pollution, employment, and



so  forth provide a fairly  direct  way to increase our understanding of



these complex relationships.   The World Dynamics Simulation, sponsored



by  the  Club of  Rome (Forrester, 1971;  Meadows, et al, 1972; Mesarovic &,



Pestel, 1974),  and the State  of the System  (SOS)  Model, sponsored by the



Environmental Protection Agency (Williams &. House, 1974), are but a few



of the  ongoing  simulation  efforts that might profit by having well-defined



and agreed-upon  minimum levels for life quality for use as variables in



their models of  societal interactions.



     Monitoring Citizen.(Pis)satisfaction



     A  final application of this  approach could be to use an agreed-upon



set of minimum standards in the collection  of attitudinal data throughout

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the nation .  Various national data collection efforts currently under



way, such as the General Social Survey, ask questions such as "What is



your level of income?' and  How satisfied are you financially?"  By



slightly reorienting the issue selection criteria for surveys of this



sort (so that they relate more directly to an agreed-upon set of minimum



standards), it should be possible to portray more clearly how different




levels of attainment relate to degree of felt (dis)satisfaction by citi-



zens in various sectors of society.  This would, however, require that



the questions not only address levels of attainment set by minimum stan-



dards, but also span levels of life quality that exceed minimums.








Background



     The Need for Indicators



     The complexity and interrelationship of the various sectors that



combine to make up the broadly defined environment present a formidable




backdrop to those responsible for making major policy decisions,  Current



focus on the energy situation, environmental protection, pending world



food shortage, and an endangered economic system add emphasis to the



accelerating need for understanding the cause/effect relationships among



alternative man-induced actions.  Social programs have become vast,



technology has grown in leaps and bounds, yet we continue to ask our-



selves, ' Is it all for the good of man?



     Advances in social statistics and social sciences over the last



hundred years have enabled us to begin to recognize and sometimes diagnose



societal problems; however, we are still largely ignorant of the causal



mechanisms underlying social behavior.  While we continue to push for an



improved understanding of social behavior, we must also strive  for a way



to monitor social well-being so that adjustments might be made when the



state of society appears endangered.  The move to an analytical approach




to measuring societal well-being has been modeled after widely used

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economic (GNP) and social (unemployment rate, crime rate) indicator

techniques.  Most of our nation's present societal indicators can best

be described by a maxim: We have tended to maximize most of what we can

measure best.  This has meant a preoccupation with measures such as GNP,
per capita or family income, cars produced, units sold, and so on.  As
we have become relatively affluent and satisfied in our material needs,

we have found that our national performance indicators are not well-suited

for the measurement of more ephemeral but equally important aspects of

our existence.  Our concern for environmental and urban problems has re-

vealed that we do not have social and physical indicators that can ef-

fectively measure and constructively analyze policy alternatives.  More

recently, the overly ambitious use of the term "quality of life" has

heightened the mismatch between the potential and the practical utility

of social indicators.

     Current Attempts at Developing Social Indicators and Quality of
     Life Measurement Techniques

     As mentioned earlier, the United States, along with numerous other

countries, has actively pursued the development of social indicators and

QOL measurement techniques.  Current efforts in the United States have

been adequately reviewed by various authors.  This report will not attempt

a comprehensive survey of current efforts, but will instead present some

illustrative examples as background to consideration of a new approach.
    • In 1969, HEW published Toward a Social Report that attempted
      to develop new social indicators to be used along with exist-
      ing indicators to evaluate social conditions.  This report,
      prepared under the direction of then Deputy Assistant
      Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, Mancur Olsen, had
      substantive merit but did little to provide new theoretical
      insights and made little progress in development of indicators.

    • The Statistical Policy Division in the Office of Management
      and Budget published Social Indicators;  1973 and is now pre-
      paring a sequel to this report to be published in 1976.  The
      first edition by Daniel B. Tunsdall is a compendium of exist-
      ing social indicators but includes no attempt at analysis or
      assessment of the data.

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    • The National Science Foundation has for about a decade funded
     social indicator work with a major focus on conceptual work
     and experimental approaches to measuring social change.  A
     recent grant to the University of Michigan, Institute for
     Social Research, is directed toward creating a set of subjec-
     tive  indicators that, along with the more traditional objec-
     tive  indicators, like the unemployment index, will guide
     policy decisions by providing a more accurate picture of what
     people care about.  The  investigation, headed by Stephen B.
     Withey and Frank M. Andrews, is largely based on four national
     surveys  conducted  in 1972 and 1973 and has been particularly
     aimed at exploring a large variety of approaches that might
     effectively measure the  quality of life.

    • The Council on Environmental Quality and EPA have initiated
     efforts  to develop improved environmental quality data and
     indices  (largely discrete physical data such as levels of
     pollution).  The Washington Environmental Research Center
     also  sponsored a national conference on quality of life  in
     1972  directed  to determining the key attributes of QOL.  Con-
     ference  proceedings  are  published  in a  volume  entitled
     Quality  of Life Concepts .

    • More  recently,  a parallel  grant  to this study  was awarded
     by EPA  to Midwest  Research  Institute.   This  study, headed
     by Dr.  Ben Liu,  entails  a  compilation  of  objective QOL in-
     dicator data largely abstracted  from U.S.  Census material.
     The work provides  comparative  quality  of  life  profiles for
     all standard metropolitan  statistical  areas  (SMSAs)  in the
     United  States (see Liu,  1975).

     Based on a review of the above  work,  and similarly pointed out  in

the HEW report on measurement and the  quality of  life  (Francis, 1973),

a number of conclusions  can be drawn:
    • The interest and the need  for  measures of  societal well-being
      have been substantiated both here  and  abroad.

    • Quality of life entails many issues that  are often  incommen-
      surable; therefore,  a single broad-guage  measure of  QOL is
      not realistically  feasible or  plausibly desired.   Instead,  a
      measurement tool that would point  out  particular problem areas
      is a more realistic objective  for  QOL.

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    • Societal  indicators  (objective  data) measure existing situa-
      tions  that  are  readily  amenable to numerical representation.
      There  is  no reference point  or  theoretical basis that would
      tell us whether we are  better   or worse-off today than yester-
      day .

    » Attitudinal surveys  indicate some similarities in what people
      care about  but  also  point  out the differences among various
      interpretations of a quality life.  What is good for one
      person is not necessarily  good  for another.

    • We do  not fully understand the  causal mechanisms underlying
      social behavior;  thus,  knowing  what and how to measure QOL
      variables is extremely  difficult, and knowing how to inter-
      relate them once they are  measured is seemingly more impossible.

    • There  has been  no real  attempt  to relate objective and sub-
      jective QOL data with existing  policies to provide an improved
      understanding of cause/effect relationships, or appropriate-
      ness of policies.

     Given these  difficulties of realistically measuring the full spectrum

of quality of life, perhaps a more fruitful approach would be to focus

(at least initially)  on minimal  QOL standards and on related dissatis-

factions, rather  than on the  general  attainment of satisfactory levels

of life quality throughout the society (House, Livingston, and Swinburn,

1974).  The  present study  is  a direct outcome of this insight.
Rationale for Looking  at QOL from the Minimum Threshold Level
     As far back  as  the development of the Constitution of the United
States, decision  makers in  this  country have been primarily concerned
with assuring Americans a healthy, secure environment in which to prosper.
Standards have become  increasingly important in determining welfare pro-
gram coverage and remain a  vital part of decision making and policy forma-
tion within the democratic  process.  Standards are set by public law,
political decision, or common custom, but traditionally our nation has
tried to invoke standards only when necessary.  ("He who governs least,

-------
governs best.")  Many of these standards either explicitly state or imply



minimum life conditions acceptable in the United States (e.g., minimum



wage law, minimally acceptable quality of drinking water) .  Standards in-



clude those designed to influence or control minimum life conditions and



those designed to provide incentives for meeting minimum life conditions.




     It is understood that standards and particularly thresholds are often



reflective of a specific time or situation and that there are policy limi-



tations to QOL indicators based solely on minimum standards.  One danger



is the assumption that what is barely tolerable is also desirable.  If



widespread application of the QOLM approach led to a political climate in



which only the achievement of minimum standards were given high priority



in policymaking (to the detriment of other important concerns), overall



life quality in the nation would undoubtedly suffer.  Another danger



(depending on one's point of view) associated with this approach is that



of increasing citizen unrest.  Showing just how bad the objective condi-



tions are for some populations (in relation to existing minimum standards)



might raise their expectations to levels that society has no  intention of



fulfilling — thereby raising the level of expressed dissatisfaction with



existing programs and policies.  Dissatisfaction throughout society could



also be stimulated if indicators of  dissatisfaction for different popula-




tions came to be used as  a  formal part of the decision logic  in social



policy formulation.  Also,  there is  the danger of relying on  the types



of quantitative measures  that are emphasized by technocratic  modes of



governance, one consequence  often being the use of political  criteria in



the definition and use  of the indicator — for example, by designing indi-




cators, data collection procedures,  and levels of aggregation so as to



prevent the true level  of suffering  of some populations from  being




revealed.



     Some of the above  dangers may be more apparent than  real:  hence



we will return to consideration of them in Section IV where the QOLM



approach is provisionally assessed.

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     Focus on Minimal Conditions
     Three general concerns make up the rationale for the approach  ex-

plored by this study:
     • The need for  some agreed-upon reference point for measurement
       purposes.

     • The need to directly relate measured life conditions to exist-
       ing QOL standards.

     • The need to better understand the relationship among various
       policies setting QOL standards, and how they can be understood
       in terms of QOL concerns.


     The elements of this  rationale are summarized in Table 1.
                                 TABLE  1

               ELEMENTS OF THE RATIONALE FOR A NEW APPROACH
             EMPHASIZING MINIMAL STANDARDS FOR QUALITY OF LIFE
         Present QOL Work
 Little agreement among people
 about what constitutes high
 quality of life

 Social indicators are not only
 expensive to gather, but also
 have problematic value when used
 as representative of the larger
 society

 Trade-offs between different
 types of social welfare and
 lack of knowledge about cause/
 effect relationships make
 assignment of value  (to be
 associated with a given direc-
 tion of change in the environ-
 ment) difficult to assess.
 Associated Attributes of QOLM Approach
Focus on minimal thresholds easily
understood by individuals; agreement
more widely shared

Identify types of minimum standards in
terms of the ease with which they may
be translated into clear-cut indicators
for purposes of monitoring
Focus on indicators that are directly
related to standards of minimal life
quality set by existing policy, codes
and  so forth
                                   10

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     As suggested earlier, one of the difficulties faced by efforts to



measure quality of life as conventionally conceived is that lack of con-



sensus on what constitutes a "high" quality of life; people more generally



tend to agree on what constitutes an intolerable quality of life.  (For



example, while people disagree on what constitutes the "best" food, they



all agree that without enough food one's quality of life disappears




altogether.)  Hence, it should be more feasible to develop an acceptable



QOL assessment approach by initially focusing on minimal life conditions.



     Also, various studies of plausible future conditions in our society



suggest that survival concerns may loom very large during the next two



decades (Heilbroner, 1974).  Should intense domestic difficulties emerge



for our nation (e.g., energy shortages, food shortages, economic depres-



sion) , policymakers should find it extremely helpful to have a set of



social indicators that would reveal which segments of our population are



experiencing the greatest distress, and which types of environments have



deteriorated to the greatest extent.



     A still different reason for focusing on minimal conditions stems



from judicial and legislative decisions of the last decade mandating equal




opportunity for all citizens.  Equal opportunity is often actually afforded



to persons previously discriminated against only when quantitative evi-



dence is  brought to bear  that the discrimination has continued in spite



of laws to the contrary  (cf. U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission,




1974, pp. 8-11) .



     Finally, it is worth noting that more legislation is directed at



improving intolerable social situations than at the improvement of already




tolerable situations  (e.g., again the basic premise that a democratic



government provides only  the minimum and leaves anything beyond to indi-



vidual initiative).   If the collection of social indicators is to be



closely related to existing laws and standards (as will be argued next),



it is important to initially focus attention on minimal life concerns.
                                  11

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     The Use of Existing Standards
     The focus on existing standards has been selected to serve as exem-
plars of what is acceptable.  While there are many reasons for wanting to
collect information  about the state of society, a high priority should be
placed on the collection of those types of information that would reveal
the extent to which  standards set by law are in fact realized in the
society.  Among other  purposes,  legal standards and guidelines exist to
influence people to  do that which they should do, but otherwise might not
do (and often do not want to do) .  Systematic monitoring of the extent to
which existing standards are being met would not only provide a higher
degree of accountability throughout society; it would also give a much
more valid assessment  of those  life conditions that are seen as important
by the policymakers  (writers of  law) — thereby providing them with needed
feedback on the effectiveness of existing law, or where they feel the
threshold should be.
     Establish Reference Point  for Monitoring and Evaluation of QOL
     As alluded to earlier, unless the conclusions of expensive programs
of social monitoring are directly relevant to the improvement of public
policy, they are unlikely to be  adequately supported in this day of eco-
nomic difficulties and competition for scarce resources.  Thus, the
approach being explored should  be biased toward its utility for policy-
making in general, and environmental protection in particular.  At least
some consideration should therefore be given to a better understanding of
the standards themselves — at  least looking at the variety of standards
that imply different methods for determining when conditions are to be
considered intolerable, different methods for enforcement, and so forth.
It is well known that  an improvement in the quality of one sector (e.g.,
transportation) may  bring a degradation in another (e.g., land use).
Some methods of monitoring and  regulation take this type of difficulty
into account; others do not.  Also, many standards probably reflect
                                 12

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welfare concerns that are difficult, if not impossible, to define unequi-



vocally or to measure directly (e.g., equal educational opportunity).  In



such instances, policies are often written that combine statements of



purpose with remedial activities — whether or not the progress toward



the purpose can itself by objectively measured.



     What monitoring styles are appropriate to given types of standards?



How are different types of information about objective (and possibly



subjective) conditions currently used for regulation and environmental



protection?  These questions typify a range of concerns that the approach



should in some way illuminate.
                                  13

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                      II DEVELOPMENT OF A NEW APPROACH







      In response to the rationale presented in Section  I  and  the objectives



 outlined for this study, the project team developed the minimum standards




 approach through a series of tasks, illustrated in Figure 1 and summarized



 below:




      • Selection of sectors and issues representative of  QOL  concerns.



      • Development of a conceptual framework for analysis and the



        presentation of data.



      • Collection of representative standards and  data  for selected



        issues within each sector and applied to framework.




      • Analysis and synthesis of information gathered.




      • Assessment of the usefulness of the approach  and development of



        recommendations for further work.




      The following section will present a detailed description of the




 methodology devised by the project team for the QOL  study, although



 Appendix A  discusses some additional issues.




 Task  1;   Select Sectors and Issues



      The first step taken by the project  team was  to  decide on a set of




 categories  that would furnish a useful as well as  holistic description of



 major environments of concern to the American people.   The team studied




 several  types of categorizations in the literature on social  indicators




 and QOL  assessment,  reviewing the sector  lists produced by other efforts



 (see Appendix A ).   The  team recognized that the "environment" could be



divided  or  categorized  a number of ways,  and their final  selection of




particular  sectors  was  made in part according to the  range and logical



clustering  of  issues  and representative life concerns on  which the approach



would focus.



     Since  the limited  scope  of this exploratory study  could  present




only a small number of  life concerns as reflected  in  existing standards,




some of  the team members next  conducted an exercise  to  select those issues
                                    14

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TASK 1
                                                            Literature Review
and Issues ^^ 1 E]

I Select


Crit
f~ for i
1
Role play
I
«— Select

TASK 2
>A IFF Others




eria
ssues ~^
1
Team
brainstorming
|
Issues — '


  Develop Conceptual
  Framework
     [~
     1
                                             Identify information  to be  collected-
                                                    Method for displaying
                                                    interrelationships of
  List Standards
  and Identify Data
                        economics
  Natural
environment
                                                    Physical
                                                  environment
Social
             Health
Political
                                             ^^      ^       »     T       -f       ^

                                            Analyze each sector and compare results
                                                              1
                                                              I-
TASK 5

  Summarize Usefulness
  and Make
  Recommendations
                Summary of usefulness

        • For measuring and monitoring QOL

        • As a tool  for decision makers
          and social policy formulation

        i Modeling and simulation
                                              Recommendations for further  work
                                 FIGURE 1.   STUDY TASK DIAGRAM
                                              15

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for analysis that would consider as many significant problem areas and




subpopulations of the general environment as possible.  The exercise



occurred within several day-long sessions in which a multidisciplinary




group of analysts formulated a list of  criteria  (Table 2) to evaluate a




preliminary set of  issues  and representative life concerns that would




be chosen for each  sector.



     The project team employed two methods to develop a preliminary list




of issues and concerns:  First, team  members role-played among themselves,




employing 38 "people-types" for whom  values and  life-styles had been



significantly differentiated by previous research (Mitchell, 1973);




second, team members held  intensive sessions with representatives of



specialized disciplines at SRI.  They then compiled the lists resulting




from these sessions, clustering the concerns into sector/issue categories



and ranking them according to the criteria.  The preliminary list was



slightly modified during data collection and analysis, and in the final




stages of the study it  appeared as shown in Table 3.








Task 2:  Develop Conceptual Framework




     A variety of considerations went into the development of a conceptual




framwork with which to  organize the study and its findings.



     A first consideration had to do  with the need to see existing




standards and data  holistically—both in terms of being able to see



relationships among various sectors of  concern (e.g., economic, health,




natural environment) and in terms of  being abi -  to see the range of



policies through which standards are  enforced.  Figure 2 is a schematic




representation of the societal context  in which  we assume the approach




being explored should inform if it is to be useful.  Consequently, the




conceptual framework (1) emphasized the portraying of existing standards




and related objective and  subjective  data that indicate the status of




life conditions addressed  by the standards and (2) includes standards




and other policies  that deal with not only minimum thresholds in various






                                   16

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                                Table 2



CRITERIA FOR THE CHOOSING OF SECTORS, ISSUES, AND REPRESENTATIVE LIFE CONCERNS








Criteria for the entire list



     • Be broadly representative of the entire range of life concerns



       (at least one from each of the categories of interest)



     » Include both issues that are expected to easily fit into the



       conceptual framework being developed, and ones that would be




       difficult to handle



     • Include issues that are usually quantified and those that are not.








Criteria for individual life concerns



     • Reducible to understandable dimensions



     • Relevant to "victims" (of life conditions defined as intolerable)



     • Relevant to user agencies at  various  levels of government



     • Relevant as a  life  concern  to a wide  variety of populations




     • Influenceable



     • Differentiates among populations



     • Objective and  attitudinal data  believed to be  available.
                                   17

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                                                Table  3
               QUALITY OF  LIFE CONCERNS  INVESTIGATED IN  THIS  STUDY
  Sector
                           I siue
                                                                   Mgtura of
Economics
Health
Social
Political
Natural
Environment
Physical
Income level
Employment

Health care

Nutrition

Crime

Criminal Juatice Process

Freedom to be
Family

Education

Civil liberties

Citizen participation

Honest; In government

Access to information

National protection

Air and water quality

Scenic and wildlife resource*


Noise

Radiation and pesticides uae

Land uae

Solid waste

Food and drugs


Housing

Public services
Transportation


Recreation and open space


Manufactured goods and products

Nonreaidentlal buildings and
structures
Guaranteed Income, cost of living, credit opportunity
Availability;  quality

Quality; availability

Mlnlrun daily  diet

Safety fron crtne

Just treatment;  conviction and confinement

Self-expression;  protection of privacy

Marriage; children
Quality; availability and equality

Freed'Xi to exercise choice

Right to vote; right to hold office;  other forms of participation

Honest and fair  representation

Citizens access  to government opinions,  rules, reports

External threats; natural disasters
Impacts on health, aesthetics (color, taste, odor)

Protection of  scenic resources,  protection of wildlife and
endangered species

Health hazard; amenities

Healti  hazard

Degree  of choice

Health hazards

Quality of food  and farm products; meat  and poultry; drugs;
cosmetics; accuracy of packaging and  labeling.

Quality; availability

Solid waste disposal; fire protection
Safety, quality,  speed, privacy, cost and availability of
various transport modes

Availability of  outdoor facilities and open space; quality of
recreational facilities

Hazardous products; quality of products

Safety and quality of buildings, materials and design.
                                                     18

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«£>
                                                   RESMARCH
                                                                          OBJECTIVE
                           SUBJECTIVE
                                                                       QUANTITATIVE MEASURES
                      CONCERNS ABOUT QOL
                       — WHAT PEOPLE FIND
                          SATISFACTORY AND
                          WHAT NOT
                                                 ON THE STATE
                                                  OF SOCIETY
 SURVEYS AND
PUBLIC OPINION
   POLLS
                         INDIVIDUALS AND
                         INTEREST GROUPS
                                                                   ENFORCEMENT
                    $ MARKET
                     PLACE
                                                  SOCIAL POLICY
                                                                     STANDARDS
                                                   PUBLIC LAW
                                                   (LEGISLATION
                    INDUSTRY
• SOCIETAL INDICATORS
• GNP
•CENSUS DATA
                  • REGULATIONS
                  • TAX INCENTIVES
                  • SUBSIDIES
                        I
                                                   POLICIES
                                                   (GOVERNMENT
                                                    AGCNCIES)
                                       • REGULATIONS
                                       • CODES
                                       • ORDINANCES
                                       • LAWS
                                       • FUNDING PRIORITIES
                                              I
                        FIGURE 2. A  SCHEMATIC REPRESENTATION OF THE THREE BASIC TYPES OF
                                 QOL INFORMATION  AS RELATED TO ENVIRONMENTAL DECISION
                                 MAKING AND SOCIAL POLICY

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sectors  (e.g., ppm of  atmospheric pollutants, or percent unemployment in



the economy), but also deal with procedural and other concerns as well —



for example, laws that mandate ameliorative activity if minimum standards



are not met, or laws that  specify equal protection.



      The second consideration had to do with relating standards to human



needs.  A number of approaches for organizing the study and its findings



were considered before deciding to apply an adaptation of Abraham Maslow's



hierarchy of needs  (Maslow,  1954, 1962).  Figure 3 portrays a human needs



matrix in which is listed,  for each sector of concern,  a synoptic view



of the issues and representative concerns in the vertical column along the



left side, and then the  standards and data in each column that pertain to



a given way of dealing with the concern.



      Though we finally  settled on categorizing human needs by the terms



"basic" and higher," the terminology is not meant to assume priorities to



needs, but rather to make  a distinction between basic physiological/



security needs and social/psychological needs.  All needs are considered



fundamental to establishing a minimally acceptable quality of life—for



example, the fulfillment of some higher needs may be a prerequisite to



the fulfillment of more  basic requirements for an adequate quality of life.



      The team found the hierarchy of needs approach particularly useful



for displaying minimum standards because it defines intolerability thresholds



for several types of need  satisfaction.  The following briefly describe



each need category:



      • By basic needs are meant:



           Physiological (to include food, water, shelter, and other bodily



           needs).



           Safety or security (meaning freedom from bodily harm, protection



           against danger,  the feeling of having a predictable, stable, and



           secure environment).
                                     20

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  SECTOR
               0 Existing Welfar-j
                      Concerns
                   B.
                    1 Threshold
    BASIC    • Physiological
             • Safety and Security

Guarantees to Achieve Minimum Standard
                Equal        Ability to
 2 Security   3 Access    4  Influence
                                                                                                HIGHER
                          • Social
                          • Ego
                          • Self-Actualization
                                                                                                             Equal
                                          Ability to
                          __  •••^»W»        >W~.~ WJ -

1 Threshold   2 Security   3 Access    4  Influence
ISSUES AND
CONCERNS

• STANDARDS

• OBJECTIVE
  DATA

• SUBJECTIVE
  DATA
                                                          Figure 3.  HUMAN NEEDS MATRIX

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      •  By higher order needs are meant:



        - Social needs (friendship, affection,  love,  belongingness).



        - Ego needs (both self-esteem as expressed by feelings  of  self-



          confidence, adequacy, and competence;  and esteem  of others  as



          expressed by status, recognition,  attention,  and  prestige).



        - Need for self-actualization (growth,  development,  achieving



          one's full potential, creativity,  self-fulfillment).



      The column headings in Figure 3 for each  of  the two major need  areas,



 basic and higher needs,  categorize the standards  according  to  four levels


 of  concern:



      •  B  and H ,  the existing welfare concern—a definition of the



        minimum threshold level beneath which the  quality of life  is



        defined as intolerable.



      •  B  and H   security—deals with provisions made by society to
         £      £


        ensure that the threshold level will be met across time.



      «  BS and H   equal  access—standards ensuring equal access for



        different populations to the  social welfare concerns being addressed.



      •  B  and H   ability to influence—standards dealing with alternative



        ways  by which individuals or  institutions  can influence threshold



        levels and  their  own access to  welfare.



      These distinctions  are clarified  further in Table 4, which lists



 types of  questions addressed by standards, along with indicator data for



 each  of  the  four columns.



      This  categorization,  or mapping process, presents standards so  as



 to make  apparent any gaps,  inconsistencies, and problem areas for identified



human needs.   It also provides a method for correlating objective and



attitudinal  data with existing standards.  The visual display of information



facilitates  a  comparative  analysis of  issues within one sector or across



several sectors.
                                    22

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      Column
      Headings
                                   Table 4

                   CELL ENTRIES IN THE HUMAN NEEDS MATRIX


          Standards   	Objective Data	
                                    Subjective Data
      YHi
What  is the minimum level of
 (issue) quality that is
considered acceptable beyond
which lack of quality may be
considered intolerable?
 Is  (issue) of an adequate
 quality for this population
 at  this time; does it meet
 minimum standards? What
 percentage of population is
 below minimum levels?
How do people  in  this population
feel  about the quality of their
(issue), or where the threshold
should be?
      B /H
       2  2
to
CO
      B /H
       3  3
      B /H
       4  4
What provisions exist to
safeguard quality of (issue)
What are the kinds and amounts
of resources or steps taken to
bring  (issue) up to minimum
                 or to increase it when it
                 does not meet minimum standards? standards (i.e.,  enforcement)?
What provisions exist to ensure
equal access to at least
minimum acceptable levels of
(issue) quality?

What provisions or widespread
activities exist through which
people determine how they go
about obtaining (issue) quality,
or about influencing (issue)
standards?
What percentage of particular
population types are meeting/
not meeting minimal life
conditions?

What levels of activity are
engaged in to influence
(issue) welfare?
How secure do people feel about
the quality of their (issue)?
How do they feel about the
adequacy of measures taken to
ensure the meeting of minimum?

How do people feel about their
opportunities, relative to
people in the society at large?
How do people feel about their
ability to influence their
(issue) welfare?

-------
     To further assess the utility of this approach for a comparative



analysis, an attempt was made to classify the standards according to the



following scheme:



     • Location of issuing authority



       L - Local  (city or local district)



       R - Regional  (county, group of cities, and so forth)



       S - State



       F - Federal.



     • Type of issuing authority



       G - Governmental



           1 - By legislation



           2 - By court decision



           3 - By executive agency ruling, guideline, or code.



      NG - Nongovernmental



           1 - By professional association or commission



           2 - By private corporation



           3 - By political influence group



           4 - By common custom articulated in some formal way.



     • Specificity of intolerability threshold



       1 - Sets general goals to be pursued,  but does not specify any



           threshold intolerability.



       2 - Sets some type of threshold of intolerability, but with no way



           to assess when threshold is reached or crossed.



       3 - Sets some type of threshold of intolerability that contains



           with its specification some way of assessing when threshold



           is reached.



     0 Method of assessing when intolerability threshold is reached



       (specified or strongly implied by the wording or interpretation of



       the standard)



       1 - By direct measure of the objective condition of concern in



           quantitative terms (e.g.,  unemployment rate).
                                    24

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       2 - By use of a proxy for the objective condition of concern in

           quantitative terms (e.g., welfare recipients as a proxy for

           low nutrition of school children).

       3 - By computation and synthesis of direct measures, leading to

           a quantitative construct that is an indirect quantitative

           measure of objective condition of concern (e.g., gross

           national product is an indirect measure of productivity).

       4 - By a court decision that an intolerable situation has existed

           (e.g., that an individual has been libelously attacked and

           damaged).

       5 - By decision of an executive agency (e.g., EPA).
       6 - Other (specify in write-up).

       7 - None.

     0 Any remedial actions mandated by standard (including enforcement)

       Y - Yes

       N - No

     • Any systematic or periodic collection of data mandated or required

       by this or a related standard?*

       Y - Yes

       N - No

     The project team's experience trying to use this classification systen

is briefly described on page  39.     in general, however, it proved too

difficult to apply validly (for each standard we considered) without

spending more time than was available in this exploratory study.


Task 3;  List Standards and Identify Data

     When a preliminary environmental sector/issue list was identified

and the conceptual framework developed, the team began a search for three
*This category was meant to include only data that indicate the extent
 to which the minimum standard is or is not being met.
                                   25

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basic types of information:  standards, objective data, and attitudinal
survey information  related  to each  issue and representative life concern,
refining  the  definitions  of the  issues and concerns as necessary.
     The  search  began with  federal  documents,  legislation, and regulations
(see Appendix A   for a  discussion of sources for standards) and proceeded
to  searches  for  standards at the state and municipal levels as well.
This  was  particularly true  for issues such as  housing, crime, and education,
where  standards  are established at  the state and local level-federal
involvement  often being limited to  special funding programs and  general
guidelines for local activity.
      Standards included those established by public law,  political  decision,
or common customs that imply minimum life conditions.  The team  devised
 the following typology for the objective  indicators collected:
      • A direct measure of objective condition of  concern (i.e., minimum
        wage  law, health and safety  regulation, crime  rate).
      • An indirect measure or political  decision regarding objective
        condition of  concern (i.e.,  definition of pornography, antitrust/
        fairness standards, or aesthetic  conditions).
      e A proxy  for the objective condition of concern (i.e., number of
        AFDC  mothers  as trigger  indicator for establishing school lunch
        program, or number  of autos per square mile as a measure of likely
        noise or air pollution).
      • An opinion,  custom,  or norm  relating to objective  condition of
        concern  (i.e.,  protection of  privacy,  discipline  in schools, dress
        codes [e.g.,  public nudity],  conservation, historical preservation).
      Since  the  present study's purpose is to  assess the  feasibility of
  using minimum thresholds for measuring quality of life,  the  standards and
  data  searched were to be representative rather than inclusive in nature.
  Once  a representative number  of standards had been gathered  for each
  column  in each  sector-matrix,  the  task was to search for objective data
  relevant to each  standard. The team attempted to incorporate data from
                                     26

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the Midwest Research Institute QOL stud}' (Liu, 1975),  also sponsored by



EPA, or to suggest modification to the types of data collected by that



study to improve its relevance for measuring QOL.  Other published social



indicator work was used, along with statistical abstracts, annual reports




of federal agencies, and research reports.



     A preview of problems encountered with available data during the



search procedure includes the question of exac ,ly what the data attempt




to measure; for example, the number of doctors per 10,000 people does



not really measure the quality or availability of medical care.  There



is no way of knowing from an aggregated figure such as this whether it




represents 70-percent gynecologists, 20-percent surgeons, and 10-percent



internists, or whether these doctors are contracted to Kaiser, on staff



at a major medical facility, or available through private practice.



Similarly, when health care objectives are established by each Comprehensive




Health Planning Council  (CHPC) for a specified geographic area that does



not coincide with SMSA boundaries, these cannot be measured with typical




SMSA data.



     Subjective or attitudinal data  (e.g., survey information  showing



what people are most concerned about) was by  far the most difficult data



to find.  Studies such as "Assessing the Quality of Life  as People Experience



it", Frank ?,I. Andrews and Stephen Sithey, 1974) or the Federal Social



Survey (National Opinion Research Center, 1972-1974), demonstrate the



potential usefulness of  subjective information for QOLM issues.  General



survey data collected by popular polling agencies (e.g.,  Gallup, Yankelovich)



or public interest groups also provide potentially useful information  for




ranking the importance of various QOL issues.








Task 4:  Analysis



     A project team members with expertise in a particular subject area




verified the content of  and reviewed the information gathered  for each




sector-matrix.  After the initial matrices were completed, the survey
                                    27

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results were presented to the entire team for discussion.  Other experts



at SRI and outside the Institute were also invited to participate in



presentations.  The objectives of the presentations were to verify



interpretation of standards, confirm the placement of information on the



matrix, and, more importantly, to ensure that most relevant information



was included.  Matrices were then revised according to recommendations



and again submitted to the  project team for approval.



     Next, the team selected from each sector list one issue for in-depth



analysis.  An attempt was made to include a cross section of issues,



such as standards set at the federal level, standards instituted at the



municipal level, standards  readily quantified, and those less amenable



to quantitative  analysis.   Selected issues were then considered for data



completeness, and a final attempt was made to verify apparent gaps.



Appendix C presents the results of the detailed analysis within each




sector.







Task 5:  Assess  Approach and Make Recommendations



     At this  stage we asked the following questions:



      (1) To what extent do  standards, objective data, and  subjective



         data exist  in each cell of the human needs matrix (Figure  3)?



      (2) Where gaps  exist,  does this appear to be more a function of how



         the  categories  in  the matrix were formed or more  a lack of



         attention  to  this  type of concern in our society?



      (3) What type of  conceptual definition of the life  concern being



         dealt with  emerges from the existing standards  as written?



      (4) What properties  significant to the needs of societal monitoring



         do the  various  standards, and objective and subjective data



         manifest?   (By  properties, we mean the categories listed  in the



         preceding sections.)  For example, to what extent does the wording



         of the  various  standards lead more or less directly to the



         possibility of assessing  (by objective monitoring or by other
                                     28

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         judgmental processes) whether or to what extent  the standard  is



         being met?  Does the enforcement of the standard require  the



         collection of indicator data?  How often,  and under what



         conditions, are the available objective and subjective data



         collected?



     (5) What commonalities emerge when comparing standards  and existing



         data across sectors and issues?  For example, what  types  of



         concerns are reflected by standards at federal as opposed to



         state or local levels?  What types are currently monitored in



         quantitative versus qualitative ways?



     (6) What problems emerge when trying to interpret and to relate



         existing standards and QOL data in this way?



     By seeking answers to these questions, we hoped to be able to infer



recommendations for further work using the general approach  we have



explored.
                                   29

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                       Ill  PROVISIONAL FINDINGS


     In this section we present the central findings that flow from the

exploratory survey of existing standards and related data.  In reading

them, keep in mind that these findings are not meant to be definitive,

but only  illustrative of the data that appear to be currently available.

For example, in  issue areas where state and local sources of standards

were most significant, we looked primarily at California and, within

California, at Santa Clara County or Palo Alto — although regional dif-

ferences  are clearly important.

     To simplify the presentation, we first explore two questions that

relate directly  to three of the potential applications list in the

Introduction (annual reporting of basic QOL attainment, technology assess-

ment, and societal modeling):

     • How are the fundamental minimum (or intolerability) thresholds
       defined for issues in each of the various sectors?


     • To what extent are data available to indicate which basic
       minimum standards are/are not being met?

     Following this presentation, we will turn to two questions related

to the other potential applications cited (monitoring of citizen satis-

faction and QOL/standards mapping) .

     • What kinds of standards (and indicator data) exist for "higher"
       needs as  well as "basic" needs, and how do they relate to
       measuring minimum life conditions?

     • How do people feel about the quality of their lives; what
       evidence  is there that people "below" the minimum standards
       are highly dissatisfied, and those above are more satisfied?
                                  30

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Intolerability Thresholds

     The level of life quality that is set by one or the few most funda-

mental minimum standards establishes thresholds in each issue area that

call attention to those very minimal life conditions that persons are
considered to need for a minimally satisfactory quality of life.

     Table 5 lists, in a highly summarized version, minimum thresholds

that are either defined or can be inferred from existing standards,

together with illustrative data that portray how well these minimum

standards are being fulfilled .  More detailed information on each of the

thresholds cited in Table 5 is presented below, and still more detailed

information is contained in the write-ups of each of the specific issues

selected for detailed treatment (all of which appear in Appendix C).

     Economics
     Income Level — The primary threshold for income is that level

beneath which a citizen is considered  to be in poverty.  Because various

government agencies, such as  the Office of Economic Opportunity, the
Department of Agriculture, and the Census Bureau, have used the concept

of poverty for somewhat specialized purposes, various definitions of
poverty exist.  However, the  differences pertain more to how the poverty

threshold is to be used than  to how the threshold itself is defined.

The threshold as defined in 1974 was:


          FAMILY SIZE           NONFARM            FARM
              1                 $ 2,330          $ 1,980
              4                   4,550            3,870
              7                   6,770            5,750


     Employment Rate — A  second fundamental issue in the economics

sector concerns employment availability, usually defined as  the  rate  of

unemployment.  In  contrast to income  level, which addresses  life quality

at the individual  level, the  minimum  acceptable level of unemployment
                                 31

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                                                       TABLE  5


          REPRESENTATIVE SAMPLING OF EXISTING FUNDAMENTAL QOLM THRESHOLDS AND RELATED OBJECTIVE CONDITIONS
                                                                Definition of Fundamental Minimum Threshold
      Sector
Issue Area
Specific Issue
Economics
Economics
Health
Social
Political
Natural
Environment
Physical
Enviornment

Income
Employment
Nutrition
Education
Citizen
Participation
Air pollution
Housing

Adequacy
Availability
Minimum Daily
Diet
Attainment
Right to vote
Suspended
Particulates
Quality

1974 poverty threshold for nonfarm family of 4 = $4,550
[U.S. average = 11% in poverty; Portland SMSA = 7%;
Birmingham SMSA = 16%]
Unemployment threshold = 6.5% sustained in an area of
100,000 population for three months. [1974 U.S. average =
6.5% (U.S. Bureau of Labor); Portland = 5.2%; Newark,
New Jersey = 7%; San Francisco = 7.9%]
Recommeaded dietary allowance (RDA): minimum daily diet of
fat/vitamins/protein/minerals needed for health (for data,
see povurty level, which is used as a proxy for nutrition)
Education threshold: ability to read, write, and compute
[Average illiteracy over age 14: United States = 2.4%;
Louisiana = 6.3%; Iowa = 0.7%]
Use of any criteria other than "full" citizenship, at least
18 yeans of age and having a fixed residence at least 30
days forr determination of eligibility (no appropriate data)
EPA primary threshold = 75 ^ig/m3. [A ratio of 1.00 means that
the annual average ambient concentration was exactly at the
level of the primary threshold, 1973; Los Angeles 1.60,
Chicago 1.16, St. Louis 1.28 — CEQ Annual Report 1974,]
Intolerability threshold is structural soundness and minimal
plumbing, defined as "nondilapidated"; [Average population
living in "dilapidated" housing, 1970: United States = 7%--
Census data reported by OMB for all housing units);
'Census c.ata reported by MRI (Liu, 1975) for single Occupancy
units orly: Portland = 1.8%, Birmingham = 3.1%J

cc
to

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addresses life quality at a collective level.   The threshold included in



Table 5 is inferred from the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act



of 1973 (CETA), which provides assistance for geographical areas of



100,000 or more population that suffer a rate of unemployment equal to



or greater than 6.5 percent for three consecutive months.



     Minimum thresholds in the economic sector generally have the advan-



tage of being quantitatively defined and associated with systematic and



periodic data collection efforts.  They have the disadvantage, however,



of suffering from various measurement problems, probably the most severe



of which is the relatively high number of uncounted persons (e.g., persons



employed part-time but seeking full-time employment are counted as employed)



who fall within the conceptual definition of intolerability.  Another prob-



lem is that, due to inflation, the dollar thresholds constantly change;



thus, by the time indicators are collected, the true situation may be



considerably different.



     Health



     Minimum thresholds in the area of health are difficult to infer,



largely because most existing standards deal with availability of treat-



ment services rather than with health quality per se — for example,



physician-to-population minimum ratios of 1:4000  (if in a city); formulae



or tables designating the number of general hospital beds per number and



type of population; availability of emergency services.  Days free of



bed disability is a threshold advocated by  an earlier study  (U.S.



Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969), but we could find



no existing standards that used this measure as a threshold.  We con-



sidered trying to infer specific minimum  thresholds by looking at the



types of substantive coverage afforded by various health insurance



schemes.  This was impractical, however,  because  the coverages afforded



are too numerous and because they are not assigned any priorities.  One



way to resolve this dilemma could be the  use of "inability  to work due
                                   33

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to illness or injury  as a minimum threshold.  Such a standard could be



justified on the basis of common custom and policies such as disability



insurance.



     Nutrition — Adequate nutrition, however, is perhaps the most funda-



mental prerequisite for minimal health.  For this reason, and because it



is defined in objective and quantitative terms, we chose to use it as the



provisional basic intolerability threshold in the health sector.  Most



federal  food programs employ two basic threshold indicators to define



minimum  nutrition:  the RDA (Recommended Dietary Allowance) and the



Secretary of Agriculture's Income Poverty Guidelines.



     The RDA is  a direct standard (hence, usable as an indicator) for



adequate nutrition, being "designed for the maintenance of good nutri-



tion of  practically all healthy people in the U.S.A."  However, because



of the difficulties inherent in measuring the actual nutritional intake



by populations thought to suffer from inadequate nutrition, and because



evidence exists  indicating that persons suffering from poverty are apt



to suffer from inadequate nutrition as well, the Income Poverty Guide-



lines are often  used as criteria for food assistance program availability,



rather than inadequate nutrition, per se.  Thus, poverty is often used as



a proxy  indicator for malnutrition, and either minimum standard can be



considered as defining the nutritional threshold .



     Social and  Political Environments



     More than most, the social and political sectors represent key issue



areas where "higher" needs may be seen as fundamental to quality of life.



The  right to vote and emotional security provided for within the family



structure are examples of psychological/social/cultural needs that are



basic to both individuals and to society.



     With the exception of education, however, most of the issue areas we



looked at in the social and political sectors have minimum thresholds



that are relatively well-defined, but are defined so as to make objective
                                  34

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monitoring operationally or conceptually difficult.  Various civil




liberties, freedom from loss due to crime, voting rights, and related




concerns, tend to be defined in absolute terms.  All citizens should



have the right to vote or to speak within certain specified limitations;



all should be free of crime, also specified in detailed terms.  However,



these are not numerical thresholds and thus present difficulties when



attempting to measure conditions.



     One problem is that the protection of these rights is often on a



case-by-case basis (as, for example, with libel or pornography).  Another



problem is that while a graded series of severity or importance may



exist (as, for example, with various types of crime), we found no way



to designate any particular level as designating a measurable "intolera-




bility threshold," as we use the term.  Although all types of crime are



considered intolerable, only lack of access to uniform justice has been




found "of fundamental interest" by the courts.




     Thus, although a variety of indirectly relevant data exist (such



as the percentage of eligible citizens who actually vote, or the Uniform




Crime Statistics series) , it is unclear how such indicators could be



used in connection with fundamental minimum thresholds that are expressed




in simple terms.



     Education — Although not a physiological, safety, or physical security



need, education — like the right to vote and the right to legal defense



when accused of a crime — has been defined by the courts as being "of



fundamental interest," a legal conception from which we can infer that



these issue areas are "basic" 5OL needs.  While various state standards



exist relating to compulsory school attendance and minimum standards for



high school graduation, these are more properly thought of as "higher"



standards insofar as the present approach is concerned.  The primary



minimum threshold for attainment in education can be inferred as minimal



mastery of the "three Rs" — ability to read and write well enough to
                                  35

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perform  tasks  such as  filling out a job application, ability to count



well enough  to make change,  and so forth.  This threshold is readily



amenable to  monitoring.



     Educational  quality,  like that of health services, is typically



defined  in terms  of guarantees (Column 62 in the matrix) such as teacher



certification  (which is virtually defined in terms of preparation, rather



than competence)  rather than actual quality as could be measured by any



objective criteria.  Thus, the principal minimum threshold for educa-



tional quality is operationally defined as "not having a certified



teacher." The principal minimum standards for equality of opportunity



for education  are stated in terms of prohibitions, e.g., against "separate



but equal" educational services.   While objective measures of racial



"opportunity"  (defined either as  access, racial mixing, or attainment)



exist, the lack of an  adequately  precise conceptual definition of "equal"



prevents adequate measurement in  this area.



     Natural Environment



     The natural environment includes those issue areas alluded to by the



National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 and of most direct concern to



the EPA.  Typical of the minimum  thresholds found in this sector are



those for air  and water quality.   Two thresholds that apply nationally



are distinguished:  primary standards (judged necessary with an adequate



margin of safety to protect the public health) and secondary standards



(judged  necessary to protect the  public welfare from any unknown or



anticipated  adverse effects of a  pollutant) .



     Clearly,  the primary standards qualify as fundamental minimum



thresholds,  and since  they deal with physical properties of the environ-



ment, they are  readily quantifiable for measurement and monitoring.



Standards establishing minimum thresholds for air and water quality are



good examples of state, regional,  and local policies that have gone



beyond the minimum of federal standards by setting more stringent standards






                                 36

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 than are applicable nationally.   California air quality  standards,  for



 example, have more strict thresholds than those set  by EPA.   In  this



 case,  then,  it is necessary to consider indicators  (objective data)



 within the State of California in the light of California standards.



 National averages or comparisons  among states would  be of less signifi-



 cance than establishing the problem areas within the political jurisdic-



 tion of the  state where minimums  are not being met.



      Finally, the natural environment sector appears to  be the only



 sector outside of economies where monitoring methods and indicator  work



 have been established in a deliberate way.  However, it  may  b.e argued



 that the state of the art is still progressing and  that  thresholds  often



 represent reference points based  on the best available knowledge (e.g.,



 health hazards of various concentrations of pollutants in the air) .



      Physical Environment



      The basic minimum thresholds for food, drugs,  and cosmetics may  be



 considered to be those causing sickness or death (due to impurities or



 side effects) for an average person, i.e., one having no allergic reactions



 and so forth.  In an operational  sense, however, these thresholds are de-



 fined in terms of purity of product, accuracy of the label,  and  permis-



 sion from the Federal Drug Administration to market  them. Hence, moni-



 toring on a  national scale would  have to be on an extremely  disaggregated



 basis, with  each type of food, drug, and cosmetic considered on  a separate



 basis.



      For housing, the intolerability threshold is a  housing  unit that is



 "dilapidated" — defined as having one or more serious defects,  such  as



 no plumbing, no heat, infestation, toxic paint, and  so forth —  all such



 defects being specified by various (and numerous) building codes, which



 are typically set by the state and local governments and thus must  be



measured at that level of political concern.
                                  37

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     The  threshold for manufactured commercial and industrial products



is generally viewed in terms of "unreasonable" risk of injury to the



consumer.  The Consumer Product Safety Commission has a broad range of



evaluative criteria,  often  subjective, for each of the many product



types.  These criteria are  often defined differently for different pro-



ducts  according  to their  performance characteristics and intended use.



     Minimum thresholds for public services, such as fire and police



protection, are  similarly viewed in terms of unreasonable risk to public



health and safety.  While such risk factors can be objectively estimated,



these  standards  are difficult to translate into precise thresholds of



intolerability.







General Observations  — Higher Level Standards and Data



     The  systematic arraying of minimum standards and related data, both



objective and subjective, proved to be a most difficult task — even in



this exploratory study.   Rather than focus on the specific findings,



which  are included in Appendix C, it is more useful to discuss some of



these difficulties, for they bear directly on the assessment of the QOLM



approach  to be discussed  in the next section.



     Difficulties in  Searching Out Standards



     The  primary difficulty in searching out relevant standards is that



there  are so many that should be included — especially in areas  (such



as housing or education)  where most standards emanate from the state or



local  level.  Although a  number of very useful reference aids  (such as



the Code  of Federal Regulations) exist to help one assess existing stan-



dards,  we found  that  it takes prior familiarity with a substantive area



to know all of the right  "keywords in context" to use such aides effec-



tively.  Thus, in checking  our results with substantive specialists



within the Institute, significant standards were often suggested that



were not  possible to  assess by standard search procedures.  This problem
                                 38

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is especially pronounced for the "higher" standards.  Hence, we concluded

that any gaps in the various cells of the matrix included for each issue

treated in detail might well stem from insufficiently exhaustive searching

of existing standards, rather than from the fact that no such standard
exists.

     A second difficulty is that many standards that imply a minimum

level of life quality or performance have been interpreted — often in

differing ways — by either executive guidelines or by the judicial pro-

cess.  Legislative and judicial history can rather straightforwardly be

researched, but it is extremely time-consuming.  Hence, this aspect of

minimum standards was relatively neglected in this study.

     Problems of Interpretation
     Once a wide range of standards and related data was collected, a

variety of difficulties faced the analysts as they sought to place them
in the appropriate place in the matrix, and to code them so as to provide

a numerical estimate of the types of standards and data that seem to exist

in the various sectors.
     An initial issue was whether the given standard should be considered
as a "basic" or a "higher" standard.  While this might be of only aca-
demic conern, to the extent that any subsequent applications of minimum

standards/data mapping would focus only on "basic" concerns, the resolu-

tion of this issue has real import for the scope (hence the feasibility)
of the work.  Generally, we found it necessary to expand the conceptual

definition of "basic" and "higher" needs, given on page  20  , in the

following ways.  A standard would be defined as "basic" if either:

     (1)  It was so defined by existing statute or interpretation.
     (2)  Its fulfillment is widely considered to be a significant
          prerequisite to the fulfillment of other basic needs.

     Examples of (1) include the right to vote, the right to adequate

defense when accused of a crime, and access to basic education — all
                                   39

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of which have been defined by the courts as "of fundamental interest"



to the welfare of the individual.  Examples of (2) are harder to docu-



ment because of the lack of rigorous cause/effect knowledge that charac-



terizes social science generally.  As an example, however, the report of



the National Goals Research Staff (1970) recognized Basic Research as a



primary sector in its treatment of life quality,  thus recognizing the



importance of a "higher" needs concern to the fulfillment of other life



concerns.



     A more severe problem was presented by the task of trying to code



the various standards according to the categories described on page 24



With a few exceptions, the categories themselves worked well, but the



time necessary to check adequately all necessary background documents



proved to be beyond the scope of this project.  Hence, providing validly



illustrative data on the types of standards found, by use of the cate-



gories, was not possible.  Instead,  the coding is used to illustrate how



it could benefit a more detailed study by enabling frequency counts, by



sector, of the standards that implied a definite threshold, that mandated



monitoring, and so forth.



     Another problem of interpretation concerned the matching of a given



standard with one (or more)  available objective or subjective datum.



Without addressing the question of the adequacy and characteristics of



data cited, data matching was somewhat uncertain at times.  We did try



to match data and standards  so as to illustrate the extent to which the



fulfillment of various standards was possible to evaluate.  It appears,



in many instances, that the  problems of measurement (e.g., in education)



are such that the operational definition of a given life concern is



significantly different from the conceptual definition contained in the



standard.  In other instances (e.g., in various civil rights), it is



simply not feasible to measure the concern directly.
                                   40

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     In summary, we concluded (1) that the detailed findings reported in
Appendix B are informative but they should not be considered in any way
complete; and (2) that both a high degree of analytical sophistication
and expenditure of effort would be required to complete our survey of
representative standards and associated objective and subjective data.
                                 41

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             IV  PROVISIONAL ASSESSMENT OF THE QOLM APPROACH








     A  number of  interesting methodological issues associated with the




QOLM approach could be discussed in their own right, but we believe that




the utility  of  this study will be heightened by discussing such issues




in connection with several potential applications of the approach.




     In the  introduction to this report we briefly identified five poten-



tial applications in which the QOLM approach might prove useful:  (1) a




procedure  that  might be terms "standards mapping"; (2) reporting  of




intolerable  conditions in the society; (3) technology/environmental



impact  assessment; (4) simulation modeling of conditions in society;




and  (5)  monitoring of citizen (dis)satisfaction.  Each of these potential



applications is discussed below.








QOL/Standards Mapping




     Various federal, state, and local government agencies are responsible



for ensuring compliance with a large and often confusing array of poli-



cies, guidelines, and standards.  Although fairly straightforward proce-



dures exist  through which  one can become aware of the applicable stan-



dards for  any given activity, the standards that pertain to a given topic




area or that are a single agency's responsibility are rarely listed so




that the reader can readily grasp the overall  ogic.  Furthermore, it is



currently  virtually impossible to obtain a synoptic view of the entire




range of significant standards and data that exist across various sectors



of concern.  The human needs matrix of existing standards and related data




introduced in Figure 3 and applied in Appendix B might be used — either




in its  present form or as modified so as to make it a reasonably  efficient




way to  portray significant policies and related conditions in the society.
                                   42

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     The basic question to be addressed here, then, is,  To what extent




is it feasible, and might it be useful, to pursue the activity of map-




ping existing standards and associated data  at the three levels of




governance that were explored in this study?



     A first consideration is whether it is feasible to map "all fronts,"




as it were, as opposed to mapping only the jurisdictional responsibilities



of a given agency, such as EPA, or a given political area, such as a city.



Given the difficulties we experienced in even this brief exploration



(noted in the previous section on results),  it is clear that a mapping



of all fronts — desirable as it might be  — would be  a large undertaking



and would require considerable analytical  sophistication.  It is a task



that lies outside the jurisdictional responsibility of any given agency,



although a foundation with programmatic  interest in social indicators




might be willing to support such an effort.  Due to the scope of such a



study, however, such foundation support  is not very probable, unless  it




could be demonstrated that such a study  would have high probability of




leading to useful applications.



     The most useful applications of QOL/standards mapping probably would




lie  in the area of policy enforcement  and  policy formulation/modification




— either due to internal agency initiative  or due to  political  pressure




by interest groups.



     If an interest group perspective  were to be taken,  the  approach



might be much  as we explored,   but  with  an emphasis only  on  standards



that clearly  state minimum conditions  to be  fulfilled. This would essen-



tially mean eliminating  consideration  of the vast  sets of programs we



tried to survey  in columns B/H2, B/H3,  and B/H4  of the matrix,  and might



indeed make an all  fronts mapping effort feasible.



      If the interests  of a  given agency  were to  be served,  on  the  other



hand, it might be  feasible  to map only those standards that  the  agency



has  a responsibility  to  fulfill, and  to  add  programs  as  a discrete ele-



ment in the matrix  (in addition  to  standards, objective  data,  and  subjective






                                    43

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data),  thereby  showing what  programs are intended to address particular
minimum standards,  and what  indications exist that they are successful
or       critical  needs exist.  This would have the added advantage of
clarifying the  distinction between  "standards" and "programs" — a dis-
tinction that became  quite blurred in this study.
      If either  of the above  modifications were to be made to the approach
we have explored,  we  believe that further pursuit of standards mapping
would be feasible and useful, although expensive.  At the very least, it
would further illuminate  the gap between stated standards and existing
data  collection procedures,  and at best it would lead to the improvement
of both public  policy and its monitoring.  In terms of longer-range
consequences, attention to the wide range of standards (both "basic" and
"higher")  might tend  to alleviate some of the potential difficulties
discussed earlier,  if undue  attention came to be placed on minimum condi-
tions and on life dissatisfactions.

Reporting of Minimum  Life Conditions
      The periodic monitoring and reporting of conditions specified by a
selected list of  intolerability thresholds (the most fundamental of
minimum QOL standards in  various sectors) is the most basic and possibly
a "least ambitious" application of the QOLM approach.  As we shall see,
however,  even this application would be quite difficult; and given the
failures of earlier social indicator/reporting/accounting program attempts
(noted  in  the Introduction), the potential ability of QOLM to avoid similar
difficulties should be questioned.
      Let us first  assume  that there was agreement among the responsible
agencies  regarding the desirability of having a selected list of (perhaps
eight to fifteen)   intolerability thresholds to be periodically monitored
and reported; that  this list should be broadly representative of the
range of concerns  making  up  life quality; and that because the list
                                    44

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includes those most fundamental minimum standards, it is considered a

worthwhile investment of public funds to seek resolution of all signifi-

cant technical problems of measurement and reporting.  For purposes of

discussion, the thresholds discussed previously (summarized in Table 5)

may be thought of as making up such a list.
     Let us first consider a problem that was not possible to solve with

earlier approaches, but which should be no problem for the QOLM approach

— that of the normative property:

     [By normative social indicator is meant] a statistic of direct
     normative interest which facilitates concise, comprehensive,
     and balanced judgments about the condition of major aspects of
     a society.  It is in all cases a direct measure of welfare,
     and is subject to the interpretations that if it changes in
     the "right" direction while other things remain equal, things
     have gotten better, or people are better off.  Thus statistics
     on the numbers of doctors or policemen could not be [normative]
     social indicators, whereas figures on health or crime rates
     could.  (U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,
     1969, p. 97)

While we would not make any claims about the QOLM approach's ability to

render up "comprehensive and balanced judgments" about life conditions

in the society, we do  assume that indicators relating directly to mini-

mum standards do have  the normative property:  at least at levels of

attainment located on  or about the minimum standard itself, "more is

better."  If for no other reason, this is true because of  the way mini-

mum standards are conceived and legally based — they set  levels of

attainment that are to be fulfilled and, if not, typically call for

some mode of action that makes fulfillment of the minimum  standard more

likely.
     A second problem  that afflicted earlier attempts at QOL  assessment

is the problem of differing values and differing priorities — thereby

making it impossible to forge consensually valid conceptions of aggregate

life quality.  With the QOLM approach, this problem reduces to an issue

                                   45

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of identifying the range of minimum thresholds that exist for various



populations.  For thresholds in areas such as health or economics, this



presents no problem, because the standards in these areas emanate pri-



marily from the federal level — thereby covering the entire population



of the nation.  In areas such as housing, however, local codes predominate,



thereby raising the following issue:  "Where local minimum standards



differ, should a national monitoring effort report local conditions in



relation to an averaged minimum standard?"  Our brief exploration suggests



that measurement against most standards is useful only within the area of



political  jurisdiction that the standard applies to.  In other words,



Federal standards can be measured by national indicator data, and state/



local  standards can be measured within their own political jurisdiction.



However, because these standards differ, they need not be compared with



other  states  or averaged across the country.  For the most fundamental



standards  or  intolerability thresholds, however, the opposite may well



be the case.  Although differences in local codes do exist,  the  range of



variation  in  the definition of, for example, intolerable housing condi-



tions  is not  all that great.  Hence the use of intolerability thresholds



to apply to the entire country for purposes of monitoring should be



feasible,  and would certainly be desirable.



     A third  problem that afflicted earlier attempts at QOL  assessment is



the  problem of assigning relative priorities among types of  life (e.g.,



Is clean air  more important than access  to transportation?).  At the mini-



mum  threshold this is not a problem because the prevention of all  types



of minimum conditions (that are sufficiently fundamental to  life quality



to warrant their inclusion on the selected list) could be assumed  to



have imperative priority.



     A fourth problem is that of valid measurement.  At  least three  as-



pects  of this problem need to be cited:  adequate conceptual definition



of the threshold, adequate operational definition of the threshold,  and



adequate measurement of conditions.





                                  46

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      Unequal educational opportunity has been defined  by numerous



 national policies as  an intolerable condition of  fundamental  importance.



 As yet,  however,  che  important political factions have been unable  to



 agree on a satisfactory conceptual definition of  "equal educational



 opportunity."  For some, it should be equal access (availability or



 years of attainment);  for others equal (skill)  mastery;  for still others,



 equal economic  success in later life.  Unless a satisfactory  conceptual



 definition can  be obtained,  there is no possibility of satisfactory



 monitoring that directly relates to the threshold.  It should  be recog-



 nized, however, that  the definitional debate over equal educational



 opportunity is  addressed to a higher level  needs  concern than  that which



 we have  called  the fundamental intolerability threshold  (which, for



 education,  might  be defined  as minimal mastery  of the  "three Rs").   If,



 in the application we  are considering, equal opportunity in areas such



 as education  or nutrition or income was addressed only at  the  most fun-



 damental  threshold, we suspect that difficulties  of conceptual defini-



 tion  could  be rather readily resolved.  Setting of a precise threshold



 level might well,  of course,  remain politically difficult  to accomplish.



      Problems of  operational definition also present difficulties.  Various



 concerns  that we  explored  in the social and political  sectors, for



 example,  have clear-cut  conceptual  definitions  but are notoriously dif-



 ficult to translate into terms  that could be quantitatively measured.



Although  many standards  in  the  social and political  sectors require



 monitoring  or data collection,  the  kind of  monitoring  mandated by such



 standards  is  often procedural  rather than substantive  (i.e., required



 reporting on  compliance  with  regulations rather than on  objective condi-



 tions in  relation  to minimum standards).  These problems may not be re-



 solved within the  currently  dominant  measurement  paradigm of Western



science that  stresses the supremacy  of  objectivity,  reductionism,  and



quantification.  Their resolution would be more probable, however,  if
                                  47

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a sustained  search was made  for viable measurement options applied to a
small  set of high-priority thresholds.
     Even if adequate conceptual and operational definitions exist,
there  are still  difficult measurement problems to be resolved if the
reporting of fundamental minimum life conditions in society is to be
satisfactory.  Here, issues  in the economic sector, such as income and
unemployment,  provide the most well-understood examples (although much
has been written about crime statistics artifacts as well).  It is well
known  that the current series of poverty and unemployment statistics are
portraying a distorted picture of objective conditions in the United
States — just how distorted is a matter of some debate (Spring, 1971;
Gross,  1974).  One problem stems from uncounted people who fall within
the conceptual and operational definitions (of poverty or  unemployment)
but are not  detected by existing measurement techniques, a second from
insufficient disaggregation in reporting, and a third from politically
biased  selection of operational definitions.  Because these issues are
complex enough to require more discussion than is appropriate here, we
will merely note that evidence exists to suggest that if all persons who
should  be counted as unemployed using existing operational definitions
were so counted, and if the operational definition of unemployment were
broadened to include "subemployment" (i.e., those persons working full-
time,  but receiving less than the legal minimum wage for their efforts),
then the objectively valid level of unemployment in various urban ghettos
would exceed thirty percent (Spring, 1971, p. 189).
     Let us now move forward  a decade and assume that this application
has been tried  and  found successful, both in scientific and political
terms.  What ordinarily unanticipated consequences might occur?  One
consequence might be that substandard or intolerable conditions have
significantly diminished.  This would clearly be desirable.   However,
if more widespread  applications of  the QOLM approach led to a political
                                 48

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climate in which only the achievement of minimum standards was given
high priority in policymaking (to the detriment of other important con-
cerns) , the results might not be so desirable.  Given the continued
priority that many "higher" pursuits have had in our society, the undue
emphasis on relieving intolerable conditions is judged unlikely.
     In summary, we conclude that the pursuit of this application of the
QOLM approach would entail some formidable difficulties, but is both
feasible and desirable.  It would require careful selection and definition
of a limited set of fundamental minimum  (intolerability) thresholds that
most informed persons would find legitimate.  It would require collection
and presentation of data at a level of aggregation no higher than the
SMSA level and, in areas of the country  where conditions are most minimal,
at sub-SMSA levels as well.  Furthermore, we believe that it would be
both feasible and desirable to collect and report these data so as to
allow multiple-category cross tabulation across indicators within the
three levels of government (federal,  state,  local) so that it would be
possible to portray the multiple types of intolerable conditions  that
are suffered by some of our citizens.


Technology/Environmental Impact Assessment in Relationship to Minimum
Standards
     The use of explicit minimum standards — especially those  that set
the very fundamental thresholds —  as a  way  to  define areas  of  potential
impact caused by application of a new technology  might  seem  to  be both
straightforward and objective.  Surely  any technology whose  application
might  bring a reduction in life quality  to less than specified  minimum
conditions should  receive most careful  scrutiny.  Furthermore,  because
the types of minimum conditions we  have  been considering generally have
the legitimacy  of  law, this application  should  be further explored.
      Several dangers, however, can  be anticipated.  One very plausible
difficulty is the  proliferation of  minimum standards mandated for inclusion,

                                    49

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It would be good to require a technology assessment to consider a few




of the most basic minimum standards, but if the approach caught on it




is likely  that increasing numbers of minimum standards would be mandated




— resulting in the type of bureaucratic nightmare that so often charac-



terizes  enforcement of administrative regulations.




     A second difficulty — especially pronounced if numerous minimum




standards  had to be considered in a given assessment — is that life




conditions not explicitly called out by mandated minimum standards would




tend to  be ignored.  Currently, it is thought that technology assessment




should include all types of potential impacts, whether covered by exist-



ing standards or not.




     Moving beyond the level of technology assessment to that of techno-




logy regulation, however, the QOLM approach brings out the following




issue:   "What legitimate rationale can be used for banning application



of a technology other  than its impact on life conditions covered by




legally-based minimum standards?"  In the brief review of previous work




in QOL assessment,  we  noted the difficulty of trying to get agreement on



priority weightings of QOL concerns.  A similar difficulty would surely



be found in trying to  get agreement on undesirable impacts not treated



by existing minimum standards.




     Because of the above difficulties, and because the emerging field




of technology/environmental impact assessment is faced with other complex




difficulties not relevant to treat here, we conclude that (1) technology/




environmental impact assessment activities could benefit from the report-



ing of minimum life conditions, but (2) the feasible linkage between the



two types of efforts is too low to be a high-priority concern.








Simulation Modeling o_f Conditions in Society




     One of the various analytical tools with which to better understand




society and its governance is that of dynamic simulation modeling
                                  50

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(Forrester, 1971; Meadows, et al, 1972; Williams & House, 1974).  To



what extent might the QOLM approach offer this type of effort anything



of value?



     Forrester  (1971, pp. 60-64) used  quality of life as a measure of



performance in  his world model  — QOL  being  defined as a "computed



quality-of-life  standard  ...  [made up  of]  ... four multipliers derived



from material standard  of living, crowding,  food availability, and pol-



lution."  In a  more  refined version of the model, Meadows, et al  (1972)




found  that they had  to  avoid  using a global  QOL  indicator due to  the



considerable difficulties faced when incorporating the complex of social




variables that  should be considered part of  such an indicator, though



they did find it useful to incorporate basic components of QOL directly



in the model.



     One difficulty  of  applying the QOLM approach to highly  aggregated




simulation models is that substandard  conditions  (in the United States)



tend to cluster in small geographical  areas. Therefore, unless the  simu-




lation model is designed to accomodate regional  differences  — the direc-



tion taken in Mesarovic and Pestel's  (1974)  second-generation Club of




Rome project — it is not likely  to  be able  to  demonstrate how various



impacts on quality of life generally would  impact on specific types  and



concentrations  of intolerability.  Also, models  such as  the  State of  the



System (Williams &. House, 1974) tend  to emphasize input/output  relation-



ships  without much consideration  of  life quality levels.  Models  of  this



type would have to be extensively redesigned to  adequately portray the




fulfillment or  nonfulfillment of  significant minimum standards.



     Therefore, we conclude  that  unless some application of  the general




QOLM approach documents not  only  existing  standards and  associated ob-



jective and subjective  data  but also  the amounts of resources devoted to




meeting those minimum  standards —  and at  a  low  level  of aggregation




(all of which would probably be infeasible)  — then the  link  between QOLM




assessment and  societal simulation  modeling  is  too tenuous to pursue.
                                  51

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Monitoring of Citizen  (Pis)satisfaction



     The systematic monitoring of the subjective component of intolerable



or substandard life conditions could be a most important contribution to



public policy formulation in the United States.  To what extent are citi-



zens who suffer from multiple, as opposed to single, intolerable conditions



dissatisfied?  Which substandard conditions bring the most dissatisfaction



and suffering?  By combining these types of data with objective data, one



should be able over time to identify the populations who are worst off,



and to determine whether their welfare is improving or diminishing rela-



tive to the  larger population whose fundamental needs are being met.



     The General Social Survey (National Opinion Research Center, 1972-



1974) exemplifies the type of activity through which this type of analysis



can take place.  Its results are stored in computers at a number of loca-



tions, thereby allowing the analyst to use the data in whatever ways are



most appropriate (e.g., to cross tabulate across various variables at a



low or a high level of aggregation).



     Inasmuch as the General Social Survey is not designed to emphasize



substandard  life conditions (or populations), however, we suggest that



special  piggyback  studies be considered in which (1) the survey instru-



ments would  include both subjective and objective questions relating to



a small set  of intolerability thresholds, and (2) the sampling design



would place  high emphasis on validly portraying life conditions and dis-



satisfactions in geographical areas known to suffer from multiple types



of substandard conditions — even if this means aggregating such data at



the census tract level and seeking to contact people left out of the



national census.



     The importance of conducting this type of data collection is sug-



gested by former Labor Secretary Willard Wirtz in a confidential memo



to President Johnson reported by Spring (1971, p. 188):  "if a third of



the people in the nation couldn't make a living, there v/ould be a
                                   52

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revolution."  Wirtz's Labor Department figures indicated that in 1966



while national unemployment stood at 3.8 percent, some 30 percent of



the urban poverty neighborhood work force failed to earn more than



poverty wages.   However, the subemployment index, published in 1967,



was discontinued and no subsequent attempts have been made to document



either the extent of unemployment (or other intolerable conditions) in



poverty areas or the levels of dissatisfaction that exist in such areas,
                                  53

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                                REFERENCES


 Andrews, Frank M. and Withey, Stephen B., of the Institute  for  Social
      Research, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan,  "Assessing
      the Quality of Life as People See It" (draft),  for presentation to
      the annual convention of the American Sociological Association,
      Montreal, Quebec, Canada, August 1974.

 Andrews, Frank M. and Withey, Stephen B., "Developing Measures  of  Perceived
      Life Quality; Results from Several National Surveys,"  Social  Indicators
      Research. I (1974).

 Environmental Protection Agency, Quality of Life Concept: A Potential New
      Tool for Decision Makers.  Washington, B.C., 1973.

 Forrester,  Jay W.,  World  Dynamics.   Cambridge,  Mass.:  Wright-Allen
      Press,  1971.

 Francis,  W.  J.,  A Report  on Measurement  and the Quality of Life.  Washington,
      D.C.:   U.S.  Department of Health,  Education,  and Welfare, January,
      1973.

 Gross,  B.  M. ,  The State of the Nation:  Social Systems Accounting.
      London:   Social Science  Paperbacks,  1966.

 Gross,  B.  M. and J. D. Straussman,  "The  Social  Indicators  Movement."
      Social  Policy. Sept/Oct  1974,  43-54.

 Hielbroner,  R. L. , An  Inquiry  into  the Human  Prospect.   New York:
      Norton, 1974.

 House,  P., R. Livingston  and C.  Swinburn,   Monitoring Mankind; The Search
      for Quality. Washington,  D.C.:   Environmental  Protection Agency,  1974.

Liu, B., Quality of  Life  in Metropolitan Areas of the United  States, Kansas
      City, Mo.,  Midwest  Research Institute, 1975.

Markley, 0. W., Alternative Futures:  Contexts  in Which  Social Indicators
     Must Work.  Menlo Park,  CA:  Stanford Research  Institute,  Report
     No. EPRC-6747-11,  February, 1971.

Maslow, A. H.,  Motivation and Personality.  New York:  Harper,  1954.

Maslow, A. H.,  Toward a Psychology of Being.  Princeton:   Van Nostrand,
     1962.

Meadows, D. H. , D.  L.  Meadows, J. Randers, and W. Behrens  III, The  Limits
     to Growth.  New York:  Universe Books, 1972.
                                   54

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Mesarovic, M. and E. Pestel, Mankind at  the Turning Point. The  Second
     Report to the Club of Rome.  New York:  E.P. Button,  1974.

Mitchell, A., 1973:  Life Ways, Life Styles.  Menlo Park,  CA:   Stanford
     Research Institute, Long Range Planning Report No.  500.

National Goals Research Staff, Toward Balanced  Growth: Quantity with
     Quality.  Washington, D.C.:  U.S.  Government Printing Office,  July,
     1970.

National Opinion Research Center, University of Chicago,  National  Data
     Program for the'Social  Sciences:   The General Social Survey,  Inter-
     University Consortium for Political Research, Ann Arbor, Michigan
     (July 1972).

Spring, W. J., "Unemployment:  the Measure We Refuse  To  Take."  New
     Generation, 5.3(1), Winter, 1971, 187-194.

Tunstall, D., Social Indicators,  1974.   Washington, D.C.:  U.S. Government
     Printing Office, 1974.

U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, Toward a  Social Report.
     U.S. Government Printing Office:   Washington, D.C.,  January,  1969.

U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Affirmative Action  and
     Equal Employment.  Washington, D.C., U.S.  Government Printing Office,
     January, 1974.

Williams, E. R., and P. House, The State of the^System  (SOS) Model:
     Measuring Growth Limitations Using Ecological Concepts.  Washington,
     D.C.:  Office of Research and Development., Environmental Protection
     Agency, February, 1974.
                                     55

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                          TABLE OF CONTENTS

                              APPENDICES
                                              Page
INTRODUCTION TO APPENDICES

APPENDIX A:  METHODOLOGY .
             1.

             2.
             3.
List of Issues and Concerns from
Role-Playing Exercise 	
Social Sector Lists (SRI)  (Non-SRI)
Literature Search Procedures.  .  .  .
APPENDIX B:  SECTOR/ISSUE EXEMPLARS,
             1.  Economics 	
             2.  Health  	
             3.  Social  	
             4.  Political 	
             5.  Natural Environment
             6.  Physical	
57
 A-l


 A-2
 A-18
 A-21

 B-l

 B-l
 B-28
 B-60
 B-103
 B-126
 B-160
                                 56

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                        INTRODUCTION TO THE APPENDICES


     This section of the Appendix contains specific issue writeups for

each sector of the study.  A multidisciplinary team was responsible for

these writeups, with specific issues assigned to those with expertise in

an area of concern.  Later, the writeups were reviewed by the entire project

team.  Each issue writeup begins with a brief introduction to the sector,

explaining why a specific issue was chosen for analysis.  An interpretation

of the data for each matrix then follows the introduction.

     Each entry in the "minimum standards matrix," has been coded in

the following manner (refer to the categories described on pages 24 and 25

of the main report):
        B-1-S-G3-2-7-Y-N
                          Basic concern
                            Related  to minimum threshold
                              Issues by State level
                                by executive agency
                                No systematic data collection mandated

                              Remedial  actions mandated
                            No method of  assessing when threshold is reached

                          Sets some  type  of  "threshold of intolerability",
                          but with no way to assess when threshold is
                          reached or crossed
     Policy Level Data  (Minimum  Standards)

     The method used in gathering policy  level data  (i.e. standards) are

discussed in "Literature  Search  Procedure"  in the Appendix section on

methodology.  The search  for  this type of data was not meant to be an
                                     57

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 exhaustive one, but its purpose,  rather,  was  to  indicate the types  of




 standards that would be relevant.   In  areas where many standards were



 available, the standards assumed  to be precedent to all others were




 sought.   The specific categories  of the matrix  (threshold, security,




 equal  access, and ability  to  influence) are not  necessarily mutually




 exclusive.  The purpose of  this classification was to structure  the analy-



 sis,  not to rigidly categorize, and each  standard appears in the most



 relevant category.








      Objective Data





      In viewing the objective data,  the reader should be aware of some




 problems with the existing  data.  These include  questions of operational




 definitions  and of data collection  and analysis.  During our search for



 objective data that could  describe  the "true" objective conditions, we



 encountered  an additional  barrier,  in  that data  often reflected  only




 the positive side of a situation.   For example,  data for program progress



 in  the employment issue often shows only  the number of jobs provided with-




 out furnishing the corresponding  number of jobless individuals in a target




 population.   Data on discrimination  was found to reflect only the number



 of  recorded  cases, without  regard to the  actual number of individuals



 suffering from discrimination.








     Subjective Data





     It  is readily apparent that the matrices do lack subjective data



 relevant  to  many  of  the issues.  This  is in part because the same problems



with objective  data  are intensified when using existing attitudinal



survey data.  Most of  the  attitudinal data that  we reviewed  was  not




specific enough to be  used  within  our matrices but,  as  responses to very



generally  phrased  questions, was more a measure  of a  vague notion of quality




of life.  The project  team  feels,  however, that  subjective data  is essential
                                     58

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to the approach we have taken and, moreover, that such data could be more




meaningfully developed by orienting collection of subjective data such




that they relate more directly to intolerability thresholds set by




existing policy.
                                      59

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  Sector
              QUALITY Og LIFE CONCERNS INVESTIGATED IN THIS STUDY
            Issue        	.	Nature of Concern
Economics
Health
Social
Political
Natural
Environment
Physical
Personal Income
Employment
Health care
Nutrition
Crime
Criminal Justice Process
Freedom to be
Family
Education
Civil liberties
Citizen participation
Honesty in government
Access to information
National protection
Air and water quality
Scenic and wildlife resources

Noise
Pesticides use
Land  use
Solid waste
Food  and drugs

Housing
Public services
Transportation

Recreation and open space

Manufactured  goods  and products
Nonresldential buildings and
structures
Guaranteed income, cost of living, credit opportunity
Availability; quality
Quality; availability
Minimum daily diet
Safety from crime
Just treatment; conviction and confinement
Self-expression; protection of privacy
Marringe; children
Quality; availability and equality
Freedom to exercise choice
Right to vote; right to hold office;  other forms of participation
Hones': and fair representation
Citizens access to government opinions,  rules,  reports
External threats; natural disasters
Impacts on health, aesthetics (color, taste,  odor)
Protection of scenic resources, protection-of wildlife and
endangered species
Health hazard; amenities
Healti hazard
Degree of choice
Healt.i hazards
Quality of food and farm products; neat and poultry; (inigs;
cosmetics; accuracy of packaging and labeling.
Quality; availability
Solid waste disposal; fire protection
Safety, quality, speed, privacy, cost and availability of
various transport modes
            «
Availability of outdoor facilities and open space;  quality  of
recreational facilities
Hazardous products; quality of products
Safety and quality of buildings, materials and design.
                                                      60

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                             Appendix A

                            METHODOLOGY
     Information and support material described in Section II of the
report are as follows:

1.  Role-playing Exercise

    The first page shows the 38 "people types" role-played by SRI
team members.  A list of issues and concerns in each of the seven
sectors (economic, political, physical, social, health, psychological
and natural environment) was compiled as a result of this exercise.

    The issues and concerns built up in this way appear on pages A-2/A-13
under the Sector headings.  The numbers refer to the typology segment
shown on the legend page.  These lists could be greatly extended by
using additional typologies and more usefully by having the ratings done
by people with a variety of backgrounds.

    In addition to responding to the sectors we asked ourselves three
other questions that seem to have a good deal to do with QOL: (1) What
are expectations for the future?, (2) What are the prime causes of
problems?, and (3) What are the remedies for the problems?  Items under
these headings appear on pages A-14/A-16.
                                   A-l

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                           QOL - ISSUES AND CONCERNS

  Legend

  1  EPRC - survival/security
  2  EPRC - belonging
  3  EPRC - esteem
  4  EPRC - self-actualization

  5  Life Cycle - prosperous bachelor/career girl
  6  Life Cycle - newly wed
  V  Life Cycle - full nest
  8  Life Cycle - empty nest
  9  Life Cycle - solitary survivor

 10  Jung - sensing/thinking
 11  Jung - intuition/thinking
 12  Jung - intuition/feeling
 13  Jung - sensing/feeling

 14  Income - ^ $3000/family/year
 15  Income - $7500 - 12,000
 16  Income - < $20,000

 17  Kohlberg - universalistic
 18  Kohlberg - social contract/duty
 19  Kohlberg - deference to authority

 20  Lifeway - Maker
 21  Lifeway - Preserver
 22  Lifeway - Taker
 23  Lifeway - Escaper
 24  Lifeway - Changer
 25  Lifeway - Seeker

 26  Images of Man - Economic
 27  Images of Man - Existential
 28  Images of Man - Humanistic Transformationalist
 29  Images of Man - Behavioristic

 30   Maslow - Survival
 31   Maslow - Security
 32   Maslow - Belonging
 33   Maslow - Esteem
 34   Maslow - Self-Actualization

 35   Age  -  20-35
 36   Age  -  35-50
 37   Age  -  50-65
38  Age  -  65+
                                       A-2

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ECONOMIC ENVIRONMENT

     Higher social security payments  1, 9, 22, 38
     Limit after-tax income  1
     Job guaranteed at minimum wage  1, 14, 22, 23, 24, 30
     Profit-sharing with workers  1
     Guaranteed annual income for all   1, 14
     Workers bigger voice in company  1
     Capitalism is OK - don't fool with it  2, 3, 20
     No limit on after-tax income  3, 20
     Profits should not be shared  3
     Business ethics should not be regulated by government  3, 21
     Business social spending is up to  it  3
     Nationalization of industry is wrong  3
     Taxes should be much reduced  3, 9, 15, 21
     Economic growth is not tied to technology 4
     Opportunity for financial advancement  5, 7,  15,  20, 32
     Good employment opportunities  6,  20, 31, 35
     Secure and stable economy  6, 8,  10,  12,  13,  16,  20, 21, 22, 31, 32
     Minimum inflation 7, 9,  15, 16,  20, 21, 31, 32, 35,  38
     Stable job structure  6, 8, 15,  19, 31
     Economic growth required 10, 20,  21, 31
     Functionality for today  is main  economic  criterion   10,  18, 21
     Equitable distribution of goods  and income  11, 14,  17,  24, 25
     Job must be challenging  and meaningful   11, 17, 20
     Marketplace should be more responsive to  esthetics   12
     Friendly, warm, protecting job  atmosphere  13,  19,  22
     Higher minimum wages  14
     Job protection, unemployment  insurance,  etc.   14, 22
     Participative management essential 17,  24
     Share corporation resources with society 17,  24
     Work and investment  should earn a fair  profit  18
     Higher corporate pensions  22
     Whole system  is wrong   24
     More regulation of  industry   24
     More consumer protection  24
     Business should spend much more on social concerns   24
     Economic goal is reasonable  prosperity—not rampant growth 25
     Leaders  should receive  meta-pay, not  huge salaries   25
     Materialism  is the  way  to  go   26
     Competition  is the  way   26
     Rugged  individualism makes  a good economic  system  26
     Economic progress  is a  rational matter   26
     Economic well-being is  not  important   27
     Economic progress  is a  process,  not a pragmaticism   28
     Purpose  of economics is leisure  28
     Purpose  of economics is realization of  higher potential   28
     Behavior-shaping  can enhance  economic productivity   29

                                     A-3

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POLITICAL ENVIRONMENT

     Unions should be freer to work for members  1
     Welfare recipients shouldn't be penalized for moonlighting  1
     Only slow change is acceptable  2
     Always obey the letter of the law  2
     World peace depends on economic aid to UDC  2
     Society's needs come before the individual's  2
     Force should be met with force  3
     The U.S. must not be subservient to the UN  3
     Initiatives should be left to individuals  3
     Union membership should not be job prerequisite  3
     The least government is best  3, 21
     Public education should be more independent of national government  4
     Police should enforce laws, not maintain order  4
     Government should not compel citizens to protect system  4
     OK for U.S. to relinquish power to supranational institution  4
     Communist threat is overestimated  4
     Policies should assume most people are trustworthy  4
     Radical change may be necessary  4
     Avenues for the individual to affect the system  5, 9
     Need local, community power  7, 24
     Need means of suppressing radicalism  8
     National defense too costly  9
     Need more national defense  9, 13, 21
     Don't expect moral perfection  10
     Politics should be pragmatic and practical  10, 13
     Need to attain much higher levels of equality  11, 24, 25, 34
     Need to attain much higher levels of justice  11, 17, 24, 25, 34
     Need to attain much higher levels of liberty  11, 24, 25, 34
     Government must be highly responsive to all citizens  11, 17, 24,  34
     Orientation should be to one world  11, 25
     Should stay out of personal affairs  12, 23
     Government's main purpose is to provide safety and security  13, 22
     If big brother!sin necessary for secure system, OK  13
     Government must give everyone a fair shake  14, 30
     To be heard in local affairs  14, 30
     We get it from both ends (i.e., rich and poor) 15
     Don't upset the applecart  16
     I should get favors  16, 26
     Politics need complete revamping  17
     Politicans have too much power  17
     Citizens should be much better informed  17
     Politics are for the individual,  not the system  17
     Need to attain much higher levels of opportunity  17, 24, 25
     Justice should go by letter of the law  18
     Anything goes,  if I'm protected  19
     We need democracy led by elite (me)   20

                                      A-4

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POLITICAL ENVIRONMENT (Continued)

     Job of government is to care for the failures  20
     Job of government is to defend the system  20
     Isolationism is good  21
     Need much wider participation in government by citizens  24, 25
     Need system for consensus decisions  24
     Government's purpose is to facilitate personal growth  25
     Civil liberties jazz is for the birds  19
     Those who have it,  should; hell with the others  26
     There is no political norm  27
     We relate to others by example, therefore...   27
     Good politics requires cooperative participation  28
     Political units should be neither too large nor toe small  28
     Politics is a major arena for farming men  29
     The law scares »nd threatens me  30
     Benefits and protection should be expanded  31
     Maintain at least minimum civil liberties  31
     The problem is how to get around the system  31
     A free press,  free speech, etc.  33
     Higher efficiency in system  33
     Societal stability is foremost  33
     Opportunity for complete participation in system  34
     Avoiding trouble with the law  35
     Is anyone listening—does anyone care?  38
                                  A-5

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PHYSICAL ENVIRONMENT

     Concern over  pollution  is  overdone  3
     Mandatory  sterilization is wrong  4
     Technology alone  cannot overcome many problems  4
     Need  decent apartments  at  reasonable rates  6, 35
     Good  housing  key  to  healthy  family life  7, 30, 35
     Need  good  public  transit to  schools, etc.  7
     Esthetic environment (so children will learn  appreciation of beauty)  7, 28
     Comfortable,  reasonable housing  8, 30, 31
     Esthetic surroundings important to well-being and happiness  8,  10,
           11, 12,  17,  24,  25, 34,  37
     Friendly,  helpful neighbors  are important  9
     Better facilities for elderly 9, 38
     Comfort  13
     Many  (social  and  recreational) facilities for the good (hedonistic)  life  13, 23
     Eliminate  slums,  rats,  bad sanitation  14, 24
     Need  city  playgrounds and  other places for children to play safely  14
     Extensive  and cheap  public services  16, 17,  22, 24
     Esthetics  second  to  "real" needs  16, 21, 24
     Urban renewal needed 20
     Better public transportation 20, 22, 24
     Better, cheaper,  handsomer public housing  14, 22, 24
     Government aid in buying houses  22
     Need  control  over my local environment  23
     Comfortable,  healthy, diverse surroundings, not lavish  25
     Organize physical environment for economic purposes  26, 28
     Surroundings  form the basis  of perceptions, ergo  28
     Rats, plumbing, slums  30
     Access to  public  services  31, 38
     Keep  the home (car,  plant, etc.) running /.SI
     Better surroundings,  car,  home, etc.  32
     Impressive, handsome community  33
     Better quality of goods 33
     Pleasant,  functional  home, car, services, etc.  34, 36, 38
     Finding a  good place to live within means  35
     Finding and retaining adequate housing  38
                                     A-6

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SOCIAL ENVIRONMENT

     Train so people can defend themselves in court  1
     Recreational facilities for poor are inadequate  1
     Education should deal with more practical matters  1, 20
     Needs of society over those of the individual  2
     A warm,  loving, protective family and community  2, 13, 21, 25,  32,  34,  36,  38
     Strong institutions increase individual freedom  2
     Family is central to human happiness and goodness  2, 7, 11, 13,  15,  20,  22
     Educational tuition should be deductible  2
     Down with deviance  2
     Practical matters come before ideals  3
     Private property is a good basis for society  3
     Educational system should be uniform  3, 22
     Educational system should emphasize alternative value systems  4
     Techniques for controlling people are improper  4
     Brutality is always wrong  4
     Technology cannot solve the serious problems  4
     Education should stress broad areas of arts, letters, science  4,  25
     Enculturation is not the purpose of education  4
     Social rights should be equal for all  4
     Obedience as a virtue is overdone  4
     Esthetics and creativity over practical matters  4
     Education should have many aims and ways  4, 12
     Justice is much more than written law  4
     More recreational facilities  5, 23, 32, 35
     Better schools and universities  5, 32
     Opportunity to meet interesting people  5, 6, 23
     Opportunity to travel  5
     Opportunity to do whatever I like  5
     Having a good time  5
     More chance to engage in outdoor activities  6
     Better local night school facilities  6
     Great sex life  6
     Sociable community  7, 32
     Pleasant work relationships  7
     Pleasant church relationships  7, 8
     Freedom from physical threat  7, 8, 9, 10, 14, 15, 20. 21, 31,  36,  38
     Freedom from property damage  7, 31, 32, 36, 38
     Inexpensive family recreational facilities  7
     Safe neighborhood  7, 8, 9, 14, 15, 20, 21
     Morally proper TV and other mass media  7
     Bigger and better police and fire services  8, 16
     Decent housing  9
     Decent transportation services  9
     Public education costs taxpayers too much  9
     Means of contacting others of similar (intellectual)  interests   11

                                      A-7

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SOCIAL ENVIRONMENT  (Continued)

     More support of  abstract, theoretic work and principles  11
     More advanced  education  11, 33
     More acceptance  of creativity and the non-regulation  12
     Jobs tend to express creativity  12
     Institutions tend to put everyone in same box  12
     Group norms should prevail over individualistic  13
     Keep the family  together  14, 22, 30, 31
     Need strong, authoritarian government  14, 19
     Need strong, authoritarian churches  14, 19
     Need strong, authoritarian family leadership  14, 19
     Need strong, authoritarian industrial leadership  14,  19
     Opportunity to get ahead is  foremost  15
     Many entertainment facilities to break boredom  15
     Too much senseless change  16
     Much good in traditional ways  16, 18, 21
     Educational opportunity  is foremost  16, 20
     Schools should teach universalistic ethics  17
     The individual comes before  the system  17
     Social stability is essential  18, 21, 22, 38
     Schools should emphasize logic, rationality  18
     Children should  be socialized in American success  20
     Work is more important than  play  20
     Home and family  should be inviolate  20
     Private education is needed  as well as public  20
     Religious (church) values central  21, 22, 30
     Enculturation  is the main purpose of education  16, 21
     Nice neighborhood, all pretty much the same  22
     Good public education  22, 35
     Free education through college  24
     More power to  local levels   24
     Education should socialize in the socialist mode  24
     Society should be geared to  promote self-actualization  25,  34
     Education should promote inner understanding  25
     Children are most prized possessions of society  25
     Interpersonal  (process)  relations are central  25
     Need more noncompetitive jobs and activities  25
     Accumulation of  goods  26
     Prestigeful job  of influence 26
     Since chaos is the law,  social environment undefinable  27
     No matter what,  man is essentially alone  27
     Self-realization ethic should govern  28, 34
     Ecological ethic should govern  28
     Sense of interdependence and oneness  28
     An environment that trains beneficially  29
     Access to formal religion  30, 31, 38
     Keeping the kids in school   31
     Getting the kids into college  32
                                      A-8

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SOCIAL ENVIRONMENT (Continued)

     More cultural opportunities  33, 34, 37
     Time for recreation, family  33
     Comfortable old age  33, 38
     Deep family relationships  34
     Need for sense of the cosmos 34
     Good setting for raising a family  35
     Getting children through college and launched  36
     Stable, one-world system  37
     Maintenance of family ties  38
     Specialized recreational facilities for elderly  38
                                      A-9

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HEALTH
     Free health care  1,  14, 24
     Health services should be more evenly distributed in population  1, 30
     Subsidize and insure  medical and dental care  1, 31
     Families with children should get a break on health bills  1
     Mentally ill should be committed by society  2
     Psychedelics  should  be  banned  2
     Health insurance  should  be cheaper  6, 7
     More effort should go to overcoming childhood diseases  7,  35
     Faster emergency  services needed  8
     Public health clinics are terrible places to be  9
     Need more geriatric R&D  9
     No way to avoid old folks home or dependency on family  9
     Robust physical health is essential  10, 13, 26
     Vigorous mental health is essential  11, 25
     Mental freedom to be  oneself is essential  12, 25
     Self-knowledge is key to health  12, 25
     Inspiration and creativity is key to health  12
     All the fun things are bad for your health  15
     The family physician  system is best  16
     Clinics are too impersonal  16
     Too much regulation of medicines, etc.  21
     National health care  for all  22, 24
     More R&D on addiction, alcoholism, etc.  23
     Mental hospitals  need thorough overhaul  24
     Stricter regulations  to  protect the innovent  24
     Place greater trust in the wisdom of the body  25
     Expect health to  vary—not meaningful  27
     Psychosomatic illness growing  28
     111 health may stem from technological change  28
     Need to be conditioned out of mental influences  29
     Better access to  health  care  30
     Medicine for kids  31
     Getting healthy diet  31, 38
     Paying doctor bills   32
     Avoiding depression—blues  33
     Doctors for pregnant  mothers  35
     Avoiding degeneracy   diseases  37, 38
                                    A-10

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NATURAL ENVIRONMENT

     Need places to get away from it all  5, 23
     Pollution is a major hazard  7, 24, 33
     City noise is bad  7
     Children need to get out into the country periodically 7
     Things should be rolled back to the way they were  8
     Some despoliation of nature is inevitable  10
     Need more appreciation of cosmic events  11
     Spaceship earth  11, 25, 34
     Every blade of grass is sacred  12
     Conservation above all  12, 17, 24
     Beautification of cities, highways, etc.  12
     Need more city parks, wild areas, national parks, etc.  13, 24
     Public lands should en enlayed and preserved  11
     More view and "gentlized" nature areas  13, 22
     Leave the ecology hullabullo to government  13
     Pollution isn't that bad—anyway you can move out  15
     Nature is great but people and progress come first  16, 18, 19, 20,  21
     Wilderness must be kept inviolate  17, 35
     Some pollution is inevitable—be reasonable  20
     Ecology costs too much  21
     More attention to the little outdoors  22
     Develop more near-in outdoor recreation areas  22
     Return to the land—communes, etc.  23
     Ecology liber alles  24, 35
     Aim should be human ecology—man/nature symbiosis  25
     Resource wastage must be stopped  25
     Mastery over nature remains the problem  26
     Source of affirming self  26
     Essential to self-understanding  28
     Man is but an animal  29
     Quality of tap water  31
     Disposing of garbage  31
     Quiet neighborhood  33, 36, 37, 38
     Access to wilderness 33
     Create a natural world  34
     Clean air and water  33, 36, 37
                                   A-ll

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PSYCHOLOGICAL ENVIRONMENT

     Parents should run the family with hand of Iron  1
     All this ESP, TM, paraX business is dangerous  1
     Life should have order, discipline, godliness  1
     One's first concern should be for others  2
     Mind-altering chemicals should be outlawed  2
     To excel, an individual must stand alone  3
     Patriotism is a great virtue  3
     Competition promotes progress  3
     The best rise to the top  3, 16
     Family norms should dominate social norms  4
     Intuitive knowledge is reliable  4
     Experiment with non-addictive, harmless drugs  4
     People are good  4, 25
     Job must be rewarding, fulfilling, well-paying  5, 10,  16,  20,  21
     Plenty of friends  5
     A trustworthy environment  5, 6, 7, 8, 13
     Getting ahead is very important  6, 16
     Self-regard  6, 9, 11, 20, 23
     Mutual respect among friends, family 6
     High morality (to teach children)  7, 15, 17, 18, 19
     Too much change is bad  8, 13, 21
     Having old, reliable friends  9
     Access to people and events  9
     Need of praise, fame, status  10, 11, 16
     Need to get things done  10, 16, 20
     Environment responsive to me as a person  11
     Means of extensive, fast communication with others  11
     Freedom to unfold in my way  12
     Excess of prejudice, hatred, inequality in society  12
     To build a pcoket of friendliness in harsh world  14, 30
     Not representative Influence in affairs  15
     Individuals, not institutions, should have the power 17
     Actions should be logical, calculated  18
     All things in moderation  18, 22
     I'll play the game if you'll protect me  19
     We need mastery over the environment  20
     Strict, authoritarian moral code  21
     Can trust only solid types like me  21
     Need many avenues of escape  23
     No control over my world  23
     Things too fixed—stodgy  24
     Need to meld work and play  25
     Progress is growth of people  25
     Self-actualization is central  25
     Peak experiences are central  25
     Need great openness among people  25
     Change for good reason is fine  25
     Goal is inner harmony  25           A  TO
                                          ™

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PSYCHOLOGICAL ENVIRONMENT (Continued)

     Need close, deep friendships  25, 33, 34, 36,  38
     Insight into self  25
     Up with the Protestant Ethic 26
     Wholly subjective  27
     More attention to subtle inner factors  28
     More attention to social-psychological factors  28
     More attention to spiritual attunement  28
     More attention to influence of physical surroundings  28
     Construct it so as to create appropriate behavior  29
     Acceptance of rigid code of ethics  30
     Trustworthy neighbors  31
     Opportunity for change  31
     World a bit too much  31
     Work that satisfies  32,:;33, 36
     Inner growth  34
     Inner contentment—serenity  34, 38
     Sense of opportunity for progress 33, 35
     Sense of accomplishment  33, 36, 37
     Sense of trust in human relationships  38
     Sense of self-worth—of being needed 38
                                   A-13

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EXPECTATIONS FOR THE FUTURE

     Things are really taking off  5
     The world is glowing now—this can't last  6
     High hopes, especially for the children  7
     The end is coming round the bend  9
     The past was better than the future is likely to be  10
     Great—a transformation is underway  12
     Things should be bigger, shinier  13, 20
     Hopeful, if lucky or times are better  14
     I'll do fine—but I'm not so sure about you  15
     Bigger and better if those radicals don't take over  16,  22
     Hopeful, but fear the worst  17
     Things will be good if we don't try to change everything  18
     This great nation will move on to greater glory  19
     Things are going to hell in a handbasket  21
     Very much in doubt  23
     Things will be better because I'll make 'em so  24
     Better, because the world is within me  25
     There are no expectations, only present reality  27
     Alternating despair and hope  28
     I don't expect much  30
     Warmer, closer, better  32
                                     A-14

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PRIME CAUSE OF PROBLEMS

     Neglect, being forgotten by friends and system  9
     My way is not sufficiently honored  12
     Too much change too fast  13, 21, 15
     The system is against me  14, 30
     Caught between the rich and the poor—I bear everyone's burden  15
     Liberals and radicals with too much power  16, 21
     Immorality, especially in high places  17
     Immoral system  17
     Irresponsible wildnesses and excesses  18
     Too much tampering and experimenting  20
     Constraints on a free system  20
     Others, the system—anything but the self  23
     Conservatives, crooks, liars, and frauds  24
     The Watergate syndrome  24, 17
     Insensitivity, indifference  25
     Unnecessary regulation  26
     Existence itself  27
     The technological society/industrialism  28
     Society  30
     Lack of opportunity  31
     Inflation, etc., will take all I have away  10
     We'll have to give up progress owing to shortages, inflation, etc.  10
     Status quoism could produce regression  12
     I haven't the influence to put the right people in power  14
     Environmentalists will put us back to primitive conditions  16
     Hopelessness  30
                                    A-15

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REMEDY FOR PRIME PROBLEMS

     Better environment in which to raise a family  7
     Society geared to people and their growth  12
     Slow down, relax, take it easy  13
     Return to proven traditional ways  13
     Have the system provide for all of my physical needs  14
     Soak the rich  15
     Throw the bastards out  17, 20
     A tough, authoritarian leader who'll enforce rules  18, 19
     Leave things alone—hands off 220
     Return to the good old days  21
     Make sure the pie is divided evenly  22
     Take my advice  24
     Cease to exist  27
     Transformed society  28
     "Them"  30
     Opportunity—a chance  31
     Work harder  32
     Give me my special niche  23
     Vote out the old fogies  24
     Personal wisdom and insight will remove external blockages  25
     Eliminate superindustrial state  28
     Produce post-industrial state  28
                                    A-16

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QUALITY OF LIFE
Intolerability Levels
1. Economic Environment
2. Political Environment
3. Physical Environment
 e Social Environment
5. Health
60 Natural Environment
7e Psychological Environment
iiate:
Typology;
                                              Group;
                                              Filled Out by;
      expectations    cause    remedy
                                      A-17

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                                             2.   SOCIAL  SECTOR  LIST (OTHER THAN SRI)
 INSTITUTE FOR Tig FUTURE
                                                         ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
                                                                                                            OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT b BUDGET
 I
M
CD
Security.
• violence
• sickness
• safety
• old age
• Job

Economic Prosperity!
Economic Environment'.
• work satisfaction
• income
• income distribution
• economic security

Political Environment;

Employment:
• work environment and job satisfaction
• employment security

Income :

• low income population
• income distribution
   • material standard of living

Justice:

   • effectiveness and equality of justice system

Spiritual:

   • diversity
   • opportunity for self-fulfillment

Environment:

   • air
   • water
   • sound
   • facilities

Culture;

   • education
   • recreation
   • leisure
   • media

National Security!

   • rhreat from Internal and external enemies

Involvement;

   • opportunities for participation

Civil Liberties!

   • voting
   • free speech
   • informed constituency
   • civil liberties
   • electoral/non-electoral  participation
   • government responsiveness

Physical Environment

   • housing
   • transportat ion
   • material quality
   • public services
   • aesthetics

Social Environment:

   • community
   • social stability
   • culture
   • physical security
   • family
   • socialisation
   • recreation

Health!

   • physical
   • mental
   • nourishment:

Natural Environment:

   • air and water quality
   • radiation
   • solid vaati!
   • toxicity
   • noise
   • level of personal income

Housing & Physical Environment:

   • housing and quality of living conditions
   • neighborhood quality
   • environmental quality

Education:

   • basic skills for everyone
   » opportunity for advanced learning

Leisure and Recreation;

   • time available
   • participation

Public Safety/Legal Justice:

   • safety from crime
   • equitable criminal justice

Health;

   • long life
   • physical and mental veil being

Population;

   • population
   • living arrangements
   • family structure

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                   2.  SOCIAL SECTOR LIST  (SRI)
    SECTOR


Physical
Environment
(Manmade)
Natural
Environment
Economics
       (Preliminary  List)
             ISSUES


Quality  of Goods &  Services



Housing


Built  Environment


Transportation


Recreation


Scenic Resources


Wilderness Areas &
Endangered Species

Open Space & Natural veg.

Natural Resources

Radiation
Pesticide

Air Quality

Water Quality



Income

Employment
                  Taxes
                  Social Welfare
  CONCERNS


 Pood  & Drugs
 Consumer Products
 Quality
 Availability

 Visual Qual. of Public Spaces
 Natural Hazards & Protection

 Safety & Operation
 Availability

 Opportunities
 Quality of Experience

 Preservation
 Quality

 Protection of
Availability

Availability

Protection


Visibility

Ecological effect
Visual Quality
Taste

Cost of living
Distribution
Availability
Quality of
Discrimination

Inflation
Availability
Quality
                                  A-19

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     SECTOR

Health
Psychological

Systemic


Social
Political
                           ISSUES

equal access to health care
equal quality of health care
equal cost of health care
adequate food/diet in both cost, nutrition,  and  quality

self-fulfillment

incomprehensibility/complexity
vulnerability of system

job discrimination
business ethics
family—divorce/child abuse
education: quality/availability/cost
women's lib

one man, one vote—representation proportion
honesty in government—Proposition 9
access to information—freedom of info.  act.
                                     A-20

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     3.  Literature Search Procedures
     Standards
     The search procedure for gathering standards for the QOL study began
at the federal level and then preceded to the state and local levels
as necessary.   The research team's approach involved several steps,  The
first was to look up pertinent legislation in several listings and indexes.
Useful guides were,  the  Congressional  Information  Service,  an index of
the  contents of  bills, hearings,  congressional  reports  and  committee
prints from 1970 on;  the Congressional Quarterly,  which contains  a
subject index  to articles discussing the  status of current  bills  and
analyzing the  issues surrounding important legislation;  the Monthly
Catalog of U.S.  Government Publications,  which  also indexes hearings,
committee prints and bills; and  the United States  Code  Annotated,  which
contains a general subject index to federal laws.
      A review  of federal law indicated whether  a federal mandate  or policy
existed for an issue.  More specific regulations and guidelines for the
laws were found  in the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) and the  Federal
Register.  The Code of Federal Regulations, codified into fifty titles,
contains the  substance of federal regulations for sperific programs
and  provides  also a current indicator  of which fedei^l programs  are
 alive and receiving funding.  To determine whether regulations have
been amended  or repealed, one can check the "codification Guide"  in the
 front of each daily issue of the Federal Register, as well as its
 cumulative monthly and quarterly guides.
                                    A-21

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     Definitions of eligibility  are often deferred to states or are



transmitted  in guidelines  issued annually by the Secretary of the Depart-



ment responsible for  issuing  regulations.  Most federal regulations



furnish program guidelines for states to follow but allow criteria for



eligibility  for a  specific program to be determined at the state and



local levels.  An  exception would be the federal welfare laws, which



give nationwide eligibility criteria.





     After reviewing  the regulations, the researchers requested



supporting literature from federal and  state agencies and from various



interest groups concerned. These are usually nonlegal summaries



restating policy and  regulations in more readable form than the CFR,



the Federal  Register,  or  other  official literature.






     A  final step  was interviewing federal,  state,  and local officials



directly,  in order to gain a better understanding of  the standards.  The



above approach was used in research for all  the  sectors, except in  the



social  area. This sector encompassed  the  issues of education, crime,



family, and  freedom to be.  In most instances, these  standards are



set at  state and local levels only and  can  be  found in state or district



codes.  For  example,  standards for education were found in the California



Education Codes, in the California  Civil Codes, as well as in  school



district codes.  Further information was obtained by  interviewing



school  officials.








     Objective and Subjective Data





     The QOL research team had no standard procedure  for gathering



objective and subjective data.   Most of the objective data came from



state and federal  sources  (Bureau of the Census, Bureau of Labor



Statistics,  or committee reports and hearings.)  To the extent  feasible,



we tried to  use objective  data included in the parallel MRI study
                                A-22

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(LIU, 1975).   Subjective data was obtained primarily from three  sources:



"Assessing the Quality of Life as People Experience It,"  by Frank M.



Andrews and Stephen B, Withey  of the Institute for Social Research,



University of Michigan; Social Indicators published by the Office of



Management and Budget in 1973; and public opinion polls such as  the



Harris, Gallup, and Roper polls.





     A detailed listing of the sources used appears in the bibliographies



following each sector writeup.
                                  A-23

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                                Appendix B
                         SECTOR/ISSUE EXEMPLARS
1.  Economics
General
     The economic sector of the Quality of Life study includes the issues
of income level and employment.  Within the issue of income level, are
the concerns of guaranteed income, cost of living, and credit opportunity.
Employment is defined as availability and quality of working conditions.
Both the issues and the specific concerns were determined by the criteria
set forth in the section on methodology (Appendix II).  The issue of
employment availability was chosen for extended analysis, for the follow-
ing reasons:
     •  Employment availability is essential to quality of life
     •  Objective data concerned with unemployment is regularly
        collected
     •  This issue illustrates how an established threshold level can
        actually change during periods of unusual stress.
     Conceptually, work  (employment) is viewed as a basic institution
through which individuals and  society experience  a reciprocal relation-
ship.  Traditionally we  find the  individual working both for  society
and his own ego needs.   Society provides  the means for obtaining  food,
clothing, and shelter and ego  satisfaction, neither society nor the
individual being able to function alone.  Employment  availability is a
basic concern of most people.   In fact, it can be assumed to  be of concern
to all people since everyone is dependent upon the stability  of the
economic  (and therefore  all  other) environment(s).  Therefore, the
relevance of employment  availability for  overall  qualify of  life  is of
central importance.   If  the  additional  factors of time--the  amount of
time the  average person  spends working—and health—the relationships
between work and mental  and  physical health—are  considered,  the  function
of work in  the  overall quality of life  becomes immense.  A work-related
                                   B-l

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 SECTOR:   ECONOMICS
 ISSUE:   Employment--Availability
    B,
      Basic Heed/Threshold

9  Comprehensive Employment
   and Training Act of 1973

   -  Sets standards of 6.5%
     unemployment which can
     be Inferred as the in-
     tolerability threshold
   (B-1-F-G1-3-1-Y-Y)

•  Employment Act of 1946
   -  Establishes general
     employment goals
   (B-1-F-G1-1-7-N-K)

•  Fair  Labor Standards Act^

   - Restrictions on the
    employment of child
    labor—generally 16
    years  of age
   (B-1-F-G1-3-1-Y-Y)
        Security
• Comprehensive Employment
  and Training Act of 1973

  - Provides assistance to
    areas of 100,000 or
    more when unemployment
    threshold is reached
  (B-2-F-G1-3-1-Y-Y)

• Emergency Jobs and Unem-
  ployment Assistance Act
  of 1974 (Amended Title
  VI of CETA)
  - Provides funding for
    public service jobs
  (B-2-F-G1-3-1-Y-Y)

• Wagner-Peyser Act of 1933
  - Established state employ-
    ment agencies
  (B-2-F-G1-1-7-Y-Y)

• Social Security Act.
  1971 Amendments
  - Established work incen-
    tive progrns (KIHJ to
    help AFDC recipients
    move quickly into appro-
    priate work
  (b-J-F-Gl-l-7-N-Y)

• Job Corps
  - Program for job training
    and placement for youth
  (B-2-F-G1-1-7-N-Y)

• Vietnam-era Veteran Re-
  adlustment and Assistance
  Act of 1972
  - Mandates Federal con-
    tractors to list job
    openings with local
    employment service
    agencies with special
    emphasis on selling
    jobs with Vietnam-era
    and  disabled veterans
  (B-2-F-G1-3-1-Y-Y)
                                      Equal Access
• Title VI Civil Rights Act
  of 1964
  - Prohibits employment
    discrimination
  (B-3-F-G1-3-1-Y-Y)
• Equal Employment Opportu-
  nity Act of 1972.  Title
  VII—Executive Order
  11246
  - Prohibits employment
    discrimination and
    provides for affirma-
    tive action programs
  (B-3-F-G1-3-4-Y-Y)

• Age Discrimination Act of
  1967
  - Prohibits employers of
    25 or more persona
    from discrimination
    against persons aged
    40-65 years
  (B-3-F-G1-3-1-Y-Y)
                                                              •  Standards
                                                              *  Objective Data
                                                              +  Subjective Data
                                                                                                  Ability to Influence
Equal Employment Opportu-
nity Act of 1972
- Provides direct contact
  to courts
(B-4-F-G1-3-4-Y-Y)
Comprehensive Employment
and Training Act of 1973
- Provides for continued
  research in expanding
  work opportunities and
  assuring access to those
  for all who desire It
(B-4-F-G1-1-7-N-N)

National Commission for
Manpower Policy
- Examines policies of
  manpower services in
  order to suggest ways
  of dealing with unem-
  ployment more effec-
  tively
(B-4:F-Gl-l-7-N-N)
                                                            B-2

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SECTOR:  ECONOMICS
ISSUE:  Employment--Availability (continued)

   B.                               B,
     Basic Meed/Threshold

• Bureau of Labor Statistics
  - City, county, state and
    national unemployment
    statistics
      9.01 California
      (Dec. 1974)
      9.11 San Francisco
      County (Dec. 1974)
      6.5S National
     Security
Department of Labor Annual
Report 1973
- Statistics on number of
 .Jobs provided through
  programs with number of
  persons potentially
  eligible for programs

  WIN Program FY73
    1,280,000 registered
      325,000 appraised
      142,000 placed in
      unsubsidized employ-
      ment
  U.S, Employment Service
                                     More  than 4.S million
                                     job placements
                                     - Veterans  1/5
                                     - Minority  group  337.
                                     - Poor persons  29%
                                   2.2 million agricultural
                                   placements
                                   395,000 Vietnam-era
                                   veterans
                                                                       Equal Access
* U.S. Department of Labor
  Statistics on unemployment
  by age, sex, race
  - 1973 unemployment rate
    by sex and color
        All White Negro ers
Males   4.1  3.7   7.6
Females 6.0. j.3  10.5
Total   4.9  4.3   8.9

* Manpower Program Digest
  Nov. 1974
  Unemployment rates:
  - young veterans (20
    to 24) *  117.
  - minority veterans
    - 23.21

* Manpower Administration
  - As of November 1974,
    123  Indian prime
    sponsors have been
    approved  under Title II
    of CETA
  Ability to Influence

Cases in which the courts
have ruled practices
discriminatory
                                + University of Michigan ISR
                                  How do you feel about your
                                  chance of getting a good
                                  job if you vent looking
                                  for one?
                                                          B-3

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SECTOR:  ECONOMICS
ISSUE:  Employment—Availability

    "l
      Basic Seed/Threshold
                                         Security
                                  Labor Management Reporting
                                  and Disclosure Act
                                  - Enforces and secures vol-
                                    untary compliance in
                                    connection with union
                                    activities, employee wel-
                                    fare and pension plan
                                    disclosures
                                  (H-2-F-G1-3-1-Y-Y)
                                                                        Equal Access
      Ability to Influence

• National Labor Relations
  Act
  - Provides bargaining
    agreements for union
    employees
  (H-4-F-G1-3-1-Y-Y)

• Labor Management Reporting
  and Disclosure Act
  - Provides assistance in
    improving labor-manage-
    ment relations
  (H-4-F-G1-1-7-N-N)
                                                             B-4

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identity is assumed to be common for most working people and a lack of
one can have a profoundly detrimental effect on those who are unemployed.
     The search for standards relating to this sector focussed on basic
federal  legislation for employment availability.  S^Qce this sector is of
such basic concern, numerous standards are known to exist at all levels:
federal, state and local.  It was impossible to include all relevant
standards and, therefore, it was decided to focus on the federal legislation
considered to be fundamental to all other relevant standards.

B  Column - Basic Need/Threshold

     The conceptual definition of employment availability (as inferred
from existing standards) is unemployment level, both for society as
a whole and for specific groups within society.  In attempting to define
the basic threshold level (B ), we asked, At what point is the level of
unemployment viewed as unacceptable?  Legislation establishing standards
for minimum unemployment threshold levels is discussed below.

     The most significant federal  standard  defining  the  threshold  level
is contained within the  Comprehensive  Employment and Training Act  of
1973 (CETA).  CETA provides  assistance for  areas of  100,000  or more
having  a rate of unemployment  equal  to or in  excess  of 6.5 percent for
three consecutive  months.   Since this  Act sets  a rate of 6.5 percent
unemployment  to obtain assistance, we  infer that this rate defines the
intolerability threshold.   This standard is quantitatively operational
in that  the threshold is based  on  a  measurement  of objective conditions.
     Data  for measurement of the objective  conditions is available from
the Department of  Labor. Types of relevant statistics regularly collected
                                  B-5

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 include:
      •  Percent national unemployment
      •  Percent state unemployment
      •  Percent county unemployment
 These statistics,  which are utilized by the Department  of  Labor to define
 objective conditions  of unemployment,  in fact exclude  a number of cate-
 gories of unemployed persons.   The Department of Labor  bases  the unem-
 ployment rate on the number of people in the civilian labor force.  This
 figure does  not, however, include civilians under sixteen  years of age,
 persons doing less than fifteen hours of work per week, seasonal workers
 who were temporarily working and who thus were not counted as unemployed,
 as  well as those who did not report that they had made  specific efforts
 to  find a job within the previous four weeks.  A subemployment index
 based on underemployment, such as the one developed by  Labor  Secretary
 Wirtz in 1966, would be a much better indicator of objective  conditions.
 This index included individuals whose earnings were below  the poverty
 level as  well as those who had been discouraged into dropping out of
 the labor force or who were working only part-time when they  actually
 desired full-time  work.  Comparing the statistics based on Wirtz's
 index with the figures based on the Department of Labor's  unemployment
 categories,  it becomes obvious that the intolerability  threshold of
 6.5 percent  unemployment, does not truly reflect actual conditions of
 employment availability as it  relates to an individual's basic needs.*
      The  Emergency Jobs and Unemployment Assistance Act of 1974  (EJUA)
 changed the  established threshold level in that it allocates  a portion
 of  funds  for securing public service jobs on the basis  of  4.5 percent
*
 William J.  Spring,  "Underemployment:   The Measure We Refuse to Take,'
New Generation, 53,1 (Winter  1971).
                                  B-6

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unemployment in an area.  This certainly is an example of a change, at



least a temporary one, in a threshold level during a period of unusual



stress.  But since the rationale for this change seems to be one of



preventing areas with lower unemployment rates from reaching the established



intolerability threshold and since most of the funds are still allocated



on the basis of 6.5 percent unemployment, this Act is listed in the



security section of the matrix, rather than the basic need/threshold



(B ) column.





     A second standard in the basic need/threshold column, the Employ-



ment Act of 1946, is also relevant to employment availability.  This



federal legislation mandates that the President will, at the beginning



of each session in Congress, set levels of employment production, and



purchasing power  that can be met in the United States to maintain and



foster a free competitive enterprise and general welfare.  Unlike the



Emergency Jobs and Assistance Act, however, the Employment Act of 1946



is not an operational one; rather, it sets descriptive goals but does



not attempt to specify thresholds or measurement of goals.





     The last standard listed at the threshold level is the Fair Labor



Standards Act which sets restrictions on the use of child labor.  This



Act is operational in that there are direct measures of violations of



employment restrictions on youth under sixteen years of age.  Systematic



data regarding this standard is collected, and remedial action is



mandated when the standard is not met.





     The subjective conditions of this sector are reflected in public



attitudes towards job availability and unemployment.  Sample survey



data concerned with attitudes of individuals toward their ability to



find a job that will fulfill the basic needs are relevant.  (It seems



likely that the subjective conditions would be found similar to the



data reflected by the Wirtz index).  Indirect measures of subjective
                                  B-7

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 conditions may also be useful as,  for example,  accounts  of attempts by



 organized groups to make the government more responsive  to employment



 attainment.








 B  Column - Security






      The next column in the matrix is concerned with basic security



 needs (B ).  In attempting to define these needs,  we view  security as it



 relates to the standards at the basic threshold level.   The question asked



 is  -  What insures us that the minimum threshold levels enacted by the



 standards will be met?





      The first act found relevant is the most recent one,  the Emergency



 Jobs  and Unemployment Assistance Act (EJUA) which  created  a new  Title VI



 of  CETA.  The main purpose of CETA is to establish or provide programs



 that  will insure job training and employment opportunities  "for



 economically disadvantaged, unemployed, and underemployed  persons, and



 to  assure that training and other services lead to maximum employment



 opportunities and enhance self-sufficiency by establishing a flexible



 and decentralized system of federal, state, and local programs."  The



 security question is answered by the mandate that  such programs  are to



 be provided when the threshold level is reached.





      The temporary EJUA program is more specific and is  designed to



have  an immediate impact at the local level by  reducing  high



unemployment rates.   This program makes funds available  for public



service  jobs.   These funds must be used within  a specific  limited time



period  ending June 30,  1975.   The  trigger points for funding are
                                 B-8

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as follows:

     Of the funds which will be appropriated among eligible applicants
               *
(prime sponsors ) ninety percent will be distributed according to the
following basic formula:

     •  Fifty percent in proportion to each area's share of unemploy-
        ment as compared to the number of unemployed persons in the
        entire nation
     •  Twenty-five percent in proportion to an area's share of
        unemployment in excess of 4.5 percent
     •  Twenty five percent to be distributed  among areas  of substantial
        high unemployment, which would be an unemployment  rate of  at
        least 6.5 percent  for three consecutive months.

     The remaining ten percent of funds  is  to  be used by  the Secretary
of Labor for specific problems.

     The impact  of both CETA and  EJUA can be measured directly by  the
number of  jobs provided and the  resultant effect on  the overall unemployment
rate.  However,  the standard provides security only  for a finite number  of
jobs; it does not actually provide  security that enough jobs will  be
created to lower the unemployment rate  to or below 6.5 percent.
Additionally,  the EJUA  Act is  a  temporary program, not to exceed twelve
months.   It is assumed  that  if unemployment rates  are  still above  6.5
percent at the end of twelve months,  legislation will be  enacted either
 to  extend  this program  and/or  to create a new  program.
 if
   "Comprehensive Employment Assistance Act of 1973."  A prime sponsor
 can be a state,  a unit of general local government with a population
 of 100,000 or more persons, any combination of units of general local
 government having a population of 100,000 or more, or any unit of
 general local government, without regard to population, which is determined
 by the Secretary of Labor (1) to serve a substantial portion of a
 functioning labor market area or (2) to be a rural area with a high
 level of unemployment and a demonstrated capability of carrying out an
 assistance program as effectively as the state

                                  B-9

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      The Wagner-Peyser Act  of  1933  also  sets  security  standards by
 providing for employment services.   The  U.S.  Employment  Service is
 designed to furnish placement,  counselling,  industrial,  and  labor
 services.  It sets goals for increased job placements  but does not
 seem to set any thresholds  of  intolerability.  The  objective conditions
 of the security provided by this  service can be obtained by direct
 measure of the number of jobs  provided as a percent of the potential
 number of people eligibile  for employment services  (possibly the target
 population includes everyone who  is unemployed).
      Other federal legislation provides  security that  employment
 opportunities will be made  available to  specific groups  within the
 population.  In addition to the programs listed on  the matrix (WIN,
 Job  Corps, Vietnam-era veterans), EJUA and CETA give special considera-
 tion to certain groups.  EJUA's general  requirements for all applicants
 are  that they must be experienced workers who have  exhausted all
 unemployment benefits or are ineligible  for these and, also, who have
 been jobless for fifteen weeks or longer.
      Both CETA and EJUA give special consideration  to  those  unemployed
 persons who served in the Armed Forces in Indochina or Korea on or aftei
 August  5,  1964 in filling transitional public service  jobs;  persons
who  received dishonorable discharges are excluded.   The  goal of the
Veterans  Action Plan, 1975, is a  total of one million  placements,
with targets for the following public agencies:
      •   By state employment services, 333,000
      •   Through the National Alliance of Businessmen,  200,000
      •   In the federal government,  70,000.
      Some  CETA funds are provided to create  additional manpower services
for  certain groups who need to be employed but who  have  particular
difficulty obtaining employment.  These  groups include youths, offenders,
                                B-10

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persons of limited English-speaking ability, and older workers.



     Examples of other relevant programs are Indian manpower programs for



Indian and Alaskan native communities where serious unemployment,  along



with economic hardships, exist.  The Migrant and Seasonal Farmworker



Manpower Program provides assistance where "chronic seasonal unemploy-



ment and underemployment in the agricultural industry exist."  Youth



programs and other special programs provide part-time employment,  on-the-



job training, and useful working experience for:  (1) students from



low-income families who are in the 9th through 12th grades of school or



who are of an equivalent age and in need of income to permit them to



resume or maintain attendance in school; and (2) unemployed or under-



employed, or low-income persons age sixteen and over.



     The objective conditions for all of the above programs can be



measured by the number of jobs provided as a percent of the target popu-



lation .



     The subjective conditions of security can be found in public atti-



tudes towards security both in finding and keeping employment that ful-



fills the basic needs.  The question, "How do you feel about the pay and



fringe benefits you get and security of your job?", from the Institute



for Social Research study on the quality of life, serves as an example



of an attitudinal research question.  Unfortunately, this particular



question is triple barreled and refers to security as well as quality of



present employment.  Attitudinal questions or scales concerned only with



employment security would be more appropriate.








Bo Column — Equal Access



     The next column in the matrix, basic equal access (83), relates back



to security.  The question asked is, "What insures that all persons have



equal access to the employment opportunities provided?"  The forerunner



of federal legislation that insures to some degree equal access to
                                    B-ll

-------
 employment without fear of discrimination is  the  Civil Rights Act of

 1964.  This Act prohibits discrimination because  of  race, color, reli-

 gion, sex, or national origin "in any term, condition, or privilege of

 employment."  Although the Civil Rights Act set the  intolerability

 threshold for equal access, it did not set up a means for assessing

 when a threshold was reached, except through  specific court actions.

      The Equal Employment Opportunity Act of  1972 greatly strengthened

 the powers and expanded the jurisdiction of the Equal Employment Oppor-

 tunity Commission in enforcing the Civil Rights Act.  As amended, Title

 VII now covers:

      • All private enterprises employing fifteen  or more persons

      • All educational institutions, public and private

      • State and local governments

      • Public and private employment agencies

      • Labor unions with fifteen or more members

      • Joint labor-management committees for  apprenticeship and
        training


The method of assessing when the intolerability threshold for equal ac-

cess is reached is based on direct measures such  as number of employees

within specific job categories by sex and race  as well as court decisions.

In  cases where an employer feels that direct  measure does not reflect the

requirements of a specific job,  a technical validation procedure is re-

quired.   Another relevant act is the Age Discrimination in Employment

Act  of   1967.   This Act prohibits employers of  twenty-five or more per-

sons from discriminating against persons forty  to sixty-five years for

any  job because of age.  Direct  measures such as  the ages of new employees

as well  as ages of employees laid off can be used for assessing when this

threshold  is  reached,  although there appears  to be no requirements for

systematic collection  of  data.
                                  B-12

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     The objective conditions of basic equal access can be observed in
Bureau of Labor Statistics figures on unemployment by age, sex,  and race.

the statistics listed on the matrix show that unemployment is higher for

both females and non-whites.  Additionally, it can be observed that
non-white females have the highest unemployment.  If one considers the

method of computing unemployment rates (discussed previously in  the

basic needs/threshold section), it is quite likely that the true unemploy-

ment rates for females and non-whites are actually higher than those re-
flected in the Bureau's statistics.

     The subjective conditions of basic equal access can be found in

public attitudes towards discrimination in employment opportunities.

Questions such as the following would be appropriate:

     « Do you feel that individuals are usually hired for a job because
       of their ability to perform the work well?

     • Do you feel that all applicants for a job are given an equal
       chance?
64 Column — Ability to Influence
     The last column in the basic needs matrix is concerned with ability
to influence (B^).  This need level is viewed in relation to all three

previous levels:  threshold, security, and equal access.  The question

asked is, "What ability do individuals have to influence standards at

the other levels?"
     The most relevant act is the Equal Employment Opportunity Act, as
amended in 1972.  This Act allows discrimination charges to be filed by

organizations on behalf of aggrieved individuals, as well as by employees

and job applicants themselves.  EEOC has direct contact now with the

courts.  The federal government has established litigation centers in

five regions to provide more rapid and effective court  action.  The courts
                                  B-13

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may enforce specific affirmative actions by numerical hiring promotional

goals.  Action under all these laws on behalf of individuals or groups

may be taken to court by individuals, private organizations, trade

unions, and other groups.  When a discrimination charge is filed against

an employer, it is up to the employer to prove that the discrimination

is not occurring.

     Other federal legislation showing a concern with this need is again

found in CETA which provides for continued research in expanding work

opportunities and in assuring access to work for all who desire it.

Additionally, the National Commission for Manpower Service was established

to examine the policies of manpower services in order to suggest ways and

means of dealing with unemployment more effectively.

     Other standards concerned with the ability to influence employment

availability are related directly to the political sector.  The right

of citizens to vote, to lobby, and to be participants within the decision-

making process are all means which individuals can use to influence em-

ployment availability.

     The objective conditions of the basic ability to influence can be

observed somewhat by researching court cases that have involved discrimi-

nation charges.  Examples of such cases include:  Newton v. Anaconda

Aluminum Co.; U.S. v. Virginia Electric Power Co.; Robinson v. Lorrillard

Corp.; U.S. v. Household Finance Corp.; Schultz v. Wheaton Glass Co.,

Madlock v. Sardis Luggage Co.; and U.S. v. Libbey-Owens Ford Co., Inc.

     The subjective conditions of the basic ability to influence are

again reflected in individual attitudes.  Sample survey data of responses

to the following types of questions would be appropriate:

     • How do you feel about the amount of influence you can have in
       finding a job?

     • Do you feel that you can have any influence in setting standards
       for employment opportunities?
                                   B-14

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       Do you  feel  that  there is any place you can go to for hel p if
       you have  trouble  finding a job?
HI Column — Higher Threshold Level

      In  attempting to  find policy  level  indicators of thresholds at the

higher needs levels, we were concerned with employment availability at

a level  beyond  that of only acquiring a  job.  At the higher threshold

level, employment availability  becomes concerned with the quality of the

job  itself; the quality of working conditions is viewed as a separate

circumstance.  Through work, many  higher needs can conceivably be met:

ego  needs, social needs,  and self  actualization needs.  Therefore, the

definition of employment availability becomes the availability of "good"

or "meaningful" employment which could   fulfill the above needs.

      Within the course of our study, we  did not find policy level stan-

dards relating  to the  higher threshold level of employment availability.

Possible reasons for this gap include, first, a problem with our defini-

tion of  higher  level employment needs since terms such as "good" and

"meaningful" are so value-laden.   Second,  it is possibly due to the

matrix categorization  and to overlaps with other sectors.  Finally,

there may not,  in fact, be any  thresholds  set at the higher needs level.

Since we have been able to find indicators of both objective and subjec-

tive conditions, however, it seems likely  that the problem is not with

the  matrix or our definition, but  is due to a gap at the policy level.

      The objective conditions of the higher threshold level exist in

data concerned with employee satisfaction/dissatisfaction.  Data con-

cerned with responses  to  questions whether the respondents would choose

the  work they now do if they could start over again is relevant.  The

subjective conditions  can be determined  by data that reflects the desire

for  employment  to be satisfying.
                                  B-15

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 H.2 Column — Higher Security



      The higher security level relates back to the higher threshold  level



 and is concerned with assurance that the standards at the policy level



 will be met.  Since we were unable to find standards at the threshold



 level, it does not seem surprising that we were unable to find  standards



 relating to higher security, although, again, we can find indicators of



 the objective conditions.



      The objective conditions of security can be viewed in statistics



 showing unemployment rates for specific occupations,  as,  for example,



 the number of teachers or physicists unable to find  work within  their



 profession.  The subjective conditions of higher security can be deter-



 mined by analyzing results of attitudinal questions  concerning  respondents'



 ability to find employment that could meet higher needs.   The question,



 'How do you feel about your chance of getting a good  job if you  went



 looking for one?", from the Institute for Social Research quality of



 life study,  is appropriate.








 H3 Column — Higher Equal Access



      The ability to have equal access to higher level  employment oppor-



 tunities is  the concern of this part of the matrix.  The  inability to find



 standards relating to higher equal access seems to be  related to the idea



 that  equal  access  is such a basic  concern that  there are not separate



 standards  relating to it at a higher level.  The standards  listed at the



basic  level  actually are in effect at the higher level  also.



     The objective  conditions of higher equal access are probably best



viewed in statistics  concerned  with employment  broken down  by sex, race,



and age.




     The subjective conditions  would  be  reflected  in attitudes towards



the ability to secure higher  level  jobs  broken  down by  the  same  factors.
                                   B-16

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H4 Column  — Higher Ability  to  Influence
     The higher ability  to influence  is viewed in relation to an indivi-
dual's ability to  influence  the previous higher level standards.  Even
though there are not actual  standards at the other levels, there do appear
to be some standards at  this level.
     Title VII of  Public Law 92-854 requires annual employee performance
evaluation in all  companies  having twenty-five or more employees, as well
as government contractors  and government agencies.
     The National  Labor Relations Act which provides for bargaining agree-
ments for  union employees  also  sets a standard at this level.  Both of
the above  Acts give individuals some  ability to influence the quality of
employment.
     There is one  sector which  is generally thought to be closely re-
lated to the higher levels of employment availability, namely, education.
If we were to adhere to the  assumption that higher education and, thus,
more professional  types of jobs, are  related to higher levels of employ-
ment satisfaction, we could  find in education legislation additional
policy level standards for the  ability to influence, specifically, legis-
lation concerned with compulsory education to age sixteen, equality in
education,  and the availability of federal funds for compensatory and
continuing education.
     The objective conditions of the  ability to influence can be found
in statistics relating to unionization and demands met through unions.
Additionally, information concerned with informal lines of communication
involving  the availability of good jobs is applicable.
     The subjective conditions  of the ability to influence are reflected
in individuals'  attitudes towards their ability to influence the attain-
ment of a  good job.
                                   B-17

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 ECONOMICS SECTOR
 ISSUE:   Personal Income
         - Income level
         - Opportunity for credit
     Basic Seed/Threshold
Concern:   What are the pre-
sent indicators that insure
people  an adequate income
when needed?
                              Security
                                                         Equal Access
                    Concern:  What measures pro-
                    vide security that  the mini-
                    mum will be met?
                               Concern:  To what portion of
                               the population are the
                               assurances of adequate income
                               applicable?
                                  Ability to Influence

                              Concern:  To what degree is
                              the individual or group of
                              individuals able to influence
                              the minimum thresholds in
                              providing a needed income?
• Poverty Threshold
  1974  OEO Poverty Guide-
  lines-Revised annually or
  sooner  if feasible and
  desirable
  Family    Ron
   Site     Farm    Farm
    1      $2,330   $1,980
    4       4,550    3,870
    7       6,770    5,750
  (B1-F-G13-3-1-N-Y)
• Eligibility for Unemploy-
  ment Insurance by State
  - Maid mm amount payable
    In California is 26
    tines the weekly
    benefit
  (B1-FS-G3-1-Y-Y)
• Eligibility  for  Supple-
  mental Social  Security
  Assets:
  Income:
Single  Couple
$1,500  $2,250*
           585,
              390
            1,680   2,520J
  Blind, disabled, aged  (over
  65 years)
   (excluding home, home
  goods, and insurance
  valued less than $1,500)

   Maximum quarterly

   MsiMimm yearly
  Payment per Month

  $140 - Single
  $210 - Couple
  (B1-FS1-G1-3-3-Y-N)
• Social  Security  Act

  (Supplemental)
  - Guaranteed  income for
    aged, blind and disabled
  * Pension benefits for
    persons who paid into
    Social Security
  - Guaranteed cost of liv-
    ing increases  in Social
    Security benefits when
    Consumer Price Index
    exceeds 3 percent
  -  AFDC (aid to families
    with dependent children

  (B2-FSL-G1-3-7-N-Y)

• EJUA-Emergencv Job Unem-
  ployment Assistance Act
  of 1974

  -  Established employment
    programs for 1 year in
    needed areas.   Also
    extends unemployment
    insurance benefits.
    Maximum salary $10,000

• CETA-Comprehensive Employ-
  ment Training Act of 1973
  - Provides assistance in
    establishing public
    service programs when
    unemploynent exceeds 6.5
    percent in a populated
    area of 100,000 or more

  (B2-FSL-G1-3-1-N-Y)
• Civil Rights Act
  Titles VI and VII
  - Prohibits employment or
    any other kind of dis-
    crimination because of
    sex, creed, religion,
    national origin or
    color
  (B3-F-G1-7-Y-N)

• Age Discrimination in Em-
  ployment Act of 1967
  - Promotes the employment
    of the older worker
    based on ability rather
    than age.   Prohibits age
    discrimination for most
    Individuals who are at
    least 40 but less than
    65 years of age
  (B3-F-G1-7-Y-N)

• Equal Pay Act of 1963
  - Prohibits pay discrimi-
    nation on the basis of
    sex.  Only applies to
    employees  subject to the
    minimum wage
  (B3-F-G1-3-7-Y-N)
                                                    •  Economic Opportunity Act
                                                      of 1964 -  Job Corps

                                                      -  Must  be  at  least 14 but
                                                        not yet  22  years at time
                                                        of enrollment
                                                      -  Low income  individual or
                                                        member of low income
                                                        family
                                                      -  Living in a cultural de-
                                                        prived environment or in
                                                        a disruptive home life
                                                      - Must be  free of medical
                                                       and behavioral problem?
                                                      (B2-FSRL-G1-3-1-Y-N)
                                                                                  • National Labor Relations
                                                                                    Act
                                                                                    -  Any  individual or group
                                                                                      of employees may present
                                                                                      grievances directly to
                                                                                      the  employer providing
                                                                                      the  bargaining repre-
                                                                                      sentative has been given
                                                                                      the  opportunity to be
                                                                                      present
                                                                                    (B4-F-G1-3-7-Y-H)

                                                                                  • Private Pension Plans

                                                                                  • Courts
                                                          B-18

-------
ECONOMICS SECTOR
ISSUE:  Person*! Income    (continued)
        - Income level
        - Opportunity for credit
  B,
    Basic Need/Threshold
                                        Security
                                                                     Equal Access
                                                                                                  Ability to Influence
                               •  Food Stamp Act-(1964)

                                  Secretary of Agriculture
                                  semi-annual maximum
                                  allowable monthly  Income,
                                  January  1975:
                                                     Food
                                  Bouse-   Maximum     Stamp
                                  hold    Allowable   Allot-
                                  Slze    Income      ment
                                 Economic Opportunity Act
                                 of 1964 - Title IV
                                 - Provides management
                                   assistance and loans up
                                   to $25,000 with a maxi-
                                   mum maturity of 15 years
                                   to low income persona
                                   for small business in
                                   urban and rural areas of
1
2
3
4
:5

6
7
8
9
10
$ 194
280
406
513
606

700
793
886
959
1032
(B-2-F-G3-3-1-1
$0 to $46
NA
HA
NA
NA

NA
NA
$266
NA
NA
J-N)
high unemployment
(B2-F-G1-3-1-Y-N)

• Indian Financing Act of

1974

- Provides capital on a
reimbursable basis to
help develop and utilize
Indian resources to pro-
mote a higher standard
of living
  Counties apply  to  the
  State Department of  Social
  Services to  operate  a
  Food Stamp Program
  (B-2-F-G1-1-7-N-N)

* Income  Tax Lavs
  -  Tsxes figured according
     to income  level, marital
     status and number  of
     dependents

   (B2-FR-G13-3-1-Y-Y)

• Grants  to states for employ-
  ment compensation

• Fgdera1 - S t a t es  Unemp 1 oyjnen t
  Compensation Act of  1970

  - Extended unemployment
    compensation
  (B2-FSRL-G13-1-N-Y)

• Emergency Unemployment^ Coin^
  pensation Act of 1971
  (voluntary state partici-
   pation only)
  - Provides further compensa-
    tion 'for those who have
    exhausted  their  regular
    and extended  compensation

  (B2-FSL-G1-3-1-N-Y)
                                                                 (B2-F-G1-3-1-Y-N)
                               •  Economic  Opportunity  Act
                                  -  Job  Corps
                                    $35  per month  allowance  for
                                    all  enrollees  for first  6
                                    months-not  to  exceed  $50
                                    thereafter
                                  -  Compensation benefits for
                                    disability  or  death for
                                    Job  Corps enrollees.  (Same
                                    as Grade GS-2 federal  employee)
                                  (B2-FSLR-GU3-1-N-Y)

                                               B-19

-------
ECONOMICS  SECTOR

ISSUE:   Personal Income  (continued)
         -  Incone level
         -  Opportunity for credit

  Bl                                  *2                              *3                          **
    Basle  Need/Threshold       	 Security	   	Equal Access	        Ability to Influence

                                • Pension Reform  Act  of  197S

                                  -  Provides  protection
                                     against the loss  of
                                     pension
                                  -  Must  be at  least  25  or
                                     have  1 year of  service
                                     to  qualify

                                  (B2-F-61-3-1-Y-H)

                                • Disaster Relief Act
                                  -  Provides  temporary
                                     assiatance  in the form
                                     of  mortgage,etc. payments
                                     in  financial  hardship
                                     areas caused  by a major
                                     natural disaster

                                  -  Also  provides assistance
                                     to  those  unemployed
                                     because of  a  najor
                                     disaster
                                  (B2-FSRL-G3-1-6-N-N)

                                • Trade Expansion  Act
                                  -  Provides  assistance to
                                     vorkers adversely
                                     affected  by increased
                                     Imports from  foreign
                                     trade
                                  (B2-F-01-1-6-N-N)

                                • Snvoer  Act  (PL  67-85)
                                  -  Provides  assistance  for
                                     living needs  to needy
                                     Indians on  reservations
                                     when  assistance is not
                                     available from  state or
                                     local public  areas
                                   (B2-F-C1-3-1-7-N-N)

                                • Fair  Labor  Standards Act
                                  of 1938
                                  -  Periodically  changes the
                                     ainlBum vage  level.  Recent
                                     changes have  occurred in
                                     1968  and  1974.  Present
                                     1974  wage is  $2.10 per hour
                                     for n&n-agricultural em-
                                     ployees and $1.60 for
                                     agricultural workers
                                  (B2-F-G1-3-2-7-H-Y)

                                • Emergency Employment Act of
                                  1971

                                  -  Provides  for  public service
                                     programs  when national unem-
                                     ployment  exceeds 4.5 percent
                                     and 6 percent for local  areas
                                     for three consecutive months
                                  (B2-F-9-L-C1-3-3-N-N)

                                • California  State Disability
                                  -  Provides  financial  assist-
                                     ance  for  loss of work  due
                                     to  sickness or  injury
                                  (B2-S-C1-3-2-Y-N)

                                              B-20

-------
SECTOR:  ECONOMICS

ISSUE:  Personal Income

  B!
    Basic Need/Threshold

* Department of Labor
  Statistics

  - Social Security Benefits
    of 29 million Americans
    are tied directly to
    the Consumer Price In-
    dex fluctuations

* Statistical Abstract of
  theLU_._S.

  - In 1971, approximately
    16.2% of all white
    families income level
    was below $5,000

1972 Statistics
Economic Report to the
President
* 11 percent below poverty
  level

* 33 percent of female-
  headed households below
  poverty level

* 6 percent were male

* 53 percent of black fe-
  male headed households
  below poverty level

* 18.i percent of popul?
  tion were 65 and over

* Adjusted income levels
  by geographic area

* Percent of full-time
  employed at less than
  poverty wages
        Security
* Average minimum wage  in-
  crease for past five  years

Statistical Abstract of the
U.S. 1973
* Percent below low income
  level in 1969:
  - Alabama   22.1%
  - New York  11.5%

* 13.3 percent of U.S.  popul-
  ation receive one or  more
  benefits

* Average amount of benefits
  for retired is $165.4 and
  for disabled $197.3 (1973)
* Amount of fiscal budget
  spent on social welfare

* Average amount received
  for unemployment per state

* Number of California citi-
  zens collecting disability
  --average amount received
  - Number turned down
                                      Equal Access
* Number of Job Corps en-
  rol lees by SMSA

* Percent of minorities on
  welfare

* Percent minorities at
  minimum wage level

1974 Economic Report to the
President
* 1969 average female
  annual salary was 62 per-
  cent of a male's average
  salary

* 1973 average usual week-
  ly earnings of male
  worker, 35-44 years with
  12 years education

  - White male, $231
  - Black male, $178

* National Association of
  Counties Research
  Foundation

  - For 1972, 12 percent
    of all families and
    35% of all black
    families were headed by
    women
	Ability to Influence

* Number of Job Corps
  trainees by age and sex
  per SMSA

* Number of strikes per
  year based on cost of
  living increases per SMSA

* Percent union employed

* Percent of involuntary
  part-time employment
                                                                                             + How discouraged  ou are
                                                                                               before negotiating for
                                                                                               pay increases
  university of Michigan
  ISR

  - What do you have to pay
    for basic necessities?
•i- University of Michigan
  ISR

  - How secure are you
    financially?
+• University of Michigan
  ISR

  - The usefulness,  for you
    personally, of your
    education and abilities
-1- University of Michigan
  ISR

  - Ability to influence
    minimum wage
                                                            B-21

-------
ECONOMICS  SECTOR

ISSUE:  Personal Income
        - Income Level
        - Opportunity for credit
_ Basic Seed/Threshold

• Consigner Price  Index--1967
  Base Year  ("cost  of
  living")
  Bureau of  Labor Statistics

  - The official  "market
    basket"  of  the  Bureau of
    Labor Statistics  which
    makes up the  CFI  covers
    396 different types  of
    goods and services put
    together in 1961-62

  (H2-G3-3-1-N-N)

• Bankruptcy Laws

  (H1-FS-G1-3-1)

» Eligibility for Credit
  (i.e. Bank of America)
        Security
                                        Equal  Access
                                                                  Ability to Influence
                °T Loans^

  - FHA
  - Veterans  loans
  - Conventional loans
  (General  mortgage loans)
  To qualify  for a loan a
  person must have worked
  for  at least 1 year and
  have 1 year of residency
  in the same area. Amount
  of loan  is  usually 1/5 of
  gross income or 1/4 of
  net  income
  (H1-L-NG2-3-1-N-N)
• Equal Credit Opportunity
  Act

  - Extended credit

  (H2-F-G1-3-1-7-Y-N)

• Consumer Credit Protection
  Act of 1970

  - Protects consumer by re-
    quiring full disclosure
    of the terms and conditions
    of credit transactions
  - Restricts the total garnish-
    ment of wages- only 25
    percent
  - Restricts discharge from
    employment by reason of
    garnishment

  (H2-F-S-G1-3-1-7-Y-NJ

• Fair Credit Reporting Act
  of 1971

  - Protects consumers against
    the circulation of inaccu-
    rate or obsolete informa-
    tion
  - Requires consumer report-
    ing agencies to exercise
    responsibilities in a fair
    and equitable manner

  (H2-F-S-G1.3-1-7-Y-N)
• Real Estate Protection Act
  of 1974
• National Labor Relations
  Act
  - Provides for individual
    and collective bargain-
    ing for union workers

• Stock options for executives

• Security Exchange
  Commission
  - Rules and regulations
    concerning the issuing
    of new stocks
                                  (H2-F-S-G1-3-1-7-Y-N)
                                • Federal Depositors  Insur-
                                  ance Corp.

                                  (H2-F-G1-3-N-Y)

                                • Union Contracts
                                  - Escalator clause  for cost
                                    of living increases
                                          /

                                • Severance Pay
                                  - Private companies
                                                            B-22

-------
ECONOMICS SECTOR

ISSUE: Personal Income  (continued)
       - Income level
       - Opportunity for credit
       Security
* Percent with garnished
  wages per SMSA

* Number of credit card
  applications refused per
  SMSA
    Basic Need/Threshold

Bureau of Labor Statistics
* Paychecks for 5.1 million
  workers are covered by
  contracts with escalator
  clauses tied to the
  Consumer Price Index

  - Incomes of another 44
    million are affected by
    movements in the index

  - Benefits of 2 million
    retired military per-
    sonnel, federal civil
    service workers and sur-
    vivors and 600,000 postal
    workers are affected by
    the index

Bureau of Labor Statistics

* A one percent increase in
  the Index triggers a $1
  billion increase in incomes
  under escalator provisions
  alone
* Per capita disposable income

* Median family income

+ University of Michigan, ISR  +  University of Michigan, ISR
                                                                      Equal  Access
                                                                                                  Ability to Influence
* Number of loans received in  * Cost  of  living  raises  for
  1973 by minorities  per SMSA    federal  employees

* Number of loans made to      * Pay levels  by number of
  Indians                        years of education

* Percent of minorities in
  professional positions

* Gini Coefficient
  - How comfortable and well
    off you are
  - The pay and fringe benefits
    you get, and security of
    your job
                               + University of Michigan,ISR
                                 - Ability to influence
                                   your pay to meet
                                   higher needs
                                 - Educational opportunity
                                                             B-23

-------
SECTOR:  ECONOMICS

ISSUE:  Employment--Quality

   «!
     Basic Need/Threshold
• Fair Labor  Standards Act
  of 1938

  - Sets standards  to pro-
    tect against  labor
    conditions detrimental
    to the maintenance of
    the minimum standard
    of living necessary for
    health, efficiency and
    general welfare
  (B-1-F-G1-3-1-Y-Y)

• Work Hours  Act  of 1962
  - Sets standards  of eight-
    hour work day and a 40-
    hour work week  with
    overtime  compensation
    of one- and a half
    times the basic rate
    of pay for work done
    in excess of  40 hours
    in one week for work
    done by laborers and
    others under  contract
    by federal government

• Occupational Health and
  SafetT Act  1970
  - OSHA has  set  standards
    that cover general in-
    dustry, maritime and*con-
    struction in  order to
    provide a safe and
    healthful working en-
    vironment (e.g. permiss-
    ible noise exposures-
    8 hour duration, 90 dBA)
  (B-1-F-G1-3-1-Y-Y)

• Federal Coal Mine Safety
  Act
  - Sets standards to allow
    miners the opportunity
    to work underground "
    during the entire adult
    working life without
    Incurring disability
    from pneumoconiosls or
    other related diseases
  (B-1-F-G1-3-1-Y-Y)
                                       Security
 •  Fair  Labor  Standards Act
   -  Provides  for minimum
     wages
   -  Premium pay for overtime
   (B-2-F-G1-3-1-Y-Y)
• Occupational Health and
  Safety Act 1970
  - Through the Occupation-
    al Health and Safety
    Administration ensures
    safe and healthful
    working conditions
  (B-2-F-G1-3-3-Y-Y)
* Univ. of Michigan - ISR

  - How do you feel about
    the pay and fringe bene-
    fits you get and security
    of your Job?
                                                                    Equal Access
• Civil Rights Act Title VI
  and VII

  - Prohibits discrimina-
    tion in employment
  (B-3-F-G1-3-1-Y-N)

• Equal Pay Act of 1963
  - Prohibits employers
    using federal monies
    from discriminating on
    the basis of sex in the
    payment of wages for
    equal work

  (B-3-F-G1-3-1-Y-Y)
     Ability to Influence

• OSHA
  Office of Research
  - Developing department-
    wide plan and coordina-
    tion mechanism for
    research on quality of
    employment
  (B-4-F-G1-1-7-N-H)
                                                             B-24

-------
SECTOR:   ECONOMICS
ISSUE:  Employment--Quality (continued)

                                    B2
    Basic Need/Threshold

* Department of Labor Sta-
  tistics on occupational
  injuries and illnesses—
  by industry and incidence
  rate
+ University of Michigan
  ISR
  - How do you feel about
    what it is like where
    you work—the physical
    surrounding, the hours,
    and the amount of work
    you are asked to do?
     Security
Department of Labor Annual
Report for 1973
- Statistics on number of
  inspections and viola-
  tion
  OSHA-FY73

  47,595 inspections
  31,379 first time
   9,136 repeat
   7,080 follow-up

  Total of approximately
  12 million employees
  whose work places have
  been inspected
                                                                     Equal Access
  + University of Michigan
    ISR
    - How do you feel about
      the work you do on your
      job—the work itself?
      What about the things
      you have available for
      doing your job—I mean
      equipment, information,
      good supervision, and
      so on?
Department of Labor Annual
Report for 1973
- Statistics on wages by
  sex
  Under Equal Fay Act,
  29,618 employees found
  underpaid in 1973
                                                                                                  Ability to Influence
                                                           B-25

-------
SECTOR:  ECONOMICS

ISSUE:  Employment—Quality

   *!
	Basic Need/Threshold
       Security
                                     Equal Access
                                                                   Ability to Influence
                                                                                             • National Labor Relations
                                                                                               Act
                                                                                               - Provides bargaining
                                                                                                 agreements for union
                                                                                                 employees

                                                                                               (H-4-F-G1-3-1-Y-Y)

                                                                                             • Title VII. Public Law
                                                                                               954 Revised Executive
                                                                                               Order

                                                                                               - Requires annual employee
                                                                                                 performance evaluation

                                                                                               (H-4-F-G1-3-1-Y-Y)
* Satisfaction/Dissatisfac-
  tion Data
* Department of Labor unem-
  ployment statistics by
  occupation
                                                           B-26

-------
                      ECONOMIC SECTOR - Bibliography
California Employer published quarterly by the California Employment
     Development Department, Health and Welfare Agency, Volume 28,
     Number 2  (December 1974).

City of San Jose, "Affirmative Action Plan, 1973."

Committee on Education and Labor, House of Representatives, "Federal Labor
     Laws," committee print, 88th Congress, 1st Session, April 1963.

Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, United States Senate, "Legisla-
     tive History of the Fair Labor Standards Amendments of 1966," committee
     print prepared for the Subcommittee on Labor, 90th Congress, 2nd
     Session, June 1968.

Committee on Ways and Means, House of Representatives, "Compilation of
     Social Security Laws, Volume I," House of Representatives Document
     No. 93-117, Vol. I, 93rd Congress, 1st Session, 1973.

"Economic Report of the President," transmitted to the Congress  (February
     1974).

Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget,
     "Statistical Reporter," Number 75-6 (December 1974).

"Manpower Report of the President," transmitted to the Congress  (April
     1974).

National Association of Counties Research Foundation, "County Manpower
     Report," Volume 3, Number 6, Washington, D. C.  (December 1974).

U. S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, "HEW Newsletter,"
     Number 126 (March 1975).

                 ,  "Guides for Day Care Licensing," DHEW Publication
     No. (OCD) 73-1053, Office of Child Development, Bureau of Child
     Development Services.

                 ,  "National Assessment and Social Indicators," DHEW
     Publication No. 73-11111, National Center for Educational Statis-
     tics,  Office of Education, Education Division (January 1973).

                 ,  Social Security Bulletin, Volume 35, Number 12,
     Social Security Administration (December 1972).
                                 B-27

-------
U. S. Department of Labor, "Sixty-First Annual Report, Fiscal Year 1973."

	,  "Major Programs, 1974," Bureau of Labor Statistics (1974)

	,  "Survey of Working Conditions," a final report froiO
     the Survey Research Center, University of Michigan, published by
     the Employment Standards Administration (August 1971).

    	,  "Federal Labor Laws and Programs," Bulletin 262, Division
     of Employment Standards, Employment Standards Administration (Revised,
     September 1971).

    	,  "Laws on Sex Discrimination in Employment," Women's
     Bureau, Employment Standards Administration (Reprinted May 1973
     with new appendixes).

    	,  "Manpower Program Digest," Volume VI, Number 8,
     Manpower Administration  (22 November 1974).

       	  	,  "Unemployment Insurance Statistics," Manpower Adminis-
     tration (November 1974).
                                   B-27 A

-------
2.  Health
     Because of its overall importance to quality of life, health is



presented as a sector.  Within this sector, the issues of health care and



nutrition have been selected.  The concerns related to the issues of



health care and nutrition have been defined as follows:





     •  Health Care               Availability



                                  Quality



     •  Nutrition                 Minimum Daily Diet





Availability considers number of facilites, distribution of health



personnel, as well as accessibility.  Quality encompasses minimum



performance standards, types of available services, and licensing criteria.





     A number of health standards initiated at the federal level apply



nationwide, particularly in nutrition where a minimum daily dietary



allowance has been established for various subpopulations  (males, females,



children, infants, and pregnant and lactating women).  Health care, both



quality and availability, however, is more a local or regional issue,



with standards formulated at these levels.  For purposes of this discussion,



the issue area of nutrition has been selected for more detailed review



to demonstrate how the matrix approach can be applied for analysis.





     Nutrition is basic to health and for this reason is selected as a



representative issue  for the health sector.  The nutrition area may also



furnish an indicator  of a federal policy which stresses a remedial approach



to QoL rather than a  preventive one, for as now constituted federal



nutrition policy, except for the WIG Program (Special Supplemental Food



Program for Women, Infants and Children), does not link malnutrition to



general health problems.





     The concept of nutrition means not only an intake of sufficient



and appropriate food  substances for basic health but also includes the
                                  B-28

-------
SECTOR:  HEALTH
ISSUE:   NUTRITION
                                                                  Standard s
                                                                  Objective Data
                                                                  Subjective Data
   Basic Need/Threshold	
Concern:  Docs the program
provide a minimally adequate
diet?
                                       Security
  Recommended Daily Dietary
  Allowances (UDA), 197-1
  (Food and Nutr i tion Board) ;
  (WAS-NRG)

  - Designed for the mainte-
    nance of good nutrition
    of practically all healthy
    people in the USA.
    (B-1-F-NGI-2-7-N-N)
Concern:  What measures pro-
vide security that the mini-
mum will be met?


• Recommended Da lly_D_let^ary
  Allowances (ItDA)
  - Used in School Lunch  Pro-
    gram, the WIC Program,
    and nutrition projects
    funded by Older Americans
    Act.
    (B-2-F-G3-2-7-Y-N)
                                                                       Equal  Access
+ Malnutrition has been poorly
  defined and most studies of
  nutrition of Americans have
  been incomplete,

+ "In America in 1974, a person
   should be considered mal-
   nourished if for economic
   or other reasons beyond his
   control he experiences re-
   petitive periods of pro-
   longed hunger even though
   his total intake of nutri-
   ents is sufficient to pro-
   tect h in from symptoms of
   deficiency disease."2

* Food Stamp Act (1964)        •

  - USDA Economy Food Plan
    Budget (1/3 of Poverty
    Income Level) provides
    minimum RDA.

    (B-1-F-G3-2-7-N-N)
                                Concern:  To what portion of
                                the population are  the assur-
                                ances of  adequate nutrition
                                applicable?

                                •  Recommended Daily Dietary
                                  Allowances (KDA)
                                  - Children in  school lunch
                                    programs.  Women, infants
                                    and children in WIC  pro-
                                    gram.  Persons  over  age
                                    60 in participating
                                    agencies,

                                    (B-3-F-G3-1-7-N-N)
* Food Stamp Act  (1964)

  - Secretary of  Agriculture
    semi-annual maximum
    allowable monthly  income,
    January 1975:
    House-  Maximum    Food
    hold   Allowable   Stamp
    Size    Income   Allotment

      1
      2
      3
      4
      5
      6
      7
      8
      9
     10
     (B-2-F-G3-3-1-Y-N)

* Counties apply  to State  Dept.
  of Social Services to  operate
  a Food Stamp Program.
  (B-2-F-C1-1-7-N-N)
$194
280
406
513
606
700
793
886
959
1O32
$0 to $46
NA
.



,
$266
NA
NA
Food Stamp Act (1964)

- Eligibility is defined
  on a household basis:
  1) share living quarters
  2) economic unit
  3) buy and prepare food
     together
- If all members receive
  public assist ance,  house-
  hold is eligible.  For
  all other households,
  income standards apply.
  (B-3-F-G3-3-3-Y-N)
                                 Ability  to  Influence	
                             Concern:  To what degree  is  the
                              individual  able  to  obtain  an
                              adequate diet?


                             •  Recommended Dally Dietary
                                Allowances (RI3A)
                                - Revised periodically  with
                                  new knowledge of  nutr i —
                                  tional  needs.
                                  (B-4-F-NG1-2-7-N-N)
                             *  USDA Food and  Nutrition
                                Service
                                - Monitors State  administra-
                                  tion of Federal nutrition
                                  programs (compliance  with
                                  standards  in regulations)

                                  (B-4-F-G3-2-5-Y-N
                                                                                                 Food  Stamp Act  (1964)

                                                                                                 - Federal  mandate for  out-
                                                                                                   reach  (nutrition educat ion
                                                                                                   for poor);  administered by
                                                                                                   counties.
                                                                                                   (B-4-F-G3-1-7-N-N)

                                                                                                 Fair  hearing  procedure by
                                                                                                 State welfare department
                                                                                                 given within  60 days of
                                                                                                 request.   Claimant receives
                                                                                                 food  stamps at  least until
                                                                                                 date  of  hearing,  regardless
                                                                                                 of whether case is won or
                                                                                                 lost.
                                                                                                 (B-4-F-G3-1-5-Y-N)
* USDA Food Consumption Sur-
  vey, 1965-66:
  2/3 households below $3,000
  had diets below RDA.
  1/3 households had less
  than 2/3 RDA for one essen-
  tial nutrient.3
+ "The only solution is a
  just, dignified, guaranteed
  income Maintenance program
  that ensures that no person
  lives without adequate
  income."4
* USDA  statistics  show March
  '73 to March  '74  price of
  Economy  Food  Plan increased
  by 21.0  percent.
                                                                 "...  since January 1974,  an
                                                                 estimated 30-45 million per-
                                                                 sons have been eligible for
                                                                 the program...but only an
                                                                 estimated 13.5 million par-
                                                                 ticipated as  recently as
                                                                 March 1974."7

                                 The  poverty  line is particu- + "...food stamp certification
                                 larly  irresponsible to rapid   offices should be open from
                                 rises  in  food  end  shelter      ...9 to 5 all  weekdays...
                                 cost s.                          several even ings a week,  and
                                  half a day on Saturday.
                                                 B-29
                                 ...total  federal,  state,
                                and  local  expenditures  for
                                state  and  local outreach
                                in FY  1973 amounted  to  only
                                about  $130,000."9
                                "USDA  should  be required
                                to  collect data...in order
                                to  facilitate the  identi-
                                fication of areas  where
                                the program is failing and
                                where  some form of cor-
                                                                                                rective act ion is needed
                                                                                                                         .,10

-------
SECTOR:    HEALTH
ISSUE:    NUTRITION
          (continued)


   Baalc Need/Threshold	

• National School  Lunch Act
  1946
                                                               •  Standards
                                                               .*.  Objective Data
                                                               +  Subjective Data
                                                               B
                                       Equal Access
  National School Lunch  Act
  1946
  - Nutritional  requirements:
      Type A  lunch  gives  1/3
      RDA  for 10-12 year  old
      boys and girls:
      1) 1 cup milk "
      2) 2 oz. lean meat/
         fish; or 2 oz.
         cheese
         or 1 egg
         or 1/2  cup cooked
         dry  beans
         or 4 T.  peanut
         butter
      3) 3/4  cup vegetable
         or fruit
      4) 1  slice bread
      (B-1-F-G3-3-5-Y-N)
  - School Is required  to
    serve free lunches  to
    needy children.
  - National average per
    lunch payment prescribed
    by USDA and revised semi-
    annually.

  - Income Threshold.
    Free lunches to needy
    children defined by Sec.
    of Agriculture's Annual
    Income Poverty Guidelines.

  (B-2-F-C3-3-2-Y-N)
•  Special Food Service
  Hutritional Requirements:
  - Prescribed components for
     a)  Breakfast
     b)  Lunch/Supper
     c)  supplemental food
   - Minimum quantities pre-
     scribed for
     a)  age 1 to 3
     b)  age 3 to 6
     c)  »ge 6 to 12
     d)  age 12 and over
   - No supplemental food if
     institution also operates
     Special Milk Program

   (B-1-F-C3-2-5-Y-N)
  National  School Lunch Act
  1946

  - All children in a par-
    ticipating school.

  (B-3-F-G3-1-7-N-N)
• Special Food Scrvico


  Two policies for free meals:
  - Free meals to all; or
  * Paid, reduced price, and
    free seals.
  - Income Threshold:
    Free  meals  to  needy  chil-
    dren  defined by Secretary
    of Agriculture's Annual
    Income Poverty Guidelines,
    plus  consider  number of
    children  In family attend-
    ing  school  or  child-care
    center.

   (B-2-F-G3-3-2-Y-N)
                                                               * Of more than 1.5 million
                                                                 poor children in day-care
                                                                 centers, only 195,000 were
                                                                 reached by the day-care
                                                                 program in FY 1973.  Aver-
                                                                 age daily attendance was
                                                                 1,175,000.l4

                                                               * Less than 16 percent of
                                                                 children who receive free
                                                                 and reduced lunch prices
                                                                 in the school year partici-
                                                                 pate in the sutuer feed-
                                                                  Ing program.
                                                                              15
                                   For  day-care  centers,  the
                                   value  of the  program has
                                   been Increasingly  compro-
                                   mised  by the  extra-ordinary
                                   low  reimbursement  rates  from
Ability to Influence	

National School Lunch Act
1964
- School must establish
  hearing procedure for
  eligibility appeals.

- FNS review of state ad-
  ministration of program.
- Child Nutrition Division
  may approve variations in
  Type A lunch where nutri-
  tionally sound and neces-
  sary to meet ethnic,
  religious, economic, or
  physical needs.
(B-4-F-G3-1-5-Y-N)
* 5,3OO,OOO children, of whoB
  roughly 2,000,000 are needy,
  attend schools which still
  refuse to participate.11
+ The fact that children of
  all economic levels may par-
  ticipate (In school nutri-
  tion programs) broadens the
  base of support and has
  probably helped more chil-
  dren to participate than an
  exclusive anti-hunger appeal
  could have achieved.^

• Special Food Service
  Program lor Children

  - Child-care institutions
    located in:
    1) areas of poor economic
       conditions
    2) areas with 50 percent
       working mothers.

   (B-3-F-G3-1-1-N-N)
 Special  Food  Service
 Program  for Children

 - Institution Is  required
   to  establish hearing pro-
   cedure for  eligibility
   appeals.
 - State  agency responsible
   for adequate program opera-
   tion*  through administra-
   tive evaluations.

 (B-4-F-G3-2-5-Y-N)
 - USDA Child  Nutrition Divi-
   sion may approve  variations
   In  meals where  nutrition-
   ally sound  and  necessary
   to  meet ethnic, religious,
   economic, or physical needs


 (B-4-F-G3-1-5-Y-N)
                                   limited  funds.
                                                 13
                                                B-30

-------
SECTOR:  HEALTH
ISSUE:   NUTRITION
                                                               • Standards
                                                               * Objective Data
                                                               + Subjective Data
   Bsslc Heed/Threshold
• Child Nutrition Act  (1966)
  Special Milk Program
                                        Security
                                                                      Equal Access_
  — 1 cup milk per day

  (B-1-F-C3-1-7-Y-N)
• Child Nutrition Act (1966)   • Child Nutrition Act 1966
  Special Milk Program
  - School or institution
    required to serve milk
    free at least once a day
    to needy children.
  - Income Threshold:
    Needy children defined by
    Secretary of Agriculture's
    Annual Income Poverty Guide-
    line.
  - Reimbursement rates:
    1) 1/2 pt./child/day w/food
       program
    2) 1 pt./child/day w/o food
       program

  (B-2-F-G3-3-1-Y-N)
• Special Milk Program
 - All children In a partic-
   ipating school or child-
   care Institution.
 (B-3-F-C3-1-7-N-N)
                                                                 Oct. 1973:  8,900 schools with
                                                                 2.6 million children did not
                                                                 participate.1
                                              16
                                                                 The fact that children of all
                                                                 economic levels may partici-
                                                                 pate (in school nutrition
                                                                 programs)  broadens the base
                                                                 of support and has probably
                                                                 helped more poor children to
                                                                 participate than an exclusive
                                                                 anti-hunger appeal could have
Ability to Influence
Child Nutrition Act 1966
Special Milk Program
- School or institution must
  establish hearing procedure
  for eligibility appeals.
- FNS review of state admin-
  istration of program.

(B-4-F-G3-2-5-Y-N)
                                                                 achieved.
                                                                          12
•  Child Nutrition Act  (1966)    '
   School Breakfast Program

   - Nutritional requirements:
   - 1/2 pt.  milk
   - 1/2 c.  fruit or juice
   - 1 slice  bread
   — (as often as practicable):
     1 egg;  1 oz. neat,
     poultry, or fish;  1 oz.
     cheese;  2 T. peanut butter
   (B-1-F-G3-2-5-Y-H)
  Child  Nutrition  Act  (1966)
  School Breakfast Program
   -  School  is required  to serve
     free breakfasts to  needy
     children.
   -  National  average per break-
     fast payment  prescribed by
     USDA and  revised semi-
     annually.
   -  Income  Threshold:
     Free breakfasts to  needy
     children  defined by Secre-
     tary of Agriculture's
     Annual  Income Poverty
     Guidelines.
   ( B-2-F-G3-3-2-Y-N)
 Child Nutrition Act (1966)
 School Breakfast Program

 - All children in a partic-
   ipating school.

 (B-3-F-G3-1-7-N-N)
                                                               * Less than 3 percent of
                                                                 nation's 50 million school
                                                                 children receive school
                                                                 breakfasts.  No more than
                                                                 13 percent low-income
                                                                 children participate
                                                                                      17
                                                                 The fact that children of
                                                                 all economic levels may
                                                                 participate (in school
                                                                 nutrition programs) broad-
                                                                 ens the base of support
                                                                 and has probably helped
                                                                 more poor children to
                                                                 participate than an exclu-
                                                                 sive anti-hunger appeal
                                                                 could have achieved.
 Child Nutrition Act  (1966)
 School  Breakfast Program

 —  School must establish
   hearing procedure  for
   eligibility appeals.

 -  State agency responsible
   for adequate program
   operations, through admin-
   istrative evaluations.

 (B-4-F-G3-2-5-Y-N)

 -  USDA  Child Nutrition Divi-
   sion  may approve variations
   in  food components of break-
   fasts where nutritionally
   sound and necessary to meet
   ethnic, religious, economic,
   or  physical needs.

 (B-4-F-G3-1-5-Y-N)
                                                    B-31

-------
    NUTRITION continued
          eshold
* WIC Program (Supplemental
  Food for Women, Infants
  end Children) (1972)

• Sutritlon ^Threshold:
  - Infanta:
    - 100X RDA for protein,
      calcium, iron, and
      vitamin C
    - 90Z RDA for vitamin A
    - 100X RDA for calories
      to 3 Booths; 7SZ RDA
      for calories 4 months
      to one year

  - Children, 1 to 4;
    - 1001 RDA for protein,
      calcium, iron, vita-
      min* A and C
    - 66X RDA for calories
  - Fregnant/lactating women:
    - 25X RDA for calories
    - 60-100X FDA for proetln,
      calcium, iron, vita-
      mina A and C

(B-1-P-G-3-3-1-Y-Y)

t WIC Program

  - Indicators of nutri-
    tional risk:
                                     Security
» MIC Program

  - VIC is a pilot program,
    funded through FY 1975

  * FNS selects eligible
    clinics which apply:
    - By demonstrated need
      for program
    - Ability to *eet pro-
      gran goals

(B-2-F-C3-3-1-N-Y)
                                                                   Equal Access
i WIC Program

 - Local health or welfare
   agencies eligibility:
   - Severeity of health
     problems In area
   - X of low-Income real-
     dents
   - Expertise and experi-
     ence of clinic.

 - Eligibility of persona:
   - Must reside In
     approved project
     area
   - Also eligible for
     toedleal a&slstance
     determined to be at
     nutritional risk.

  (B-3-F-C3-3-2-N-Y)
    - Known inadequate
      nutrition
    - Anemia
    - Prematurity or mis-
      carriage
    - Inadequate growth

  - Infants and children:
    - 7)eMc1pT»r jrowrh
    - Anemia
    — Known Inadequate
      nutrition

(B-1-F-C3-3-1-Y-Y)

* "The death rate for lov
  birth weight infants Is
  30 times greater than
  for babies weighing over
  S.5 pounds at birth."18
+ "When we speak of fetal
  and early infant malnu-
  trition we are speaking
  i..of nothing less than
  vested lives and lost
  potential...It is simply
  that the damage...can
  never be made up...The
  food dollars...we fall
  Invest here cost the
  tion many times the!
  value later on/'l^
                               * At least 4.6 million
                                 women, children and in-
                                 fants eligible; yet nun-
                                 bar served by VIC is less
                                 than .5 million.  Supple-
                                 mental food Is available
                                 to barely 11 percent of
                                 those who need it.20
    Ability to Influence

• jfIC Program

  - Data collection requited
    for evaluation of food
    intervention upon persons
    at nutritional risk.

(B-4-F-G3-1-5-Y-Y)


    State agency shall es-
    tablish a hearing pro-
    cedure by which persons
    can appeal eligibility
    decisions.

  (B-4-P-C3-2-5-Y-S)
                               + Eligibility for WIC should
                                 be on a acre equitable
                                 basis.21
                                 USDA should institute a
                                 a national Income eligi-
                                 bility floor similar to
                                 that for the child nutri-
                                 tion programs.22
                                                   B-32

-------
      NUTRITION
           shold
                                       Security
                                                                   Equi
• Older Americans Act

  - One hot meal/day, 5 or
    •ore days per week. Each
    meal muse provide 1/3
    RDA.

(B-1-F-G1-J-5-Y-N)
• Older Americans Act

  - Nutrition Program for
    the Elderly
  - Funds allotted to any
    state for FY 1973 and 1974
    to disburse as grants
    to agencies which carry
    out programs.

(B-2-F-G1-1-7-Y-N)
                                                                    iqual Access
  Older Americana  Act
  - Recipients  of  project
    grants or contracts who
    agt'ee to carry out legi-
    slated program

(B-3-F-C1-1-7-N-N)

• Older Americans  Act
  Individuals age  60 or over
  who
  — Cannot afford  to eat
    adequately
  - Lack skills to prepare
    meals
  - Limited mobility
  - Lack incentive to pre-
    pare and eat meals alone.

(B-3-F-G1-2-7-N-N)
    Ability to Influence

• Older Americans Act
  - Outreach to assure maxi-
    mum participation;
    evaluate effectiveness
    and feasibility of each
    project.

(B-4-F-G1-2-5-Y-N)
* 1/2 to 1/3 of deaths over
  65 caused by malnutrition
  (estimate published in
  Crowing Old in  the
  Country of the  Young,
  by Senator Charles Percy)
                                                  B-33

-------
concept of a diet which gives a feeling of well-being;  this would mean



having a variety of food  choices and the ability to select those



which satisfy cultural or ethnic preferences.




     Adequate nutrition is crucial to quality of life, and it has,  furthermore,



become  a very critical issue of the day.  If food price inflation has



given the issue of food itself more than the issue of nutrition prominence,



so it* has also given publicity to the Food Stamp Program, whose basic



Quality of Life indicators will be discussed.




     The following discussion outlines standards and objective data as



these appear from left to right across the needs matrix.







B  Column - Basic Need/Threshold






     Two questions are posed in discussing B.^ indicators:  What are the



basic threshold indicators in federal nutrition programs, and, What are



the assumptions of these standards, which we take  to  indicate a basic



threshold level?




     Five federal nutrition programs and the Food  Stamp  Program will be



discussed.  The food programs of  the federal government  were created by



three legislative acts, the National School Lunch  Act of 1946, the Food



Stamp Act of 1964, and the Child  Nutrition Act of  1966,  as well as by



later amendments to these acts.




     The majority of federal food programs employ  two basic threshold



indicators  to define minimum standards.  These are the RDA  (Recommended



Dietary Allowance), a direct indicator  of nutrition,  and the  Secretary



of Agriculture's  Income Poverty Guidelines which measure eligibility  for



receiving  free meals, supplemental  food, or  free milk.




     The RDA  is  the product of  research by  the Food and  Nutrition  Board



 of  the National  Academy  of Sciences-National  Research  Council  and
                                   B-34

-------
 "is designed for the maintenance of good nutrition of practically all


healthy people in the U.S.A."   It is revised periodically to incorporate


new research in nutrition, and it is an aggregate figure not applicable


to specific health or nutrition problems.


     The Income Poverty Guidelines are issued annually by the Secretary


of Agriculture and are based on income and family size as well as being


"based on the previous year's proverty level adjusted for the year-to-

                                         2
year change in the Consumer Price Index."


     The National School Lunch Program regulations essentially base the


Type A lunch pattern on the RDA, the lunch providing one third of the


RDA for 10 to 12 year old boys and girls.  The Lunch Program regulations


furnish no guidelines as to what quantities will furnish minimum RDA to


younger or older age groups, but the regulations do allow the state


agency to recommend lesser portions to younger children and to encourage


larger servings to older boys and girls.  Regulations for the Special


Food Service Program for Children, on the other hand, indicate minimum


quantities for four different age groups:  ages one to three; ages three


to six; ages six to twelve; and age twelve and over.  The same regulations


do not, however, indicate the corresponding RDA that is provided in


these differing quantities.  The WIG Program regulations specify not


only quantities but the RDA percentages  the quantities will provide


women, infants and children.


     The School Breakfast Program serves three basic foods:  one half a


pint of milk, one half a cup of fruit or juice, and one slice of bread.


Protein  (one egg; one ounce meat, poultry or fish; one ounce cheese; or


two tablespoons peanut butter) is to be  served "as often as practicable"


and is not a minimum component of breakfasts as in the lunches of the


National School Lunch Program.  School breakfasts do not explicitly


provide minimum RDA, and, in fact, they may affect a child's carbohydrate-


fat-protein balance by providing him too many carbohydrate calories.
                                   B-35

-------
     The Special Food Service Program for Children specifies the kinds



of meals (breakfast, lunch, supper,  and supplemental food) which may be



served, along with the kinds of foods for each meal and the recommended



quantities for four different age groupings, but none of these quantitative



or qualitative prescriptions is based upon RDA.  Like the School Lunch



Program, minimum amounts of component foods may vary according to the


                         3
age range of participants  but are not tailored to size, weight, or sex.




     The basic threshold of the Special Milk Program is frequency, that



milk must be served at least once a day free to needy children.  It is



not based upon a minimum nutritional threshold.  The rate of reimbursement



to schools for milk served free to eligible children also furnishes a



threshold:  reimbursement  is for one half a pint/child/day in institu-



tions which also provide a food service, and one pint/child/day in

                                                       4

programs which do not offer a food service to children.   In either



case, it appears that a needy child will receive at least two cups of



milk a day, assuming milk  also comes with a free lunch or breakfast.



Eight glasses of milk fulfill the MDR  (Minimum Daily Requirement) for



protein for children.




     Nutritional guidelines for the WIG Program, a 1972 amendment to



the Child Nutrition Act, explicitly state the percentage of RDA which the



maximum monthly quantities of the "nutritionally desirable foods" selected



by the USDA will provide to infants, to children of one to four years,



and to pregnant or  lactating women.




     In addition to nutrition thresholds, all of the nutrition programs



employ poverty income thresholds to determine eligibility for free and



reduced price meals, or milk, or supplemental food.  Schools which



elect to participate in federal food programs are required to serve



free meals to children from families whose income is at or below the



applicable income  level in the Secretary of Agriculture's Income
                                 B-36

-------
Poverty Guidelines.    It is the school's responsibility to determine



whether a child is entitled to & free meal.  The methods for doing this



are very complicated, and this requirement is often difficult to administer.





     Following the annual issuance of the Secretary's guidelines, "Each



State educational agency is required to prescribe income guidelines for



both free and reduced-price meals, by family size, for use by schools in



the State."   State thresholds may not fall below the Secretary's guide-



lines, which represent a minimum, nor may they exceed a ceiling, prescribed



by regulation, of 25 percent above the minimum for free meal eligibility,



or 75 percent above the minimum for reduced price meal eligibility.



Each local School Food Authority responsible for the administration of



one or more schools and which has the legal authority to operate food



programs therein is required to submit for approval a free and reduced



price policy statement to the state educational agency.  The Secretary's



guidelines and procedure govern institutions participating in the



National School Lunch Program, the School Breakfast Program, and the



Special Food Service Program for Children.  Though specific income



criteria are not applied in the WIG Program, local health clinics which



administer WIG are required to demonstrate that they serve low income



populations considered to be at nutritional risk.





     The Food Stamp Program differs from the programs described above



because it does not specify minimum nutritional components, food types,



or quantities.  In contrast to the programs which contain separate



nutritional and income indicators, the assumption of the Food Stamp



Program is that one third of the current poverty income figure can be



spent for a diet which will furnish the minimum RDA.  The poverty income



budget for food is based upon the quantities of particular foods allowed



by the Economy Food Plan, the lowest-cost of the five Family Food Plans



devised by the Agricultural Research Service.
                                   B-37

-------
     The Economy Food Plan was originally developed from a Department


of Agriculture food consumption survey of 1955 and a Bureau of Labor


Statistics family expenditure survey from 1960-61.  These indicated that


a low-income family spent an average of one third of its income after


taxes for food.   In formulating an Economy Food Plan, the Agricultural


Research Service made substitutions and revisions in the food choices


reflected by the food consumption survey in order to insure that an
                                              g

Economy Food Plan would furnish a minimum RDA.   Estimates of quantities
                                  9
of food established a food budget,  which became the USDA measure of


the minimum amount of money a family of four needs in order to obtain

                10
basic nutrients.



     In turn, the cost of  the Economy Food Plan  (the cheapest of the five


Family Food Plans), multiplied by three  (since food expense was found to


consume one third of a low-income family's budget), was the methodology


used for determining a poverty income level in 1965.    "Each year.  . .


until 1969, the cost of the foods in the Economy Diet Plan were repriced


on a national basis, and multiplied by 3 to arrive at the poverty  income


level for that year. . .  . After 1969, the poverty line already developed


from the cost of an Economy Diet times 3 would be used as the base,  but


the yearly adjustments would  come only from the  single, all-items  price

                                              12
change reflected in the Consumer Price Index."    The Consumer Price


Index does not reflect the disproportionate amount that food and shelter

                                  13
consume of a poor  family's budget.



     The  Secretary of Agriculture now issues  nationwide income poverty

                                                                    ..   14
guidelines for  the Food  Stamp Program; these  are revised  semi-annually.


It  is a claim  of the Food Stamp Program  that  the coupon allotment  is


nutritionally  based.  However, maintaining an adequate diet within the


budget of the  Economy Food Plan requires nutritional  awareness and


educated  buying.   The RDA assumes  a caveat of a  wide  variety  of  foods
                                 B-38

-------
which either are not affordable within the Economy Plan budget or



whose frequent use is restricted by the stated minimum quantities upon



which the Plan is based.





     By utilizing income thresholds, federal programs propose to equate



inadequate nutrition with poverty.  The use of an income level indicator



is, at best, an indirect way  to promote nutrition.  The semi-annual



poverty income adjustments do not keep pace with spiraling costs of foods



and other life necessities, and thus  the budget based on the Economy



Food Plan is often inadequate.  Regional differences in cost of living



also accentuate inadequacies  in food  budget allocations.  The use of



income level as a surrogate indicator of adequate nutrition does not



reflect a coherent federal nutrition  policy.








B  Column - Security






     Under the National School Lunch  Act,  the  USDA supports school lunch



programs with payments for lunches which meet  the Type A lunch pattern



requirements, based on one third of the Recommended Dietary Allowance



for boys and girls 10 to 12 years old.





     Schools are paid on the  basis of performance funding, with payment



for each lunch served.  Funding is now open-ended, with minimum payment



and maximum reimbursement rates prescribed by  the Department and



adjusted semi-annually to reflect changes  in costs of operating a school



lunch program.  Two funding categories pay three different rates for



free, reduced price, and fully paid lunches.   General cash-for-food



assistance funds provide across-the-board  lunch subsidies for all Type A



lunches served in a state in  a fiscal year.  Special cash assistance



funds pay for lunches which are served free or at a reduced price to needy



children who meet poverty income criteria.  Payments are made to states



several times during a year by the Department, using projections of



lunches served.
                                   B-39

-------
     The state educational agency may adjust the assistance payment per


lunch based upon its determination of the financial need of each school.


Thus, a state receives currently 11.750 per lunch, which is the national


average factor prescribed by the Secretary of Agriculture for the


period January 1 to July 1, 1975.  In California, for example, the state


educational agency may give the Beverly Hills school lunch program a


50 per lunch subsidy and the Compton school district 150 per lunch, up


to a maximum of 17.50.  If it pays one district more than the 11.750


average allotted, it must therefore apportion less to some other

                15
school district.



     In order to participate in  the Lunch Program, schools are now


required to serve free or reduced price  lunches  to children who are


determined to be unable to pay.  The special cash assistance  funds


supplement the base subsidy of 11.750 with  a current national average


payment rate of 52.50 for free lunches and  100  less for  reduced price


lunches, the maximum free  lunch  subsidy  being 79.20.  The  ceiling  on


subsidies is imposed so that in  no event will the per lunch reimbursement


exceed  the per  lunch cost of providing a Type A lunch.



     Although nutrition programs were  initiated on a federal  level


beginning in 1946, none of  them  carries  a  federal mandate.  The closest


 thing  to a mandate  is the  positive obligation of participating  schools


 to serve free or reduced price meals  to  needy children.  Federal programs


reach  the local level only through the optional participation of schools


 or institutions which apply to  the state education agency.



      A matching fund  requirement secures each participating  state's


 financial commitment  for  the Lunch Program. The regulations  call  for


matching each dollar  of  federal  general  cash-for-food  assistance  funds


 each fiscal year with three dollars  of funds from sources  within  the


 state.   These matching  state funds must  have been determined by the
                                   B-40

-------
Secretary to have been expended in connection with the Program.   Sources


of funds include children's payments for lunches, local general  school


district funds, as well as state funds expended for local (not state


level) administration of lunch programs.



     California follows the policy orientation of federal nutrition


programs of preserving local choice by not mandating school or institutional


food programs.  In 1974, Governor Reagan signed the Mbscone Bill, which


provides a reimbursement from state revenues of 5
-------
demonstrate that nutrition should have a status equal to a school's



athletic program.  This would eliminate the present welfare stigma



from free breakfasts and lunches.





     It has been argued that only federal legislation which mandates



school and institutional participation will accomplish the goal of reaching



all school children and, more particularly, needy children  with



nourishing lunches and breakfasts, or nourishing meals in child-care



institutions.




     Fiscal support for the Lunch Program is now based on performance



funding.  The method used formerly was once-a-year apportionment, and



this was often exhausted long before the end of the school year.  The



number of free lunches served increased greatly when schools and



institutions were required to provide free meals to children who were



determined eligible.  Beginning in January 1974, the federal lunch



payment factor was adjusted semi-annually to reflect changes in costs



of operating a lunch program.




     Increasingly liberal regulations and financial support may encourage



participation in food programs, but the National School Lunch Act was



not part of a coherent federal policy to achieve these ends.  The



National School Lunch Program was  created originally to utilize



surplus agricultural commodities.  World wide food demand has made



domestic surplus commodities less available, and although the emphasis



of the food programs has changed considerably since the National School



Lunch Act of 1946, a basic federal commitment to promote nutrition



still does not exist.




     Even without a participation mandate, if adequate nutrition were



defined as a national priority and programs received full federal support,



in fiscal as well as in policy terms, a necessary level of participation



and commitment might be achieved.  The public and the legislators have
                                 B-42

-------
been reluctant to commit themselves to a comprehensive nutrition program



of a preventative nature.  Several federal nutrition programs were born



of the "hunger crisis" of the late 1960s; a comprehensive federal



nutrition policy may only take shape in the event of subsequent crises.








B  Column - Equal Access






     Federal food programs reach children through schools and child-



care centers.  Participation in the National School Lunch Program and



the School Breakfast Program is available to any school.  Location and



income are indirect indicators used to identify eligible children.



Participation in the Special Milk Program is open to any school and, in



addition, to any child-care institution which  submits a free and reduced



price policy statement and signs a written contract with the state



education agency.





     In  two programs, the Special Food Service Program for Children



and the  Nonfood Assistance Program, the location of the school or



institution is a criterion for participation.  A child-care institution



applying for the Special Food Service Program  for Children must provide



a description of its location and appropriate  data to prove that it



serves children from an area where poor economic conditions exist or



from an  area with a high concentration  (at least 50 percent) of



working  mothers.




     The Nonfood Assistance Program also requires submission of data to



demonstrate that a school draws a substantial  portion of attendance



from areas of poor economic conditions.  This  program, which helps needy



schools  obtain equipment to operate a food program, requires participation



either in the School Lunch Program or in the School Breakfast Program



with the state agency bearing a positive obligation to help such schools



obtain equipment to operate an adequate feeding program.
                                 B-43

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     Participation in the WIG Program is limited to health clinics



which can demonstrate that they serve low income populations considered



to be at nutritional risk and which,  furthermore, have the necessary



facilities and other resources to effectively carry out the WIG Program.





     As a result of these restrictions, many of the nutrition programs



are limited to institutions which can meet the strict qualifying criteria.



This means that programs do not reach directly those who are otherwise



eligible, often due to the economic,  geographic, or demographic criteria



which institutions must meet in order to receive funding.  There is a



complex array of factors with which institutions must comply in order



to become eligible.





     For three of the food service programs,  identical eligibility



criteria apply.  Children qualify for free milk under the same rules



used to determine eligibility for free breakfasts and free lunches.



The criterion schools use is the Secretary of Agriculture's Poverty



Income Guideline issued annually to state educational agencies and



with which a School Food Authority's free and reduced price policy



statement must comply.





     In the Special Food Service Program for  Children, in addition to



the same income guidelines which apply to the school meal programs,



the number of children in a family who attend school or  a child-care



institution is considered.





     Schools and child-care centers apply voluntarily to participate in



food programs.  Once approved for participation, however, each institution



is obligated to determine which of its children  qualify  for free or



reduced price meals.  Only institutions which serve  free meals or free



milk to each child do not have to submit a separate  free and reduced



price policy statement for approval.   Instead, such schools  file an



affidavit  stating  that no discrimination of  any  kind exists in their



food service programs.





                                  B-44

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B  Column - Ability to Influence






     "All of the nutrition programs financed by the federal government



wholly or in part have been characterized by  the lack of a built-in



evaluation procedure.



     Evaluations should be of at least three kinds.  The first should



determine whether or not the participants in the programs perceive them



to be helpful and designed to meet their needs.



     A second kind of evaluation should quantify the nutritional benefits,



if any, that participation in the program confer.



     A third kind of evaluation must be made of the degree to which



present programs reach all those in need."  (pp. 10-12)





     This criticism was given by the Panel on Nutrition and Special



Groups to the Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs of the



United States Senate.





     Most of the federal nutrition programs discussed previously provide



by regulation a hearing procedure for eligibility appeals and, in addition,



for an administrative evaluation of local programs by the state agency



or by the Food and Nutrition Service.  The purpose of these two



mechanisms is to resolve situations which may vary from prescribed



regulation.  The existing rules are applied to individual cases, and



the purpose of such review is not to call into question the effectiveness



of the program itself.





     The kind of evaluation suggested by the Panel on Nutrition and



Special Groups, however, is one which continually monitors the



effectiveness of the nutrition programs.  This kind of program evaluation



is not built into present programs except, to a limited extent, into the



WIC Program.
                                   B-45

-------
     The WIG Program is a pilot program funded through June 1975.
"Although the WIG Program will supply nutritious foods to participants,
a major object of the program is the collection and evaluation of data
which will medically identify benefits of this food intervention program.
In addition, data will be collected and analyzed to measure the
administrative efficiencies of various methods of making food available
                ,,17
to participants."
     The WIG Program makes an effort to devise a feedback mechanism to
monitor its effectiveness, but it does not include a way to assess
whether its benefits are reaching all the women, infants, and children
who may need supplemental food.  This lack, referring again to the
Panel's observation, characterizes all federal nutrition programs.

     If the central criterion of program effectiveness is whether it
reaches all those who need it, this would imply, at the  least, full
federal fiscal support or some such insurance of the  fullest extension
of a particular program to its proper constituents.   This would  also
imply a federal nutrition policy with a goal of correcting the existing
malnutrition among all population categories in the United States.
                                  B-46

-------
 Health Sector - Issue Writeup:  References

 1.  "Recommended Daily Dietary Allowances, Revised 19745" National
     Academy of Sciences-National Research Council, Washington, D.C. (1974).

 2.  Federal Register, 39 F.R. 16178  (7 May 1974).

 3.  Mr. Jack Bradley, Director, Child Nutrition Division, Western Region,
     U.S. Department of Agriculture  (letter communication).

 4.  Ibid.

 5.  (2)

 6.  Federal Register, 39 F.R. 26885  (24 July 1974).

 7.  Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs, United States Senate,
     "Studies of Human Need," p. 148, committee print, 92nd Congress,
     2nd Session, June 1972.

 8.  Ms. Mavis Bucholz, Home Economist, Nutrition and Technical Service,
     Western Region, U.S. Department  of Agriculture (personal communication),

 9.  U.S. Department of Agriculture,  "Family Food Plans, Revised 1964,"
     Consumer and Food Economics Research Division, Agricultural Research
     Service, Hyattsville, Maryland  (issued November 1964).

10.  (7)

11.  Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs, op. cit., p. 149.

12.  Ibid.

13.  Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs, United States Senate,
     "National Nutrition Policy Study, Report and Recommendations--VIII,"
     p. 52, committee print prepared  by the Panel on Nutrition and Special
     Groups, 93rd Congress, 2nd Session, June 1974.

14.  Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs, United States Senate,
     "National Nutrition Policy Study, Report and Recommendation—VIII,"
     p. 44.

15.  Mr. Brian_.Allison, Program Operations, Child Nutrition Division,
     Western Region, U.S. Department  of Agriculture (personal communication),
                                  B-47

-------
Health Sector - Issue Writeup:  References (continued)

16.  Mrs. Betty Murray, State of California Administrator for Bay Area
     School Food Service Programs (personal communication).

17.  Federal Register, 38 F.R. 18447-18451 (11 July 1973).
                                B-48

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HEALTH SECTOR

ISSUE:  Health Care; Quality  and Availability
   B,
     Basle Need/Threshold

Concern:  What are the
thresholds for quality and
availability of adequate
health care?
Facilities

• Hill-Burton Act

  Number of general hospi-
  tal beds (CFR 42, Sec.
  53.11) - Formula below:

  Current area use rate
  X projected area popu-
  lation
          368
  » average daily census;
  average daily census +10
          O5
  » number of beds needed

  (B-l -F-G3-3-3-Y-Y)

• Calif. State Plan
  Guidelines

  Minimum hospital beds/
  population/health
  planning area
               Minimum
  Population     Beds
  500,000+        300
  200-500,000     200
  125-200,000     150
         B,
           OO   100-25
   50- 75,000      75
  Remote, low-  One 50 bed
  density area  facility

  (B-1-S-G3-3-1-N-K)

• BACHPC Recommended Occu-
  pancy Levels

  - Med/Surg      90Z
  - Maternity     75
  - Pediatric     75
  - Psychiatric   90
  - Nursing Home  90

  (B-1-R-G3-3-1-N-N)
           Security
Concern:  What measures pro-
vide security that the mini-
mum will be met?
  Hospital Survey and Con-
  struction Act of 1946
  (the Hill-Burton Act)
                                        Equal Access
                                   Ability  to  Influence
  Grants to States for
  Hospital Planning and
  Construction
  (B-2-F-G1-1-5-Y-Y)
• California State Plan
  Guidelines
  Bay_Area Comprehensive
  Health Planning Council
  (BACHPC)
  Areawide Health Facilities
  and Services Flan and

  Individual county CUP
  agency recommendations
  (B-2-R-G3-1-5-Y-N)

  "How do you feel about:
  The doctors, clinics and
  hospitals you would use in
  this area?" (May 1972)—
  Institute for Social
  Research ,

  Delig.  Pleas.  Mos. Sat.
   11%     5«       32*

  Mixed  Mos. Piss. Unhap.

   Ill      5Z        42

  Terr.
    3Z
Concern:   To what portion of   Concern:   To what degree  is
the population are the assur-  the individual  able  to  influ-
ences of  adequate facilities/  ence availability and quality
services/quality of care       of health care?
applicable?
• Hill-Burton Act
  States which submit a
  State Plan

  (B-3-F-C1-2-5-Y-Y)
                               • CHPC Review Process

                                 Chapter 1451 of 1969
                                 California statutues
                                 gives 12 areawide CHPCs
                                 responsibility for re-
                                 view and approval of
                                 facilities licensed by
                                 State Department of
                                 Health

                                 (B-4-S-G1-1-5-Y-Y)
                                 BACHPC

                                 - Public Hearing and Appeal
                                   Process
                                 - Consumer Representation
                                 - Participation of  providers

                                 (B-4-R-G3-1-7-N-N)

                                 1972 Amendments to  Social
                                 Security Act requires
                                 State planning agencies  to
                                 review capital expenditures
                                 for coordinated develop-
                                 ment of services

                                 (B-4-F-G1-3-5-Y-Y)

                                 BACHPC recommends all
                                 general hospitals develop
                                 a 5-year plan coordinated
                                 with PL 92-603 (1972 amend-
                                 ments 3-year capital expen-
                                 diture funding

                                 (B-4-R-G3-1-7-N-N)
                                                            B-49

-------
HEALTH SECTOR (continued)


    1Baslc Need/Threshold

Facilities (continued)

• California State Health
  Planning Council
  Estimate for general
  hospital beds for an area
  •ay not exceed State Plan
  estimate, calculated on
  an 85Z maximum occupancy
  factor

  (B-1-S-G3-3-1-Y-Y)

» BACHPC Occupancy Rate
  Planning Factors

  Med/Surg.
    (incl. psych.)    85Z
  Maternal            70
  Pediatric           65

  (B-1-S-G3-3-5-T-Y)
            Security
        qual Access
                               • Accessibility (Facilities)

                                 • California State Flan
                                   for Hospitals,
                                   Recommendations for
                                   hospital accessibility:
                                   - High density urban:
                                     vlthln 10-mile radius,
                                     or 30 minutes auto
                                     travel tine
                                   - Suburban:  within
                                     15-mile radius or 30
                                     minutes auto travel
                                     tine
                                   - Rural:  Within 45-
                                     mile radius or one
                                     hour auto travel time
                                   - Public transportation:
                                     No more than 1-1/2
                                     times auto travel time
                                   - Where  transportation
                                     is inadequate, hospl
                                     tal should provide
                                 (B-3-S-G3-2-7-N-N)
                                                                 Ability to Influence
                                                              o BACHPC
                                                                General hospitals should
                                                                develop services In com—
                                                                nunlty to improve conven-
                                                                ient access

                                                                (B3-S-G3-1-7-N-N)
Accessibility (Personnel)

• Physician Distribution
• Emergency Health Personnel
  Act

  Interim Criteria for defi-
  nition of Physician/Dentist
  Shortage:
  Primary care physician-to-
  population ratio of less
  than 1:4000 (if a city)
  Dentist-to-population
  ratio less than 1:5000

  (B-1-F-C3-2-1-H-H)

  In San Francisco (pop.:
  700,000 - 1971 est.),
  there are more than 1800
  physicians and 600
  dentists.3 (Physician
  ratio appro*. 1:400).

  Hunter's Point, S.F.:
  50,000 pop., 5 physi-
  cians.   (Physician ratio:
  1:10,0001-
                                 Health services scarcity
                                 areas are neighborhoods
                                 recognized as major poverty
                                 pockets, and these comprise
                                 almost one-half of the
                                 total land area of San Fran-
                                 cisco 2
• Emergency Health Personnel
  %ct (1970)
  National Health Service
  Corps
  Secretary of HEW designates
  cities or areas which have
  a shortage

  (B-2-F-G3-3-5-N-N)
  FT 1*72:  ^.75 additional
  conmunltifes assigned health
  personnel, providing support
  for 175-225 communities
  with a total population of
  700,000 to 900.000.5
i Emergency Health Personnel
 Act
 Eligibility for considera-
 tion of application:

 Designation as a "critical
 health manpower shortage
 area" by a State CEP agency

 (B-3-F-G-3-1-7-N-N)
                                                                          Health Personnel
Act
Burden of proof is upon
applicant
                                                            B-50

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HEALTH SECTOR (continued)
   D,
     Basic Seed/Threshold

Emergency Medical Services,
Availability and Quality

• PL93-154
  Requirements:

  - Personnel to provide
    services on 24-hour
    basis
  - Central communications
  - Adequate vehicles
  — Adequate number of
    accessible facilities
  — Provide for transfer
    of patient
  - Assure services in
    disasters, national
    emergencies, etc.

  (B-1-F-G1-2-5-Y-Y)
• California AB515
  Statewide 911 system
  required by 1982

  (B-1-S-C1-3-5-Y-Y)
       Security
                                     Equal Access
• Criteria developed by the
  Emergency Medical Care
  Committee of San Mateo
  City
  - Emergency services must
    be easily accessible at
    any time by the general
    public
  - Initial unit must be at
    scene within 5 minutes
    of receipt of call

  (B-1-R-G3-3-1-Y-Y)
• PL93-154
  Emergency Medical Services
  Systems Act (1973)'

  (B-2-F-G1-2-1-Y-Y)

  Service Area determined
  by Secretary of HEW on
  basis of size/population/
  economic diversity

  (B-2-F-G3-2-5-N-Y)
 ' PL93-1S4
  Access to  specialized
  facilities
  Shared personnel  and
  equipment
  Provide, without  prior
  inquiry, necessary  emer-
  gency medical services  to
  all patients  requiring
  such

  Provide for provision of
  services on reciprocal
  basis
  (B-3-F-G1-2-5-Y-Y)
• California AB515 (1972)

  Mandatory Operational
  and Technical Standards

  - Required agreement
    between public agencies
    sharing common boundar-
    ies to respond if called
    outside normal
    Jurisdiction

  (B-2-S-G1-3-5-Y-Y)

• Emergency Medical Care
  Committee (San Mateo)
  For each county required
  by California law.  (Its
  only function is to submit
  an annual report) .
  (B-2-S-G1-1-7-N-Y)

o San Mateo County
  Performance standards
  must be legally mandated
  State standards to define
  minimum acceptable levels
  of capabiliiv for 4 levels
  of service:
  - First-in Unit
  - Basic Res- ;ie
  - Basic Emergency
    Ambulance
  - Emergency^Paramedic
    Service
  (These are not yet mandated)

  (B-3-S-G3-3-5-N-Y)
• San Mateo County
  Availability of each
  level of service will be
  dependent on need and
  availability of resources
  (B-3-R-G3-1-7-N-N)
                                  Ability to Influence
                                                              • PL93-154
   Grants and Contracts  for
   research
   HEW study to determine
   medical barriers to medi-
   cal care in emergency
   conditions

 • PL93-154
   Further requirements  of
   Act:

   - Provide training
   - Public participation in
     policy formulation
   - Standardized record-
     keeping system
   - Public education
     programs
   - Periodic review
   (B-4-F-G3-1-7-N-N)
• San Mated County

  There must be an ongoing
  monitoring mechanism
  with sanctions
  Medical records will be
  available for review

  (B-4-R-G3-1-7-Y-Y)
  Long-term Nursing Care

• BACHPC
  Facilities.should separate
  patients of differing ages
  and problems

  (B/H-1-R-G3-1-7-N-N)
  BACHFC
  All Health Facility Planning
  Areas should have

  - Skilled nursing care
  - Intermediate care

  B-2-R-G3-1-7-N-N)
  BACHPC

  Facilities and services
  should be accessible to
  population served

  (B-3-R-C3-1-7-N-N)
 BACHPC

 Each facility should have
 a strong utilization re-
 view system
 (B-4-R-G3-1-7-N-N)
                                                           R-51

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HEALTH  SECTOR  (continued)

    B,
      Basic Need/Threshold

• BACHPC

  Method  for estimating  long-
  term  nursing beds:

  1979  65+ population
  1972  65+ population

  1972  long-term care
      patient  days
  (90S) occupancy rate X 365

  = Estimate for beds

  (B-1-R-G3-3-5-Y-Y)
        Security
• State Advisory Health
  Council

  BACHPC estimate for any
  area may not exceed esti-
  mate in State Plan for
  Hospitals

  (B-2-S-G3-3-5-Y-Y)

• Santa Clara City Health
  Facilities Licensing
  and Certification
  24-hour skilled nursing
  care means:

  - Direct supervision by
    licensed nurse
  - Dietary Therapeutic
    Program
  - Patient Activity
    Program

  (B-2-S-C3-2-5-Y-Y)

• Currently the Santa
  Clara County Health
  Facilities Licensing
  and Certification uses
  Medicare and MediCal
  standards

  (B-2-S-G3-2-2-Y-Y)
                                        Equal Access
                                      Ability to Influence

                                 • BACHPC

                                   Major consumer repre-
                                   sentation

                                   All long-term care facili-
                                   ties should develop long-
                                   range master plans

                                   (B-4-R-G3-1-7-N-N)
• Calif. Nursing Home Admin-
  istrators Act

  Nursing home administrators
  must be licensed:

  - Exam
  - 100 hours continuing
    education par  year

  (B-1-S-G1-3-2-Y-Y)

• Medical Assistance Programs
  (Social Security)

• Social Security, Title  I:

  Care and  Services eligible
  for payment:
  -' Inpatient hospital
  - Skilled nursing-home
  - Physicians' services
  - Outpatient hospital or
    clinic
  - Home health care
  - Private duty nursing
  - Physical therapy
  - Dental services
  - Laboratory and X-rays
  - Prescribed drugs, eye-
    glasses, dentures
  - Diagnostic services
  - Any other medical care
    recognized under State
    law
  (B-1-F-G1-2-5-Y-Y)
• California  Nursing Home
  Administrators Act
  (1972)

  (B-2-S-G1-3-2-Y-Y)
•  Social Security, Title I

   Grants to States for Old-
   Age Assistance and Medical
   Assistance for the Aged

   (B-2-F-G1-2-5-Y-Y)
• Social Security, Title V
  Maternal and Child Health
  and Crippled Children's
  Services
  (B-2-F-G1-1-5-Y-N)


* FY 1971:  56 projects
  providing care to 141,000
  mothers and 47,000
                                 Infants.
                                                     B-52
• Social Security, Title I

  States which submit a
  State Flan

• Social Security, Title I

  65+ not receiving old-age
  assistance and vnable to
  pay for neces^.    medical
  services

• Social Security . Title I

  No care or services for any
  inmate of a public (except
  medical) institution

  (B-3-F-G1-3-5-Y-Y)

• Social Security, Title V

  States which submit a State
  Plan

  Grants to extend services,
  especially in rural or
  areas of severe economic
  distress

  (B-3-F-G1-2-5-Y-N)

• Maternity, infant care,
  school and preschool
  children

  (B-3-F-G1-1-5-Y-H)
• Social Security, Title I

  Rehabilitation services
  to help such individual
  attain self-care

  (B-4-F-C1-2-7-N-N)

-------
HEALTH SECTOR (continued)
      Basic Need/Threshold
                                       Security
                                                                     Equal Access
                                                                                                 Ability to Influence
• Social Security, Title XVI   • Social Security, Title XVI • Social Security. Title XVI
  Care and services eligible
  for payment:

  (sane as for Title I)
  (B-1-F-G1-2-5-Y-Y)
  Social Security, Title
  XVIII

  Basic Hospital Insurance
  Benefits for any spell of
  illness:
  - Inpatient hospital treat-
    ment up to 150 days
  - Post-hospital 100 days
  - Post-hospital home health
    services 100 visits
  Plus supplementary Medi-
  cal Insurance benefits

  (B-1-F-G1-3-5-Y-Y)
  Supplemental Security In-
  come for Aged, Blind, and
  Disabled
  No payment may be made to
  States for Titles I, X, or
  XIV, if State receives
  grants under Title XVI
  (B-2-F-G1-1-5-Y-N)

  Social Security, Title
  XVIII - Medicare

  Provides health insur-
  ance for people eligible
  for old-age insurance

  (B-2-F-G1-3-5-Y-Y)
 States which submit a State
 Plan

 - Aged: 65+
 - Needy
    a) 65+
    b) Disabled
    c) Blind
 (B-3-F-G1-3-5-Y-Y)

i Social Security, Title
 XVIII - Eligibility:

 Individuals 65+ and entitled
 to benefits under Title II
 (Sec. 202):

 - Who is fully insured
 - Has attained age 62
 — Has filed application for
   old-age Insurance benefits
 - Individuals under 65 en-
   titled to various disa-
   bility insurance benefits
   (see Sec. 226)
 (B-3-F-G1-3-5-Y-Y)
                               •  Social Security, Title XVI

                                 Rehabilitation services
                                 to help such individuals
                                 attain self-care

                                 (B-4-F-G1-2-7-N-N)
                                 FY 1971:  Protection  to
                                 20,300,000  and payments
                                 on behalf of 4,500,000.'

• Social Security. Title XIX   • Social Security, Title XIX  •  Social Security, Title XIX
  Care and services eligible
  for payment:

  - Inpatient hospital
  - Outpatient hospital
  - Other lab. and X-ray
  - Skilled nursing facility
  — Services
  - Physicians' services
  - Medical care recognized
    under State law
  — Home health care
    services
  - Private duty nursing
  - Clinic
  - Dental
  - Physical therapy
  — Prescribed drugs, den-
    tures, prosthetic
    devices
  - Other diagnostic services
  - Inpatient hospital for
    65 or over in TB or
    mental institution
  - Intermediate care
  — Inpatient psychiatric
    hospital for under 21
  - Any other medical care or
    remedial care recognized
    under State law

  (B-1-F-G1-3-5-Y-Y)

 • Public Health Service,
  Title III

  Basic services:

  - Ambulatory patient diag-
    nosis and follow-up for
    acute
  — Preventive services inte-
    grated Into treatment
  - Emergency medical/dental
  - Dental care

   'B-1-F-G3-3-5-Y-Y)
  Grants to States for
  Medical Assistance Payments
  (Medicaid)

  (B-2-F-G1-1-2-Y-N)
  FY 1971;  18,200,000
  recipients of medical
  assistance.
• Public Health Service,
  Title III, Part A,
  Sec. 310
  Health Services for
  Domestic Agricultural
  Migrants
  (B-2-F-G1-1-5-Y-N)
* FY 1971:  108 grants to
  migrant health projects
  for $14,000,000s
 States which submit a State
 Plan

 Eligibility of Individuals:

 - Public assistance (welfare)
   recipients
 - "Medically Needy": not on
   welfare but are 65+; blind;
   disabled; family with a
   child under 21 who is w/o
   support of a parent
 — Indlgents under 18 who
   cannot get AFDC
 - Indigents 18-64
 (Note: #3 and #4 must be
 within AFDC income eligi-
 bility limits)

 (B-3-F-G1-3-5-Y-Y)
                               • Social  Security,  Title XIX

                                 Rehabilitation and other
                                 services  to help  such
                                 individuals attain sell-
                                 care

                                 (B-4-F-G1-1-7-Y-N)
• Public Health Service,
  Title III
  Public or nonprofit
  private agencies to serve
  domestic agricultural
  migrant workers
  (B-3-F-G1-1-5-V-N)
B-53
                                Public Health Service,
                                Title III
                                Project Policy Board
                                required

                                Methods for evaluation
                                required

                                (B-4-F-G3-1-5-Y-Y)

-------
 HEALTH SECTOR  (continued)
     1Ba3ic Need/Threshold

 •  Public Health Service Act
   Title III
   Secretary of HEW is
   authorized to accept State
   and local assistance in
   enforcement of quaran-
   tine regulations

  (B-1-F-G1 -1-5-Y-N)

• Public Health Service Act
  Title III

  Secretary is authorized
  to extend temporary
  assistance in health
  emergencies (to States
  and localities)
  (B-1-F-G1-1-5-Y-N)
      ^Security
• Public Health Service Act
  Title III
  Secretary shall consider
  the extent of the problem:
  - Measured against the
    highest immunization
    levels ever attained, by
    annual Immunization Sur-
    vey by the Census Bureau

  (B-1-F-03-3-1-Y-Y)
• San Francisco Dept. Public
  Health
  School-Entry Survey under-
  taken by San Francisco
  Health Cap t. »TV? «rhool
  districts
  (B-1-L-G3-3-1-Y-Y)
 Venereal diseases reported
 to the health department
 with percentages reported
 by private physicians
 e Public Health Service_Act
   Title III. Part B
   Federal-State Cooperation

   (B2-F-C1-1-5-Y-H)
      Equal  Access
^Ability to Influence
 1 Public Health Service Act
   Title  III.  PlrT~B	
   Grants for  Vaccination
   Programs  and Other Com-
   municable Disease Control
   Programs
   In  San Francisco in 1971
   312 new  cases  of IB and
   44.4  cases/100,000 pop.
   This  Is  2.5  tinea rate
   for Calif, and nation.10


   TB  rate  of Chinatown la
   6 times  the  rate for
   San Francisco,11

• Public Health  Service Act
  Title III. Part  B

  Projects and Programs
  for the Prevention and
  Control of Venereal
  Disease

  (B-2-F-G1-3-1-Y-Y)

* FY 1971:  72 federal
  health officers assigned
  to State and local health
  depts. for VD control
  activities.13

• Public Health Service Act
  Title X

  Population Research
  and Voluntary Family
  Planning Programs

  (B-2-F-G1-1-5-Y-Y)

* FY 1971;?'62 new projects
  funded for $10,200,000.
  700,000 women benefited
  in 1971, and an estimated
  1,500,000 will  benefit in
  19721*
• Public Health Service Act
  Title III
  State health authorities
* Public Health Service Act
  Title III

  Grants to States, locali-
  ties, public and nonprofit
  entitles for projects
  States must submit a State
  Flan for approval

  (B-3-F-G1-2-5-Y-Y)
                                                     B-54
1 Public Health  Service Act
 Title X

 A.  Public or  nonprofit
 private agencies

 Secretary shall take  into
 account:

 - Number of patients
 - Extent of local need
   for planning services
 - Relative need of appli-
   cant and ability to
   make effective
   contribution

 (B-3-F-G1-3-5-Y-Y)

 B.  State Health Authori-
 ties which have submitted
 a State Plan

 Priority given to persons
 from low-Income families;
 "low-income" to be defined
 by the Secretary

 (B-3-F-G1-1-5-Y-Y)

-------
HEALTH SECTOR (concluded)

    B.
     •"•Basic Need/Threshold

• PL 83-568

  Hospital and health facili-
  ties for Indians

  Conservation of health of
  Indians.
     Security
• PL 83-568

  HEW/PHS shall bear respon-
  sibility for maintenance
  and operation of hospital
  and health facilities

  (B-2-F-G1-1-5-Y-N)

• PL 83-151

  Funds to construct health
  facilities

  (B-2-F-G1-3-5-Y-N)
»3
  Equal Access
                                                                 ^Ability  to Influence
                                                            • PL 83-151

                                                              Public or nonprofit agencie
                                                              as a more desirable alter-
                                                              native to direct Federal
                                                              construction

                                                              (B-3-F-G1-3-5-Y-N)
                                 FY 1972:  1,000,000 out-
                                 patient preventative
                                 visits; 1,300,000 out-
                                 patient visits to
                                 hospitals.15

                               • PL 93-222

                                 Health Maintenance
                                 Organization Act  (1973)

                                 Assistance for establish-
                                 ment and expansion of
                                 HMOs
                              ' PL 93-222

                               Organizations, to receive
                               assistance, must be

                               - A legal entity providing
                                 basic health services
                               - Fiscally sound

                               (B-3-F-G1-3-5-Y-K )
                                 FY 1972:  an estimated
                                 117 grants and 65 con-
                                 tracts for HMO planning
                                 and development will be
                                 funded totaling
                                 $21,700,000.16
                                                           B-55

-------
HEALTH SECTOR, NUTRITION MATRIX - References
Source

Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs, United States Senate,
"National Nutrition Policy Study, Report and Recommendation — VIII,
committee print print prepared by the Panel on Nutrition and
Special Groups, 93rd Congress, 2nd Session, June 1974.
      1.  P. 7

      2.  p. 7

      3.  p. 69

      4.  p. 31

      5.  p. 20

      6.  p. 52

      7.  p. 51

      8.  p. 35

      9.  p. 30

     10.  p. 39

     11.  p. 112

     12.  p. 107

     13.  p. 94

     14.  p. 92

     15.  p. 97

     16.  p. 107

     17.  p. 107

     18.  p. 70

     19.  p. 72

     20.  p. 79

     21.  p. 83

     22.  p. 84
                           B-56

-------
HEALTH SECTOR MATRIX - References



 1.  Department of Health, Education and Welfare, "HEW Catalog of
     Assistance.  Programs Providing Financial Support and Services
     to States, Communities, Organizations, and  Individuals," U. S.
     Government Printing Office, Washington, D.  C.  (1972), Pt 152.

 2.  San Francisco Comprehensive Health Planning Council, "San
     Francisco Plan for Health, 1973," San Francisco, California
      (1973), p. 5.

 3.   Ibid.

 4.   SFCHPC, p. 13.

 5.   HEW Catalog, p.  179.

 6.   HEW Catalog, p.  162.

 7.   HEW Catalog, p.  346.

 8.   HEW Catalog, p.  333.

  9.   HEW Catalog, p.  171.

 10.   SFCHPC,  p.  4.

 11.   SFCHPC,  p.  16.

 12.   San Francisco Department of Public Health, "Statistical
      Report,  1973," San Francisco, California (1973), p. 12.

 13.   HEW Catalog, p. 142.

 14.  HEW Catalog, p. 150.

 15.  HEW Catalog, p. 157.

 16.  HEW Catalog, p. 177.
                            B-57

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                      HEALTH SECTOR-BIBLIOGRAPHY
Bay Area Comprehensive Health Planning Council,  "Short Version of the
     Areawide Health Facilities and Services Plan, Effective Date:
     January 1, 1974 - December 31, 1974," San Francisco, California (1974)

California Medical Association, "Socio-Economic Reports," published by
     the Division of Socio-Economics and Research, San Francisco,
     California.

Code of Federal Regulations, Title 7:  Agriculture ( 1 January 1974), and
     Title 42:  Public Health  ( 1 October 1973).

Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, United States Senate, "Compilation
     of Selected Public Health Laws, Volume I:  Health Law," joint com-
     mittee print, 93rd Congress,  1st Session, March 1973.

           , "Compilation of Selected Public Health Laws, Volume II:
     Food, Drug, and Related Law,"  joint committee print, 93rd Congress,
     1st Session, March 1973.

Department of Health  Education and Welfare, HEW Catalog of Assistance.
     Programs Providing Financial Support and Services to States,
     Communities  , Organizations, and Individuals, U. S. Government
     Printing Office, Washington, D. C., (1972).

Department of Health, Education and Welfare, "Establishing a Health
     Care Practice in Your Community, Guidelines and Procedures"
      (draft), The National Health Service Corps, The United States
     Public Health Service.

Everstine, Louis, et al., "Community Needs for Mental Health Services,"
     PERT Reports: 2, Santa Clara County Health Department, San Jose,
     California ( 15 December 1972).

Federal Register, various issues.

Boilings, Ernest E., "Hunger in America," Super-marketing, pp. 41-60
      (June 1971).

The  Liaison Committee on Medical Education of The Association of American
     Medical Colleges and The Council on Medical Education, American
     Medical Association, "Functions and Structure of a Medical School"
      (June 1973).

                                6-58

-------
                 Special Criteria for Programs in the Basic Medical
     Sciences" (December 1973).

National Academy  of Sciences-National Research Council,  Recommended
     Dietary Allowances, Eighth Revised Edition, 1974,  Washington, B.C.
     (1974).

National Commission on Accrediting, "Accreditation in Medicine,"
     Washington, D.C. (November 1970).

San Francisco Comprehensive Health Planning Council,  "San Francisco
     Plan for Health, 1973," San Francisco, California (1973).

San Francisco Department of Public Health, "statistical Report,  1973,"
     San Francisco, California (1973).

Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs, United States Senate,
     "Hunger—1973," committee print, 93rd Congress,  1st Session,
     May 1973.

          , "National Nutrition Policy Study, Report and Recommendation—
     VIII,  committee print prepared by the Panel on Nutrition and
     Special Groups, 93rd Congress, 2nd Session, June 1974.

            , "studies of Human Need," committee print, 92nd Congress,
     2nd Session, June 1972.

State of California, "California State Plan for Community Mental Health
     Centers, July 1, 1972 - June 30, 1973," Bureau of Health Facilities
     Planning and Construction, Department of Public Health, Sacramento,
     California.

             , "California State Plan for Hospitals, J'lly 1, 1970 - June 30,
     1972," Bureau of Health Facilities Planning and  onstruction,
     Department of Public Health, Sacramento, California.
                                 B-59

-------
3.   Social

      The  social  sector includes various  types of environmental influ-
 ences which  affect  interpersonal  skills  and relationships.  For this
 sector we  sought out standards and related data in five issue areas,
 each of which was subdivided further into the following concerns:

      •  Crime:  Safety from crime
      •  Freedom  to  be:  self-expression; protection of privacy
      •  Family:  child abuse; marriage;  adoption
      •  Education:  quality; availability; equality
      •  Criminal Justice Process:  just  treatment; conviction  and
         confinement

      The matrices portray  the various  standards and related data identi-
 fied in our  brief exploration of  the issue areas of crime, freedom  to
 be, family,  and  the criminal justice process.

      Education
      Education,  the  fourth  issue area of  the social sector, was selected
 for more detailed  exploration, both because, of its unquestioned impor-
 tance to life quality  in general, and because the monitoring of education
 has received greater attention relative to  other issues in the social
 sector.

      Matrix Analysis:   Another Example.   As an alternative way of
  introducing the standards  and data  pertaining to education,  they  are
  presented  and  discussed below in  a  somewhat different  format  than
  is used in the standard matrix.   First, we  consider  definitional  and procedural
  standards, then educational availability/attainment,  and  then quality and
  equality.   Following this  alternate approach, the  various standards and
 data are  then  presented in  the same matrix  format  for  other  case  examples.
                                   B-60

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SECTOR: SOCIAL (S)          ISSUE: EDUCATION  (4)



           BASIC EDUCATION CONCERNS
Definitional
and Procedural
Serrano v. Priest
(Calif. Supreme
Court):
Defines common
public education
to be of "funda-

hence a basic
welfare concern.
(B-1-S-G2-3-4-Y-N)
Common custom: Noi
being able to reat!
write, or cipher
Is a deficit that
is considered
intolerable for ai
adequate adult
life.

-------
SOCIAL SECTOR

ISSUE:  Education
        Quality, Availability, and Equality
                                                           •   Standards
                                                           *   Objective Data
                                                           f   Subjective Data
	  Basic fteed/Threshold

Concern:  What are the
thresholds for quality and
availability of adequate
education?
           Security
Concern:  What measures pro-
vide security that the
minimum will be met?
	Equal Access	        Ability to Influence

Concern:  To what portion of   Concern:  To what degree is
the population are the assur-  the individual able to
ances of adequate facilities/  influence availability and
instruction/quality of         quality of education?
education given?
 • Serrano v. Priest (Calif.  •  California Education Code
   Supreme Court) 1974

   Defines common public
   education to be at "funds-
   nental Interest", hence a
   basic welfare concern
   (B-1-S-G2-3-4-Y-N)
  Common custom: Not being
  able to read, write or
  cipher li a deficit that
  i* considered intolerable
  for an adequate adult life
* Percent of Population
  over 14 years of age
  illiterate in 1960: *

  U.S. » 2.4X
  Iowa - .11
  Louisiana -6.31
• California Education Code
  13103
  Sets standards for teach-
  ing credentials and
  special training programs
  (B-1-S-G1-3-5-N-H)

e California Education Code
  13188
  Sets minimum years of
  study and degrees required
  for teaching credentials
  (B-1-S-G-1-3-5-S-N)
  Requires all children
  through age 16 to attend
  a school meeting minimum
  standards

  (B-2-S-G1-3-5-Y-Y)

  Article IX-5. California
  Constitution
  Free common schools to be
  provided and open at least
  six months/year
  (B-2-S-G1-3-1-N-Y)
                               • California Education Code
                                 6720
                                 Encourages establishment of
                                 technical, agricultural,
                                 end natural resource conser-
                                 vation schools in areas
                                 where they are needed in
                                 order to reduce the number
                                 of school dropouts, combat
                                 juvenile delinquency, and to
                                 provide skilled and trained
                                 workers

                                 (B2-S-G1-1-7-N-N)
e Title V of Civil Rights
  Act of 1964

  Requires "Equality of
  Education Opportunity
  Survey" and a related report
  on availability and quality
  of education for minorities
  (B-3-F-G1-1-6-N-Y)

• Brown v. Board of Education
  (U.S. Supreme Court, 1954)
  Outlawed segregation in
  public schools

  (B-3-G2-3-4-Y-N)

• Project Head Start (PHEW)

  Provides programs of pre-
  school instruction for
  children of welfare or
  poverty families
                                 (B-3-F-G1-3-1/2-Y-Y)

                                 Project Follow Through
                                 (PHEW)
                                 Provides programs of
                                 instruction to sustain
                                 gains made in Read Start
                                 Program

                                 (B-3-F-G1-3-1/2-Y-Y)
• California Education Code
  5761
          V
  Mandates'special instruc-
  tion for non-English speak-
  ing children
  (B-2-S-G1-2-5-Y-N)
• Amendment X, U.S. Consti-
  tution

  By omission, reserves
  education as a function of
  the states
  (B/H-4-F-G1-7-N-N)

• Public Law  20- USC 123
  Prohibits Federal "control"
  of education
  (B/H-4-F-G1-3-4-N-N)
                                                              • California Education Code
                                                                8574

                                                                Local school district
                                                                governing boards shall set
                                                                tniniffluin acsdecilc standards
                                                                for high school graduation
                               * Equality of Education
                                 Opportunity Survey:
                                 Weighted and standardized
                                 achievement scores (mean
                                 - 50, standard develop-
                                 ment » 10) of white 9th
                                 graders in 1965 is 52.8;
                                 of black Is 41.6; of Puerto
                                 Rican is 40.6

                               + Equality  of Education
                                 Opportunity Survey:
                                 "Attitudes such as a sense
                                 of control over one's
                                 environment highly related
                                 to student achievement,
                                 and minority students are
                                 far less likely than others
                                 to feel they have a chance
                                 to control theirs
                       B-62

-------
SOCIAL SECTOR
ISSUE:  Education (continued)

  B!
    Basic Need/Threshold
                                         Security
                               • Public Law 93-380
                                 Elementary & Secondary
                                 Education Act of 1965.
                                 Title I
                                 Provides programs to pro-
                                 mote equal educational
                                 opportunity for all
                                 students
                                 (B-2-F-G1-1-2-Y-Y)

                               • California Education Code
                                 6812
                                 Allows special, non-
                                 standard experimental
                                 programs for multiple-
                                 handicapped students
                                 (B-2-S-G1-1-7-N-N)

                               • California Education  Code
                                 894
                                 Education of Handicapped
                                 Act:
                                 Provides grants  to pre-
                                 school  and  elementary
                                 school  programs  for
                                 handicapped
                                  (B-2-F-G1-1-7-Y-N)
Equal Access
 Ability to  Influence
Curriculum Development  &
Supplemental Materials
Commission
Specifies methods with
which to establish stan-
dards for classroom text-
books
(B-4-S-G1-1-7-Y-N)
                                                            B-63

-------
 SOCIAL SECTOR
 ISSUE:  Education
         Quality, Availability, and Equality
  Basic Need/Threshold

California Education Code
8575
Mandates successful comple-
tion of 200 semester hours
and certain substantive
courses of Instruction for
highschool graduation
(H-1-S-G1-3-1-N-N)
 • Palo Alto Unified School
   District Board Policy
   3-8.6
   Mandates successful
   completion of 210 semester
   hours and certain sub-
   stantive courses of
   instruction for high-
   school graduation
   (H-1-L-G1-3-1-N-Y)

 • National Assessment of
   educational Progress
   Under authority of Educa-
   tion Commission of the
   States, collects periodic
   national data on achieve-
   ment of various age
   groups in art, career &
   occupational development,
   citizenship, literature,
   math, music, reading,
   science, social studies
   and writing.
* Number of high school
  graduates as a percentage
  of entering 9th graders:
  U.S. - 79%
  Minnesota = 92%
  Mississippi = 59%
  (National Education
  Association)
                                          Security
                                                                   H3
                                • Educational  Amendments of
                                  1972.  Title  III (P.L.  92-
                                  3181
                                  Provides  assistance to
                                  marginal  institutions  of
                                  higher education whose
                                  survival  is  threatened
                                  (H-2-F-G1-1-7-Y-N)
• California Education Code
  1075.5
  Establishes criteria for
  state interest-free loans,
  scholarships, and grants
  for Higher Education
  (H-2-S-G1-1-7-Y-N)

• Public Law 93-380
  Prohibits Federal funds
  to any school not comply-
  ing with guidelines for
  access/protection of
  records about the student.
  (H-2-F-G1-3-5-Y-N)

• California Education Code
  5736
  Mandates offering of
  classes in citizenship for
  and notification of
  applicants for naturaliz-
  ation.
  (H-2-S-G1-1-7-Y-N)
                                                                     Equal Access
                               • Public Law 93-380

                                 Provides grants to local
                                 educational agencies to
                                 provide programs for
                                 gifted children

                                 (H-3-F-G1-1-7-Y-N)
• California Education Code
  8553
  Requires social science
  instruction in schools to
  include contributions made
  by minority persons to
  development of the state
  (H-3-S-G1-1-7-Y-N)

• California Education Code
  1075.5
  Prohibits racial discrim-
  ination when considering
  eligibility for financial
  assistance (loans, etc.)
  (H-3-S-G1-1-7-N-N)
                               * Graduates of vocational
                                 schools earn 36% less
                                 than college graduates
                                 doing the same work
                                 (National Institute
                                 of Education Survey)
                                   Ability to Influence
                               • Specific Federal guide-
                                 lines for Head Start and
                                 Follow ftirough Programs:
                                 require community advisory
                                 committees
                                 (H-4-F-G3-3-Y-Y)
                                                                                           • California Education Code
                                                                                             22700
                                                                                             Sets commission for
                                                                                             accreditation of state
                                                                                             colleges
                                                                                             (H-4-5-G1-1-7-N-&)

                                                                                           • California Education Code
                                                                                             1070
                                                                                             Mandates counseling ser-
                                                                                             vices for high school
                                                                                             students and their parents
                                                                                             to assist in planning and
                                                                                             evaluating students
                                                                                             educational program
                                                                                             (H-4-S-G1-1-7-Y-N)
                               * 1974 Gallup Poll:
                                 SIX of college graduates
                                 perceived having made
                                 significant personal
                                 progress during past year
                                 as compared to 35Z of
                                 those with only grade
                                 school education
 • California Education Code
   25517
   Sets minimum credits for
   graduation In state
   colleges
   (H-1-S-G1-3-1-K-N)
• California Constitution IV
  Prescribes "Moral Improve-
  ment" as one of the prin-
  cipal purposes of public
  schools
  (H-2-S-G1-1-7-Y-Y)
                               • Advanced Placement Pro-
                                 gram (College Entrance
                                 Examination Board)
                                 Enables high school stu-
                                 dents to receive college
                                 credits for some courses
                                 taken in high school
                                 (H-4-0-NG2-1-7-Y-Y)
                                                               B-64

-------
SOCIAL SECTOR
ISSUE:  Education (continued)

  «!
    Basic Need/Threshold
• Federation of Regional
  Conmissions of Higher
  Education
  Establishes minimum stan-
  dards for accreditation of
  Higher Education
  (H-1-0-NC1-3-5-N-Y)
Security
                           H3
                              Equal  Access
                                                     	Ability to Influence
                                                     * Advanced Placement Program
                                                       In California -
                                                       74X of the eligible stu-
                                                       dents do not now have the
                                                       opportunity to join the
                                                       program because their
                                                       high schools do not
                                                       offer it

                                                     • California Education Code
                                                       8506
                                                       Teaching about repro-
                                                       ductive organs, etc. may
                                                       not be done unless
                                                       parents are informed and
                                                       given a chance to have
                                                       their child exempted
                                                       from this instruction
                                                       (H-4-S-G1-3-4/5-N-N)
                                                              B-65

-------
The former type of presentation may be easier to read than the matrix,





because  it more easily allows one to make an ordered inquiry  into  the





following questions:






     •   Is education a basic or a higher order concern?



     •  Who has responsibility for setting educational standards and



        ensuring that they are met?



     •  What are the basic standards in education which if not met are



        to be considered an intolerable situation?



     •  How is the meeting of these standards attempted and/or guaranteed?



     •  How, if at all, is the meeting of these standards monitored?








     Definitional/Procedural Standards and Related Data.  Although



education is not an issue involved with physiological needs, safety, or



security per se, there is at least one standard from which we can infer



that education is, in our society, indeed a basic life concern.  In the



majority opinion of Serrano v. Priest,  common education (kindergarten



through grade twelve) was defined to be "of fundamental interest" or



importance to the welfare of the individual, because it is a necessity in



our society for the fulfillment of basic human needs (Sullivan, 1971).








     Based on common custom,  the accepted basic threshold for the types



of skills development usually thought of as education is the adequate



mastery of the "three Rs":  reading,  writing, and ciphering.  As  Social



Indicators,  1973, indicates, the average level of illiteracy of persons



in the United States over 14 years of age is 2.4 percent,  with a high



in Louisiana of 6.3 percent and a low in Iowa of 0.7 percent (National



Education Association,  1972).
                               B-66

-------
     Some might infer from existing standards, such as California
Educational Code,  8575, that mastery over additional subjects such as
some required for high school graduation--an adequate understanding
of the English language, our system of government and its history, how
to stay healthy--also should come under the definition of basic mini-
mums.  We consider these skills to come under the definition of higher
needs, the H side of the matrix.
     At least two legal standards (USC 123A, X Amendment U.S. Constitu-
tion) reserve education as a function to be fulfilled by the various
states, and therefore virtually all minimum standards pertaining to
education emanate either from state or local governments or else from
associations of professional educators.  The federal government has,
nevertheless, taken a strong role in education, including assistance
in providing equal educational opportunity for all citizens and in the
monitoring of educational affairs.  Some of the guidelines that are
mandated by federal programs in education (for example, the requirement
for community advisory committees (Head Start and Follow Through Pro-
grams) may be in conflict with the prohibition against federal control
of education expressed in USC 123-A.

     Minimum Educational Attainment  and Availability.  Although  the
procedures for  setting  minimum  educational  attainment  and  availability
vary  widely  among  the  several  states,  the standards  themselves are quite
similar due  largely  to  common processes of  accreditation  (Markley,  1974).
Most  states mandate  compulsory  school  attendance  through  at  least 16  years
of  age and specify the  types of  topics that  are to be  taught  (as,  for
example,  in California  Education  Codes 12101  and  8575).   In  the  case  of
Wisconsin v. Yoder,  however, the  U.S.  Supreme Court  held  that  public  education
beyond the eighth  grade would  intolerably injure  the quality of  life  of the
Amish  communities  who,  for  religious  reasons,  "view  secondary  school  education
as  an  impermissible  exposure of  their children to a  'worldly*  influence
in  conflict  with  their beliefs."   This case is in essential  agreement with
                                  B-67

-------
the common custom that basic skills in the "three Rs" is the basic





minimum standard for education of all citizens.  It further supports the





contention that higher QOL needs are a function of the eye of the beholder,





and that although minimum "higher" standards exist, they do not apply to





all populations.






     While minimum standards for availablility of educational opportuni-



ties are rather clearcut, the minimum standards for attainment are not.



As can be inferred by California Education Codes 12101 and 8575, as



well as Article IX,  Section 9 of the California Constitution, high



school graduation is typically based more on the amount of time exposed



to required topics than on demonstrated mastery of topics taught.  It



is as though not being able to graduate from high school  (even though



there are many graduates who are virtually illiterate)  has come to be



an intolerable condition in our society, and at least one lawsuit has



been launched against the schools for graduating a student who, never-



theless, could not read or write well enough to fill out ordinary employ-



ment application forms.



     The use of "seat time" as a criterion of educational attainment



stems from two problems:  clientele and measurement.  The public school



system must offer its wares to all children,  whether or not they want



to learn.  While the schools must provide exposure, they can in no way



be held responsible for what is essentially an individual right:  dis-



position to choose to learn or not to learn.   On the measurement side,



numerous problems exist when one tries to validly measure educational



achievement defined as competence or mastery.  It is relatively easy



to collect statistics on school attendance and matriculation, and



hence these have come into heavy use as indicators of educational




attainment. (See table below for attendance standards of different states.)
                              B-68

-------
                                                 ATTENDANCE REQUIREMENTS
STATES
ALABAMA
ALASKA
ARIZONA
ARKANSAS
CALIFORNIA
COLORADO
CONNECTICUT
DELAWARE
FLORIDA
GEORGIA
HAWAII
OAHO
UJNOIS
MDIANA
IOWA
KANSAS
KENTUCKY
LOUISIANA
MANE
MARYLAND
MASSACHUSETTS
MICHIGAN
MINNESOTA
MISSISSIPPI
MISSOURI
MONTANA
NEBRASKA
NEVADA
NEW HAMPSHIRE
NEW JERSEY
NEW MEXICO
NEW YORK
N6OTH CAROLINA
NORTH DAKOTA
OHO
OKLAHOMA
OREGON
PENNSYLVANIA
RHODE ISLAND
SOUTH CAROLINA
SOUTH DAKOTA
TENNESSEE
TEXAS
UTAH
VERMONT
VIRGINIA
WASHINGTON
WEST VIRGINIA
WISCONSIN
WYOMING
COMPULSORY
ATTENDANCE
7-16
7- 16
8-16
7-15
6-16
7-16
7-16
6-16
7-16
7-16
6-18
7-16
7-16
7-16
8-15
7-16
7-16
7-15
7-17
6-16
(b)
6-16
716

7-lLXCi
7-15
7-16
7-17
6-16
6-16
8-17
6-16
7-16
7-16
6-18
7-18
7-18
8-17
7-16
7-16
7-16
7-16
7-17
6-18
7-16
6-17
8-15
7-16
7-16
7-16

PERMITTED


6-21
6-21


5-21
6-21
7-21


6-21






6-2O(p)



5-21


6-20



(«)




5-21


6-21

6-2 1|h)
5-21
6-21
7-21


5-20(m)
6-21
6-2 1
-------
     Quality  and Equality.   Similar problems exist  in  defining  and



measuring educational  quality.  Thus,  the education profession  relies



heavily  on accreditation  of  schools  (Western Regional  Accreditation



Commission) and on  the use of  certification and  credentialing of  teachers



as  a way to ensure  quality of  education  (California Education Codes  1303



and 13188).






     The existence  ot  unequal  educational opportunity,  defined by  Brown  v



Board  of Education  and other national  policies to be an  intolerable



condition,  is one of the  reasons most  often given for  federal involve-



ment in  education.  The "Equal Educational Opportunity Survey," typi-



fies federal  QOL monitoring  efforts.   As the results of  this survey



indicate,  minority  students  suffer both objectively and  subjectively



from unequal  opportunity  as  this term  has come to be used  (Mayeske et



al, 1973).  But beyond a  very  loose concensus of concern,  there is no



general  agreement on what equal educational opportunity  means (Thomas &



Danner,  1974).  For some  it  means availability of programs that meet



the specific  needs  of  educationally disadvantaged;  for others it means



equal  levels  of educational  attainment; and for  still  others it means



equal  expectation of life success, often in terms of employment and



salary.   Added to this confusion is the lack of  understanding how to



measure  quality, and hence equality (other than  by  the standard of



academic  attainment, which many believe to be the wrong measure),  in



terms  of  the  cause  and effect relationships between the inputs of educa-



tion and  its  outputs.   Hence it is understandable that such a difficulty



exists in the monitoring  of educational quality  and equality, and why,



as exemplified by Elementary and Secondary Act PL 93-380, many policies



are written to improve an intolerable situation with remedial actions



but without a clear-cut definition  of the minimum threshold nor with



guidelines for measuring the extent to which such conditions are



experienced.





                                B-70

-------
     Higher Educational Concerns.  While standards exist to specify



minimum levels for quality in various fields of higher education and



professional training, these were considered beyond the scope of this



exploratory study.  Thus, we only observe that the general form and style



of such standards seem to parallel those which exist for basic educational



concerns.  Many of the same types of issues discussed above apply equally



well to higher educational concerns  (see, for example, National Commission





on the Financing of Postsecondary Education, 1973).
                                 B-71

-------
SOCIAL SECTOR, EDUCATION MATRIX - References
1.  Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget,
    Social Indicators, 1973, U. S. Government Printing Office,
    Washington, D. C. (1973).

2.  Equality of Educational Opportunity Survey, mandated by PL 93-380,
    Title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of  1965.

3.  Ibid.

4.  National Education Association statistic.

5.  National Institute of Education  Survey, conducted by W. W. Wilms,
     University of California, Berkeley,  California  (1974).   Reported
     in the Redwood City Tribune  (21 November  1974).

6.  Gallup Poll (1974).

7.  "A Head Start for College," San  Francisco  Chronicle  (19 December  1974)
                              B-71a

-------
SOCIAL SECTOR
ISSUE:  Crime
        - Safety from crime
    Basic Need/Threshold
Concern:  What is the thres-
hold for availability of
adequate protection from
crime?
                                      Security
Concern:  What measures pro-
vide security that the
minimum will be met?
                                                                     Equal Access
Concern:  What portion of the
population is provided ade-
quate protection?
	Ability  to  Influence

Concern:  To  what degree is
the individual able  to
influence assurance  of
safety from crime?
• Penal Code California

  - Defines specific crimes
    and punishments
  (B1-S-G3-3-4-Y-K)
                               • Art. 4 - U.S. Constitution   • P.s.  Consltltution
  - Right of the people to be
    secure in their persons,
    houses, papers against
    unreasonable searches and
    seizures
   (B2-F-G3-1-4-N-N)
 • Seven major crime cate-
   gories in hierarchical
   order •

   1. Murder
   2. Rape
   3. Aggrevated  assault
   4. Burglary
   5. Car theft
   6. Larceny
   7. Robbery

• Penal Code California
  187 - Murder

  - Unlawful killing of a
    human being with malice
    aforethought

   (B1-S-G3-3-4-Y-1Q
• Penal Code California
  240 - Assault

   - Unlawful attenpt coupled
    with a  present ability,
    to commit  a violent injury
    on the  person of another

    (B1-S-O3-3-4-T-IO
• C.S. Constitution - 10th
  Amendment
  - Denies general police
    powers to the Federal
    Government and reserves
    them for the states or
    local government
  (B2-F-G3-1-4-N-N)

• Bill of Rights
  - Congress gave the respon-
    sibility and Hiithority
    for protection of persons
    and property to the state
    and to representatives of
    local government
  (B2-F-G3-3-2-Y-N)

• Article 11 - Sec. 5b
  California Constitution
  - All city charters shall
    provide for by the laws
    of this state, the con-
    stitution regulation, and
    government of the city
    police force
  (B2-S-G3-1-5-N-N)
• Omnibus Crime Control &
  Safe Streets Act - 1968

  - Provides funding to develop
    and adopt plans to improve
    state and local problems
  (B2-F-G3-1-5-H-Y)

•  Public Law 93-83
   *• All states must have a
     comprehensive program
     for Improvement of
     juvenile justice
  - Everyone is given the
    right to life, liberty,
    and the pursuit of
    happiness
  (B3-F-G3-1-7-N-N)

• Civil Rights Act

  - Prohibits discrimination
  (B3-F-G3-3-4-Y-N)
                               • Equal protection
                                 Supreme Court has held
                                 that a state can't dis-
                                 criminate on the basis
                                 of a person's sex

                                 (B3-F-G2-1-4-N-N)

                               • Equal protection when
                                 threatened by violator
• Public Law 93-83
  National Advisory Commis-
  sion on Criminal Justice
  Standards and  Goals  (1971)

  - Formulating,  for the  first
    time, national criminal
    justice standards  and
    goals for crime reduction
    and prevention at  the
    state and local level
   (B4-F-G3-1-5-Y-Y)

• Public Law 93-83
  - Establishment of Crimi-
    nal Justice Coordinat-
    ing Council for local
    governments with a pop-
    ulation of 250,000 or more
    to assure improved plan-
    ning of law enforcement
    and criminal Justice
    activitites

    (B4-F-G3-3-5-Y-Y)

• Citizen's arrest

• Police Department's
  citizens education pro-
  grams on security measures
                                • 5th Amendment  - U.S.
                                  Constitution

                                  - Equal rights when accused
                                    of being the violator
                               • Right  to bear  arms

                               + When asked  if  you would
                                 favor  or oppose  a law
                                 which  would require  a
                                 person to obtain a police
                                 permit before  he or  she
                                 could  buy a gun, 1,099
                                 out of 1,500 were In
                                 favor  (Roper Public
                                 Opinion Research)5
   (B2-F-G36.1-1-5-N-N)
                                    (B3-F-G3-3-4-H-N)
                                                              B-72

-------
SOCIAL SECTOR

ISSUE:
        Crime   (continued)
        - Safety from crime
  B.
    Basic Need/Threshold
                                       Security
                                 President  Commission on
                                 Law Enforcement and Admin-
                                 istration  of  Justice
                                 -  911  designated as a
                                   nationwide  telephone
                                   number giving the public
                                   direct access to an
                                   emergency answering
                                   center

                                 (B2-F-G3-1-7-N-N)
                                                                     Equal  Access
                                California Government
                                Code  -  53100

                                - Every local public
                                  agency shall establish
                                  and have in operation
                                  by December 1982, a
                                  "911"  emergency tele-
                                  phone system

                                (B3-S-G3-1-7-N-N)
                                                                                                 Ability to Influence
                               • Civil  Rights  Act of 1866

                                 -  Gives  civil and criminal
                                   remedies  against federal
                                   law  enforcement officers
                                   who  deny  an individual
                                   of his civil rights

                                 (B2-F-G3-3-4-Y-N)

                               • Preventive  detention by
                                 keeping  criminals off the
                                 streets

                               • Protective  Services
                                 Poiice Force
                                 Sheriffs Office
                                 FBI

                               • Physical protection
                                 Child  abuse
                                 Drunk  driving
                                 Narcotic users
 • Penal Code Califonia
  261 - Rape

  - Sexual intercourse
    with a female by
    fraud, or force, or
    against her will.
    Any sexual penetration
    is sufficient to com-
    plete this crime
  (B1-S-G3-3-4-Y-N)
+ Evaluations of overall
  Federal, State, and Local Law
  Enforcement Official's perform-
  ance, by demographic charac-
  teristics, 1970--nationwide,
  all regions,  60% thought
  they were doing a good job

4- 58%, nationwide, support
  heavier sentence for those  .
  committing armed offenses
  (Gallup, 1969)

• Penal Code California
  Revision- of Rape Laws
  (1974)

  - Protects rape victims
    from intimidating ques-
    tions about their sex
    lives

  (B2-S-G3-3-4-Y-N)
                               • Penal Code - Michigan
                                 Revision - (1974)
                                 - Provides that a rape
                                   victim need not prove
                                   she resisted to the
                                   utmost
                                                                                            + Public attitudes toward
                                                                                              reducing crime—more
                                                                                              police - 29% - reforming
                                                                                              courts for fairer and
                                                                                              speedier justice - 457.-
                                                                                              improving jails, more
                                                                                              people rehabilitated -
                                                                                              397. - longer and tougher
                                                                                              prison terms - 347. -
                                                                                              stricter discipline over
                                                                                              children by parents - 42%
                                                                                              cleaning up slums and
                                                                                              ghettos - 54%6
                                B-73

-------
SOCIAL SECTOR

ISSUE:  Crime  (continued)
        - Safety from crime
    Basic Need/Threshold
                                      Security
                               * Rate per 100,000 females in
                                 U.S. in 1972, there were
                                 43.5 forcible rapes report-
                                 ed compared to 23.5 report-
                                 ed in 1965
Equal Access
	Ability to Influence

+ In a recent Roper  survey
  of 1,504 people, 748
  thought that pornography
  lead people to commit
  rape
                               * In 1971, there were 2,359
                                 persons under 18 years of
                                 age arrested for forcible
                                 rape, and 8,801, 18 years
                                 and over (nationwide)

                               • Colleges and universities,
                                 nationwide, are providing
                                 security on campuses to
                                 protect women students
                                 from rape
                                  (B2-NG1-3-1-Y-N)

                               * Midwest's Big Ten  univer-
                                 sities had more  than 200
                                 reported rapes on  campuses
                                 in  the  last three  years

                               *  Serious crime in the nation
                                 during  1973 climbed 5%
                                 above 1972  level with  a
                                 16i spurt in final quarter
                                 of  1973, 15% increase  in
                                 1st quarter of 1974

                               * Rate of victimization  for
                                 violent crime was  358  per
                                  100,000 population com-
                                 pared to reported  rate of
                                 198

                               + When asked "What's behind
                                 the high crime rate in the
                                 U.S.?" 25% thought that
                                 laws are too lenient/
                                 penalties not stiff enough;
                                 -23% responded the lack of
                                 religion; television and
                                 movies glamorize crime;
                                 and overpopulation (Gallup
                                 Poll, 1972, 21 years and
                                 older)

                               4- Americans rate progress
                                 over last 2 years  in com-
                                 batting crime:
                                 - much progress     -   2%
                                 - some progress     -  19%
                                 - stood still       -  24%
                                 - lost some ground -  29%
                                 - lost much ground -  23%
                                 (State of the Nation Poll
                                  1974) 2
                               -I- Degree of public  concern
                                 about major national  issues
                                 ranks amount of violence in
                                 American life  91  and  crime
                                 in  this country 90  (composite
                                                                     B-74

-------
SOCIAL SECTOR

ISSUE:  Crime (continued)
        - Safety from crime
    Basic Need/Threshold
                                        Security
                               + 457. of  the population is
                                 afraid  to walk near home
                                 at  night;  46% of the homes
                                 contain at least one gun;
                                 at  least 87. experienced
                                 crime in their own homes

                               -*• Public  opinion on govern-
                                 ment spending to combat
                                 crime should be - increased
                                 64S; kept at present level
                                 - 247.;  reduced 7,6%; ended
                                 altogether - 17.

                               4- In  the  nation's five largest
                                 cities, actual crime outran
                                 reported violations 2 to 5
                                 times.   Respondents' reasons
                                 for not reporting crimes:
                                 347. - nothing could be done,
                                 they lacked proof; 287. - was
                                 not important enough; 87» -
                                 police  wouldn't want to
                                 bother; 77. - reported to
                                 other than police; 57, - too
                                 inconvenient; 47. - private
                                 matter; 27. - feared reprisal
                                 (1974)  (Bureau of Census)
                                                                     Equal Access
                                                                                                 Ability to Influenc
                                                        B-75

-------
 SOCIAL SECTOR
ISSUE:  Crime
        - Safety from crime

  Hl
    Basic Need/Threshold

  Individual security from
  unlawful seizure
 • Penal Code California
   211 - Robbery

   - Felonious taking of
     personal property in
     the possession of
     another

 • Penal Code California
   459 - Burglary

   - Unlawful breaking or
     entering with Intent
     to comr.it a felony or
     a theft

 • Penal Code California
   484 - Larceny

   -  Theft  of $50 sod over
     In value which is not
     taken  by force,  vio-
     lence,  or fraud

 •  Penal Code California
   314 - Indecent  Exposure
   —  Exposes his  person  ^r
     private parts  in public
     place  where  other per-
     sons are present

 •  Penal Code California
   311  - Obscene Matter

   -  Distributing to  minors,
     advertising and  promotion
     of  obscene matter
  Penal Code California
  248  - Libel
  - A nalicious defamation,
    expressed either by
    writing, printing, or
    by signs or pictures,
    to impeach the honesty,
    integrity, virtue, or
    reputation of a person
« Penal Code California
  258 - Slander

  - A malicious defamation,
    orally uttered

• Penal Code California
  415 - Disturbing the
  Peace

  - Disturbance of public
    •eetlngs or causing a
    riot,  or threat of
    violence by 2 or aore
    persons

  (HI -S-<33-1 -4-y-K)
  (Includes all  of H )
                                       Security
• Availability of life,
  theft,  fire and auto in-
  surance from private in-
  surance companies

* The largest amounts  of
  arrests made throughout
  the nation in 1971 were for
  larceny-theft rate per
  100,000 - 434.2, and
  burglary-breaking or enter-
  ing rate per 100,000 -
  202.9 (FBI statistics  -
  1ST. of  U.S. population)

* As unemployment rises, so
  does the number of new
  prison  admissions each year
  (Library of Congress study)
                                                                     Equal Access
                                                                                             	Ability to Influence

                                                                                             • Theft insurance rates go up
                                                                                               when the crime rate goes
                                                                                               over a certain %
                       B-76

-------
SOCIAL SECTOR





Crime




             REFERENCES  FOR OBJECTIVE (*) AND SUBJECTIVE (+)  DATA







1,   +•   Sourcebook of  Criminal Justice Statistics.  Table 2.5, p. 134 (1973).





2.   +   Gallup  Poll (1969).




3.   *   Federal Bureau of Investigation, Uniform Crime Reports (1973).





4.   *   Ibid.





5.   +   Roper Poll.




6.   +   Watts and Free,  State of the Nation  (1974).





7.   +   Roper Poll (1974).




8.   *   "Why Students  are More Vulnerable to Rape," New York Times  (February 1975),





 9.   *   Gallup  Poll




10.   *   U. S.  Department of Commerce, Social Indicators  (1973).





11.   +  Gallup  Poll (1972).




12.   +  Watts  and Free,  op. cit.





13.   +  Ibid.




14.   +  Roper Poll (1974).  National adult  sample  of  1,484 respondents.





15.   +  Watts  and Free,  op. cit.




16.    +  Census Bureau (1974).




17.    +  State of  the Nation Poll,  1974.




18.    *  Federal Bureau  of  Investigation,  Uniform Crime Reports  (1972).
                                 B-77

-------
SOCIAL SECTOR
ISSUE:  Criminal Justice Process

   B,
     Basic Need/Threshold      	Security	

Concern:  What are the thres-  Concern:  What measures pro-
holds for quality and avail-   vide security that the
ability of an adequate         minimum will be met?
Criminal Justice Process?
                                                                     Equal Access
                                                                                                  Ability to Influence
                                                           Concern:  Is the due process
                                                           of law guaranteed to every-
                                                           one?
                               Concern: .To what degree is
                               the individual able to influ-
                               ence availability and quality
                              .of-the Criminal Justice Process?
Just Treatment for the
Accused	
• Right to trial by an
  impartial jury
• Assistance of counsel
• Attendance of witnesses on
  behalf of the defendent
• Be present at trial with
  counsel
  (Bl-F-S-Gl-l-4-Y-N)

• Calif. Constitution -
  Art. 1
  - A person cannot be tried
    twice for the same crime
  - Be a witness against him-
    self
  - Be deprived of life,
    liberty, or property
    without due process of
    the law
  (B1-F-S-G1-3-4-Y-N)

•  The rights of defend-
   ants are fundamental
   interest which the
   Supreme Court has pro-
   tected (Sullivan 1971)
   (B1-F-G3-4-Y-N)
• Miranda Ruling of 1966
  - Statements Bade during
    police Interrogation can-
    not be used as evidence
    unless a defendant was
    advised of his rights to
    remain silent and have a
    lawyer present during
    questioning

  (Bl -F-S-G3-3-4-Y-H)
                            • 4th Amendment U.S. Consti-
                               tution

                              - Bight to trial by Jury
                              (B-2-F-G3-1-4-N-H)

                            • Ball Reform Act (1966)

                              - Provides lor pre-trial
                                release of persons accused
                                of noncapital crimes
                              (B2-F-G1-3-7-Y-N)
                            • 5th Amendment -U.S. Consti-
                              tution

                              - Excessive bail, fines, or
                                punishment prohibited
                              (B2-F-G1 -3-4-Y-N)

                            • Penal Code California 858
                              - Magistrate to inform de-    ,
                                fendant of the charge and
                                right to counsel when he is
                                brought before him upon
                                arrest
                              (B2-S-G3-3-7-N-N)


                             • D.S. Const.  -  Art 1
                               Section 9

                               - The privilege of the writ
                                 of habeas  corpus shall not
                                 be suspended,  unless when
                                 in cases of  rebellion or
                                 invasion the  public safe-
                                 ty may require it
                               (B2-F-G-3-3-4-Y-N)

                             • Penal  Code California 1096

                               - A defendant in  a criminal
                                 action  is  presumed innocent
                                 until he is proven guilty

                               (B2-S-G3-7-Y-N)
• Criminal Justice Act
  - All defendants have the
    right of representation
    by a private attorney or
    Legal Aid Society attorney

  (B3-F-G1-1-7-N-H)
• Penal Code California 1896
  - Every person unlawfully
    imprisoned or restrained
    of his liberty, under any
    pretense whatever, may
    prosecute a writ of habeas
    corpus to inquire into the
    cause of such imprisonment
    or restraint
  
-------
SOCIAL SECTOR

ISSUE:  Criminal Justice Process  (continued)

  B,                                 B.
    Basic Need/Threshold

• Existing correctional in-
  stitutions for imprisonment
  of persons convicted of
  serious crimes in California
  - Calif. State Prisons at
    San Quentin & Folsom
  - Institution for Men
  - Vocational Institution
  - Training Facility
  - Medium Security Prison
  - Correctional Institution
  - Industrial Farms and Road
    camps
  - Special Security Facility
  - Institution for Women
  - Federal Youth Center
  - Calif. Rehabilitation
    Center (exclusively for
    narcotics addicts com-
    mitted through civil
    court procedures)
  (B1-S-G3-3-4-Y-N)
        Security
                                       Equal Access
• Penal Code California 2652
  - Cruel and unusual punish-
    ment not permitted in
    prisons

  (B2-S-G3-1-7-N-N)

• USC 4042 Public Law 90-317

  - Improve correctional
    services to those convict-
    ed of violations to reduce
    recidivism

  (B2-F-G3-1-7-N-N)

* Dept. of Corrections (Calif.)
  is responsible for 28,000 men
  and women in institutions,
  another 15,000 under super-
  vision of parole agents
* In California, the number of
  sentenced defendants and
  actual % placed on pro-
  bation by areas:

  Northern - 395     60  \
  Eastern    381     58.5%
  Central  1,374     61.77.
  Southern   908     53.47.
  (1970 Sourcebook-Criminal
   Justice)
                                                                    Ability to Influence
* In Federal Prison System
  inmate population has
  increased from 21,430 in
  1972 to 23,300 in 1974.
  The system is 3,400 over
  capacity

-I- Death Penalty - 64% In
  favor, 36X opposed.
  Majority support among all
  population groups.  Non-
  white and young people
  closely divided
  (Gallup Poll 1974)

+ 37% believe the main
  emphasis in most prisons
  is to protect society;
  735 think that the
  emphasis should be to
  rehabilitate the prisoners
  (1970 Gallup Poll)7
                                                              B-79

-------
SOCIAL SECTOR
ISSUE:  Criminal Justice Process   (continued)
  B,
    Basic Need/Threshold
                                       Security
                               * In California, 1970, there
                                 were 8,692 males, 560
                                 women, and 40 juveniles
                                 arraigned and awaiting
                                 trial

                               + Belief that elapsed tine
                                 from arrest to trial is
                                 excessive, nationwide, 78%
                                 thought  there was too long
                                 a time

                               • Legal Aid Bill  (1974)

                                 - Provides  local  poverty
                                   lav  firms with  funds to
                                   represent the poor in
                                   ordinary  day-to-day legal
                                   difficulties
                                 (B2-F-G1-3-7-H-N-)
                                                                     Equal Access
                                                                                                  Ability to Influence
                                i  American Bar  Association
                                  Standards
                                  Fair Trial  and Free  Press

                                  -  Specifies types of pre-
                                    judicial  information
                                    which lawyers in a case
                                    should not  release to
                                    press
                                  -  Encourages  court and law
                                    enforcement to follow
                                    similar rules to avoid
                                    prejudice to accused
                                  -  Basic facts about  crimes
                                    comitted should be re-
                                    leased promptly to the
                                    press
                                  -  Press free  to publish in-
                                    formation obtained on their
                                    own
Conviction and Confinement

• Penal Code California
  4OOO - County Jails

  - Persons charged with
    crime and committed for
    trial
  - Detention to secure their
    attendance as witnesses in
    criminal cases
  - Persons coaoitted for con-
    tempt, or upon civil pro-
    cess
  - Persons sentenced to im-
    prisonment therein upon
    conviction for a .crime

  (B1-S-G3-3-4-Y-N)
• Penal Code California
  4001 - County Jails

 County jails must provide
 separate rooms for persons:
 - Committed on criminal pro-
   cess and detained for
   trial   5
 - Already convicted and held
   under sentence
 - Detained as witness for
   civil process or contempt
 - Males separately from
   females
 (B2-S-G3-3-7-N-N)
o Penal Code California
  2920

  - Time credit reductions
    from term of confinement
    for good behavior
  (B4-S-G3-3-5-T-H)

• In 1972, State Supreme
  Court held the death
  penalty unconstitutional.
  January 1974, a limited
  death penalty in effect
  now
   (B4-S-G2-3-4-T-N)
                                                               B-80

-------
SOCIAL SECTOR
ISSUE:  Criminal Justice Process
	Basle Need/Threshold
Just Treatment for the
Accused	
Security
                              Equal  Access
                                                          Ability to Influence
                               • Right to a speedy,  public
                                 trial
                                 (H2-F-G1-1-7-N-N)

                               • Art. I.  Sec.  7.  Calif.  Const.
                                 -  In civil actions  three
                                   fourths of  a Jury may
                                   render a verdict.  Need 12
                                   jurors unless  both parties
                                   agree  to less.
                                 (H2-S-C1-1-7-N-N)

                               • Bail Reform Act               • Bail  Reform Act
                                 -  A person may be  released on  - Discourages  use of money
                                   his personal recognizance,
                                   or by putting up bail in
                                   the amount specified by the
                                   judicial officer.  Excep-
                                   tions include crimes
                                   punishable by death
                                 (H2-F-G1-3-7-N-N)
                           bail requiring judge  to
                           seek other means  to in-
                           sure defendant would
                           appear at his trial

                         (H3-F-G1-3-7-N-N)
                               • Article 4.  Sec.  2.  U.S. Const.

                                 - A person  must  return to the
                                   state having jurisdiction of
                                   the crime
                                 (H2-F-G1-3-7-Y-N)

                               • 8th Amendment, U.S. Const.

                                 - Excessive bail shall not be
                                   required, nor  excessive
                                   fines be  imposed, nor cruel
                                   and unusur-i punishments
                                   inflicteu
                                 (H2-F-G1-3-7-N-N)

                               • 5th Amendment, U.S. Const.

                                 - Guarantees that  a person
                                   cannot be tried  before
                                   Federal or state court
                                   more than once for the
                                   same crime
                                 (H2-F-G1-3-4-Y-N)

                               * With the passing of the Legal
                                 Aid Bill, Legal  Services
                                 lawyers are no longer per-
                                 mitted to file actions in
                                 connection with  desegregation,
                                                        o
                                 labor or abortion cases
                                                                  B-81

-------
SOCIAL SECTOR
ISSUE:  Criminal Justice Process  (continued)
                                      H
	Basic Heed/Threshold

Conviction and Confinement
                                        Security
                                                                      Equal Access
                               • Adult Authority Head
                                 Calif. 1975
                                 - New" policy for immediate
                                   granting of tentative
                                   parole dates to majority
                                   of California's 25,000
                                   convicts within 1 year's
                                   time
                                  (H2-S-G3-3-1-Y-Y)

                               *  1971  plan to control
                                 violence in prisons, 707.
                                 of  the convicts received
                                  parole dates, compared  to
                                  1974  when only  207.  received
                                 parole dates

                               •  MAC Corrections Standard 5.4
                                  - Prompt confinement of pro-
                                   bationers who exhibit
                                   behavior that is  a serious
                                   threat to themselves and
                                   others
                                  (H2-F-G3-3-5-Y-N)
                                                                                                  Ability to Influence
* 5 year follow-up studies
  indicate that about one-
  half of the inmates re-
  leased from correctional
  institutions in California
  do not return

* Nearly 907. of men and women
  released from correctional
  institutions and camps are
  required to undergo a
  period of parole supervision

* More than 2,000 private
  citizens volunteers are in
  institution and parole
  programs

• Drug prevention grant offer-
  ing women prisoners communi-
  cation classes and chance to
  narrate TV public service
  announcements on drugs,
  child abuse, and jobs for
  ex-convicts
11
                                                                  B-82

-------
 SOCIAL SECTOR

 Criminal Justice Process


              REFERENCES  FOR OBJECTIVE (*)  AND SUBJECTIVE (+)  DATA

 1.    *  American Bar Association,  American  Criminal Law Review (Fall  1974).

 2.    +  Louis Harris and  Associates Poll (1970).

 3.    *  Sourcebook  of  Criminal Justice (1970).

 4.    *  California  Corrections Program Summary.

 5..   *  American Bar Association,  op. cit.

 6.    +  Gallup  Poll (1974).

 7.    +  Gallup  Poll (1970).

 8.    *  "Legal  Agencies Face Changes," San Francisco Chronicle (5 August 1974),

 9.    *  "New Head of Adult Authority Changes in Parole," San Francisco
        Chronicle,(18  February 1975) .

10.    *  California  Department of Corrections, Programs and Security Control.

11.    *  Ibid.

12.    *  Ibid.
                                      B-83

-------
SECTOR:  SOCIAL

FREEDOM TO BE

    H,
Only the HIGHER issues
and concerns were considered
      Threshold Level
                                     Security
SELF EXPRESSION
• Freedom of
  - worship
  - liberty of conscience
  - speech
  - press
  - assembly
  (H1-F-G1-1-4-Y-N)

+ Twice as many Americans
  believe religion is in-
  creasing its influence
  on  society - 317. today
  to  14* in 1970X

• Supreme Court Ruling (1974)
  on  Obscenity
  - Local, not national,
    standards apply in judg-
     ing whether books and
    movies cross the obscen-
     ity line

   (H1-F-G1-3-4-Y-N)

 • Disturbing the Peace

• Nudity

  - Forbidden in public
    places*
   (H1-S-G1-3-4-Y-N)

 • Cigarettes & Alcoholic
   Beverages Lavs - age
   requirements
   - Anyone 18 years and
     over may purchase
     cigarettes
   - Anyone 21 and over may
     purchase alcoholic
     beverages
   (H1-S-G3-3-4-Y-N)

 • Use of drugs prohibited
   (H1-S-G3-2-4-Y-N)
        • U.S. Constitution - Art. I

          - All citizens have the
            right to the freedom of
            speech, press, assembly,
            petition and religion
          (H2-F-G1-1-4-Y-N)

        • U.S. Constitution- Amend-
          ment I - Rellelous Freedom

          - No law can be made to
            establish an official
            church for all Americans
            or prohibit free exercise
            thereof
           (H2-F-G1-1-7-Y-N)

         • U.S. Constitution  -  Art.  VI
           - A person's  religious
            beliefs  are no indication
            of his patriotism, his
            ability,  or right  to
            serve his country
           (H2-F-G1-2-4-Y-N)
         • California Penal Code 653
           - Obscene telephone calls
             with the intent to annoy
             another person
         • California Penal  Code  -  314
           Nudity
           -  Forbids  public  exposure
             of  private  parts  of
             people
           -  Assisting any person to
             expose himself
           -  Partaking in any  model
             artist exhibition
           -  Exciting people by
             vicious  or  lewd acts

           (H2-S-G3-3-4-Y-N)

          • California Supreme Court

           7  Ruled unanimously that
             nudity,^or  nudity for  the
             purpose  of  sexual excita-
             tion does not constitute
             Che crime of indecent ex-
             posure in California.  It
             Is  considered a public
             nuisance rather than a
             heinous  crime
                                                                     Eoual Access
     Ability to  Influence

  national  Labor Relations
  Act
  -  Allows  certain  employees
    to present their  griev-
    ances to their  employers
  (H*-F-Gl-3-Y-N)

  Fair Credit Report  Act
  of 1971
  -  Law requires credit re-
    porting firms  to  dis-
    close most of  the Inform-
    ation In their  files to
    consumer (medical data
    may be withheld)
  (H4-F-G3-1-4-Y-Y)
• California Penal Code
  3185-6
  - City and county ordi-
    nances may set degree
    of nudity allowed in
    public performances
    and nudity of employees
    of an eating and/or
    drinking establishment
  (H4-S-G2-3-4-Y-N)
                                  (H2-S-G1-3-4-Y-N)
                                                           B-84

-------
SECTOR:  SOCIAL
FREEDOM TO BE  (continued)

   «l
	Threshold Level	

  Prostitution

• Prostitution is currently
  a crime in every state
  except Nevada.  The
  statutes explicitly apply
  only to females, ignoring
  the fact that males and
  homosexuals can be
  prostitutes
  (H1-S-G3-3-4-Y-N)
        Security
• Mann Act of 1910

  - Prohibits interstate
    transportation of women
    for immoral purposes
  (H2-S-G3-3-3-4-Y-N)

• California Penal Code 266
  - Protects female minors
    from being enticed for
    prostitution
  - An adult female without
    consent
  - Compel a female to live
    illicitly with another
    nan and receive money
    for this
  - To sell females for
    illicit use
  - Place wife in a house of
    prostitution
  (H2-S-G3-3-4-Y-N)

* In 57 cities over 250,000
  population, there were
  45,416 arrests for pros-
  titution and commercial
  vice in 19712

• California Penal Code
  - It is a felony to entice
    an unmarried, minor fe-
    male of previous chaste
    character, or take a
    woman without her consent
    for the purpose of pros-
    titution
  (H2-S-G3-3-4-Y-N)

+ The courts have said that
  arbitrary and unfair law
  enforcement under the
  vagrancy and loitering
  statutes is opposite to
  concepts of due process,
  equal protection and indivi-
  dual liberty3
                                       Equal Access
• California Penal Code 647
  - It is not illegal to be
    a prostitute, but if
    apprehended while solicit-
    ing or engaging in pros-
    titution, she may be
    prosecuted as a vagrant
    under disorderly conduct
    statute
  (H3-S-G3-3-3-Y-N)

+ Judicial ruling that male
  clients of prostitutes can
  be arrested along with
  prostitutes.  Merely citing
  the men caught with women
  violates the women's.civil
  rights (Calif. 1975)
                                                                    Ability to Influence
• Red Light Abatement Act
  - Considers a place of
    prostitution as a nuis-
    ance and outlines pro-
    cedures to close it down
  (H4-S-G1-3-4-Y-N)
                                                                                               - Nationwide organization
                                                                                                 numbering 8,500.  A coali-
                                                                                                 tion of prostltues, ex-
                                                                                                 prostitutes and friends.
                                                                                                 Goal is not to legalize
                                                                                                 but to decriminalize
                                                                                                 prostitution

                                                                                             • American Civil Liberties
                                                                                               Union

                                                                                             + Attutudes regarding how
                                                                                               police should react to
                                                                                               vice/gambling, nationwide,
                                                                                               79J women, 70% men thought
                                                                                               they should stop inter-
                                                                                               fering®
PROTECTION OF PRIVACY
 • 4th Amendment - U. S.
  Constitution
  -  Search  and seizure provi-
     sions
  (H1-F-G3-3-4-Y-N)
• California Penal  Code  1523
  - Requires a  search warrant
    in order to search pri-
    vatly  owned property
   (H2-S-G3-3-4-Y-N)
                                                          B-85
                               • U.S. 388 (1971)
                                 - Civil relief in the
                                   form of money damages
                                   awarded for gross  in-
                                   trusion of person's home
                                   by federal narcotics
                                   agents
                                 (H4-F-G2-4-Y-N)

-------
SECTOR:  SOCIAL

FREEDOM TO BE  (continued)
    H,
       hreshold Level
                                     - Security
                                   H3
                                                                    Equal Access
                                                                                                  Ability to  Influence
Protection of Privacy
  (continued)

+ Olms tead v. U.S.-277  (1920)
  - "The right to be let
    alone" ie the most  com-
    prehensive of rights and
    most valued by civilized
    sum (Justice Brandels)
  - Detention of a defend-
    ant's  mail by Post
    Muter pending conclu-
    sion of statutory pro-
    ceedings
  - Only after authority
    of the Post Master
    General or a person
    holding a search war-
    rant,  authorized by law,
    may open any letter or
    parcel of first class
   (H1-S-G3-2-4-V-H)
• California Penal Code 630
  - Prohibits wire tapping

  (H2-S-G3-4-Y-N)

* Great majority of police
  searches and seizures are
  made without a search
  warrant, but within recog-
  nized exceptions to 4th
  Amendment requirement

• California Civil Code 4006

  * Obscene, lewd matter,
    things, device is unlaw-
    ful  to send  in the mall
   (H2-S-G3-1-4-Y-N)

• California Civil Code -
  Title  18
  - Protection of personal
    and  all other mail from
    being embezzled by a
    postal worker
  (H2-S-G3-1-4-Y-N)

.* Omnibus Crime  Control Act
  - Prohibits private elec-
    tronic surveillance and
    strict limitations by
    public law enforcement
    personnel
                                s  U.S.  Code 4057
                                  - Upon the approval  of the
                                    Postmaster General,
                                    first class mail may be
                                    opened

                                  (H4-F-G1)
 • Sexual Freedoms
   Legal bans against sexual
   activities:
   - Between two persons of
     opposite sex in marriage
     (e.g., anal, oral)
   - Between two persons of
     tame sex (homosexuality,
     lesbianism

 • Proposed Reforms-Homo-
   sexual
   - Private consensual sex
     acts between persons
     over the age of consent
     shall not be offenses
   - Solicitation for  any
     sexual act  shall  not
     be  an offense  except
     upon  the filing of a
     complaint by the
     aggrieved party,  not  a
     police officer or
     agent
 • Proposed Reforms for Homo-
   sexuals

   - Neither the police de-
     partment nor any other
     government agency shall
     keep files solely for
     the purpose of identify-
     ing homosexuals

   - The practice of harrass-
     ing bars and other
     establishments and of
     revoking their licenses
     because they cater to
     homosexuals cease
B-86
                                                              • Homosexual Organizations

                                                                -  Society for  Individual
                                                                   Rights
                                                                -  Gay Information Center
                                                                -  Whitman Radclyffe  Founda-
                                                                   tion
                                                                -  Daughters  of Bllltls
• AB 489 - 1975 (California)

  - Legal bans against many
    sexual activities be-
    tween consenting adults
    would be removed if this
    bill passes

  (H4-S-G1-3-1-Y-N)

• Amendment to 1964 and 1968
  Civil Rights Acts before
  Congress to strengthen
  the rights of homosexuals
  (1975)

-------
SECTOR:  SOCIAL

FREEDOM TO BE (continued)

   H!
     Threshold Level

  Proposed Reforms - Homo-
  sexual (continued)

  - A person's sexual
    orientation or practice
    shall not be a factor
    In the granting or re-
    newing of federal secur-
    ity clearance, visas, and
    the granting of citizen-
    ship

  - Service in and dis-
    charge from the armed
    forces and eligibility
    to VA benefits shall
    be without reference
    to homosexuality

  - A person's sexual •.
    orientation or practice
    shall not affect his
    eligibility for employ-
    ment with federal,
    state or local govern-
    aents (Society for
    Individual Rights)
     Security
Proposed Reforms for Homo-
sexuals (continued)

- The registration of sex-
  offenders shall not be
  required

- City ordinances involv-
  ing sexual matters shall
  be rescinded and these
  matters left to state
  legislators (Society
  for Individual Rights)
                                      Equal Access
                                                                 Ability to Influence
                                                         B-87

-------
SOCIAL SECTOR



Freedom to Be





                REFERENCES FOR OBJECTIVE (*) AND SUBJECTIVE (+)  DATA





1.   +  Gallup Poll





2.   *  Social Indicators, 1973,  U.S.  Dept.  of Commerce





3.   +  Coyote publication, October 1974





4.   *  Court Ruling, March 1975 (California) S.  F.  Chronicle





5.   +  Criminal Victimization in the U.S.,  P. H.  Ennis





6.   *  Olmstead v US 277, U.S. Supreme Court





7.   *  Right to be Let Alone, report by Santa Clara University
                                                B-88

-------
SECTOR:   SOCIAL

ISSUE:  Family
        threshold Level
MARRIAGE

• Marriage Is a recognized
  Institution which estab-
  lishes a family

+ Disagree that marriage
  la becoming obsolete:
  Noncollege youth - 627.
  College youth    - 67%

+ Looking forward to being
  legally married:
  Noncollege youth - 487.
  College youth    - 53%

+ 851 white respondents
  felt  marriage was
  happier if  there were
  children, only  87. men
  and 6% women believed
  it Is happier without
  children  (Gallup Poll
  1973)3

 + Activities  thought
  morally wrong:
  Noncollege      College
  Youth          Yoi.ith
   1973 - 1969  1973  - 1969

   Abortion
    48% -  637.   327. -  36%

   Relations between con-
   senting homosexuals
    471 -  72%   25% -  42%
          «
   Casual premarital sex
    34% -  58%   22% -  34%
 * The largest missing per-
   sons detective agency  in
   the country reports that
   this year, for the first
   time,  it  is searching  for
   more wives (1,136) than
   husbands  (989) who have
   run away  from
                                       Security
                                                                      Equal Access
 Marriage is a solemn com-
 mitment between a man and
 a woman only to be broken
 by legal action
• Eligibility for Marriage

  • Any person who Is 18 or
    older may consent to
    marry.  Minors must have
    consent of parents and
    court.  Both parties must
    pass a syphilis test

   (B3-S-G3-3-7-Y-M)
                                                                                                   Ability to Influence
• California Civil Code 4201
  - Persons under 18 must
    have the consent of their
    parents and the court to
    marry
  (B4S-G3-3-7-Y-N)
• California Civil Code  4205  • California Civil Code 4201
  - Marriage solemnized  by
    Judge, commissioner,  of
    a court of record  or
    justice, priest, minis-
    ter or rabbi,  all  of
    whom are 18  or older
  (B2-S-G3-3-7-Y-N)
  - Obtain a license and pre-
    sent certificate stating
    that both parties have
    passed a test,  within last
    30 days for syphilis.
    Women must also have bad
    a test for rubella

  (B3-S-G3-3-7-Y-N)

  The state of marriage only
  applies to a man and woman
  of 18 years of age or older
                                • Some geographical areas
                                  prohibit interracial
                                  marriages

                                • California  Civil Code 4213

                                  - When  unmarried    rsons,
                                    not minors,  hav..  been
                                    living together,  they
                                    may,  without a license,
                                    be married by a clergyman
                                    without obtaining health
                                    certificates

                                   (B3-S-G3)

                                 • California  Civil Code  5101
                                  - Husband  is  the head  of
                                     the  family.   He  may
                                   , choose any reasonable
                                    place or  mode of living
                                     and  the  wife must con-
                                     form thereto. Repealed
                                     effective Jan.  1975
                                     (inconsistent with the
                                    Equal Rights Amendment)
                                   (B3-S-G1-3-7-Y-N)
 •  Courts  -  legal action
 •  California  State Commis-
   sion for  the  Status of
   Women

 -I- Institute for Social
   Research  Study 1972-73
   Satisfied with their  lives-
   married,  bet. 18 and  29
   with no children—women
   80%, men  72%; married,
   over 29 with  no children—
   women  68%, men 75%;
   married,  youngest child
   bet. 5 and 17—women  68%,
   men, 65%.  Least  satis-
   fied—divorced women  327.,
   men 42% 6

 * In  1974,  for  the  first
   time in  16 years,  the U.S.
   marriage rate declined to
   10.5 per 1000 population,
   a decrease of 3.77.. Di-
   vorces rose 4.5% to 4.6%
   per 1000 population 7

 + Fewer  than 1/2 of non-
   college women to 2/3 of
   those  in college believe
   that women are discrimin-
   ated against  and that
   "women's place is in the
   home"  is nonsense:  age
   group--16  to  25--1974
   (Opinion Research Organi-
   zation)6

  + Against  having children
   outside  formal marriage:
   Minority youth  - 44%
   White  youth     - 61%

-------
SECTOR:  SOCIAL

ISSUE:  Family

    B,
      Threshold Level
                                       Security
                                                                    Equal Access
                                                                                                  Ability to Influence
  California Penal  Code
  269A

  - Every person who  lives
    in a state  of cohabita-
    tion and adultery is
    guilty of a misdemeanor
    which is punishable by
    o f
-------
SECTOR:  SOCIAL

ISSUE:  Family

    "l
      Threshold Level
                                       Security
MARRIAGE
                               • Depository Institution Act
                                 Amendment 1974 Equal  Credit
                                 Act
                                 - When a creditor  falls to
                                   comply, an aggrieved
                                   applicant may  Institute
                                   civil action for pre-
                                   ventive relief
                                 (H2-F-G1-3-4-Y-N)
                                                                       Equal  Access
• Depository Institutions Act
  Amendment 1974 - Equal
  Credit Act
  - Prohibits discrimination
    based on sex or marital
    status for consumer
    credit or extensions of
    credit
  (H3-F-G1-3-4-Y-N)
                               * Fewer  than 20% of U.S.
                                 colleges  and  universities
                                 provide family planning
                                 services  for  their stu-
                                 dents  according to surveys
                                 of nearly 3000 institu-
                                 tions  made by National
                                 Center for Health
                                 Statistics16
                                                                                                 Ability  to  Influence
                               • Bead Start Program Day
                                 Care Centers for pre-
                                 school welfare children

                               * Licensed non-profit day
                                 care centers for pre-
                                 school children of work-
                                 Ing mothers increased
                                 from 3.8 million in 1960
                                 to 6 million in 1970.
                                 In 1962, Federal grants
                                 became available to
                                 states and localities.
                                 Between 1962 and 1965,
                                 $5 million were devoted
                                 to improvement of state
                                 licensing and standardsl7

                               * According to the Labor
                                 Statistics Bureau, of the
                                 4.6 million mothers who
                                 had children under 6 and
                                 were in the labor force
                                 in 1970, 2.3 million had
                                 children aged 3, 4, or 5
                                 with none under 3, and
                                 the same number had less
                                                                                                than 3-year olds
                                                                                                                 18
                                                                                                The American Bar Associa-
                                                                                                tion has called on all
                                                                                                states to eliminate exist-
                                                                                                ing legal restrictions on
                                                                                                access to contraceptive
                                                                                                information, procedures
                                                                                                and supplies
                                                        B--91

-------
SECTOR:  SOCIAL
ISSUE:  Children
    B,
      Threshold Level
                                        Security
                                                                       Equal Access
                                                                                                   Ability to  Influence
CHILDREN

• When a child  Is no longer
  • child--males and fe-
  males 18 years and older
   California Constitution -
   Amendment IX -  Protection
   of  Privacy
   - A state cannot  Interfere
    with the decision of a
    pregnant women  and her
    physician to  terminate
    pregnancy by  abortion
    during first  3  months
   (B1-S-G3-1-7-Y-N)
   In 1)61. 6.11 of women
   aged 18 to 24 expected to
   have one child in their
   lifetime; 1973 the per-
   centage has risen to
   9.61, an increase of more
   than 501 19
• Welfare & Institutions
  Code 8254
  - Provides for steriliza-
    tion of certain Inhab-
    itants of mental
    hospitals
  (B2-S-G3-3-1-Y-N)

• Children's Rome Society
  and other state operated
  organizations provide care
  for unwed mothers and
  illegitimate children
   (B2-S-HG1)

 * In  1969,  10* of  all
   births  in the country
   were  illegitimate, 291
   were  to girls 19 or
   younger out of wedlock?0
 * Two thirds of the births
   to low income mothers
   occur in city and county
   hospitals, and one third
   are financed by Medicaid
   in voluntary hospitals.
   The average cost per
   pregnancy is $97I21

 • Law 290 - Attorney Gen-
   eral-1970
   - Non-therapeutic steril-
     ization of prisoners  Is
     allowed with Informed
     consent of prisoner
   (B2-S-G3-3-1-Y-N)

 • Callfomi-r. Civil Code 34.6

   - Sterilization operations
     cannot be performed on
     minors without parental
     consent
   (B3-S-G3-3-1-Y-N)

 * California 1973 - More
   than one-fourth of the
   babies born to white teen-
   agers and nearly three-
   fourths to black teens
   were illegitimate (up
   from 16.71 and 52.37. In
   1966)22
                               • Health & Safety Code 1225    • Birth  Control
  - Voluntary sterilization
    Is legal.  Clinics and
    hospitals that perform
    sterilization operations
    can't Impose non-medical
    requirements such as age,
    marital status and number
    of children for contra-
    ceptive purposes
  (B-3-S-G3-7-Y-N)

* For all races, the non-
  marital birthrate among
  15-19 year olds, fell from
  24.71 In 1970 to 22.27. in
  1971 per 1,000 unmarried
  women In the 15 states
  that enacted abortion
  reform Iaws23

• California Civil Code 34.5
  - A minor, regardless of
    age, may obtain an aborr
    tion without parental
    consent.  Abortions are
    covered by states' wel-
    fare program through
    Medi-Cal with prior okay
    from Department of
    Health Care Services and
    must be performed in
    hospitals
   (B3-S-G3-3-7-Y-N)
                                                          B-92
• Abortion Requirements

  - Abortion  is available  to
    women of  all ages,
    including minors

• Sterilization Requirement

  - Anyone of legal age  and
    minors with consent  of
    parents
   (B4-S-G3)

• Welfare and Institutions
  Code  14010
   - The parents of a  child
    under 21  shall not be
    held financially  respons-
    ible for  health care or
    related services  which
    child may consent under
    express provision of law
     (abortion, pregnancy,
    treatment for VD)
   (B4-S-G3-3-7-Y-N)

• Welfare Reform Ace  -  1971
   - Family planning  services
    to  all former, current
    or  potential recipients
    of  chlldbearing  age,
    15-44, Inclusive, with-
    out regard  to marital
    status, age or parent-
    hood.  Minors do  not need
    consent of  parents

   (B4-S-G3)

•  California  Government  Code
  26808

  - Law requires county
    clerk's  or  marriage
    license bureaus make
    available  a  list  of
    county birth control
    clinics when applying
    for marriage license

•  California  Civil  Code  34.5
  Therapeutic  Abortion Law-
  1967
  - Three grounds:  to protect
    physical  and mental
    health of  mother; rape;
    and incest

-------
SECTOR:  SOCIAL
ISSUE:  Children  (continued)
      Threshold Level
                                       Security
                                                                      Equal Access
                                                                                                   Ability to Influence
CHILDREN
                                * In 1972, there were more
                                  than 200,000 unwanted
                                  births among teenagers
                                  nationally  (Institute
                                  for Family  Research gc
                                  Education)24

                                • California  Civil  Code
                                  -  In most cases of divorce
                                     women  are awarded cus-
                                     tody of the  children and
                                     husbands  are ordered to
                                     pay child support until
                                     they reach  18 years
                                   (B2-S-G2-3-Y-N)

                                * Across  the  nation, accord-
                                   ing to  U.S. Census Bureau,
                                   9 million children under
                                   age 18  are  being  raised
                                  by one  parent only—more
                                   than 8  million by mothers,
                                   800,000 by fathers25

                                 * SOS of  all child  support
                                   payments ordered by the
                                   courts are never made
                                                        .26
• 1974 - Abortion is decision
  solely between a woman and
  her doctor—up to 20th week
  of pregnancy

• Dept. of Social Welfare
  - Has not issued regula-
    tions advising local wel-
    fare departments how to
    comply with the law re-
    garding sterilization—
    final decision rests
    with Courts

* End  of 1973, unmarried,
  unemancipated girls 18
  years old could consent to
  their own contraceptive
  services in 41 states, and
  with no age restrictions
  in  22 states  (Family Plan-
  ning Digest)27

 * State Department  of Health-
  the number  of legal abor-
  tions has risen  from  5,000
  in 1968  to  more  than
   136,000  in  197228

 + Abortion—517. in favor,
  49% opposed—better edu-
  cated 2  to  1  in favor of
   abortions during first
   3 months--non-whites  and
   Catholics most opposed
   (Gallup Poll—Nov. 1974)29

 • Women's Liberation Groups

 * Based on number of women
   enrolled in federally
   funded family planning
   programs during 1966-71,
   the number of births
   averted was between
   614,000 and 874,000.
   Estimated $174 million
   was spent on family
                                                                                                  planning
                                                                                                           30
                                                             B-93

-------
SECTOR:  SOCIAL
ISSUE:  Children  (continued)
     Threshold Level
                                     Security
  CHILDREN
Adoption
• Requirements for adoption:
  - Consent of child over 12
    years
  - Adoptive parent must be
    10 years older than per-
    son to be adopted
  - Consent of parents needed
    for legitimate children
  - Comprehensive review of
    prospective parents by
    county adoption agency
  - Required waiting time
    before legal petition foi
    adoption: infant, 6
    months, older child 8
    months
   (B2-S-C2)

 * Average waiting  period  for
   Infan^ 3 months  to  1  1/2
   years;  older  child,  1  to
   8 months31
                                * Number of visits from
                                  social worker before court
                                  petition: 2 visits to home
                                  and office before child is
                                  In home and 4 visits after32

                                * In last 5 years, complete)?
                                  adoptions have decreased
                                  501 despite 30,000 adop-
                                                                     Equal Access
                                                                Requirements  to  adopt--A
                                                                married couple,  23  years
                                                                or older, married for  2
                                                                years  or more.   Must not be
                                                                older  than  36 to adopt an
                                                                infant.
                                                                - Not  necessary  to  own
                                                                  their homes
                                                                - Adoptive  parents  are
                                                                  eligible  for state
                                                                  financial aid  if  they
                                                                  adopt a handicapped  child

                                                                 (B3-S-G3-3-7-Y-N)
                                                                                                   Ability to Influence
                             * Increasing tendency for
                               young unmarried mothers to
                               keep their babies.  The
                               number of babies adopted by
                               nonrelatives In California
                               between 1967-1968 and 1971-
                               1972 fell from 11,257 to
                               5,807
                                    36
                                                               • California Civil Code 224m   • California Civil Code 224m
- A minor parent has the
  right to put child up
  for adoption

(B3-S-G3)
                                                                                                - A minor parent has the
                                                                                                  right to put child up
                                                                                                  for adoption
                                                                 An application fcr adoption
                                                                 which has been rejected can
                                                                 be contested to supervisor
                                                                 of the agency who may
                                                                 assign a new social worker
                                                                 to the couple

                                                                 New abortion laws and Hedl-
                                                                 Cal abortion services
                                  tion requests a year
                                                      33
                                * In 1965. the Children's
                                  Hone Society, private adop-
                                  tion agency, placed 500
                                  children a year;  in 1974
                                  they placed 6934
                                * Families most Interested In
                                  adopting handicapped
                                  children are apt to have
                                  Incomes under $20,000 and
                                  live In rural areas39

                                e Aid to the Adoption of
                                  Special Kids (AASK)
                                  - Foundation serving as
                                    clearinghouse bringing
                                    prospective parents and
                                    hard to adopt children
                                    together

                                 • County Adoption Agencies

                                   -  Investigate  prospective
                                     parents to qualify for
                                     adopting children

-------
SECTOR:   SOCIAL
ISSUE:  Children

    »1
      Threshold Level

CHILDREN
Security
                               • California Civil Code 224
                                 - Legitimate child cannot
                                   be adopted without con-
                                   sent of parents
                                 (B2-S-G3)

                               * AASK has placed 150 hard-
                                 to-adopt children, nation-
                                 wide in the last 6 months
                                 (1974)37
                               Foster Children

                               • Welfare & Institution Code-
                                 Sec.600 - Foster Children:

                                 - Declared dependents of
                                   the juvenile court
                                 - Voluntarily placed by
                                   parents with county wel-
                                   fare departments
                                 (B2-S-C3-3-7-Y-N)

                               * 58% of 30,000 foster
                                 children in California
                                 were shifted around to 2
                                 or more foster hotnss,
                                 32t placed in 3 or more.
                                 When declared independent
                                 by the courts, a child
                                 averaged 4 1/2 years in
                                 foster care 38

                               * There are 40,000 foster
                                 children in California.
                                 Survey covering the 31,300
                                 under AFDC program showed
                                 1205 increase in last 10
                                 years (1974) 39

                               * Foster care rates set by
                                 counties range from $98
                                 to $160 per month *°
                               Equal Access
                                                           Ability to Influence
                               Child Abuse
                               • Penal Code California
                                 (1968)  '
                                 - Reporting child abuse  is
                                   mandatory and  provides
                                   immunity from  legal
                                   action to person making
                                   report
                                 (B2-S-G3-3-1-Y-N)
                               • Child Abuae Prevention
                                 and Treatment Act- 1974
                                 -  Created  the National
                                    Center in Child  Abuse
                                    and Neglect,  Office of
                                    Child Development (OCD)
                                  (B2-F-G1-3-1-Y-N)
                     B-95
                                                       • National Center in Child
                                                         Abuse and Neglect (OCD)
                                                         Law directs the center to:
                                                         - Compile and publish train-
                                                           ing materials
                                                         - Develop and establish
                                                           training programs for
                                                           personnel
                                                         - Training programs for
                                                           children and persons
                                                           responsible for welfare
                                                           of children

-------
SECTOR:  SOCIAL

ISSUE:  Children
     Threshold level
                                      Security
CHILDREN
                               (Child Abuse) continued

                               • Reporting child abuse to
                                 the Child Protective
                                 Services, Division of
                                 County Welfare Department,
                                 and to the head of Police
                                 Department, the Sheriff,
                                 or the District Attorney

                                 (B2-S-G3-3-7-Y-K)

                               * Estimates indicate that
                                 74,000 to 90,000, or about
                                 1 child  in every  100 under
                                 18 years of age are abused.
                                 Hundreds of thousands more
                                 are physically, mentally,
                                 and emotionally scarred
                                 each year 41

                               * Studies  indicate  that abus-
                                 ing parent most often was
                                 an abused child *2
                                                                      Equal Access
                                                                                                   Ability to Influence
• Influential child abuse
  groups in major cities in
  California:
  - The Child and Family Pro-
    ject (San Francisco)
  - Friends of the Family
    (Los Angeles)
  - Department of Social
    Services—Department of
    Mental Health (San Diego)
  - Parents Anonymous (10
    groups in Los Angeles
    area)

• TALK - Telephone Aid in
  Living with Kids (Bay Area)
  - Hot Line to help parents
    talk out aggressions be-
    fore they start hitting.
    Funded for three years by
    Junior League--staffed by
    60 volunteers—open 8 to
    midnight--? days a week.
                                                         B--96

-------
SECTOR:   SOCIAL

ISSUE:   Children   (continued)
      Threshold Level
                                     Security
CHILDREN
                               Sex Education

                               • California Constitution IV
                                 - Prescribes "moral im-
                                   provement as one of
                                   principal purposes of
                                   public schools

                               • Sex Education (Health and
                                 Family
                                 - It is legal to teach in
                                   California, but certain
                                   conditions are set for
                                   teaching grades 1
                                   through 12.  Subjects
                                   covered are health, edu-
                                   cation, human sexuality,
                                   and family life
                                   education

                                 (H2-S-G3)
                                                                    Equal  Access
                                                                                                Ability to Influence
                               • Education Code of Cali-
                                 fornia 8507 - 1972
                                 - Elementary and secondary
                                   schools may offer VD
                                   education with assist-
                                   ance from State Depart-
                                   ment of Education.
                                   Grade level determined
                                   by school district
                                   board

                                 (H2-S-G3)
                               • Education rode of Cali-
                                 fornia- 1091
                                 - Parent of each pupil to
                                   be enrolled in venereal
                                   disease education
                                   classes shall be noti-
                                   fied in vriting at
                                   least 15 days prior to
                                   commencement of class .
                                   Also advise them of
                                   their right to inspect
                                   material to be used and
                                   request that their child
                                   not attend

                               • Education Code of Cali-
                                 fornia-8506-Schmitz Act

                                 - No pupil may be requir-
                                   ed to attend a class in
                                   which reproductive
                                   organs, their functions,
                                   and processes are de-
                                   scribed.  If such
                                   classes are offered,
                                   parent must be notified
                                   in writing.  Parental
                                   consent is not required
                                   only a note from those
                                   who don't want their
                                   child to attend
                                Education Code of Call-
                                fornia-1091
                                - No pupil may attend class
                                  in VD education if a
                                  request that he not attend
                                  has been received by the
                                  school
• Ediieation Code of Cali-
  fornia-8506
  - Parents shall be noti-
    fied they can inspect
    material to be used in
    sex education classes
B-97
                                  (H2-S-G3)

-------
SECTOR:  SOCIAL

ISSUE:  Children  (continued)

    *!
	Threshold Level	

CHILDREN
        Security
Sex Education (continued)

• Education Code of Cali-
  fornla-13301
  - When needed, school
    districts may employ
    lecturers, not required
    to hold credentials, to
    teach sex education

• State Board of Education
  Resolution - 1969
  - Earliest instruction
    relative to human re-
    production not to be
    introduced prior to
    age 9

• Sex Education - ECC 13132.5
  - Minimum requirements for
    teaching credential, com-
    pletion of  1 unit of
    health education on  the
    effects of  alcohol,  nar-
    cotics , drugs and tobacco

 • Education Code of Cali-
  fornia  S701
  - Child may be excused
    from  sex education  in-
    struction by reason  of
    religious beliefs

 * In survey of  1,100 teen
  wor n,  sex education was one
  of the  needs  not met--blacks
  - 44%,  Mexican Americans -
  66%,  and whites - 38%
  (YWCA)  43

 * Legislature finds and  de-
  clares  incidence of venereal
  disease in California  has
  reached epidemic proportions
   (AB 71  - 1972) 44

 * The gonorrhea rate in  Cali-
  fornia  has risen 1321 in the
  last  6  years 45

 * During  calendar year  1973,
  there was one case of
  gonorrhea  for every 87 boys
  and girls aged  15  to  19  In
                                    H3
                                      Equal Access
                                                                   Ability to Influence
   Criteria used to rate
   film*
   - nudity
   - language
   - violence
 • Rating guide for motion pic-
   tures X-rated, PG,  restricted,
   etc., aids parents  to deter-
   mine the range of material
   likely to be seen in a film
   and if suitable for minors
   to see
                             B-98
FTT received a $46.9
million appropriation from
Senate and House Committee
to take action to protect
children from excessive
programming of violence
and obscenity on television

-------
SOCIAL SECTOR
Family                   REFERENCES FOR OBJECTIVE  (*) AND SUBJECTIVE (+) DATA

1.   +  The New Morality, A Profile of American Youth in the 70' s, D. Yankelovich
2.   +  State of the Nation, Watts and Free, 1974
3.   +  Gallup Poll - 1974
4.   +  Gallup Poll - 1974
5.   *  Tracers Co. of America, San Francisco Chronicle,, March 2, 1975
6.   *  State of Calif., Dept. of Health,  Registrar of Vital Statistics
rj    -j.    "        "      IT          II       IT           TI        I!

8    *  Institute   for Social Research Study, 1972-73
9.   *  HEW 1974 Statistics
10.  +  Opinion Research Organization  (State of the Nation)
11.  +  The New Morality, A Profile of American Youth in the 70fs
12.  =1=  Registrar of Vital Statistics  (State of Calif.)
13.  +  The New Morality
14.  *  U.S. Census Bureau
15.  *
16A  *  New York Times, Jan.  25, 1975
16.  *  Census Bureau
17.  *  Hat'l Center for Health Statistics, Family Planning Perspectives 1974
18.  *  HEW - Day Care Centers booklet, 1974
19.  *  Bureau of Labor Statistics (State  of the Nation)
20.  *  U.S. Census Bureau, 1974
21.  *  Family Planning Perspectives,  Summer 1974  - Vol. 6
22   *
23.  *     "      "           "         Fall 1974
24.  *  Institute for Family  Research  and  Education
25.  *  Family Planning Perspectives,  Summer 1974  - Vol 6
26.  *    "       "         "        ,  September 1974
27.  *  U.S. Census Bureau
28.  *  Legal Assistance Foundation, San Francisco (S.F. Chronicle article)
                                         B-99

-------
(Continued)

SOCIAL SECTOR
Children
29.  *  Adoption information obtained from San Mateo County Adoption Center
        and Children's Home Society
30.  *  San Francisco Chronicle - 1-28-75 on Adoption
34.  *  State Dept. of Health - Family Planning magazine
35   +  Gallup Poll, November 1974
36.  +  Gallup Poll, 1974
37.  *  Family Planning Digest
38.  *
39-  *  S.F. Chroncile, AASK Foundation article, 1975
40.  *  The Family Protection Act of 1975
41.  *   "     "       "       "
42.  *   "
43   *  Hearings  on Child Prevention Act, 1973, Senate Comm. on Children & Youth
44.  *  Rights of Children, 1972, Senate Hearings, Child Abuse and Day Care
45.  +  Attention is Needed, Action is Called For, Nat'l YWCA Resource Center on
        Women, 1974
46   *
47>  *
48.  *  American  Social Health Association, 3-3-75
                                          B-100

-------
                              SOCIAL SECTOR

                               Bibliography

Equality of Education Opportunity Survey,  mandated by PL 93-380, Title I
     of Elementary and Secondary Education Act  of 1965.

Executive Office of the President, Office  of Management and Budget,
     Social Indicators, 1973.

Gallup Poll, "Public Attitudes Toward Education" (1974).

Gatov, Elizabeth R., ed.,  Sex Code of California, A  Compendium, Public
     Education and Research Committee of California  (1973).

Markley, 0. "The Normative Structure of Knowledge Production  and Utilization:
     Interim Report," Stanford Research Institute, Menlo Park, California
     (December 1974)

Mayeski, George et al., "study of Achievement of Our Nation's Students,"
     Report (OE) 72-131, U.S. Department of  Health,  Education and Welfare,
     Washington, D.C. (1973).

Palo Alto Unified School District Board Policy.

State of California, Constitution.

	, California Education Codes.

             "Framework for Health Instructions in California Public Schools,
     Kindergarten Through Grade Twelve," Department  of Education  (1970).

             "Project Arise - Reform of Intermediate and Secondary Education,
     Department of Education (1974).

 Sullivan, J.,California Supreme Court majority opinion in Serrano v.  Priest,
     California Official Reports, No. 25 (14 September 1971).

 Thomas, T. and J. Danner, "Definitions of Equal Educational^Opportunity
     and Their Policy Implications:  Interim Working Draft," Stanford
     Research Institute, Menlo Park, California (March 1974).

 U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, "Head Start - Policies
     and Instructions Manual," Office of Child Development (September 1967)
                                  B-101

-------
4.  Political

     The political sector has been broken down into five major issues:
 civil liberties,  citizen participation, honesty in government,  access to
 information,  and  public protection (internal and external).   The  first
 issue,  civil  liberties, as defined by the QOL study,  includes the basic
 freedoms of U.S.  citizens to exercise the rights inherent in the  Consti-
 tution.  Citizen  participation includes three subissues:   the right to
 vote, right to hold  office,  along with other forms of participation such
 as community  involvement. Honesty in government is the need for  honest
 and fair representation to be exercised by all elected officials  and civil
 employees.  The fourth issue, access to information,  means citizen access
 to all  government opinions,  rules, and reports.   The last issue in this
 sector, public protection,  covers standards ensuring safety against ex-
 ternal  aggression, insurrection and natural disasters.  These issues and
 specific concerns were determined by the criteria set forth in the section
 on methodology in the  report.
     The subissue,  right to vote,  was selected as a representative concern
 to detail the  political sector for various reasons:
          •  First of all,  there are specific standards relating to
            registration and voting functions, many of these differ-
            ing from state to state.
          •  Registration and voting standards also have quantitative
            indicators which are  reflected in available objective and
            subjective data.
          •  And,  finally, the subissue,  right to vote,  was selected
            because of the relevance  of  the vote in a democratic
            system.
                                   B-103

-------
                                                                                               Standard
                                                                                               Objective Data
                                                                                               Subjective Data
SECTOR:  POLITICAL

        B.
         lThres
               i hold
                                         2
                                          Security
    CITIZEN PARTICIPATION

    - Right to vote
    - Right to bold office
    - Other forms of
      participation

 «. California Beterendums

   - Must have at least 5% of
     votes in last guberna-
     torial election for
     rejection of a statute
   - For amendments must have
     S% of vote in last
     gubernatorial election
   - Referendum measure for
     an amendment must be
     presented 90 days after
     enactment of the  statute
     with  5* pf the vote to the
     Secretary of State
 • To Vote in Presidential
   Elections

   - 18 years old
j  - SO-day residency  re-
     quirement
   * Absentee voting 7 days
     prior to election and
     return of ballot  by
     close of polls
                               • Public Law 89-110

                                 - Protects against the pas-
                                   sing of any law by any
                                   state that will Infringe
                                   the citizen's right to
                                   vote on account of race,
                                   sex, religion, national
                                   origin
   - 18 years old
   - 3O-day residency
 • To be a Representative
   - Must be 25 years old and
     7 years a United States
     citizen

 • Senator
   • SO years old and 9 years
     a United States citizen
                                      Equal Access
                                                                 Ability to Influence
• Voting Rights Act Amend-
  ments of 1970

  - Prohibits the use of
    literacy testa as pre-
    requisite for voting
  - Allows for a person 18
    years of age to vote
  - Maximum 30-day residency
    requirement
  - Maximum absentee voting
    requireuwjijL wl 7 uaya
    prior to an election and
    return of ballot by close
    of polls


• Article IV, California
  Constitution
• Public  Law  93-443 Campaign
  Reform  Bill —  1974
  - Required  time for  polls
    to close  will be 11  p.m.
    in the East,  1O p.m.  in
    the Midwest,  9 p.m.  In
    the mountain  states,  S
    p.m.  In the West

• Article II,  California       i
  Constitution

  - Mentally deficient, in-
    sane, convicted criminals
    of Infamous crimes are
    not allowed to vote

• Article I, California
  Constitution, Section 24
  - No pronerty ouallfications
    to vote

• Public Law  89-110
  - Local voting  procedures
    Imposed on account of
    race prohibited
                                                             e Article I, United States
                                                               Constitution

                                                               - Each House will estab-
                                                                 lish their Rules of
                                                                 Proceedings, punish
                                                                 members for bad beha-
                                                                 vior and replace members
  - Insures the right of clti- • XXIV Amendment,  United
    zens to use the referendum
    and initiative
                                                                 State Constitution
                                                                 - Right to vote can' t be
                                                                   denied by reason of
                                                                   failure to pay any poll
                                                                   tax or other tax
                                                                                               Article I, California
                                                                                               Constitution, Section 10
                                                                                               - Guaranteed right of peti-
                                                                                                 tion to people
i Article' IV, California
 Constitution, Section 23
 - ftnnrantfiori n<*u"?r of th?
   electors to propose
   atatutes and amendments
   to the Constitution and
   to adopt or reject them

. XIV Amendment, United
 States Constitution

 — No state shall make or
   enforce a law which shall
   abridge the privileges
   or immunities of citizens
   of the United States
 - Due process of law
   guaranteed
 • Lobbying Laws

   - Federal
   - State

 • California Representation

   - Must be 18 yrs old and
     a citizen at the time
     of the election to hold
     a civil office

   - (Primary Elections)
     Requirements - Ca.
     Party must have recei-
     ved at least 2% of entire
     vote of the state in pre-
     ceding gubernatorial
     •lection
   - Or petition represen-
     ting 10% of entire vote
     in preceding gubernator-
     ial election and received
     before the 135th day be-
     fore any election
   - Party disqualified when
     registration falls be-
     low 1/15 of 1% of re-
     gistered voters.
                                 Article I,  California
                                 Constitution

                                 - Ho property qualifica-
                                   tions can be required
                                   In order to vote
                               • California Elections Code,
                                 Section 201 fc 204
                                                                                              • Civil Rights Act - 1964
                                                                                                Title VII
                                                                                                - Provides civil and cri-
                                                                                                  minal remedies against
                                                                                                  federal law enforcement
                                                                                                  Officers who unjustifi-
                                                                                                  ably deny an Individual
                                                                                                  his civil rights
                     B-104
                                 - Does not require a set
                                   number of registration
                                   places throughout each
                                   county
                              • Hatch Act
                                - Prohibits political parti-
                                  cipation for all Federal
                                  employees other than
                                  Secretaries of Departments:
                                  V.P.s, etc.

                              • San Francisco Charter
                                - Prohibits political par-
                                  ticipation for city
                                  employees

-------
 SECTOR:   POLITICAL
            Thre0hold
                                          Security
 CITIZEN PARTICIPATION (continued)

 (Lobbying Laws, continued)
      •Or petition representing
      10% of entire vote
      *nd received before
      the 135th day be-
      fore any election
      -Party disqualified
      when registration
      falls below l/15tb
      of 1% of registered
      voter*
  * Statistical Abstract
   - Total voting age popula-
     tion In 1972 equaled
     136,803,000
                                                                        Equal Acceaa
                                                                   *  Statistical Abstract  of
                                                                     the U.S.  1973
                                                                    Total  number who  voted
                                                                    by years  of education
                                                                    -  8 yr« of less - 47.4%
                                                                    -  9-11 yrs      - 52.0%
                                                                    -  12 yrs        - 65.4%
                                                                    -  12 yrs  +      - 78.8%
                                                                    California
                                                                    -  U.S. it  State
                                                                       Legislature       - 11
                                                                    -  City fc  County
                                                                       Offices          - 45
                                                                    -  Law  Enforcement  - 14
                                                                    -  Education         - 60
                                                                               Total      130
                                                                     United States
                                                                     -  U.S. & State
                                                                       Legislature    -   256
                                                                     -  City fc County  -
                                                                       Offices       - 1,264
                                                                     -  Law Enforce-
                                                                       nent              334
                                                                     -  Education     -   767
                                                                                Total   2,621

                                                                     Total  Black elected
                                                                     Officials (1970-1973)

                                                                   * Percent  who voted in
                                                                     primaries
                                                                                                   Ability to Influence
                                                                     * Statistical Abstract of
                                                                       the U.S. 1973

                                                                     - Total Voting Age Popu-
                                                                       lation who voted in
                                                                       1972 in U.S. = 55.7%;
                                                                       in Calif. - 605
                                                                          f
                                                                     " Women = 53% of the
                                                                       voting population

                                                                     - Percent of iemal.es wr.o
                                                                       voted in 1972 = 625

                                                                     - Percent of males who
                                                                       voted in 1972 = 64.1%

                                                                     - Total black vote equals
                                                                       9.8% of the voter popu-
                                                                       lation
  Dniv. of Michigan. ISR
+ Your Independence or free-
  don, the chance you have
  to do what you want
+ The way other  people
  treat you  (registra-
  tion, public services)

  Univ. of Michigan. ISR
+ The extent to which  you
  get what you are entitle
  what is rightfully yours

+ Your opportunity to
  change things around
  you that you don't like
   Statistical Abstract of
   the U.S.  1973
 * Total  voting age popu-
   lation between 18 and 20
   years  of  age = 11,022,000
   equaled 8%  of total voting
   age population

 * Total  18-20 yrs who voted
   5,318,000 equaled 48.3J

  Univ. of Michigan. ISR
+ How discouraged are you
  before you even register?

+ How Important is your vote?

•f The respect other people
  have for your rights
                                                                                                 +  Is voting more trouble
                                                                                                    than It's worth

                                                                                                 +  The extent to which you
                                                                                                    get what you are entitled
                                                                                                    to, what is rightfully
                                                                                                    yours
Univ. of Michigan. ISR
Do you feel that you are
forced to earn the privi-
lege to vote?
                                                     B-105

-------
      Thre
           shold
                                        Security
                                   JEqual Access
                                  Ability  to Influence
 CITIZEN PARTICIPATION

 - Right to vote
 - Right to hold office
 - Other forms of
   participation

» Art II Calif. Const.

  - All elections are free
  — Federal employees are
    prohibited from active
    campaigning

 tCalif. Elections Code

  - Calif. State employees
    are prohibited from
    political participation
    other than voting
 • Proposition 9, 1974 Laws

  - $50 cash limit on pol.
    donations in Calif, over
    this must submit name,
    address and money in
    security check form
• Art II Calif.  Const.

  - Elections  are free

» Hatch Act

  - Prohibits  pol. activity
    on the part  of federal
    civil servants
• Calif.  Const.  Art  II          ,
  - All voters are privi-
    leged from arrest while
    at or while  going and re-
    turning home from his poll-
    ing place (excep- for
    treason, felonies, and
    breach of peace
• Calif.  Elee. Code
  Sec 203
  - Registration will be  in
    effect at all times except
    30 days before elec.
  - Absentee reg.  must be filed
    7 days before election and
    returned by  close of  polls
  - Only  party registered
    voters may vote  in primary
    elections
Fed. Personal Manual

- All fed. employees are
  allowed to be excused
  up to one day in order
  to vote, register,

Calif. Elec Code
See 14400

- All Calif, employees
  are allowed to be excused
  up to 2 hours with pay
  in order to vote
                                                      B-106

-------
    Voting,  in theory,  is the most influential action citizens can exer-



cise.  The vote initially determined the system we now live under, and  it is



our chosen democratic system which ultimately determines standards across



all the sectors.





    How can we argue the right to vote as a basic need?  In Maslow's



theory of a hierarchy of needs, basic needs include security needs along



with physiological needs.  In Sullivan, 1971, the U.S. Supreme Court de-



fined the right to vote as a fundamental interest.  The right to vote is



a safeguard for insuring the continued existence of democracy.  Finally,



the vote is an essential prerequisite of a representative form of govern-



ment and is the primary means American citizens use to express and effect



their will.






B  Column - Basic Need
    Threshold
         It was not until 1970 that a major election reform law was passed



to suspend the use of literacy and other tests and establish uniform stan-



dards for general elections throughout the United States.  This law, re-



ferred to as "The Voting Rights Act Amendments of 1970," set a minimum age



requirement of 18, a 30-day residency requirement, absentee voting applica-



tion requirement of seven days prior to an election, and the return of the



ballot no later than the time of closing of the polls, as well as balloting



standards for all states to follow.  Although the law set a uniform voting



age requirement for Presidential elections, it did not establish when a



person must be 18 in order to vote in primary elections.  To participate



in a primary election, however, a voter in California must be 18 on the



day of the primary; whereas, in Indiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North



Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia, a voter may be 17




and vote in the primary election.
                                   B-107

-------
         Residency requirements cannot exceed 30 days for a  Presidential


election.  In California, a person must establish state,  county,  and  pre-


cinct residency 30 days prior to an election, differing from Florida  and

                                                      *
some other states which have no residency requirement.


         Registration requirements for primary and general elections  differ


a great deal among states.  In California,  a voter must register  30 days


before a primary election in order to vote.  In Nebraska,  a  voter may wait


until the second Friday before the primary.  Both states  require  a voter


to register in person.



    Objective Data



         •  See list of requirements for age, residency and


            registration deadlines by state on Table A.



         •  Percent of registered voters in California as com-


            pared to percent registered in Nebraska.



    Subjective Data



         •  Do you feel the voter registration laws discourage a

            person's interest in trying to vote?




B  Column - Security
    Is the freedom to exercise opinion in the form of a vote protected


and insured for all U.S. citizens?



    As U.S, citizens, our right to vote is guaranteed in the U,S.  Consti


tution.  Article 26, Sec. I, gives citizens who are 18 years of age or


older the right to vote.  Article 19 protects citizens from being  denied
 Information supplied by the chief election officials and League of

 Women Voters in 1974, 'Voter's Service, Citizen Alert."
                                 B-108

-------
League of Women Voters of the United States
1730 M  Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036
Pub. No. 522
The abbreviations used in the following table are:

b = absent on business
d = disabled persons
e = not absent, but prevented by employment from
    voting at polling place
m = military personnel (including families)
r = absent for religious  reasons
s = student s
t = temporarily out of county
FPCA = Federal Post Card  Application form
                      B-109

-------
DATE BY WHICH A
                           RESIDENCE  REQUIREMENTS
                                                                 REGISTRATION DEADLINE
                                                                                               WHERE TO REGISTER

ALABAMA
ALAsToT
ARIZONA
ARKANSAS
CALIFORNIA
COLORADO
CONNECTICUT
DELAWARE
flORIDA
GEORGIA
HAWAII
IDAHO
IlllNOIS
INDIANA
IOWA
KANSAS
KENTUCKY
LOUISIANA
MAINE
MARYLAND
MASSACHUSETTS
MICHIGAN 	
MINNESOTA
MISSISSIPPI
MISSOURI
MONTANA
NEBRASKA
NEVADA
NEW HAMPSHIRE
NEW JERSEY
NEW MEXICO
NEW YORK
NORTH CAROLINA
NORTH DAKOTA
OHIO
OKLAHOMA
OREGON
PENNSYLVANIA
RHODE INLAND
SOUTH CAROLINA
SOUTH DAKOTA
TENNESSEE
TEXAS
UTAH
VERMONT
VlRfiitaA
WASHINGTON
WEST VIRGINIA
WISCONSIN
WYOMING
DC
PUERTO RICO
VIRGIN (SUNOS
primjrv
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Aanl
30 ton Man a~Mrr
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1 Q ton brfn ilactwa
30 dan Men aLatUM
50 Uri tactora atatiwa
20 ton Mm *tani««
30 tori Mara akcti**
32 ton Mxa ilK»o*
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45 tort aHan i«anj|?04m*u« tact »IK .
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40 ton Man nicitan
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10 ton kttan alaciia*
29 ton Manatacn**
30 ton M0f« *ntii««
?6 ton M;an t*»rnwi
21 buuMts dan Men tlrcna*

30 ton M«n IHCIIM
tO ton Mai* ttaclicfl
31 dan MawpiKTiH
30 ton ktttra rl«ita<
30 da*: arib* *>acti»a*
15 ton Man atactu*
29 ton btton riactiaa
30 ton Man twni*n
In Tan Mart aiattiaa
24 ton M«i tlaciiM
M ton Mwa •HKIIM
M ton Man awctMii
Sfi ton totara alacna*
I«d Wai MM* ataewi
30 ton Man twciwa
1C ton Man awctiaa
1st &•*•> » Wtnfi
45 ton Man ataciia*

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uw
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wui »H mifrKt!
affKt if bMrd of vlfctiom atiwi a<«cat 2
MM Man rtet.M
                                        B-110

-------
CANCELLATION OF REGISTRATION
                                                   PARTY AFFILIATION
ABSENTEE REGISTRATION
Why is a vottr's registration cancelled?
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••M trow *n»*enon. <«iluif » *W( is 91* ittetwn.
(•MI MM otat*t»ff twnca
MMd Dt dwd
MM M vou in 4 ft, convKtiM at tomo
MHHti. Woitf fulttd to vott in gtncnt
M**r tMMCtwt, comnutBwiit 1o MDIBI h«pn*J.
fMhft ra record du*g« »f additu or 10 «oti
»**• 2 ,^ 	 	
Wan t« Mil in 4 i n
OfatnDon tHnrterf MiKt to von tor 2 in
Wwt M vott i« two T«n *rie*r coevictiOR,
Wf/ttmtM Ofuwhirf
if wun' BM«Wit ••MmaWt n ^m«d
Wm u MM HI ? in
M n* in 2 Vn
Wwt it vtu 111 4 ctmtcuiivf ft teoih.
•m frwR twrty. MI«»I irtomptr»«c«
dM«t el «WM t*iu:i to *on tor 4 in .
Mttf twwtliw Wan 10 MM fo> 3 »rj
•••facat* t*^aifWi«fl
•tw ITMI ta«n
tajetwl of rfiidwci. ltl«»r COHVKIIOA.
oa>Li

Ttl
v=:
v«
M
-
in lorai
m
ft*
TW
no
V0«
rt»

T«
?«
mi »Jlowtd to
T«
M>
t"
y«
m

r«
"•

How does one *e -register?
M TMW VOI*.
'O-ftvutor »nd sign Miti
mum tijnrt cavd (Worn mast p*tii«n
CHrt)
U Wifinal rifutiitian
rviuin cart « la-iagtsttr
at oriftnaJ ngulrilion
*nn«n ifqirtft »pr tonltnwtion.
if moved n-'tgitlor in MW (own
wmttn or phorw itqunt
wif> tup of fiteliom thai mtvi u
unclungad
*t Origtnkl raaittritiOit
at angiflal rt|ittntian
ftunng with cawntv cltrk wittmi
1Q d«yi ol itttipl of notici
m rtfiilK in ptnon
iHurn Buigt miicc or rtguict » mm
rwir
B oriffiJi*! inotrUiefl
tM "Wtwn t« Rtgntai'
•aoiat Mora co M of itaction and
arfln o4»f iMity
(•gattf ttflittrniBit procadura
EWtKt rtcnttaf
*t onyiiot rtgntritiOfl
'••rtgntK in ptnon
ftHittf bcfwr txti clttk
tt wtfliort rtfitiralion
Boirfl
« OTHJIMI itgmriltDn
u original (tgntni'on
« '0|nrratto» 'd •>* avrrf 10 yr
dork tr try pa«c»d
H oiigiMf rtBiitfifion
rt rtjtttrr in pfrjOfl ft' n» mail
wrttun eounry
niurn rwtitnauon card, o> rtg n
**w nut
» origmal (tfntritian

10 d«v> of nDliftcatian or tt-rtgaiti
HOB try phon* Ittiai. tn BfTJ^n rf
fi.ltri ID voi*
it iitablmtJirmaM
~.fTp«M to t»nc^«ti«n «»« in 3D
d«vi w apply m p*'«n lo bd ot
d»dlint for dtcUratton of
party to voti in primary
M ptw ifWiMiM Fao^cifa4
J.«t
50 dan ^^ ••Kt'M
M phai *H*)«1ta« ratwrri
3D tart Wera 4*1.™
ataciion day « a< pn*wy rat* wn* t(NHMtt*(
no party t>clwatf«n
no piavfovi arlihation laa^irao*
dtclart party wttf voting
M piwwu awty •FlriijliOM rtejuirtd
tf«y «1 pfMUfy it wt irtiliattd th*ngt 20 dwrt
btlon
bt'oti prtcadtng ft*' ftachon. MM votan 30
days aaVota pnaiary
30 0*yi Btfori tltciton
ckanft. 3 MaMta Wlera. original
dadantian, any tuna
ttoM at raftltianan
dfctMi piny •< 00H. chango 28 d*yi
bifort ttKtion
no flifty tttilxno* itlott*4
M pafty ragiitrarton
....

30 4ayi Men Pfciw*
90 davi Man (taciian. ind»p»ndflRtt may dtclatt


tfltolltd in parry pnoi to latt gmrd
tltctrtn. tofoat tarottmcnt availatlt
f»F ntw win
OM thtKartx o' "***' '" voting for maionrv of
oth«i p«fTY in lait oirt'l tltttign

31 tttyi bttdt fittiiwi
30 days b^on etrction
no pitvtws iHiU«lior> rtquirtd
Ki»* dapbcila raftttrttiftfl Card
M P<«VIIMI affritatwi 'sautirt
no (trmoui tftdmion ftqvtrrt

M s*rty »H*»tiM
M party •*«•*»
30 days Won ataciioft
N ptavtoM atWMfofl 'tajairad
may ttgntar al poHi
30 dayf t*'** alMiiae


Who can register absentee?
i. m. & thaw taMntanti
•nvwt; Mtliai rtgiitration rto^ifaawHl
«. Mfow ttaaatnnn; Mr af tUlt
MM
i
d. i. m. b t
m. ciMbaa U i M*«!«yM U*^ a!aaflii4aMtl
M. flit* CfQM. Ptact Cortt. timportfiry
a*««nt tnm tan limm of U S
d. i. n. t
IflVBoa who 9Mirtiii aj abtlMH uttltr
d. i. m. 1. 1
d, t «. ». t
no n«
I d
1
t. d. Irttnf itrwcoi Mt rt^Mirtd
flOfW
amatvyaat MI at eaMntrv, mantbort o* ra-
ligioui at wafara Offncwi wnth wm«J forcat

out of county 1w 30 dvyt baloia oltction.
CitnHiM U S tmplovttl ovtrMH
M thou in govt anitien. tnoM
hvtnj tamporantv ourtidt U S
a. m 1. 1
•U votan
alactien eam«ttiMn«n onty

m & spovto

all panain
A s m. fc, !
d. t. in. • Bi laouM param or chrfdrin
KCtaipMTiaaj I

fltghu Aci
batora MiMy puWic t tegutaf in anvrtoi
counrv d may rtg at horn*
**Jf«r« ar| . wrfk »r«iftf toicft U S tm-
ployaai omxtai & dtp of abovt
US goniMwirt tfflBiovtes ovoncai
IHldtMff

d. s. m, b. t
owm aucttnf wtftnct n«ofit)Mn

wi HKftsMf ttf afafMflO voting
tr«« tUH ior Bttaswy c*ui*
tmdantt

official af bd ol aiaciioRi
ctnlrxt ontmtt Ml

How dots ont riqutsl
•estotM rtgj form?
loft or
talit. antw^, i* etna*
tfttaf. a«flt*r4
~
•kana. lamr. botkard. "i
•HIMLffCA

plwna, Itntr. pottcard. i"
ptfia*
Ititar, BMtecri
lontf. amiurd
ant), poittart. iflilicirion by
paiaML IIOMI. tMd or ubiinf
•boa*, hmtt. paitca^. <* oarten
ia HroM. by awf
-
lanif, pMturd. FPCA
Hfln. iMttird
•JWM. «TRH. HitUrt
~
latt at, la amon
ngitiir bafera piitico ot ttia
paoca or mar* RuWK
ptioia. Itrttr. tottcafd- in par-
nn by an a«aM whoi • ngu-
tftad vtlii
ra'atin at tovnt. in panon

DA«M. limr. puicifd. i* pi""


a*ow. tuicafd Itltar. talogrtph
•kana. kttai. IB p«non
fiwK coMty claik. local IWV
phono. Itttw. pnuatd, in paraoii
•ton. Ittttt. a«iturf





latin, a«t(«rt. to panon.
itfunt by »*noti auiiliod
te «ii FPCA

ptMiw. lattat. B«ic*i i* ptnon
l«Tlir. in ptnon
FPCA



•anM. or by taint
relotm

*t w«H* ratuatt l»r rttonift
boNot
                                               B-1H

-------
the right to vote on account of sex.  Article 15 protects the right to


vote from being denied or abridged by the United States or any state on


account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude.  Finally,


Article 24, adopted in 1964, protects all eligible citizens from being


denied the right to vote by reason of failure to pay any poll tax or


other tax.  Our vote is thus guaranteed in the U.S. Constitution.



    The methods and requirements for casting a vote, on the other hand,


are regulated by state laws or, in some cities and counties, by local


charter.  In California, if a citizen continuously votes in every gen-


eral election and does not relocate to another county, he will remain


eligible to vote.  However, if he does not vote in a general election,

                                                                *
his registration is cancelled and he becomes ineligible to vote.   So,


in a particular state, the right to vote may exist within certain defini-


tions of eligibility.  Article II of the California Constitution insures


the right to vote to a citizen 18 years of age.  It further provides for


a free election and that all voting will be kept secret.


    A citizen cannot always be present in his or her prospective precinct


on election day.  For these citizens to exercise their right to vote,


there is the absentee voting system.  The 1970 Voting Amendments estab-


lished a minimum time requirement for registering as an absentee (see B )


This enables people who are in the military, away on business, disabled,


students away at college, and others to vote.  In California a person may


request an absentee registration form by phone, letter, postcard, in person,

                                               **
or through a federal postcard application form.
*
 Art.  II, California State Constitution.

**
  Information supplied by the chief election officials and League of

  Women Voters in 1974,  "Voter's Service, Citizen Alert."
                                  B-112

-------
Objective Data





    •  According to William E.  Bieker, Director of University  of



       California State Data Program at Berkeley,  ten percent  of



       California's voters lose their eligibility following each



       election because of laws requiring them to re-register  in



       person every time they move.  Furthermore,  the average



       Californian moves every four years.





    •  Census Bureau Report on the 1974 Elections



       - 64 percent of the 18-21 year olds and 53 percent of the



         21-24 year olds failed to register in 1974.





       - Only 45 percent of a record 141 million eligible voters



         were reported to have voted in 1974.  The report further



         showed that not since 1958 had such a high proportion of



         those eligible failed to vote; in that recession year,



         only 43 percent voted.





    •  U. S. Statistical Abstract - 1973



       48.3 percent of the 18-20 year olds voted in the 1972



       Presidential elections.








 Subjective  Data




     Various attitudinal  data  on  the  effectiveness of our federal and



 local governments  has been collected by the  Institute for Social




 Research in Ann Arbor, Michigan.




     In 1972 the following questions  were asked concerning our




 national government:
                             B-113

-------
   "How do  you feel about:  The way our national government is operating?'


                           (May 1972)



                           What our national government is doing?"


                           (November 1972)
   Delig.
Pleas.    Mos. Sat.
Mixed    Mos. Diss.
Unhap.    Terr.
1% 8%
1% 5%
1% 4%
25%
28%
21%
38%
45%
42%
15%
14%
18%
7%
5%
10%
6% (May)
2% (Nov.)
4% (Nov.)
  Sample of 1118 respondents.
  Sample of 1072 respondents,
   "How do you feel about:
                5%
              The way your local government is operating?'


              (May 1972)



              What your local government is doing?"


              (November 1972)
    Delig.    Pleas.   Mos. Sat.



     1%        13%        32%
                       Mixed    Mos. Diss.    Unhap.    Terr.


                                   13%          6%        5% (May)
             34%
  30%
  37%
   5%
4% (Nov.)
B  Column - Equal Access
 O



     Can everyone, 18 years of age or older, who is a citizen of the United


States, vote?  Do all people follow the same system of registration and voting


procedures in order to express their choice on the candidates?
                                B-114

-------
    The 24th Amendment of the Constitution ensures that an eligible

citizen cannot  be denied his or her right to vote by reason of failure

to pay poll tax or other tax.  Article II in the California State  Consti-

tution provides for free elections throughout the state.

    In California, as well as in many other states, certain people are

denied the right to vote.  These include a "severely mentally deficient

person, insane  person, a person convicted of an infamous crime, embezzle-
                                          *
ment or misappropriation of public money."   A voter is free from arrest

going to, or  returning from, his or her polling place, except for indict-

able offenses,  which include treason, felony, and breach of peace com-
                                      *
mitted during attendance at elections.

    Finally,  Public Law 89-110 prohibits any state or county, etc.,  from

imposing any local voting procedures which would prohibit persons from

voting on account of race or color.  TJSC 43 of 1971, insures all U.S. citi-

zens the right to vote without distinction of race, color, or previous

servitude.  In 1974, according to the Census Bureau, only 45 percent of

a record 141 million eligible voters were reported to have voted.  Further,

the Census Bureau stated that not since  1958 had  such a high proportion

of those eligible failed to  vote.  Approximately  57 percent did not vote

that year.

    Another major issue  of concern is the access  a person has  to  voter

registration.  Registration  is the first and most  important step  in the

voting process.   In most cases when people register, they usually vote.

Where  is a person required to go  to register?   In California,  a person

may  register,  in person,  in  any city before  a deputy  registrar, at a

firehouse,  or   at the Office of Registrar of Voters.  The State of Cali-

fornia does not  require  a  certain number of  registration  places throughout
  Art.  II, California State  Constitution.
                                   B-115

-------
each county other than at the above-mentioned places.   It  is left to each


county to establish a sufficient number of registration places and en-


courage voter registration.  Registration of voters is required to be in


progress at all times except during the 30 days preceding  any election


in California.  However, this occurs only at the Office of Registrar and


at firehouses.  Deputy registrars only actively register people immediately


prior to an election.   The major political parties make attempts through


the use of deputy registrars to register additional people.  Their major


interest, of course, is to obtain additional votes for their particular


candidates.  Therefore, they concentrate on registration in areas where they


anticipate votes.  The preceding standards indicate that the law does not


require local officials to take the initiative to reach potential voters.


    A subjective concern here might be the experiences of  people as they


seek to register to vote.  The cost in terms of time,  inconvenience, and


energy needed to register will vary among potential voters, and consider-


ing these factors, it  is not surprising that many people choose not to vote.



    Objective Data


         •  Percent of voters by age, sex, race


         •  Percent of door-to-door registration by county


         •  Percent of firehouse registration


         •  Percent of voter registration at the Office of Registrar


         •  Percent of people who did not register due to lack of access.



    Subjective Data


         •  Why did people not register?


         •  If they registered and did not vote, why did they not vote?


         •  Do citizens think that they should take the initiative in


            order to qualify as a voter?
 *
 California State Elections Code, Sec. 203.
                                  B-116

-------
         •  According to a 1974 Census Bureau's report,  minorities


           and women showed the least interest in Congressional


           elections and in the selection of governors  and local


           officials.





B  Column - Ability to Influence
 4	



    There are two ways in California for electors to initiate change


in the State  government other than voting itself.  First is through the


initiative which is the power given to electors to propose statutes and


amendments to the Constitution and to adopt or reject them.  In the


case of a statute, a petition must be certified to have been signed by


electors equal in number to five percent of the votes for all candidates


for governor  in the last gubernatorial election.  For a proposed amend-


ment, a petition must have been signed by at least eight percent of the


voters in the preceding gubernatorial election.*  The second way is through


the referendum which is the power given to the electors to approve or re-


ject statutes or parts of statutes except urgency statutes.  These include


statutes addressing elections, and statutes providing for tax levies or


appropriations for usual current expenses of the State.



    In the case of a referendum, a petition must be certified to have been


signed by at least five percent of the voters  in the preceding gubernatorial


election within 90 days after the enacting date  of the  statute.  In some


cases, after the petition has been submitted to  the Secretary of State,


the governor may call a special statewide election for  the measure.  Usually,


a measure is included at the next general election held at least 31 days

                   **
after it qualifies.



    Apart from  the use  of the initiative  and referendum, the vote  is the


most effective  way to change the system.  The  question  here  is, why do so


many eligible citizens  choose not to  vote?   In our present election system
  *


 **
Art. IV, Sec. 22, California State Constitution.


Art. IV, Sec. 23, California State Constitution.


                                B-117

-------
a citizen must be forced to earn the privilege to vote when actually

it should be an insured right.  The federal government and states have,


in most cases, mandated specific voting requirements for people to follow

in order to vote.  However, standards that would set a threshold of in-


tolerability concerning actual voting participation have not been estab-


lished.  The past 1974 election, although not a Presidential election,


had only approximately 45 percent of eligible voters participate.  A sub-


jective condition here would be the percent of people who fear their vote

would be misrepresented.




    Objective Data


         •  Number of certified initiatives and referendums that qualifiy

            in California.



    Subjectivei Data



         •  Do voters see the system as giving him/her a non-choice?

         •  Estimated 76 million who stayed home said that they were


            either uninterested or disliked politics in the post-
                          *
            Watergate era.
*
 Based on a Census Bureau report which interviewed more than 100,000

 eligible voters within two weeks after the election in 1974.
                               B-118

-------
SECTOR:   POLITICAL
     Threshold
                                        -Security
                                                                     Equal Access
                                                                                                   Ability to Influence
CIVIL LIBERTIES
- Basic freedoms to exer-
  cise our constitutional
  right* u citizens of the
  U.S.

• U.S. Preamble
  - Establish justice, In-
    jure domestic tran-
    4ulllty, provide for the
    common defense, and
    promote general welfare

* Requirements for the
  Rlrilt to Hold Assembly
  - Registration w/ police
    department
  - Will not disturb the
    public  (disturbing the
    peace)

e Art.  IV U.S. Constitution
  - Freedom of movement
  - All citizens of each
    state shall be entitled
    to  all  privileges and
    Immunities of citizens
    of  each state
  - To  be secure In their
    persons, houses,
    papers  2nd effects

 • California State Consti-
  tution
   - Liberty of  conscience
    for all
   - All voting  will be kept
     tecret
e Art. I U. S. Constitution
  - Freedom of Press, Reli-
    gion, speech, assembly
• Art. V U.S. Constitution
  - Private property
    not be taken by the
    Federal government  with-
    out compensation
• Art. I  Sec.  9.  U.S.
  Constitution
   - Right  of Habeas  Corpus
   - Protection against un-
    warranted search and
    seizure
   - Protection against bill
    of  attainder or  expose
    facto  law
   California Civil Rights
   Act-1964 Title VII
   - Protects all individuals
     both citizen and non-
     citizens, domiciled or
     residing In the U.S.
     against discrimination
     on the basis of race,
     color, religion, sex,
     or national origin
   - Provides civil and
     criminal remedies
     against federal law en-
     forcement officers who
     unjustifiably deny an
     Individual his civil
     rights
• Art IV U.S.  Constitution
  - All citizens are en-
    titled to  all privi-
    leges and  immunities
    that every citizen of
    •very state has

• Civil Rights Act-1964
  and Executive Order 11246
  - Prohibits  discrimination
    based on sex, color,
    creed, religion,
    national origin and re-
    quires affirmative
    action to ensure equal-
    ity of opportunity in
    all aspects of employ-
    ment.  Applies to
    Federal government and
    organizations having
    contracts with the
    Federal government
                                  XIV Amendment. U.  S.
                                  Constitution
                                  - Prohibits  all  states
                                    from making or enforcing
                                    a law  that may infringe
                                    on our civil liberties
                                • V Amendment.  U.S.
                                  Constitution
                                  - A  person does  not  have
                                    to incriminate himself
                                    unless  on presentment
                                    for indictment of  a
                                    grand Jury
 • Art. I California Con-
  sti tution  Sec. 21
   - All citizens have the
    same privileges and
    immunities  granted
    them
                                                                 Art. IV California Con-
                                                                 stitution Sec. 45
                                                                 - At election time only
                                                                   registered qualified
                                                                   voter may sign an
                                                                   initiative, referendum,
                                                                   recall, nominating pe-
                                                                   tition or other paper
                                                                   concerning a state
                                                                   issue or person
                                   XII Amendment.  V.  S.
                                   Constitution
                                   -  Right of citizens  to
                                     vote
e Art. I U.S.  Constitution
  - Freedom of press,  speech,
    assembly and petition
• Art. I U.S. Constitution

  - Only the House of Repre-
    sentatives has the
    sole power of Impeach-
    ment.
  - The Senate has the sole
    power to try all impeach-
    ments.  Must have 2/3's
    concurrence to convict
  - Congress must meet at
    least once annually
    (January 3 of each year)

• California Constitution
  Art.  IV.  Sec. 22 and 23
  - The right to propose
    and approve or reject
    statutes, a-,er,dment3
    through the use of
    referendums and
    Initiatives
   Art.  XXIII  Sec.  1 Cali-
   fornia  Constitution
   -  Recall  of public
     officers.   Guaranteed
     right of  electors
     to remove any elected
     public  officer through
     recall  petition
                                 XIV Amendment. U.S.
                                 Constitution

                                 -  No  state shall make or
                                    enforce a law which
                                    shall  abridge the privi-
                                    leges  or immunities of
                                    citizens of  the  U.S.
                                 -  Due process  of law
                                    guaranteed

                                 Civil Rights Act-1964
                                 Title VII
                                 -  provides civil and
                                    criminal remedies
                                    against Faderal  law
                                    enforcement  officers
                                    who unjustifiably deny
                                    an  Individual his
                                    civil  rights
                                              B-119

-------
SECTOR:  POLITICAL
     Threshold
CIVIL LIBERTIES (continued)
                                        Security
                                                                      Equal Access
                                                                                                    Ability to Influence
                                 Art.I California Constitu-
                                 tion

                                 - No person can be impri-
                                   soned for debt unless in
                                   cases of fraud or will-
                                   ful Injury to person or
                                   property
                                                              • Judicial System

                                                                - Right to bring suit
                                                                  against another person
                                                                - Right to bring suit
                                                                  against the Federal
                                                                  government
                               »VI Amendment U.S. Const.
                                - Right to counsel
                                - Right to jury trial
                                - Right to speedy trial

                               • V and XIV Amendment
                                U.S. Const.
                                - Right to due process of
                                  law

                               • VIII Amendment U.S. Const.

                                - Right not  to have ex-
                                  cessive bail and cruel
                                  and unusual punishment.
  Statistical Abstract of
  the U.S. 1S73
* Total no. of civil cases
  In 1972 - 96,173

* Total no. of criminal
  cases in 1972 - 47,043

  Univ. of Michigan. ISR

+ Your jndependence or
  freedom, the chance you
  have to do what you want
  Univ. of Michigan. ISS

+ The extent to which you
  get what you are entitled
  to what is rightfully
  yours.
+• Your opportunity to change
  things around you that you
  don't like
Univ. of Michigan, ISR
The respect other people
have for your rights
                                                        B-120

-------
 SECTOR:  POLITICAL
 ISSUE:  HONESTY IN GOVERNMENT

 Honesty and  fair
 representation to be
 exercised  by all
 elected and  civil
 officials
       Threshold
                                      Security
                                                                   Equal  Access
                                                                                                Ability to Influence
• All civil officers  of  the
  U.S. are subject  to im-
  peachment and  conviction
  of crimes of treason,
  bribery and other high
  crimes
• All U.S. Representatives
 and Senators are privi-
 leged from arresc during
 their attendance at ses-
 sions and in their homes
 except for treason,
 felony, and breach of
 peace
•  Recall
   - The power of citizens
     to remove public offi-
     cers from the govern-
     ment
                              • U.S. Const. Art 2, Sec  2
                                - Insures conviction of
                                  civil officers for
                                  crimes committed
                               • Art I See 9 U.S. Const.
                                 - All accounts of receipts
                                   and expenditures of
                                   public funds will be
                                   published periodically
                               • Art I Sec 6 U.S. Const.
                                 - Protection of all U.S.
                                   Representatives and
                                   and Senators from
                                   arrest while in Con-
                                   gress
                               • Intergovernmental Coop-
                                 - To improve the operation
                                  of the federal system
                                  through the cooperation
                                  and coordination of ac-
                                  tivities among the
                                  different levels of
                                  government
• U.S. Constitution
  House Rules Committee
  - Committee has authority
    to set rules and prac-
    tices that the Senate
    and Congress must
    follow

• Art XXIII, Calif. Const.
  (Recall)
  - Every elective public
    officer of the State of
    California may be re-
    moved from office at
    any time by the electors
    entitled to vote for a
    successor of such in-
    cumbent
  - Must have at least 12%
    of the entire vote cast
    at the last preceding
    election for the office
    sought to be removed
  - For a State officer
    a petition must have
    at least 20% of the
    entire vote cast.   Pe-
    tlon oust be circulated
    in at least 5 counties
                                                                                               Percent  of public offi-
                                                                                               cials  removed  from office
                                                                                               in California
                                                                                              How effective is the
                                                                                              system?
                                                  B-121

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SECTOR:  POLITICAL
ISSUE:  HONESTY IN GOVERHMEOT
        Threshold
                                          Security
                                                                    Equal Access
                                                                                                 Ability to Influence
• GAO will audit all em-
  ployees of the executive
  legislation and judicial
  branches who earn over
  $20fOOO a year

  - Will audit the five
    previous years of each
    employee

• Public Law 93-443
  Campaign Reform Act
  Of 1974
• Campaign Spending and
  Donations Limits
  - Individual donations
    cannot exceed $1,000
    nor can an individual
    make contributions
    aggregating more  thar.
    $25,000 in any calen-
    dar year
  - Organizations cannot
    exceed $5,000 at  one
    tine
 • Primary and General
   Elections
   • Spending limits
     - $75,000 for  repre-
       sentatives
• Hatch Act

  - Prohibits political  par-
    ticipants on the part  of
    Federal employees except
    for a few exceptions
  - President and Vice Pres-
    ident
  - Heads and assistants,  and
    beads of executive depart -
    nents
• Public Law 93-443
  Campaign Reform Act
  of 1974
• Hatch Act

  - Includes all postmasters
    and post office employees,
    persons employed on an
    irregular temporary part-
    time and emergency basis
    and employees on leave
    and furlough status
   San Franci SCO Ci t y
   Charter, Part 2, Code
   8:311
   - Prohibits political
     participation for all
     city employees
• Campaign Reform Bill 1974

| Federal Payments
  - Can only be used for
    five purposes:
    - Television
    - Radio time
    - Newspaper advertising
    - Postage for direct
      •ailing
    - Billboards and tele-
      phone banks
  - Prohibits foreign con-
    tributions to American
    political campaigns
  - A vote fraud will impose
    a maximum of a ten year
    jail sentence and $10O,OOO
    floe for any person convicted
 • Qualifications  for
   Federal  Payments
   -  Candidate must have
     raised 10% of his maxi-
     mum allowable in con-
     tributions of $50 or
     less
   -  Must have separate
     bank account to hold
     fed. payments
 ' Bank Loans for
  Campaigning
  - Are treated as politi-
    cal contributions
  - Endorser is treated as
    a contributor,e.g.,
    $10,000 bank loan would
    need 10 endorsements in
    order not to exceed the
    $1,000 individual limit
 > Federal Matching Grants
  - Representatives must
    raise at least $10,000
    and Senate candidates
    at least $125,000 to
    qualify for matching
    Federal funds
  - Pres candidates must raise
    $100,000 in private  con-
    tributions of  $5,000 in
    at least 20 states to
    qualify for public match-
    ing grants for primaries
                     B-122

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POLITICAL SECTOR

Issue:
National protection
and security from national
emergencies caused by
external threats or
internal natural disasters
      Threshold
• Art I Sec.  8 U.S. Const.

  - Only Congress may
    declare war against
    another nation
• 32 CTR.  Sec 502

  - Only the President  can
    declare an area a
    "disaster area."

  Only the Governor of  a
  state may call in the
  National Guard
                                     Security
                       • Art I Sec. 10 U.S. Const.

                         - A state alone cannot
                           enter into an agreement
                           with another power or
                           engage in war (unless
                           actually envaded) without
                           the consent of Congress

                       • Art IV Sec. 4 U.S. Const.

                         - U.S. Government guaran-
                           tees to every state
                           a Republican form of
                           government, protection
                           against invasion and at
                           times against domestic
                           violence.  Must have
                           legislative or execu-
                           tive approval

                       • 32 CFR. Sec  502
                         - Provides relief  through
                           all the federal  agen-
                           cies in times of national
                           disasters

                       • II Amendment. U.S. Const.

                         - All states will  have  a
                           well regulated militia
                               • Disaster Relief Act

                                 - Provides temporary
                                   assistance in the
                                   form of mortgage,
                                   etc. payments in
                                   financial hardship
                                   areas caused by a.
                                   major natural dis-
                                   aster
                                 - Also provides assis-
                                   tance to those un-
                                   employed because of
                                   a major disaster

                                 (B2-FSRL-G3-1-6-N-N)
                                                                   Equal Access
                                                                                         Ability to  Influence
• Art IV Sec. 4 U.S. Const.

  - U.S. Government guaran-
    tees to every state a
    Republican form of gov-
    ernment , protection
    against invasion and at
    times against domestic
    violence.  Must have
    legislative or execu-
    tive approval
                                                                II Amendment. U.S. Const.

                                                                - All state will have a
                                                                  well regulated militia
                                                                                            •  II _ Amendment,  U . _S' .Const .
                                 - The right to keep and bear
                                   arms is a right of the
                                   people that cannot be
                                   infringed upon
                                                                B-123

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POLITICAL SECTOR
ISSUE:  Access to Information

- The public's right to
  know in a  free society

	^Threshold	

• Freedom of  Information
  Act of 1974
  - Citizens  oust have
    access to all reports,
    etc... not published
    in the Federal Register
    or for sale through the
    government agencies
  - Public access to
    advisory meeting* of
    federal  agencies
  - Congress oust keep and
    publish  all proceedings
    except for parts  In
    their  judgement warrant
    secrecy
  - Guaranteed  the  liberty
    of speech and of  the
    press

• Privacy  Act of  1974
  - Allows an individual
    to decide vhat kinds
    of information about
    him/her  will be col-
    lected,  how and by
    whom it  will be used
     Security
Freedom of Information
Act of 1974
- Requires all government
  agencies to publish
  reports not published
  In the Federal Register
  or offered for sale
  (includes  the Postal
  Officer, Exec. Office
  of the President, 0KB
- Detailed reports must be
  submitted to Congress
  regarding Implementa-
  tion  of the Act
Privacy Act of 1974
- Protects an individual
  against the release of
  information about bin
  against his wishes
                                • Art I. O.S.  Const^

                                  - Requires Congress to
                                    keep and publish their
                                    proceedings, etc., (e.g.
                                    Congressional Record,
                                    Federal Register)


                                • Art I. U.S. Const.

                                  - Ability to read
                                    alnost anything


                                • Art I. Sec 9. Calif. Const.

                                  - Insures that all citizens
                                    may freely speak, write
                                    and publish their senti-
                                    ments on all subjects.
                                    Further insures  that no
                                    law can be passed to
                                    restrain or abridge the
                                    liberty of speech or of
                                    the press
                                 Equal Access
 Freedom of Information
 Act of 1974
- Determinations on
  request for reasonably
  identifiable records must
  be made within 10 days
- Appeals must Ire made
  within 20 days

- Fees for records, etc.,
  must be uniformed through
  the departmental agencies

- Index of precedential
  materials must be made
  available for all the
  government agencies
                               State & Local Fiscal
                               Assistance Act of 1972

                               - Under this P.L. all
                                 state and local gov-
                                 ernments must make
                                 available through a
                                 statewide newspaper,
                                 and to the media, a
                                 detailed report of all
                                 proposed plans and
                                 amounts to be spent
   ^Ability to Influence

• Freedom of Information
  Act of 1974
  - Governmental failure to
    comply with time limits
    is justification for a
    requestor going to court

  - Established criminal
    penalties against fed-
    eral employees who will-
    fully violate this law
                              • Privacy Act of 1974

                                - Provides civil remedies
                                  against federal agencies
                                  for violations of the
                                  provisions

                                - Established criminal
                                  penalties against fed-
                                  eral employees who will-
                                  fully violate this law
                                                            • Art I. Sec 9. Calif. Const.

                                                              - Jury will decide if a
                                                                person has committed
                                                                libel against someone
                                                                                              * Number of libel suits
                                                                                                brought to court in Calif.

                                                                                              * Number of cases brought
                                                                                                to court concerning
                                                                                                violations of Freedom of
                                                                                                Information Act
  NOTE:  No available data  concerning this Issue
                                                           B-124

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                     POLITICAL SECTOR—BIBLIOGRAPHY
"A Symposium:   The American Bar Association Standards Relating to  the
     Administration  of  Criminal Justice, Part I," The American Criminal
     Law Review. Volume 12, Number 2 (Fall 1974).

Constitution of the  State of California, as last amended November  7, 1972,
     distributed by  the California Legislature Assembly (1973).

Constitution of the  United States of America, as amended through July  1971,
     House of  Representatives Document No. 92-157, 92nd Congress,  2nd
     Session,  9 February 1972.

Executive Office of  the President:  Office of Management and Budget,
     Social Indicators, 1973, U.S. Government Printing Office,
     Washington, D.C.   (1973).

League of Women Voters  Education Fund, "Administrative Obstacles to Voting,"
     Pub. No.  206, a report of the Election Systems Project, League of
     Women Voters of the United States, Washington, D.C. (1972).

	, "Voters  Service, Citizen Alert 1974, Registration and  Absentee
     Voting Procedures  by State 1974," Pub. No. 522, League of Women Voters
     of the United States, Washington, D.C. (1974).

State of California, California Election Laws, 1972, Carlisle Graphics,
     San Francisco,  California (1972).

U.S. Department of Defense, Defense Civil Preparedness Agency, "Foresight,
     Annual Report,  FY  1973,"

	, "In Time of Emergency, A Citizen's Handbook on Disasters,"
     H-14-B (May 1972).

	, "Introduction to Civil Preparedness," CPG 1-1 (September 1972).
          ,  "Introduction to Civil Preparedness, Summary for Public Officials,'
     CPG 1-4 (December 1972).

    	,  "Standards for Civil Preparedness," CPG 1-5 (December 1972)
U.S. Department of Defense, Office of Civil Defense, "Government in
     Emergency, Suggestions for Including Civil Defense Principles in the
     Social Studies Curriculum:  Grades 1-12," MP 56 (May 1971).
                                  B-125

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5.  Natural Environment

     The Natural Environment sector is organized to include those issue

areas alluded to by the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 and

which are of most direct concern to the Environmental Protection Agency.

The overriding consideration in each issue under this sector is the degree

of "productive and enjoyable harmony between man and his environment"—

in this case, environment meaning the ecological system and natural

resources important to human life.  Issues and related concerns include:


     •  Air and water quality—impacts on health; aesthetic impacts (color,

        taste, odor)

     •  Noise—health hazards; amenities
     •  Radiation and pesticides—health hazards

     •  Land Use—degree of choice

     •  Solid waste

     •  Scenic and wild life resources—protection of resources and

        endangered species


     Though some standards in the Natural Environment sector are well

established (specifically, the quality of drinking water), others are

relatively new and untested with respect to their overall effect on

quality of life.  The issue area of air and water quality has been

selected for detailed review in this sector for the following reasons:


     •  Air and water quality are not only essential to life
        itself (basic need) but also to satisfy a number of
        higher needs (aesthetics).

     •  Standards within these areas are numerically defined
        and are amenable to objective evaluation through
        monitoring.

     •  It is  representative of an issue where standards are
        primarily formulated and enforced through federal
        legislation.

                                  B-126

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     The completed matrix for the Natural Environment sector is shown in

Tables 1-3.   Each of the matrix cells for the issues of air and water
quality is described below, moving from left to right across the differ-

ent need columns.


B  Column - Basic Need/Threshold


     Threshold levels for air and water quality under the basic need

category are directly related to human health and welfare.


     Existing Standards

          The clean air  standards established by EPA and published  in

the Federal Register  are  divided into  two  separate categories, primary

and secondary.

     The national primary  ambient air quality  standards are the levels
of air  quality which  the Administrator  of EPA  judges are necessary,
with an adequate margin  of  safety,  to protect  the  public health.  The
national secondary  ambient  air  quality standards  are the levels of  air
quality which the Administrator judges necessary  to protect the public
welfare from any known  or  anticipated adverse  effects of a pollutant.


For  example, the  primary air quality standard  (threshold)  for  carbon

monoxide is:

      (a)   10 milligrams per cubic meter (9ppm)-maximum 8 hour  concentra-

           tion,  not to  be  exceeded  more than once per year
      (b)   40 milligrams per cubic meter (35ppm)-maximum one hour  concen-
                                                               3
           tration,  not  to be exceeded more than once per year.

 These thresholds are based on evidence that low levels of carboxyhemoglobin

 in human  blood  may be associated with impairment of ability to discrimi-

 nate time  intervals.4  Other air quality standards specified by EPA are
                  5
 shown in  Table  4.

                                     B-127

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SECTOR:  NATURAL ENVIRONMENT
ISSUE:   WATER QUALITY

        Human Health & Aesthetic  Impacts

  B.                                B,
                                                    Table  1   Basic  Needs
                                      Security
                                                                      Equal Access
    Basic Need/Threshold       	
Concern:  What are the thres-  Concern:  What measures pro-   Concern:   To what portion of
holds for quality and avail-   vide security that the mini-   the population are the
ability of water quality?      mum will be met?               assurances of adequate water
                                                              quality applicable?
                                                                                                   Ability to Influence
                                                                                              Concern:   To what degree is
                                                                                              the individual able to In-
                                                                                              fluence availability and
                                                                                              quality of water?
• U.S. Drinking Standards
  not to exceed for health
  reasons. Examples include:

  - Iron 0.3 mg/1
  - Sulfate 250 mg/1
  - Nitrite 45 mg/1

• Safe Drinking Water Act,

  Amended to Include U.S.
  Drinking Standards, plus:
  - Bacteria
  - Turbidity
  - Radioactive materials

• EPA criteria for primary
  contact waters (recrea-
  tional swimming & bathing) :
  - Fecal coliform-log mean
    of 200 per 100 ml
  - pH ' 6.5 to 8.3
  - Temp - 30° C-<86"F)
  - Clarity - visible at
    4 ft.

* Concentration of pollutants
  - Nat'l Water Surveillance
    Network  (STORET)

* Statistical evaluation
  indices
  - PDI  *
  - SPI           2
  - Envirs-control

* In 1970, 27% of the U.S.
  stream and shoreline miles
  were polluted
                                  Safe Drinking Water Act
                                  (1974)

                                  Federal Water Pollution
                                  Control Act  (1972)
                                  -  Nat'l Pollution Discharge
                                    Elimination System,
                                    Systems Permits
                                  -  Court injunctions
                                  -  Inspection rights
                                  -  Record and monitor
                                  -  Administrative orders
                               • U.S. Public Health Service

                               • State & Regional Water Pollu-
                                 tion Control Board's Policy
• Federal Water Pollution
  Control Act (1972)
  - States required to hold
    public meeting once
    every 3 years to revise
    standards

  Special interest groups
  (Environmental Def ens e
   Fund)
                               • National Environmental
                                 Policy Act
                                 -  Environmental Impact
                                    Statements

                                * To date, 36 states have
                                  passed legislation to
                                  enable then to take over
                                  the function at issuing
                                  permits and enforcing
                                  then, 16 state programs
                                  have been approved by
                                  KPA4
                                * $9 billion for fiscal
                                  1976 allocated to muni-
                                  cipalities for construc-
                                  tion of sewage treatment
                                  facilities5

                                + "How do you feel about:
                                  Die conditions of the natu-
                                  ral environment — the air,
                                  land, and water in this
                                  area?" (May 1972)
                                  Del i^.  Pleas .  Mos. Sat.

                                   5*      181      271
                                  Mixed  Mos. Piss.  Unhap.

                                  211       12S       10%
                                  Terr.

                                   71
                                 (Institute for Social Research)
  - public disclosure of
    impacts
                                                            B-128

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SECTOR:  NATURAL ENVIRONMENT
ISSUE:   AIR QUALITY

        Human Health 6. Aesthetic Impacts

  H.                                 "«
                                                Table 2   Higher  Needs
                                       Security
    Basic Need/Threshold       	

• Non deterioration pristine   • State & Regional Pollution
  areas--areas not already       Control Board
  polluted should be
  protected
                                                                      Equal  Access
                                                                                            	Ability to Influence
                                                                                            • Citizen Action Groups
                              * Number days of low  visibility
                                (Yellow haze, smog):
                                scenic vistas masked
 ISSUE:  WATER QUALITY
        Human Health & Aesthetic  Impacts
• U.S. drinking water stan-
  dards based on taste,*
  color, odor, and  turbidity
  could include examples  as
  follows:
  - Iron--0.3
  - Copper —1.0 mg/1
  - Zinc—5.0 mg/1
  - Dissolved solids—
    500 mg/1
  - Color--free from per-
    ceptible color, less
    than 15 units on
    scale of 0-500
  - Detergents (methyleije
    blue active substarch)
    0.5 mg/1

• EPA proposed criteria for
  recreational waters (same
  as B
                               • Federal Hater Pollution
                                 Control Act

                               • State & regional water
                                 pollution control board

                               • U.S. Public Health  Services
                                 (Inspection)

                               • Parks & Recreation  Agencies
                                                          B-129

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  SECTOR:
  ISSUE:
NATURAL ENVIRONMENT
AIR DUALITY
                                              Table 3  Basic Needs
        Human Health & Aesthetic Impacts
                                 •  Standards
                                 *  Objective Data
                                 +  Subjective Data
    Basic Need/Threshold

Concern:  What are the
thresholds for quality and
availability of clean air?
  EPA Primary and Secondary
  Air Quality Standards  (see
  attached  text): example:

   sulfur oxides: primary
   0.03 ppm, annual - 0.14
   ppm for  24 hr.


  California Emergency
  Episode Plan
  Pollution thresholds 24 hr.
  for sulfur dioxide:
  - Stage 1 - Health Advisory
    Alert - 0.2 ppm
  - Stage 2 - Warning level -
    0.7 ppm
  - Stage 3 - Emergency - 0.9
    ppm
                                       Security
                               Concern:  What measures pro-
                               vide  security that the mini-
                               mum will be met?
                                • Clean Air Act  (as amended)

                                  - Thresholds cannot  be ex-
                                    ceeded more  than once per
                                    year
                                  - EPA emission standards
                                    for motor  vehicles (1974,
                                    1975,  1976)
                               •  State Air Pollution Agen-
                                 cies Calif. Air Resources
                                 Board  Emergency Episode
                                 Plan

                                 - Stationary Source Cur-
                                   tailment Plans
                                 - Traffic Abatement Act
                                 - Hew, stricter smog con-
                                   trol standards on 1977
                                   American cars
                                                                      Equal Access
                                                                                                4
                                                   Concern:  To what portion of
                                                   the population is the assur-
                                                   ance of adequate air pollu-
                                                   tion control provided?

                                                   • Standards designed to pro-
                                                     tect the general public

                                                   • Calif. Emergency Episode
                                                     Plan - Stage 1
                                                     - Persons with respiratory
                                                       or coronary artery disease
                                                       are notified to take pre-
                                                       cautions;  schools are
                                                       notified
                                   Ability to Influence

                               Concern:  To vhat degree Is
                               the Individual able to in-
                               fluence availability and
                               quality of clean air?

                               • Rational Environmental
                                 Policy Act - 1969 '

                                 - Public disclosure of en-
                                   vironmental impacts

                               • Special interest group
                                 pressure (e.g., National
                                 Resources Defense Council)

                                 Public hearing and comment
                                 when regulations or stan-
                                 dards are promulgated
                                 Air Pollution Control
                                 District
* Concentrations of pollu-
  tants
  - National Air Surveill-
    ance Network (NASK)
    Sulfur Oxide: annual
    average concentration
    range from 0.002 ppm in
    Kansas City, Mo., to
    0.17 In New York City

  - Continuous Air Monitor-
    ing Project (CAMP)
    Sulfur Oxides:  these over
    6 year period show  mean
    annual concentrations
    ranging from 0.01 ppm in
    San Francisco to 0.18 ppm
    In Chicago

  - Mitre Air Quality Index
    (MAQI)

  - Extreme Value Index (EVI)
  - Pindex
    SO  levels--1962-67 (ppm)
    for Chicago 0.14, Phila-
    delphia 0.08
  - Oak Ridge Air Quality
    Index

  - State Air Pollution
    Emission Inventories

  - Air Quality Control Region
    Systems

  - Urban Systems Inventories
                      Inspection program for auto
                      emissions- reported data

                      Licenses denied for station-
                      ary source facilities
                    * HEW statistics:  For sulfur
                      oxides:
                       -  At concentrations of
                          about 500 ug/m  (OU9
                          ppm) of sulfur dioxide
                          (24 hour mean) with low
                          partlculate levels, in-
                          creased mortality rates
                          may occur

                       -  At concentrations rang-
                          ing  from 105 ug/m  to
                          265  ug/m  (0.37 ppm to
                          0.092 ppm) of sulfur
                          dioxide (annual mean)
                          accompanied by smoke con-
                          centration of .about
                          185  ug/m , Increased
                          frequence of respiratory
                          symptons and lung disease
                          may  occur

                    + EPA Survey:  BIZ of persons
                      polled opposed letting air
                      pollution increase in areas
                      that now have clean air—
                      591 opposed relaxing pollu-
                      tion controls for factories 3
* I population with reported
  respiratory disease,  heart
  disease, circulatory prob-
  lems

* Health Advisory - Alert days
  in Air Pollution  Control
  District

* Increases in morbidity and
  mortality associated  with
  fluctuation in pollution
  concentrations (short-
  term pollution episodes)
                                                                                             * Number of  Environmental
                                                                                               Ispact St-adiss  or  Environ-
                                                                                               mental Impact Reports  held
                                                                                               up because of air  pollu-
                                                                                               tion impacts

                                                                                             * Number of  court cases,
                                                                                               petitions  against  polluters
                                                               B-130

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                           TABLE   4
               NATIONAL AIR  QUALITY  STANDARDS
Pollutant
Primary Standards
Secondary Standards
Sulfur Oxides
 (a) 80 micrograros
per cubic meter
 (0.03 ppm)  -  annual
arithmetic  mean.
 (b) 365 micro-grams
per cubic meter
 (0.14 ppm)  -  maxi-
mum 24-hr,  concen-
tration not to be
exceeded more than
once per year.
(a) 60 micrograms
per cubic meter
(0.02 ppm) - annual
arithmetic mean.
(b) 260 micrograms
per cubic meter
(0.1 ppm) - maxi-
mum 24-hr, concen-
tration not to be
exceeded more than
once per year, as a
guide to be used in
assessing implementa-
tion plans to achieve
the annual standard.
(c) 1,300 micrograms
per cubic meter
(0,5 ppm) - maximum
3-hr, concentration
not to be exceeded
more than once per
year.
Particulate
   Matter
Carbon Monoxide
Photochemical
  Oxidants
Hydrocarbons
Nitrogen Dioxide
 (a) 75 micrograms
per cubic meter -
annual geometric
mean •
 (b) 260 micrograms
per cubic meter -
rn.sxirr.ur1. 24— h^r. c.r.r.-
centration not to
be exceeded more
than once per year.
                                             (a)  60 micrograms
                                             per cubic meter -
                                             annual geometric
                                             mean,  as a guide to
                                             be used in assessing
                                             implementation plans
                                             to acjiicve Lhc 24-hr.
                                             standard.
                                             (b)  150 micrograms
                                             per cubic meter -
                                             maximum 24—hr. con-
                                             centration not to
                                             be exceeded more than
                                             once per year.
(a) 10 milligrams per cubic meter
(9 ppm) - maximum 8-hr, concentra-
tion not to be exceeded more than
once per year.
(b) 40 milligrams per cubic meter
(35 ppm) - maximum 1-hr, concentra-
tion not to be exceeded more than
once per year.
160 micrograms per cubic meter  (0.08
ppm) - maximum 1-hr, concentration
not to be exceeded more than once
per year.

160 micrograms per cubic meter  (0.24
ppm) - maximum 3-hr, concentration
(6 to 9 a.m.) not to be exceeded
more than once per year.

100 micrograms per cubic meter  (0.05
ppm) - annual arithmetic mean.
                           B-131

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     Though national ambient air  quality standards apply uniformly
throughout the U.S., some states  and regions have initiated standards
more stringent than federal levels.   The state of California,  for example,
                                               6
has established the standards shown  in Table 5.    Though air quality
standards are meant to establish  minimal acceptable levels of concentra-
tion for protecting human health  and welfare, some would argue the
effectiveness of the thresholds.   One argument against the appropriate-
ness of thresholds established for acute levels of pollution has been
presented by Hickey, Boyce, Haines,  and Clelland (1970), who maintain
that the long-term low-concentration levels of exposure which cause
relatively little irritation, discomfort or odor may in reality consti-
                                  7
tute a more serious health hazard.   The federal ambient air quality
standards are merely one uniform  set of thresholds for the whole nation.
California and others have gone beyond this national level to be more
specific.  In California, for example, there are three pollution thres-
hold levels:  Stage 3—the emergency level; Stage 2—the warning level;
and Stage 1—the health advisory  alert level, in descending order of
importance.  If pollution levels  reach the emergency level, a short-
term emergency episode plan is activated to bring the pollution level
under control.  Pollutant levels are shown in Table 6 for each of these
       8
stages.
     Water quality  thresholds under the B  column heading include U.S.
drinking water standards.  These  standards, originally researched under
the Public Health  Service Act of  1912 and  formulated under the Water
Pollution Control  Act of 1948, establish clean water standards necessary
                   9*
for public health.
  Pursuant  to  the  new  Safe Drinking Water Act  (1974), EPA  has prepared
  more comprehensive drinking water regulations to  include all  standards
  specified in the existing  act  plus other  standards  for bacteria,
  turbidity, and radioactive materials.

                                   B-132

-------
                                              TABLE    5
                                        mint us 40AUTT naum
FollUtaBt
Photoeboiilcal
Oxttaata
(Comcta4 lot «0y)
CarkOB Moaoaloa


lltroaaa ttoida.

t*l*ar Utatoa


taa»OB*oa
tarUo»lato
•attar
boa
Duraaaa lalflea
Mroearkoaa
(eonaotaa for
Hatka*.)
RayUaa
tialhllltj
MK!«C
fartlclaa

Averaging
Tut
1 boor
12 boar
S boor
1 bour
Annual Avarac*
1 tour
Aaau.1 Avaraca
J» komr
Jbour
1 haw
Awial Coo-
aatrio HO.B
J» boar
50 BV
avaraco
1 kaax
J boar
«-» a.m.)
• ban
1 hear
1 okaoi-Mtloa
C.lltorni 5t.nd.nl.
C«ne*>?.tratlOfi'
0.10 pp.
(200 Pt/m)
ai'U/.')
-
&;£/.»>
-
?iH£^.'>
-
0.0« ppB .
(105 «*/•*>
-
(ijlOPg8/*>)
60 uf/.'
100 HE/'*
1.5 ui/.>
?i!'^)
-
0.1 pp.
O.JpT-
lOtbM*
Pmtral
kffirM
Kt»tl»
ledlto
Ion-W.p.r.1™
IxfrarM
9p*«tr«M«p7
bltoua
Ihtkel
GonAKtiMtrlo
ruauM
Ii(k »ol».
Supllai
Uib fbl«>
tupltiic.
KtSlu.0.
IWtho«
C*«^m
ZjlnxUt
•ri>ctu
IXthM
-


In (afflclut unlit to ,
r* l«t« th«a ?C*
lUtlMal at*nd»rtmr
Pri..^"-'
1W U»/."8J
(o.oa pp«>
-
10 me/*'
H DM)
w «/.'
(3!. pp.)
(0.05 *D9)
-
aouc/.9
(o.ortp.)
565»«/k'
(oa» pp.)
-
_
nvfA?
tea vt/tf
•*
"
M0«c/k>
(O.M F»)
-

B»e«»l.rr *'
&•.« ••
PrlMt7 Btd.
Su« ..
mur7
atand.rdt
S*M ••
Priaary
luadart
CO »'
150 m/.'
~
~
Prl«U7
•tudart
-

lUthM7
Ch««llt«io«Becat
lUtbod
«o^M»p of olr ouallty  aaoaaary. Mt aa alootuto  aargla or aaftty, to protaet
    tbo »oolirb..lth.  I.=b atara au.t a'.t.in tli. Briaary  attilard. BO Ittar tiao tkroa y«.ra .rter tbit at.to'a
    l^loaaotatlon pi., la approtad ky tut EnvtroaBt.tal Protottloa Agtacy (ETA).
4   B.tioe.1  S.cotid*r« Staj^ardti  tba l.T.la or air (ruallty B.caoaary to protect tb. public wtlf.ft froa aey kaawa
    ar^IScipl!"? .Z.r.r.rr,Na ™ a p-,llut..t.  Eacb .tit. ~.t attain tba aoeaadary at.ad.rd. -Itbla a l*..ot.clon plan la approved by toa  EPA.

7.  laroraec. avthod aa e^a.
    Vaaalato.t ralatloaa^l;
icrlb.^ by th. IP».  An -«oui*ol«at lothod* or aaaauroaoat aay ka utd kot auat ba»a  t
p t. 
-------
                                        Table  6

                                      California
                                    ETOODE CX rmtlA LEVELS

Photochemical Oxidant
(Including Ozone)
Carbon Monoxide
Sulfur Dioxide
Averaging
Tbne
(Hour
IHow
12 Hours
IHour
MHoura
Stage [-(Health
Advisory-Alert)
JO ppm
40 ppm
20ppm
OJ ppm
0.2 ppm
Stage!
(Warning)
.40 ppm
75 ppm
35 ppm
14 ppm
0.7 ppm
State 3-(Emertency)
£O ppm for one hour ind
predicted to persist for one
additional hour.
100 ppm for one hour and
predicted to persist for one
additional hour.
SO ppm
lOppIB
05 ppm
                                    EPISODE STAGES
 Listed below  in  order of increasing air pollution severity  are  the episode stages where
 specific actions will be required:

 A.   Stage 1 (Health Advisory-Alert)

     A health advisory is issued when the concentration of pollutants specified for this stage
     is predicted or reached. Persons with respiratory or coronary artery disease should be
     notified to take  precautions against exposure. Schools should be notified so they can
     curtail students' participation in strenuous activities. Abatement action for this stage
     will be voluntary.

 B.   Stage 2 (Warning)

     A warning is called when the concentration of pollutants specified for  this stage is
     predicted  or reached. This  is an intermediate stage. Abatement actions needed under
     this stage  can, therefore, range from voluntary measures to mandatory measures.

 C.   Stage 3 (Emergency)

     An emergency is called when the conditions specified for this stage are reached; and in
     the  case of the one hour criteria for carbon monoxide or  oxidant, are predicted to
     persist for one additional hour. If local district efforts for abatement are not adequate,
     the  State  may take action  under the appropriate provisions of the State Peacetime
     Emergency Plan developed pursuant to the Emergency Services Act.

D.   Episode Termination

     A stage is to  be terminated whenever the concentration of the pollutant(s) which
     causes the declaration of such episode has  been verified to have fallen below  the
     criteria level for the declaration of the  episode, and meteorological data indicate  that
     the pollutant concentration is expected to decrease.
                                       B-134

-------
As with air quality standards, these thresholds apply nationwide; however,


in some cases, states or municipalities have initiated more stringent


drinking water standards.  Generally speaking, drinking water standards


also apply to primary contact waters (those waters where the body may be


submerged, such as recreational activities, or water which may be


ingested).  Thresholds criteria are very  specific, as those proposed by


EPA for primary contact waters.  These health and  safety considerations


are clarity, bacteriological levels  (the  fecal coliform concentration


should be an average of no more than 2000 per 100  ml, with a maximum of


4000 per 100 ml), pH range, recommended to be 6.5  to 8.3 with a  minimum


level of 5.0 to 9.0 and temperature which should not be in excess of 86  F

                                 10
unless due to natural occurrence.


     Standards which indirectly affect human health have been established


under the Marine Protection Research and  Sanctuaries Act, and EPA


has proposed criteria for marine water quality to  protect important


species in the aquatic food chain.  Other water  quality  standards  (thres-


hold levels) that affect humans directly  and indirectly  are  those which


apply to public water supply  and agricultural  and  industrial water  supply.


Control of pollutants and  the  general  improvement  of  the quality of


water makes it available for  more  uses  and protects  against  harmful


residuals such as toxins and  poisonous chemicals.   It  is  important  to


note that there are specific  thresholds  correlated to  specific  water uses,


such as for drinking, swimming, or viewing,  and  that  such categorization


implies an enforcement priority,  the  most important  one  being  against


hazards to health.




     Objective Data



          Since both air and  water quality deal  with  physical  properties


of the environment, they are  amenable  to quantification  for  both initial


measurement   and continued monitoring.   Considerable  research  has  gone


into establishing air and  water quality threshold levels for individual



                                   B-135

-------
constituents,  and this research effort continues as progress is made in

the area of health sciences.   Likewise,  an extensive effort has been

initiated for developing surveillance networks for monitoring both air

and water quality.  These range from national to local in scale.    Examples

include the following:


     Air
          •  National Air Surveillance Network (NASN)

          •  Continuous Air Monitoring Project (CAMP)

          •  State Air Pollution Emission Inventories

          •  Air Quality Control Region System

          •  Urban Emission Inventories


Data from the above is collected and published through the Office of
                                                              11
Air Programs of EPA in  its Air Pollution Technical Documents.


     Water
          •  National Water Surveillance Network—STORET
             "... provides a national repository  for  all water
             quality control data collected  by EPA  and co-
             operating agencies       (includes federal agencies,
             states and regions).

Statistical indexes and models have  been developed  to show how well

standards are being met.  These vary according to how data is calcu-

lated for evaluation.  Indexes for measuring air  quality include  the

Mitre Air Quality Index  (MAQI),  the  Extreme  Value Index  (EVI), and

the Oak Ridge Air Quality  Index  (ORAQI).  Table 7 shows  data derived
                       13
from the above  indexes.    As  Berry  points out, "the  problem with these

indexes is they develop  total  standard-achievement  measures as the  sum

of achievement  ratios  for  the  individual  pollutant, without due regard

being given to  the  interdependencies and  interactions among pollutants
                                                               ,,14
that arise from their physical relationship  in  the  environment.

     One proposed index  discussed by Berry is Babcock's  PINDEX (1970).

The PINDEX index includes  provision  for particulate matter -  sulfur

                                    B-136

-------
                            TABLE  7
                AIR POLLUTION DATA UTILIZING MAQI,
                      EVI, AND ORAQI MEASURES

NEW YORK
1968
1969
1970
BALTIMORE
1968
1969
1970
BIRMINGHAM
1968
1969
1970
BOSTON
1968
1969
1970
PHILADELPHIA
1968
1969
1970
ST. LOUIS
1968
1969
1970
MILWAUKEE
1968
1969
1970
ATLANTA
1968
1969
1970
DETROIT
1968
1969
1970
MAQI

6.07
5.01
3.48

3.51
3.28
4.17

5.09
4.25
5.05

2.35
2.51
2.12

3.84
2.72
3.99

3.82
5.35
4.41

4 .27
3.17
2.69

2.88
2.51
2.60

4.01
3.68
3.39
EVI

20.06
13.39
7.38

6.95
4.48
15.15

26.67
22.41
16.13

3.24
2.58
1.09

9.15
5.53
13.38

18.07
27.24
13.15

30.82
10.17
6.41

2.22
1.10
3.44

17.90
12.11
9.17
ORAQI
e
246
181
116

127
117
114

135
107
76

84
79
76

128
82
150

157
163
125

119
89
70

108
91
86

145
138
102
Source:   U. S. Council on Environmental Quality (1972)
                               B-137

-------
oxides  synergisms,  as well  as  the  effects  of  oxidants  as  both  primary

and secondary  pollutants.  Data from the  PINDEX  model is shown  in  Table
8  15


     Proposed  statistical  indexes for water quality  evaluation  include:


           (1)   Prevalence  -  Duration -  Intensity Index  (PDI)

                This  measure  considers the relationship  of  actual water
                quality to  state standards.   It has been computed for
                a nationwide  network  of  10,000  stations, leading, however,
                to a  single judgemental  decision  as to whether water
                at each station  is polluted  or  not polluted.

           (2)   Enviro-Control Water  Pollution  Measurement  System

                This  measurement system  focuses on DoD as a criterion
                and has been  computed for  140 selected stations  with
                the reliable  DoD data.   A  problem is  that the 142-
                station network  is not closely  correlated with the
                urban system.

           (3)   Syracuse Pollution Index (SPI)

                The important feature  of this index is that it provides
                a single measure of water  quality relative  to permis-
                sible use standards.  This is perhaps the most inclusive
                index available.


           The  PDI index "... allows  any water  body to be describee1 in
           terms of the prevalence, duration, and intensity of its  water
           pollution,  corrected  for natural  background pollutant levels,
           and  taking into  account the flow  characteristics of the  water
           courses for which  it  is computed.  The index  is  based on how
           much water quality deviates from  Federal-State water  quality
           standards,  which vary from place  to  place,  depending  on  lo-
           cally established use  designations as  to use,  as for  drinking,
           swimming,  industrial  waste discharge,  etc."17

                The prevalence of water  pollution was first assessed
           systematically on  a nationwide basis in 1970  and reported
           in The  Annual  Report  of the Council  on Environmental  Quality.
           The  1970 figures indicated  that 27 percent of the U.S. stream

                                    B-138

-------
                           TABLE
          PINDEX LEVELS FOR SELECTED  U.S.  CITIES*

Chicago
Cincinnati
Denver
Los Angeles
Philadelphia
Saint Louis
San Diego
San Francisco
San Jose
Washington
Pindex Levels
Chicago
Los Angeles
Saint Louis
Philadelphia
San Jose
Denver
Cincinnati
San Francisco
Washington
San Diego
PM
(ug/m3)
124
154
126
119
154
143
69
68
92
77

0.47 '
0.34
0.42
0.49
0. 26
0.35
0.44
0.19
0.26
0. 19
SOX
(ppn>)
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0,
0.

0
0
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0
0
0
.14
03
01
.02
.08
.04
01
.01
.01
.05

. 42
.06
.14
.24
.03
.03
.09
.03
.15
.03
NOX
(ppm)
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.

o .
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
>\
0.
0.
0.
14
06
07
13
OS
07
05
14
12
07

56
52
26
32
48
29
24
56
28
20
CO
(ppra)
12.0
6.0
7.9
11.0
6.8
5.8
3.0
3.2
5.0
6.0

0. 38
0. 34
0.18
0. 21
0.16
0.25
0.19
0.16
0. 18
0.09
HC
(ppm)
3
3
2
4
2
3
6
3
4
3

0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
.0
.0
.4
.0
.0
.0
.0
.0
.3
.0

11
15
11
07
15
09
11
11
11
22
Oxidant
(pom)
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.

c.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
0.
01
02
03
05
01
04
03
02
02
02

10
50
36
10
30
29
20
20
20
30










TOTAL
2.04
1 .91
1.47
I .43
1.38
1.30
1.2-*
1.2i
1.13
' C "*
'(approximated from 1962  to 1967 data).
                                          Source:  Babcock  (1970),
                                 B-139

-------
          and  shoreline miles were polluted.  EPA  assessed  it  again  a
          year later  and  found  that, despite  improved  field reporting,
          the  prevalence  of pollution was  about  the  same  nationally
          (29  percent) in 1971.

               Table  9  summarizes the EPA data  for  major drainage
          basins.!8 unfortunately, of the  four apparently significant
          shifts  in reported water pollution  that  took  place—in  the
          Ohio, Gulf, Missouri, and Northeastern Basins—three  are so
          obscured by procedural variations that it  is  impossible to
          evaluate the degree of real change.  Both  the Gulf and
          Missouri Basins reported an enormous improvement  in  compliance
          with state  water quality standards, but  the  apparent  improve-
          ment between 1970 and 1971 is almost certainly  due to more
          accurate reporting, not to better water.   In  the  case of the
          Ohio River  Basin, the 1970 assessment  overlooked  a large number
          of  smaller  tributaries which were polluted.

               The last column of Table 9  shows the duration-intensity
          factor  for  the  1971 figures.  Whereas  the  prior columns
          simply  indicate what portion of  the stream was  polluted, the
          duration-intensity factor indicates how  badly polluted  it
          was  and for how long during the  year it  was  in  violation of
          the  standards.   To obtain the complete PDI index,  the number
          of  polluted stream miles is multiplied by  the duration-
          intensity factor.  Thus, the higher the  factor  is, the  worse
          the  pollution.

               The PDI index has several advantages.  It  covers all
          U.S. surface waters.   It considers the relationship of
          actual  water quality to state standards of desirable water
          quality.


     The above is merely  representative of objective data available
for measuring air and water quality.   Similar data is recorded at
state, regional,  and local agency levels in addition to data available
through universities and  private research institutions.

B  Column - Security
 £t

     Moving on now to the B  column of the needs matrix, which considers
the major acts and enforcement mechanisms that insure standards will be
                                    B-140

-------
                         TABLE  9
     HATER POLLUTION INDEX SUMMARIZED FOR MAJOR DRAINAGE
                    AREAS, 1970 AND 1971
Major
Watershed
Ohio
Southeast
Great Lakes
Northeast
Middle
Atlantic
California
Gulf
Missouri
Columbia
Stream
Miles
28,992
11,726
21,374
32,431
31,914
28,277
64,719
10.448
30,443
Polluted miles
1970
9,869
3,109
6,580
11,895
4,620
5,359
16,605
4,259
7,443
1971
24,031
4,490
8,771
5,823
5,627
8,429
11,604
1,839
5,685
Change
+13,746
+ 1,381
+ 2,191
- 6,072
+ 869
•f 2,499
- 5,001
- 2,420
- 1,758
1971
Duration-
Intensity
Factor
0.42
.74
.45
.61
.47
.27
.35
.31
. -12
UNITED STATES
            260,324   69,739  76,291   + 5,435


UNITED STATES
LESS OHIO   231,332   59,870  52,263   - 8,311


UNITED STATES
LESS COLUMBIA
            229,881   62,296  70,614   + 7,193
.41



.40




.43
 Source: Environmental Protection Agency, "The Cost
    of Clean Water"  (1972).
                           B-14I

-------
met over time.  Legislation for air includes:   The Clean Air Act,  as

amended in 1973; EPA emission standards;  state and regional air quality

standards; and for water,  the Federal Water Pollution Control Act  of

1972 and more recently the Safe Drinking Water Act of 1974.  The federal

government,  under these Acts,  has the power to seek court injunction

against polluters who create health hazards or endanger livelihood.

States must  adopt standards for intrastate waters and submit these to

EPA for approval.  Further,  EPA has the power to enter and inspect any

polluting facility to check its records and monitoring equipment and

to sample discharges.   EPA may enforce the criteria for permit condi-

tions and other requirements of the law by issuing administrative  orders

that are enforceable in court,  or by seeking court action.


     Objective Data
          Air  pollution episodes in New York City have been associated
     with exposures  similar  to those of the London episodes.  In one
     case,  for example,  excess deaths were detected in New York fol-
     lowing a  24-hour period during which sulfur dioxide concentrations
     exceeded  1500fltg/m3 (>0.5 ppm) (as measured by the hydrogen
     peroxide  titrimetric method)  and suspended particulate matter
     was  measured  as a soiling index of 6 cohs or greater.
          For  Rotterdam,  there have been indications of a positive
     association between total mortality and exposure for a few days
     to 24-hour mean concentrations of 500ULg/m3 (0.19 ppm) sulfur
     dioxide.   Further,  it has been reported that:   "There is a faint
     indication that this will happen somewhere between 300 and 500
     JAgS02 per m3 per 24 hours"  (0.11 ppm and 0.19 ppm).
          A survey of emergency clinics at major New York City hospi-
     tals revealed a rise in visits for upper respiratory infections
     and  cardiac diseases in both  children and adults in all four
     hospital  studies during a 10-day period of elevated pollution
     levels.   Sulfur dioxide ranged between 200U, g/m3 and 2460txg/m3
     (0.07 ppm to  0.86 ppm)  during the period studied;  hospital ad-
     missions  were clearly elevated at a time when  concentrations had
     not  yet exceeded 715icg/m3 (0.25 ppm).   Smoke  shade was close to
     3 coh units.
          In  London,  a  one-day exposure  to a daily average  level  of
     600*tg/m3  of  sulfur  dioxide  (0.20 ppm)  caused accentuation of
                                  B-142

-------
     symptoms in persons with chronic respiratory disease on the day


     following the high sulfur dioxide level if particular matter

                                                         20
     at a substantial concentration was also a pollutant.
Subjective Data




     Various attitudinal data on the quality of the natural environment


has been collected by the Institute for Social Research in Ann Arbor,


Michigan.  The following question was asked concerning air and water

        21
quality:



     "How do you feel about:  The conditions of the natural environment —


the air, land, and water in  this area?"   (May  1972)




     Delig.    Pleas.    Mos. Sat.    Mixed    Mos. Piss.    Unhap.    Terr.


      5%        18%         27%          21%        12%        10%       7%




B  Column - Equal Access
 *J



     Federal  standards  for  air  and  water  quality  are  designed  to protect


the general public and  therefore  apply  nationwide. As mentioned above,


state and regional standards are  in some  cases more stringent  than


federal  standards; however,  in  every case these apply uniformly to all


populations within their  jurisdiction.


     The problem  lies in  fact that  standards (thresholds)  are  set  to


protect the general  public  and  do not necessarily reflect health dangers


for  subpopulations of persons already combating health problems (e.g.,


respiratory diseases, heart malfunctions, circulatory problems).   These


persons are generally more  susceptible to air pollution hazards and,


thus,  their activities are  even more restricted during acute pollution


days.
                                     B-143

-------
     Objective Data




     One objective measure of equal access to air quality might be the


number of air pollution alert days in an air quality control district


along with correlated morbidity and mortality rates for the same days.


     A measure of access to water quality might be the effectiveness of


enforcement measures or bodies or stream miles of polluted water of the


total available.  Geographic areas which suffer from extensive pollution,


then, would be cited as not having access to tolerable water in their


living environment.  The volume of bottled drinking water sold in a


district would be one method of measuring the extent of intolerability


as perceived by the general public in that district.
B  Column - Ability to Influence
 4
     In a general sense, the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969


establishes the overall policy of public disclosure of environmental


impacts to allow for public response and action.  Though thresholds


themselves are not easily influenced by the general public (they are


primarily established and adjusted through research), both security and


access to security can be accomplished by the public, the typical case


being a request by industry to relax the standards until they can be


met in a more cost-effective way (e.g., auto emission standards).


     The Federal Water Pollution Control Act additionally requires the


states to hold public hearings to review their water quality standards


and, if necessary, to update them at least once every three years.  Other


means of public influence might be through special interest group asso-


ciations, such as the Natural Resources Defense Council, as well as


applying pressure on public regulating bodies, such as the Air Pollution


Control Board, or private industrial polluters.
                                    B-144

-------
     Objective Data







     The number of environmental impact statements reporting negatively




on the adequacy of air and water pollution control  employed by a




proposed project might be one measure of public influence.  Court cases




based on examples such as the above or on personal health hazards from




uncontrolled pollution would offer another measure of influence.







     Subjective Data






     Percent of persons willing  to attend public  hearings.
H  Column - Threshold Level/Higher Needs
     Moving from left to right  across  the  needs  matrix for  the  issues




of air and water quality brings us  to  the  task of  defining  QOL  threshold




levels for meeting higher  needs.  For  purposes of  this report,  a  prelimi-




nary decision was made on  the dividing point  between  basic  and  higher




need levels.  The division was  made to include as  basic needs only those



standards  (threshold) pertaining to health and safety; all  other  thres-




holds were considered to be higher  needs because they dealt with  such



things as  taste, color, odor and aesthetic appeal.   The argument  here



could be made that odoriferous  air  or  water may  cause psychological




stress, which may affect human  health  and safety indirectly;  however,




thresholds do not seem  to  reflect this premise  as yet.  Perhaps,  as



further cause-effect  information is uncovered,  standards will  reflect




also  psychological  stressors defined as health hazards.







     Threshold  Levels






     For drinking water  and for water  used for recreation,  standards




have been  established based on tolerance levels  for taste,  color, odor



and  turbidity.   Standards  also specify thresholds for copper,  zinc,







                                    B-145

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iron, dissolved solids, and detergents.  For recreational water, EPA  has


proposed criteria  for limiting pH, providing clarity, controlling mico-


organisms, and establishing temperature levels suitable  for water used


for  bathing  and swimming. These thresholds stem from  such general aesthe-


tic  objectives as  the following:




      a)  All  surface waters should be capable of supporting life


         forms of  aesthetic value.


      b)  Surface waters should be free of substances  attributable


         to  discharge or wastes (e.g., objectionable  deposits,


         floating  debris, oil, scum, substances producing objectionable

                                                       22
         color, odor,  taste, or turbidity, and so on).




      In addition to the established standards, a number  of surveys  have


been conducted by  the Bureau of Parks and Recreation  in  particular, in


an attempt to establish further thresholds based on aesthetic  proper-


ties of water.  To date, these have not moved beyond  recommended guide-


lines.




      Objective Data




      Data sources  for indicating where regions and states do not conform


to the water  quality standards in the H  column would be the same as


those identified under the B  column.




H  Column -  Security
 £t




     The Federal Water Pollution Control Act,  along with state and  regional


pollution control  boards, offers security for assuring that higher  need


thresholds will not be ignored.  U.S. and state public service monitor-


ing of recreational waters provides further security  in addition to


enforcement measures taken by parks and recreation agencies.
                                    B-146

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     Objective Data (example)


     •  Number of swimming areas closed for pollution clean-up.



     Subjective Data (example)



     •  Annual park-user complaints based on aesthetic criteria.


H  Column - Equal Access
     Standards cited for water quality apply to all bodies of water and,

therefore,  to all persons.  However, enforcement of standards may vary

from region to region and thus may by default discriminate.  The appor-

tionment of tax dollars for water pollution control, for example, may

be quite different between areas facing similar water quality problems.

This may or may not reflect user interests.



     Objective Data



     One relatively objective measure might be the degree of choice

or number of approved recreational water areas, within a geographic

area.



H  Column - Ability to Influence
 4	_____


     Individuals or groups of individuals may influence the quality of

recreational waters within their local area through public hearing,

special interest group pressure (petitions), letters to public officials,

or referendums.

     The most effective method, however, may be through purchasing

power (e.g., patronage of recreational areas).
                                    B-147

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Objective Data

•  Public hearing attendance
•  Pressure grouping and special interest groups  (Sierra Club)
•  Referendums passed and defeated for improved water
   quality used for recreational purposes

Subjective Data

•  Survey results from "willingness to pay"   for improved
   water quality based on aesthetic criteria.
                              B-148

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SECTOR:  NATURAL ENVIRONMENT

ISSUE:  SCENIC AND WILDLIFE RESOURCES
        Protection
     Basic Need/Threshold

   Protects any wild mammal,
   fish, bird, amphibian, rep-
   tile, mollusk or crustacian
   threatened with extinction

   Calif. Coastal Zone includes
   mountain ranges or five
   miles from the nean high
   tide line whichever is the
   shorter distance
        Security
• Wild & Scenic Rivers Act
  Sec. 1271-1273

• Marine Protection Research-
  Sanctuaries Act of  1972
                                      Equal Access
	Ability to Influence
• Special interest groups

  - Audubon Societies,
    Sierra Club, and garden
    cluba
• Scenic Highways Act

• National Coastal  Zone Act

• Calif. Coastal Zone  Con-
  servation Act

* Approximately two million
  people or 20% of  the popu-
  lation of Southern Cali-
  fornia live within the
  five-mile, coastal zone  of
  Los Angeles & Orange
  Counties

* Over 100  animals  in  the
  U.S.  (including 50 birds
  and 31 fish) are  in  danger
  of becoming extinct
   (Source:  U.S. Fish  and
  Wildlife  Service)2
                                                                                                 The Coastal Zone Conser-
                                                                                                 vation Bill of 1972 (Calif)
                                                                                                 reached the ballot by
                                                                                                 citizen initiation and
                                                                                                 was voted into law by
                                                                                                 551 of the electorate
                                                            B-149

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SECTOR:  NATURAL ENVIRONMENT
ISSUE:   NOISE
         Health hazards iajaenities
    »,
      Basle Need/Threshold
 • MBcl-num level - 73 dB of
   4000 HZ noise for a contin-
   uous exposure of 8 hours

 • Critical sound exposure
   levels  (Dickerson 1970)
   safe - 70-80 dB(A)
   hearing loss begins -
   90 dB(A), 50% probability
   of impairment - 95 dB(A),
   losses  of all exposed  indi-
   vidual  - 105 dB(A)

  • Persons suffering
   pr esbycusi >

  i Temporary threshold shift
   in loss of hearing
       Security
                                       Equal Access
• State & local quantitative
  and qualitative noise ordi-
  nance for motor vehicles

• Airport citing restrictions

• KEPA

• Noise Control Act (1972)
     Ability to Influence
• Legal action

• Croup appeals
• Individual complaints
• Rational Environmental
  Policy Act
                                                              * Court action
                                                              * Complaints issued to
                                                                - petitions to city
                                                                  councils
 ISSUE:    RADIATION
  e  10 CFR Chap 1,  Part  20
    No licensee shall  cause:
    -  (1) radiation levels
      which, if an individual
      were continuously  present
      in the area,  could re-
      sult in his receiving
      a dose in excess of 2
      mirt-icens (2 mrem) in
      any one hour or  (2)
      radiation levels which
      if an individual were
      continuously present in
      the area could result
      in his receiving a dose
      in excess of 100 mil-
      licens in any 7  con-
      sesecutive days
 • VWPC Act

 • EPA Radiation Alert  Net-
   work Station

 • Tritium Surveillance
   Systems

 • National Council on  Radia-
   tion Protection and
   Measurement

 • Federal Radiation Council
  • EPA special structure
    group— limit of 5 mrem
    per year per reactor at
    the site boundary

  • National Council on Radia-
    tion Protection and
    Measurements

    -  Figure of 170 mrem per
      year per reactor at the
      site boundary

  * Gross Beta radioacting
    pll/m2

  * Ralnfall-ms
                            B-150
  * Beta radioactivity deposi-
    tion mcl/m

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SECTOR:  NATURAL ENVIRONMENT
ISSUE:   NOISE

        Health hazards & amenities


    Basic Need/Threshold       	
• Intrusion noise interfer-
  ence with activity or
  annoyance maximum level
  45 dB indoors, 55 dB
  outdoors
                                       Security
                               • Noise control U.S. Code
                                 No. .42, 4901-4819

                               • Municipal ordinances—
                                 emission levels for
                                 specific sources e.g., loud-
                                 speakers, construction
                                 projects

                               • HUD guidelines for location
                                 of projects

                               • EPA--noise from truck tires
                                                                      Equal  Access
   H
     Ability to Influence

• Legal action

• Group action

• Individual complaints

• NEPA
                               * Maximum noise limits at
                                 residential boundary (M3)
                                 Chicago--63 dB(A), Anaheim
                                 --60, Fairlawn, N.V.,
                                 Chicago M-2—58,  Beverly
                                 H111S--431

                               * Loss of sleep due to noise,
                                 survey results

                               * Loss of property values
                                 due to expressway noise
                                                                                             • Court action

                                                                                             • Complaints issued
                                                            B-151

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SECTOR:  NATURAL ENVIRONMENT

ISSUE:    PESTICIDES

         Health Hazards 6t amenities

    B,
	Basic Need/Threshold

• EPA pesticide pollution
   residuals most important

   - DDT
   - Dieldrin
   - Heptachlor
   - Heptachlor Epoxides
   - Toxaphene
   - Parathion/Paroxon

 • EPA- minimum standard for
   certifying applications
                                       Security
• Federal Water Pollution
  Control Act
• State Water Pollution
  Control Boards
• Consumer Protection
  Program

• Food & Drug Administration

* U.S. Department of
  Agriculture

• Federal Environmental
  Pesticide Control Act
                                                                      Equal  Access
                                                                                                   Ability to Influence
                                                          B-152

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SECTOR:  NATURAL ENVIRONMENT

ISSUE;   LAND USE

        Degree of choice
   Basic Need/Threshold

No quantitative thresholds
established at national
levels

Local ordinance—limits on
lot coverage and floor
area ratio and standard
resident zoning regulations

Court decisions:  "No
community has the right to
make, by itself, decisions
that adversely affect
other communities."
                                       Security
                               • Land use,  lot coverage,
                                 and floor  area ratios de-
                                 termined at municipal
                                 levels

                                 - Zoning laws related
                                   ordinances  (code enforce-
                                   ment)
                                 - Building permits, public
                                   power

                               • Soil Conservation Act 16
                                 USC 59 OFF
                                                                      Equal Access
                                                                   Ability to Influence

                                                              • Public  review built  into
                                                                General Plan and aspects
                                                                of zoning administration

                                                              • Variance and appeal
                                                                process

                                                              • EIR process

                                                              • Citizen groups and  special
                                                                interest groups (developers'
                                                                groups, real estate)
                               • Historic & Archaelogical
                                 Sites Act
                               • HUD 701 Program  (Comprehen-
                                 sive Planning Assistance

                               • State  land use planning
                                 acts (e.g., Connecticut
                                 Plan of Conservation &
                                 Development) identifying
                                 critical areas for review
* In urbanized areas, popu-
  lation per square mile
  has declined from 6,580
  in 1920 to 4.2301
* 5 per type of land use
  - Residential
  - Commercial
  - Industrial
  - Extractive
  - Public, quasi-public
  - Transportation, commu-
    nication, utilities
  - Agricultural recrea-
    tional, water
• General Plan - Regional
  and local level (specific
  distribution of different
  land uses)

• Specific land use Acts
  e.g., Williamson Act of
  California to preserve
  agricultural land through
  tax incentive

* In the U.S., estimated
  10,000 local governments
  with independent, auton-
  omous authority over land
  use decisions2

* New York metropolitan area-
  500 separate jurisdictions
  control land use-^

* Cook County, Chicago —
  130 separate zoning author-
  ities4
                                                          B-153

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SECTOR:  HATUHAL miRONMENT
ISSUE:  SOLID WASTE
    B
      Basic Need/Threshold
                                         Security
 * Health hazards connected
   with solid waste pollu-
   tion—fly and rodent
   borne disease
• Local ordinances related
  to solid waste disposal,
  odors & visual impacts

• State & local rules on
  handling of solid wastes:
  • Solid Waste Disposal Act
    (1965)

* EPA National Survey of
  Solid Water Practices
                                                                     Equal Access
                                                                                                  Ability to Influence
                                                          B-154

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              NATURAL ENVIRONMENT - ISSUE WRITEUP:  REFERENCES


 1.  Federal Register, 38 F. R. 25678 (14 September 1973).

 2.  Brian J. L.  Berry et al., Land Use, Urban Form and Environmental
     Quality, p.  40, Research Paper No.  155, Department of  Geography,
     University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois (1974).

 3.  Berry, op. cit., p. 41.

 4.  Berry, op. cit., p. 40.

 5.  Berry, op. cit., p. 41.

 6.  California Air Resources Board, "California Air Quality Data,  July,
     August, September 1972," p. 15, Volume IV, No. 3.

 7.  Cited in Berry, op. cit., p. 57.

 8.  California Air Resources Board and Office of Emergency Services,
     "California Air Pollution Emergency Plan," pp. 3-4 (July 1974).

 9.  Berry, op. cit., p. 109.

10.  U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Proposed Criteria for  Water
     Quality, Volume I," pp. 401-404, Washington, D. C. (October 1973).

11.  Berry, op. cit., pp. 32-33.

12.  Berry, op. cit., p. 86.

13.  Berry, op. cit., p. 52.

14.  Berry, op. cit., pp. 52-53.

15.  Berry, op. cit., p. 55.

16.  Berry, op. cit., p. 117 and p. 128.

17.  Berry, op. cit., p. 128.

18.  Berry, op. cit., p. 129.

19.  Berry, op. cit., pp. 128-130.
                                   B-155

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20.  U. S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, "Air Quality Criteria
     for Sulfur Oxides, Summary and Conclusions," pp. 10-11, Consumer Protec-
     tion and Environmental Health Service, Public Health Service, reprinted
     from Air Quality Criteria for Sulfur Oxides, issued by the National Air
     Pollution Control Administration, Arlington, Virginia (February 1969).

21.  Andrews, F. M. and Withey, S. B., "Developing Measures of Perceived Life
     Quality; Results from Several National Surveys," Social Indicators
     Research, I (1974).

22.  U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, op. cit., pp. 340-341.
                                   B-156

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                 NATURAL ENVIRONMENT - BIBLIOGRAPHY

Andrews, Frank M. and Withey, Stephen B., "Developing Measures  of Per-
     ceived Life Quality; Results from Several National  Surveys," Social
     Indicators Research, I (1974).

Babcock, Jr., L. R., "A Combined Pollution Index for Measurement of
     Total Air Pollution," Journal of the Air Pollution  Control Associ-
     ation, Vol. 20, No. 10 (October 1970).

Berry, Brian J. L. et al., Land Use, Urban Form and Environmental
     Quality, Research Paper No. 155, Department of Geography,  University
     of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois (1974).

California Air Resources Board, "California Air Quality  Data,  July, August,
     September 1972,"Volume IV, No. 3.

California Air Resources Board and Office of Emergency Services,  "California
     Air Pollution Emergency Plan" (July 1974).

Committee on Merchant Marine and Fisheries, A Compilation of Federal
     Laws Relating to Conservation and Development of Our Nation's
     Fish and Wildlife Resources, Environmental Quality, and Oceanography,
     committee print, January 1973.

Flax, Michael J., "A Study in Comparative Urban Indicators:  Conditions
     in 18 Large Metropolitan Areas," URI 20006, The Urban Institute,
     Washington, D. C. (April 1972).

Environment Report, published by Trends Publishing, Inc., National  Press
     Building, Washington, D. C. (4 September  1974).

Environmental News, news releases, briefs, and addresses, issued by  the
     U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington,  D. C.  (1 August
     1974 and 27 February 1975).

Hickey, R. J., D. E. Boyce, E. B. Harmer, and  R. C. Clelland, Ecological
     Statistical Studies Concerning Environmental Pollution and Chronic
     Disease.  Summary in Digest of Technical  Papers, 2nd Internationsl
     Geoscience Electronics Symposium, IEEE, Washington, D. C. (April 1970).

"Land Use:  More and Better Choices for America," address given by the
     Honorable Russell E. Train, Administrator, U. S. Environmental Pro-
     tection Agency, at  a land conference sponsored by the Natural  Resources
     Council of  Connecticut and the Connecticut Department of Environmental
     Protection, Northford, Connecticut, 26 November 1974 (released in
     Environmental News, December  1974).
                                 B-157

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Marine Advisory Program, Sea Grant Program,  University of Southern Cali-
     fornia, "Changing the Future of the Coast:   Increasing Public Access,
     A Report on the Coastal Plan of the South Coast Regional Coastal
     Commission," Los Angeles, California (February 1975).

National League of Cities, "Recreation in the Nation's Cities, Problems
     and Approaches," Washington, D. C.  (December 1968).

U. S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, "Air Quality Criteria
     for Sulfur Oxides, Summary and Conclusions," Consumer Protection
     and Environmental Health Service, Public Health Service, reprinted
     from Air Quality Criteria for Sulfur Oxides, issued  by the
     National Air Pollution Control Administration, Arlington, Virginia
     (February 1969).

U. S. Environmental Protection Agency,  "National Primary  and Secondary
     Ambient Air Quality Standards," Federal Register, Vol. 36, No. 84,
     Pt. II  (30 April 1971).

	, "Proposed Criteria for Water  Quality, Volume I," Washington,
     D. C.  (October 1973).
                                B-158

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NATURAL ENVIRONMENT
              REFERENCES FOR OBJECTIVE (*)  AND SUBJECTIVE  (+)  DATA
Air Quality

1. *  Land Use, Urban  Form and Environmental  Quality,  Berry,  Brian  J.  L.,
      University of Chicago for EPA

2. *  Air Quality Criteria for Sulfur Oxides,   U.  S. Department  of  Health,
      Education, and Welfare,  1969  -  booklet

3. *  Environmental News,  August 1,  1974 (EPA-A-107) article  - "Impact of  the
      Fuel Shortage on Public  Attitudes  Toward Environmental  Protection
Water Quality

1. *-2. *-3. *  Land  Use,  Urban Form and Environmental  Quality,  Berry,
                    Brian J. L.,  University of Chicago for  EPA

4. * - 5. *  Environmental News  - February 27, 1975  -  "EPA  Approves  $40  million
             for State, Interstate Water Programs"
Scenic and Wildlife Resources

1. *  "Changing the Future of  the  Coast:   Increasing  Public  Access"  - Marine
      Advisory Program,  Sea Grant  Programs,  University of  Southern California
      Report

2. *  "U. S. List of Endangered  Fauna,"  U.  S.  Fish  and Wildlife  Service

3. *  "Changing the Future of  the  Coast:   Increasing  Public  Access"  - Marine
      Advisory Program Report  (University  of Southern California), February 1975.
Noise

1. * - 2. * - 3. *  Lend Use, Urban Form  and  Environmental Quality, Berry,
                    Brian J. L.  for EPA
Land Us e

1. * - 2. * - 3. * - 4. *  "Land Use:  More and Better Choices for America"
                           Environmental News, December 1974, EPA

                                   B-159

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6.  Physical
General
     Perhaps the most visible indicator of a nation's quality of life it
the condition of its physical environment.  The state of any nation's
physical environment depends on its wealth of natural resources as well
as man's use of those resources in manufacturing, processing and develop^
ment activities.   In this section we are primarily concerned with the
feasibility of measuring the impact of the man-made environment on quality
of life, although  this sector necessarily involves certain aspects of the
natural environment as well.
     The built environment represents an extremely broad sector, and the
key issues concerning this sector are many.  For the purpose of our
analysis, seven separate issues have been identified.  These seven issues
represent a sufficiently broad spectrum to facilitate the analysis of
virtually any concern relating to man's control over the physical environ-
ment.  The seven issues are:
     • Housing
     • Nonresidential buildings and structures
     • Food, drugs, and cosmetics
     • Commercial  and industrial products
     • Public services
     • Transportation
     • Recreation  and open space
     For each of these issues, a variety of sub-issues are relevant, although
the sub-issues for each category vary considerably.  Sub-issues relating
to the commercial  products category, for example, would include such
concerns as cost economy, durability and ease of use, whereas sub-issues
relating to transportation would include such concerns as safety, availability,
and privacy.   Although it is possible to develop a reasonably comprehensive
                                   B-160

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 PHYSICAL SECTOR

 ISSUE:   Housing-

   B!
     Basic Seeds/Threshold  __   	

 Concern:  Is my basic shelter  Concern:   How secure do
 of adequate quality?           people feel about the quality
                                of their  shelter?
_ Secur itv
 • Bureau of the  Census
   Bousing classification
   standards.   Establishes
   definitions  of sub-
   standard housing  according
   to measures  of structural
   soundness &  the avail-
   ability of plumbing
   (B-1-F-G1-3-1-N-Y)
• HUD  Minimum Property
  Standards

  Establishes design,  materi-
  al & construction standards
  by type  of  dwelling  unit

  (B-2&B-3-F-G3-3-1-Y-Y)
• Uniform  Building Code

  Establishes standards  for
  building material, design
  & construction

  (B-2&B-3-S-NG1-3-1-N-N)
• Manual of Acceptable
  Practices

  Detailed supplement  to HUD
  Minimum  Property Standards

  (B-2S.B-3-F-G3-3-1-Y-Y)

• IJnifonn Mechanical Code
  Establishes  standards for
  Installation & maintenance
  of heating & ventilation in
  dwelling units
  (B-2&B-3-S-NG1-3-1-N-N)

• The HUD Act  of 1968

  States basic Federal hous-
  ing goals &  policies

  (B-2&B-3-F-G1-1-2-Y-N)

• Uniform Plumbing Code
  Standards for materials
  use & installation

  (B-2&B-3-S-NG1-3-1-N-N)
• Palo Alto City Building
  Code

  Adds to or amends the
  Uniform Building Code
  standards

  (B-2&B-3-L-G3-3-1-Y-N)
* 71 of households in 1970
  were living in sub-
  standard housing  (B-l)

-I- Gallup Poll. November  1974
  "Bow vould you rate the
  condition of your house &
  property?"  excellent  - 28%;
  good - 46X; fa^r - 181;
  and poor - 21.
                              Equal  Access
                     Concern:   To what  proportion
                     of the population  are the
                     assurances of housing
                     quality applicable?

                     • HUP Minimum Property
                       Standards

                       Establishes design materi-
                       al  & construction standards
                       by  type  of dwelling unit

                       (B-2&B-3-F-G3-3-1-Y-Y)

                     • Uniform  Building Code
                       Establishes standards for
                       building material, design
                       & construction
                       (B-2&B-3-S-SG1-3-1-S-U)

                     • Manual of Acceptable
                       Practices

                       Detailed supplement to HUD
                       Minimum  Property Standards

                       (B-2&B-3-F-C3-3-1-Y-Y)

                     • Uniform  Mechanical Code

                       Establishes standards for
                       installation & maintenance
                       of heating & ventilation in
                       dwelling units

                       (B-2&B-3-S-NG1-3-1-N-N)
                     • The  HUD  Act of 1968
                       States basic Federal hous-
                       ing  goals & policies

                       (B-2&B-3-F-G1-1-2-Y-N)
                     • uniform  Plumbing Code

                       Standards  for materials
                       use  & installation

                       (B-2&B-3-S-NG1-3-1-N-N)
                     "  Palo Alto City Building
                       Code

                      Adds to  or  amends the
                       uniform Building Code
                       standards

                       (B-2&B-3-L-G3-3-1-Y-N)

                    *  In 1970,  22Z of the  black
                      population  lived in  sub-
                      standard housing, and 61
                      of the non-black popula-
                      tion lived in  sub-standard
                      housing  (B-3)
• Standards
* Objective Data
+ Subjective Data

  B4
    Ability  to  Influence
Concern:   To what  degree  is
the individual  able  to
influence  housing  quality
standards?

• Palo  Alto Municipal Code

  Establishes procedures  for
  applying for  a building
  variance

   (B-4-L-G3-1-3-N-S)
                                                                                             • Dept. of Housing & Develop-
                                                                                               ment Law - 1974

                                                                                               - Requires federal subsidies
                                                                                                 for public housing be cut
                                                                                                 from local housing author-
                                                                                                 ities that fail to enforce
                                                                                                 rent collection
                                                          B-161
* Recent survey revealed that
  subsidies for public hous-
  ing, nearing $500 million
  a year, have been inflated
  by failure of local hous-
  ing authorities to collect
  full rents from tenants
  (General Accounting Office)
* More than 3 million low-
  income Americans live in
  public housing owned and
  operated by public agen-
  cies {GAD Investigation,
  1974)

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PHYSICAL  SECTOR

ISSUE:  Bousing


    Basle Need/Threshold

Concern:  Does quality hous-
ing contribute to a resi-
dent's status, prestige or
self-esteem?
           Security
Concern:  To what degree can
one feel secure about find-
ing ego fulfillment in
quality housing?
                                        Equal Access
Concern: To what degree are
people provided equal access
to security about finding
ego fulfillment in quality
housing?
    Ability to Influence

Concern:  To what degree can
the individual's ability to
influence housing quality
standards affect status,
prestige, or self-esteem?
• Palo Alto Municipal Code
  Title 21 - Subdivisions &
  Other Divisions of Land

  Establishes standards for
  the quality of land
  divisions

  (H-1-L-G3-1-2-Y-H)

• P»lo Alto Municipal Code
  Title 18 -  Zoning

  Establishes  zoning stan-
  dards for all  types of
  dwelling units in the city

  (H-1-L-G3-1-2-Y-N)
 > Standardized requirements
  for facilities for social
  interaction in a planned
  community

  (H-2&H-3-L-NG2-1-Y-N)
• Binding agreements to
  maintain a certain implic-
  itly prestigious character
  of appearance of houses &
  yards in a neighborhood or
  housing association

  (H-2&H-3-I.-lfG2-1-Y-N)
• Standardized requirements
  for facilities for social-
  interaction in a planned
  community

  (H-2SJI-3-L-NG2-1-Y-N)
  Binding agreements to
  maintain a certain implic-
  itly prestigious character
  of appearance of houses &
  yards in a neighborhood or
  housing association

  (H-2&H-3-1-NG2-1-Y-N)
                                                      B-162

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issue list containing only seven components, the number of sub-issues
relative to any given issue is enormous, especially if one were to
consider sub-issues by each type of product, service or facility.
Because a comprehensive analysis of this type is beyond the scope of this
feasibility study, only indicative issues and sub-issues are being
considered.

Matrix Analysis—An Example
     To demonstrate the feasibility of using the impact matrix methodology
to measure quality of life in the physical  environment, the issue of
housing has been chosen as an illustrative  example.  The  issue of standard
housing relates to quality of life (QOL) in that it is a  fundamental
concern to most individuals, and as such is a widely accepted indicator
of quality of life in general.  In addition, the housing  issue concerns
many basic level needs which must be fulfilled  to  some degree as a
prerequisite to the fulfillment of higher need  concerns represented in
other issues relative to QOL.  The issue of standard housing is also a
good illustrative example of QOL in the physical sector because:
     • Housing standards deal primarily with basic need concerns as do
       most physical sector concerns.
     • Housing standards exist at all levels of government, and thus
       represent the full spectrum of sector standards.
     • Housing policy often has many implications  in policy decisions
       relative to other aspects of the physical environment.

     Because housing quality  is a fundamental aspect of the housing issue,
the sub-issue of quality and  safety of housing  materials, design and
construction will be considered for this illustrative matrix example.
Quality design would include  such considerations as square footage, number
of bedrooms, etc.  Existing design standards are intended to prevent
overcrowded housing conditions, and such standards are typically measured
                                  B-163

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in terms of what is inadequate.  Other types of housing quality concerns
can be measured in a variety of ways, but perhaps the dominant means of
measuring or standardizing such concerns is in terms of defining,
quantifying and remedying substandard conditions.  That is, housing quality
and housing design quality is  standardized according to what it is not
(e.g., substandard or  inadequate).  Other less significant conceptual
considerations  include fire insurance grading schedules (with evidence of
higher quality  correlated to degrees of  standardization), and the more
abstract conceptual realm of assessed market value.
     The general  search procedure used to accumulate matrix data  is
described  in the  appendix.  This search procedure was slightly different
for  some issues within the physical sector—such as housing—for which
the  issue  concerns are ultimately addressed at the local level.  Although
housing standards exist on the state and federal level, the true measure
of the  threshold  concern was typically found in municipal ordinances and
codes.  The search procedure for this particular issue, then, proved most
fruitful at the local  level, usually in municipal libraries or civic
information centers or city offices.
     The complete matrix corresponding to the housing quality concern is
shown in Figure 2.  Each of the matrix cells is described below, moving
from left  to right across the  eight columns corresponding to different
levels of  the human need hierarchy.

B Column -Basic Need/Threshold
     In this first column we are concerned with identifying the basic need
threshold  level for housing quality, the level below which housing  quality
could be considered intolerable.  A subjective concern regarding that
threshold  level is whether or  not one's  basic shelter is of standard quality;
this concern is noted  in Column B  .  A concern relative to design quality
                                B-164

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might be whether or not one's shelter is of adequate quality (which could

indicate crowding or cost factors).

     Existing Standards.  Standards responding to the basic concern of

standard housing quality are essentially definitions of what is substandard.

Although compliance with local codes is the ultimate measure of whether or

not a dwelling is considered to be substandard, certain more general

standards exist on the national level as well.  For example, the Bureau

of the Census uses two subjective  measures to determine housing quality—
                                                                   I/
structural soundness and availability of basic plumbing facilities.    These

threshold level standards are summarized in Column B  .

     Objective Data.  The total number of households  or percentage of all

households that are living in substandard housing units is one objective

measure of the basic level subjective concern.  Column B  includes data
                                               2/
prepared by the Office of Management and Budget   (according to the Census

Bureau standards) which indicate that in 1970, 7% of  the nation's population

was living in substandard housing  units.

     Attitudinal Data.  In response  to the question:  "How would you rate

the condition of your house  and property?"   (Gallup Poll, November 1974),

a  representative sampling of the national  population  responded as follows:

28% rated their housing as "excellent"; 46%,  good; 18%, only fair; 6%, poor;

and 2% of the sample gave no answer.  These  data are  summarized in Column B ,
 I/  A  structurally  dilapidated housing unit is  identified  as  unsafe  due to:
     (1)  one  or more serious  defects,  (2)  numerous  intermediate  defects in
     sufficient numbers to require considerable  repair  or rebuilding, or
     (3)  inadequate  original  construction.   A unit  can  also be considered
     substandard  if  it  is lacking any  of the following  basic facilities:
     private  bath, private flush toilet, or hot  running water  (at  least
     part of  the  time).
 2/   Social  Indicators; 1973, Executive Office of the President: Office
     of Management and  Budget, U.S.  Government Printing Office,  Washington
     B.C., 1973.
                                  B-165

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B  Column-Basic Need/Security
_2	

     In  this  second column we are concerned with people's perception of


 security  regarding housing quality.  The subjective concern heading the


 column  then  is:   "what  type of standards exist to guarantee that housing


 quality will be above the threshold level?"


     Existing standards.  Despite the difficulty of identifying and


 measuring levels  of  householders' security, the issue of providing housing


 quality is nonetheless  real, and there exist seemingly innumerable laws


 and standards aimed  at  providing quality and safety of housing materials,


 design  and construction.  Virtually all of these standards can be included


 in Column B   because their very existence represents an assurance to  the
           £t

 householder  that  he  can feel reasonably secure about the safety and


 quality of his dwelling.  Examples of these standards are noted in Column


 B  and  include:
  2

     • HUD Minimum Property Standards - nationally applicable; mandatory.


     • Manual of Acceptable Practices - nationally applicable; voluntary.


     • Uniform Building  Code          - privately set standards; mandatory

                                       statewide if officially adopted.


     • (Palo  Alto) City  Building Code - mandatory municipal code.



     As  demonstrated  in  just these four examples, standards may be mandatory


 or voluntary, and be applicable at the local, regional or national level.


 Numerous  other standards  are applicable to less generalizable aspects of


 dwelling  construction such  as  the Uniform Plumbing Code or the Uniform


 Mechanical Code.


     These few standards are indicative of the immense network of  codified


 regulations  aimed at providing minimum standards of quality  and  safety in


 dwelling  units.   The effectiveness of these  standards depends upon an


 equally immense  network of  inspection, review and enforcement.   It is


 very difficult to analyze such a  complex  regulatory network,  not  only


 because of its size, but  also  because considerable diversity in  quality
                                   B-166

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standards exists in each locality.  In fact, local standards are the



ultimate determinants of housing quality.  Nonlocal standards are usually



broadly defined, most often representing generalizable policy guidelines.



It is at the local level, however, that the most effective guarantees of



appropriate housing quality standards exist, and this is true for several



reasons:




    • Regional differences in climate, topography



    • Regional differences in lifestyle



    • Local and regional differences in levels of urbanization, ruralization,



      growth and development



    • Local and regional differences in political and economic priorities,



      union requirements and pressures



    • Local and regional differences in materials use and availability



    • The need to preserve distinctly regional architectural character.




    People's basic and higher order housing needs and concerns may vary



so much from one region to the next that a national housing index would



have to be so generalized as to be of little use as a policy tool.  A



locally applicable measure, on the other hand, should aid policy makers



in responding to the particular needs of specific constituencies.



    As with the B  threshold column, the intolerability threshold for



each standard in the B  column is very specific.  The absolute security
                      £


threshold is confused, however, simply because there exist so many



different standards, each specifying different threshold measures.  None-



theless, for the sake of our analysis, the important point to note is that



the threshold level is assessed according to a direct measure of the



objective condition, and in the case of housing quality standards, these



objective conditions are highly delineated  (i.e., spacing of doors,



windows, support beams, types of materials, etc.)  Each of the specific



elements in a local building code, for example, represents a standard



which can be assessed by measuring that particular (objective) condition.
                                  B-167

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     Objective Data.   Objective data to measure  the adequacy  of  housing


 quality standards is very  difficult to obtain because  it  is  difficult


 to determine an appropriate measure of standards adequacy (i.e.,  security).


 In a sense,  the designation of housing as "substandard" or "not up  to


 code" represents a type of guarantee of threshold level standards adequacy


 (even though the reality of housing shortages makes  this  type of  standard


 enforcement  impossible, forcing portions of the population to live  in


 substandard  dwellings.)  Nonetheless, the objective  data  to  measure this


 condition  could be viewed as the number of housing units  designated as


 "substandard".   This measure is noted in Column B  ,  although actual data
                                                 &

 of this sort  would have to be obtained through  further research at  the


 local level.



     With regard  to considerations of housing quality above the  threshold


 level,  (i.e., municipal building codes with higher order  quality  standards)


 the "adequacy" of  these standards is a subjective measure of degree, and


 the actual quality condition cannot so easily be measured by objective data.






     Attitudinal Data.  An example of the type of question that  would be


 a  useful measure of attitudes about the adequacy of  housing  quality standards


 is included  in Column B :   "How adequate are existing  housing quality
                       &t

 standards?"  The answers to this type of question could be keyed  to a


 semantic or  a   numerical differential scale for ease of quantifying and


 organizing responses.  To the best of our knowledge, no such attitudinal


 data now exist,  and would have to be generated  in a  companion attitudinal


 study if the MQOL  methodology were to be used for the  analysis  of this


 sub-issue.






B  Column-Basic Need/Equal Access
    Moving across the impact matrix, the next level of need is "equal


access," or the issue of regulatory applicability.  In the case of
                                 B-168

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housing quality, we are not so much concerned with the accessibility to


quality housing as we are with people's access to existing standards to


housing quality.  Our subjective concern, then, could be stated:  "To what


portion of the population are the assurance of housing quality applicable?"



This concern is noted in Column B .
                                 O





    Existing Standards.  As mentioned above, the items in Column B  are
    — •" —- •  ~                                                       O

measures of regulatory applicability.  And for every regulatory standard


the applicability is either implicit or explicitly stated.  For example,


the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968, noted in Column B ,  states
                                                                O

explicitly that every American have a decent home and a suitable living


environment.  Although this is essentially a policy of housing accessibility,


the terms  "decent home" and "suitable living environment" represent a


policy  of  quality assurances as well, though policy and reality may be


two different things.  Unless otherwise noted, then, the standards  set



forth  in that Act are applicable to every American, in all types of housing,


whether public  or private, owned or rented.


    Further examples of existing standards that  could be included in


Column B   are many.  In fact, every existing  standard that could be
        *J

included in Column B  has  a domain of applicability once that  standard
                    2

is adopted.


    For example:


    •  Uniform Building Code - all  citizens of  states where adopted


    •  Palo Alto City Building Code -  residents of Palo Alto


    •  HUD  Minimum Property Standards  -  persons residing  in HUD-financed



       housing units.


The  real issues concerning applicability  and  equal access are  apparent



when considering a variety of related criteria such  as:


     •  That group of  citizens  living  in  housing that  is not up  to code.



       (access to quality  housing is  effectively  the  same  issue as access



       to quality housing  assurance.)




                                  B-169

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     •  What are the residency requirements in Palo Alto?   (income?  race?)



     •  Who qualifies for HUD-financed housing?  (subjectively biased



        criteria?)



     Because the standards noted in Column B  are a duplication of those



standards found in Column B , it follows that the Specificity of the



threshold level of each standard, and the method of assessing when the



intolerability threshold is reached will be the same in Column B  as



in B.
      Objective Data.  As we move from column to column, it becomes



apparent that the resolution of needs becomes more difficult as one



moves higher on the need hierarchy.   Even basic need resolution becomes



more  complex as we move from left to right, because it is harder to



quantify degrees of need fulfillment than it is to quantify absolute



need  fulfillment.  And clearly, as we move higher on the need hierarchy,



the possible degrees of need fulfillment are expanded.  In addition, the



greater complexity of higher order need issues should indicate that the



objective condition indicative of that issue has resulted from a



multiplicity of issue concerns and not just "equal access."  For these



reasons, then, it is very difficult  to find a single objective condition



that  is an accurate indicator of the issue concern.



      Nonetheless, we have chosen the example of racial balance in sub-



standard housing units as an apparent indicator of the equal access



issue.  The data collected indicates that in 1970, 227, of the black



population in this country lived in  substandard housing,  while only



6% of the nonblack population lived  in substandard units.   Apparently,



then, American blacks are discriminated against in the housing market--



they do not have equal access to quality housing.   This may be true, but



it is a measure not only of access to housing quality, but a measure of



the more fundamental issue—housing  availability.   Historical economic




 I/  Social  Indicators—1974.
                                  B-170

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and social repression, voluntary and involutary segregation, ignorance of

legal access, an actual discriminatory denial of legal access—all could

be considered reasons for the statistic, yet it is impossible to weigh

all these reasons or even be sure that they all contribute to the statistic.


    Attituclinal Data.  Again, we know of no existing attitudinal data that

is an appropriate measure of the subjective concern for this particular

column.  An example could be suggested, however, "Do you feel that you have

access to quality housing?"  It should be realized, however, that other

criteria are involved.  One may have legal  (or actual) access, but not

have financial access.

    (Note:  The only nearly appropriate attitudinal data obtained was
     from State of The Nation, Watts & Free, 1974, which showed that the
     degree of public concern about the provision  of adequate housing for
     the nation's population, particularly low-income families, received
     a composite score of '71'.  This composite score is a computational
     derivation used to keep State of the Nation data consistent, and it
     is explained in the appendix to that document.  The same source
     showed that this particular issue concern ranked as the 21st most
     important concern to the American people.)


B  Column-Ability to Influence

    Housing codes and building standards encourage the uniform and discourage

the unique.  Variances are granted on rare occasions and a citizen's ability

to influence the adoption or affect the change of  housing quality standards

are usually limited.  The subjective concern for Column B , then, is

"To what degree is the individual able to influence housing quality standards?"


    Existing Standards.  Many of the standards included in B  an(^ B  include
                   —                                        £      3
specific provisions for initiating standards changes, additions or amendments,

and in that respect represent "standards" to facilitate change or to allow

for individual influence.  In addition, existing political standards

designed to facilitate participatory democracy and citizen involvement
                                  B-171

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are many, and they represent an officially legislated means to register



dissent and to affect change in society.



    The specificity of  the  threshold level of "influence" and the method



of assessing when that  level is reached cannot be as easily described as



for the lower level issue concerns.  This is true because standards to



guarantee the ability to influence are typically open-ended means of



appeal such as "When  sufficient justification exists...", or "When there



is apparent breach of the law...", or "Whenever reasonable grounds exist



to petition.. . " .








    Objective Data.   The measures that a citizen can take to influence



housing quality  standards encompass the full range of political activism,



and several such measures can  be suggested, even though substantiating



data  is unavailable.  Examples include:








    » Numbers of applications  for variances



    • Class action suits challenging the applicability of building codes



       (e.g., Mendocino's owner-built homes)



    • Political  lobbies (construction industry, citizen groups, etc.)



    • Municipal  amendments  or  additions to regional or national codes



    • Letters, petitions, political pressure on private standards-setting



      groups.








    Attitudinal  Data.   Although we are unaware of appropriate attitudinal



data,  we can suggest a  survey  topic example:  "Do you feel that you have



adequate means to affect change in housing quality standards?"  "How do



you perceive the adequacy of standards intended to assure individual ability



to influence housing quality standards?"  In addition, attitudinal data



could  be used to reflect the degree to which changes in people's values



are affecting the rather rigid and inflexible housing standards.  The



emergent values associated with a new age lifestyle, for example, might
                                   B-172

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include an increased desire for older homes or for simpler cabin-type
dwellings or for experimental households based on energy self-sufficiency
and waste and materials recycling.  Attitudes about the "ability to influence'
in this type of nontraditional context would add significant depth to the
analysis of the issue.

HI Column-Higher Order/Threshold
    In the physical sector most easily identifiable subjective concerns
deal with basic level needs.  This is true because most aspects of the
physical sector, but especially housing, have been developed in response
to a physiological need.  Very few aspects of the physical sector have
been developed primarily to satisfy higher order needs relative to social
need, ego need, or self-actualization, although certain aspects of these
higher order needs are apparent in virtually every physical sector issue
concern.
    Continuing the example of housing quality, several high order subjective
concerns could be suggested.  For this analysis, a single ego need has
been chosen, the the concern could be stated, "Does quality housing
contribute to a resident's status, prestige or self-esteem?"

    Existing Standards.  Standards aimed at threshold level higher need
cannot really be legislated, although many existing standards do somehow
facilitate or allow for higher need fulfillment.  An example of this type
of  standard would be one of the many types of local controls that are
involved when a home owner wants  to add on to his  home.  Some type of
higher need fulfillment may be derived from a larger home,  even though
the standards do not  specifically aim at that goal.
     Objective Data.   Because  no  existing  standards  address  the  issue of
 H  concern,  it is  not possible to  note  objective  data  illustrative of
 the degree of standards  compliance or divergence.   The only accurate
                                  B-173

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 measure of higher order need fulfillment,  therefore,  is attitudinal data.






     Attitudinal Data.  An example of an attitudinal  survey topic question



    t would Toe appropriate to this issue c<



 "Do you feel proud of your housing unit?"






 H   Column -Higher Order/Security
that would be appropriate to this issue concern is noted  in Column H :
     The subjective concern for this second column could  be  stated  "To



 what degree can one feel secure about finding ego fulfillment  in quality



 housing?"







     Existing Standards.  Any housing standard that addresses any  issue other



 than basic physiological soundness or safety  could be considered a higher



 order standard.  These types of standards would  include  all types  of



 aesthetic design standards, and to a degree,  space planning standards and



 natural light availability.  Although a resident would not necessarily



 fulfill his ego needs by living in an environment in which higher  order



 quality standards exist, he would have access to a certain degree  of



 security that the means for his ego fulfillment  were provided  in those



 standards.   Specific examples of these types  of  standards would  include



 requirements for facilities for social interaction in a planned  community,



 or  legally-binding requirements to maintain a certain implicitly prestigious



 character of appearance of  house and yard in  a neighborhood or housing



 association.  These standards are noted in Column H .
                                                   2





    Objective Data.  The numbers  of  such communities as noted in the



standards in Column H   would  be one  way to objectively measure the concern.
                     &






    Attitudinal Data.  An example  of  an attitudinal survey topic question



that would be appropriate to  this  issue  concern  is noted in Column H —

                                                                    2
                                B-174

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"How adequate do you perceive existing housing quality standards to be in

terms of assuring access to ego fulfillment?"
H  Column-Higher Order/Equal Access
    Standards relating to higher need security are included in Column B  .
                                                                       £t

These  standards provide access to the fulfillment of higher needs relative


to housing quality, although the issue of equal access is not necessarily


addressed in each standard in an explicit manner.  As with the basic need,


B  equal access column, the regulatory applicability of each standard is
 O

sometimes implicit, sometimes explicit.  Therefore, the subjective


concern relative to equal access is 1(To what degree are people provided


equal  access to security about finding ego  fulfillment in quality housing?"


A more specific concern might be  Do existing standards ensure that a


variety of housing types are available to choose from?




    Existing Standards.  As in the B  column, items to be included in the
    - — ~~ *^^~" ^     ._.--_                 j

H  column would include virtually all of the standards listed in the
 3

previous column (B  , H ) .  The degree of applicability of these standards
                  2   <£

is either implicitly or explicitly stated,  and this applicability represents


the codified standards relative to equal access.  Examples of these standards


would  be seen in the residency requirements for these planned communities,


neighborhoods or housing associations, and  these residency "standards" would


in turn represent  the whole range of  evaluative criteria:  economic,  social,


personal, etc.




    Objective Data.  The most obvious objective measure of the existing


standards as noted would be the actual numbers of persons who actually


live  in planned communities, neighborhoods  or housing associations where


such  standards exist.  Caution should be taken, however, as  this  typo of


data may measure only what  is available, and not what is desired.
                                   B-175

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    Attitudinal Data.  Again, for a higher order concern, the attitudinal



component appears the best indication of the actual objective condition.


An example  of a survey topic  example appropriate to the H  concern would
                                                         *5

be:  "Are other people happier than you because they have special access


to quality  housing?"  Another example would be:  "Do you feel that you


have a  full range of choices  of living environments?"  The answers to these


questions would reveal people's perceived relation between prestige and


housing quality.
H  Column-Higher Order/Ability to Influence



     In this last column we  are concerned with the degree to which individuals


are  able  to affect  changes  in the way that housing quality regulations


facilitate the fulfillment  of higher order needs.  The subjective concern


might  well be:  "To  what degree can the individual's ability to influence


housing quality standards affect status, prestige, or self-esteem?"






     Existing Standards.  As already indicated, existing standards to assure


the  fulfillment of  higher order needs are far less common than are standards


to assure the fulfillment of basic needs.  This is especially true of


standards in the highest need Column H .  Certain standards do exist,


however,  that do facilitate H  need fulfillment, although most of these


standards  are primarily intended to provide fulfillment of other, lower-


level  needs.   Examples of such standards would include deed restrictions,


zoning, density restrictions, setbacks, etc.  In addition, the individual


can  achieve  a degree of ego fulfillment by participating in the already


existing mechanisms (B ) which allow him to affect change in housing


quality standards.


    Although  the BA standards in themselves do little to assure the fulfill-
                  4

ment of the H   concern, an  individual's participation in the process of


affecting change may encourage pride, self-esteem, or provide him with new
                                     B-176

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found status in the eyes of the community.  So, then,  an individual's



ability to influence housing quality standards can affect his status,



prestige or self-esteem, but this type of ego-fulfillment cannot necessarily



be assured through standardization.  For this reason,  Column H  contains



no specific standards.








    Objective Data.  The change in one's own ego perception can be measured



only through honest response to attitudinal inquiry.  Objective data



indicating ego fulfillment due to the H /ability to influence could be



suggested—more ostentatious purchase patterns, more selective choice of



peer group—but these conditions would be extremely hard to quantify,



and even harder to attribute directly to the (ego > fulfillment of the H




concern.
    Attitudinal Data.  A measure of H  fulfillment could be suggested in
    	                 4


the form of the attitudinal inquiry: "HOW has your participation in



changing quality standards influenced your self image?"  This sample survey



topic  is noted in Column H .
                                      B-177

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PHYSICAL SECTOR

ISSUE:  Food, Drugs  & Cosmetics
    Basic Seed/Threshold

Concern: Are available  food,
drug, and cosmetic  items  of
adequate quality?
Security
Concern: How secure do people
feel about the quality of
available food, drug, and
cosmetic items?
                             Equal  Access
                    Concern: To what portion of
                    the population are the
                    assurances of food, drug,
                    and cosmetic quality applic-
                    able!
    Ability to Influence

Concern:  To what  degree is
the individual  able to
influence quality  standards
for food, drug,  and cosmetic
items?
                                • Federal Meat  & Poultry
                                  Inspection Acts

                                  Acts establish  minimum
                                  quality and content  policies
                                  for federally inspected meat
                                  and poultry
                                  (B-2-F-G1-1-5-N-N)

                                « Regulations for Meat &
                                  Poultry Inspection (USDA)
                                  CFR, Title 9

                                  Detailed inspection  stand-
                                  ards in compliance with
                                  Meat & Poultry Inspection
                                  Acts

                                  (B-2-F-G1-3-1-Y-N)

                                • Federal Food,  Drue &
                                  Cosmetic Act

                                  Establishes container  fill
                                  and product content  identify
                                  &  labeling standards to avoid
                                  deceptive packaging, & assure
                                  quality,  safety

                                  (B-2-F-G1-3-1-Y-N)

                                • Food and  Drug  Administration
                                  Regulations -  1975
                                  Ordered that ingredients
                                 be  listed on all cosmetics,
                                  and warning labels appear
                                 on  feminine sprays in an
                                 effort to reduce consumer
                                 injuries

                                  (B-2-F-G1-3-1-Y-N)

                               •  Public Health  Service  Ac^

                                 Authorizes FDA to advise
                                 state and  local sanitation
                                 standards required to pre-
                                 vent Qifectious diseases
                                 in food products

                                 (B-2-F-G1-1-Y-N)
                                                      B-178

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PHYSICAL SECTOR

ISSUE:  Public Services

  Bl                                    B2                           B3                        B4
    Basle Need/Threshold       	Security	   	Equal Access	        Ability to Influence
Concern: Are available public  Concern: How secure do         Concern: To what portion of    Concern: To what degree is
services of adequate quality?  people feel about the quality  the population are the         the individual able to
                               of available public services?  assurances of quality public   influence quality standards
                                                              services available?             for public services?


                               • 42 U.S.C. 3251-3259
                                 Solid Waste Disposal Act
                                 Promotes waste management
                                 resource recovery so as
                                 to enhance the environment.

                                 (B-2-F-G1-1-5-N-N)

                               •  Palo Alto Municipal Code
                                  Title 5 Health & Sanita-
                                  tion
                                  Provides for refuse dis-
                                  posal to protect public
                                  health, safety, welfare 6c
                                  the environment.
                                  (B-2-L-G3-3-1SA-N-K)

                               + "How do you feel about: The
                                 services you get in this
                                 neighborhood—like garbage
                                 collection, street main-
                                 tenance, fire and police
                                 protection?" (May 1972)
                                 Institute for Social Research
                                 Delia.  Fleas.  Mos.Sat.

                                  7%      322     35%

                                 Mixed  Mos. Piss.  Unhap.
                                  13?      6Z        n

                                 Terr.
                                  «4
                               • Palo Alto Municipal Code
                                 Title 15 Fire Protection
                                 Establishes standards for
                                 protective administration
                                 & maintenance, and for fire
                                 alarms & facilities.
                                 (B-2-L-G34NG1-1&2&3-1&2-N-N)

                               • Uniform Fire Code
                                 International Conference of
                                 Building Officials
                                 Provides standards for fire
                                 safety of buildings &
                                 equipment.
                                 (B-2-L-NG1-1&2&3-1&3&6-N-N1
                                                      B-179.

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PHYSICAL SECTOR

ISSUE:  Public Services  (continued)
  B.                                    B                            B3                        B4
    Basle Seed/Threshold       	Security	   	Equal Access	       Ability to Influence

                               • Grading Schedule for
                                 Municipal Fire Protection
                                 Insurance Services Office

                                 Recommends standards for
                                 water supply, fire depart-
                                 ments, fire service eonnuni-
                                 cations, fire safety control
                                 & other deficiencies.

                                 (B-2-L-NG1-3-2-N-N)

                               • Palo Alto Municipal Code
                                 Title 12 Public Works &
                                 gtllities
                                 Establishes municipal stand-
                                 ards for the construction
                                 and maintenance of city
                                 public works & utilities
                                 (streets, sidewalks, under-
                                 ground utilities, etc.)
                                 (B-2-L-G3-1&2-1-N-N)
                                                        B-180

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 ratSICAL SECTOR

 ISSUE:   Recreation 6. Open Space
     Basic Need/Threshold

 Concern:  Are existing
recreational facilities
and open space lands of
adequate quality?
           Security
                                        Equal Access
Concern:  How secure do people  Concern:  To what portion of
feel about the quality of
existing recreational facil-
ities and open space land?
the population are the
assurances of quality
recreational facilities and
open space land applicable?
    Ability to Influence
Concern: To what degree  is
the individual able  to
influence quality  standards
for recreational facilities
and open space land?
 41 National Recreation and
   Park Association
   Bulletin No. 4

   Recommends picnic stan-
   dards of 10.5 tables per
   acre and 1 grill per 5.1
   tables with maximum use
   set at 220.1 picknickers
   per day per acre
   (B-1-L-G3-3-1-N-N)
 • National League of Cities.
   Dept.  of Urban Studies

   The American Society of
   Planning Officials.
   Accepts 10 acres of parks
   for each 1,000 population
   for cities having less than
   500,000 inhabitants, sug-
   gests  10 acres per 2,000
   for cities over 500,000,
   and 10 acres for cities
   over 1,000,000

 • Planning Facilities for
   Health Physical Education
   & Recreation Athletic
   Institute
   Recommends space planning
   standard of 100 acres or
   more of city parks per
   5,000  population
   (B-1-L-NG-1-3-3-N-N)
• Menlo Park Municipal Code
  Chapter 15, Section 16.170
  Recreation requirements
  for residential sub-divi-
  sions
  - Defines portion of open
    space acreage that must
    be Included in each
    residential subdivision,
    for public use

• Menlo Park^Municipal Code
  Chapter 15.02. Section
  .02.020
  Preservation of municipal
  character--The city adopts a
  policy to regulate and limit
  the density of population;
  encourage the most appro-
  priate use of land; to con-
  serve land and stabilize
  the value of property; to
  provide adequate open space
  for light, air and fire
  protection etc.

• The California Land Con-
  servation Act

  (The Williamson Act)

• Open Space and Conservation
  Element Menlo Park General
  Plan
  The city shall provide open
  space lands for a variety of
  recreation opportunities,
  make improvements, construct
  facilities, and maintain
  programs which encourage a
  maximum of resident partici-
  pation
  (B-2-L-G3-1-5-N-N)
  16 TJ.S.C. 460

  Federal Water Project
  Recreation Act
  Provides for the construe- •
  tion, maintenance and
  operation of outdoor
  recreation facilities when
  and if such a project would
  be consistent with the
  planned purpose of federal
  multipurpose water resources
  projects
                                                                    16 U.S.C.  460k to 460k-4
                                                                    Recreational  Use of
                                                                    Conservation  Areas Act
                                                                    Provides  for  the adminis-
                                                                    tration of fish and wild-
                                                                    life conservation areas
                                                                    for appropriate public
                                                                    recreation
   • Public Law 88-607
     Public Land Management
     Regulation

     Promotes use of public
     land for recreation along
     guidelines to protect the
     health, safety and com-
     fort of the public,  and
     to preserve the environment
     (E-3-F-G1-1-7-N-N)
  Open Space and Conservation
  Element Menlo Park General
  Flan
  The city shall provide open
  space lands for a variety of
  recreation opportunities,
  make improvements,  construct
  facilities, and maintain
  programs which encourage a
  maximum of resident partici-
  pation
  (B-3-L-G3-1-5-N-N)
* California with a population
  of 18,426,000, aggregate re-
  creation acreage (includes
  all Federal, state, and
  county recreation acreage)
  of 41,904,500 has 2,274,000
  public outdoor recreation
  acreage per 1,000 population;
  more acreage than the total
  of the West South Central
  States (Arkansas, Louisiana,
  Oklahoma, and Texas)(U.S.
  Dept. of the Interior) 8
                                                                B-181

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PHYSICAL SECTOR

ISSUE:  Recreation b Open Space  (continued)
    Basic Heed/Threshold
• Book of Recreation
  Resources
  Soil Conservation Service
  Rec
                                          Security
                                                                       Equal  Access
                                      88-29
  _...n_jends as an adequate
  apace standard, 2-4 boats
  per acre for fishing from
  trolling boats
  (B-1-L-C3-3-1-H-S)
                                 national Outdoor Recreation
                                 Plan
                                 Mandates a policy ta let
                                 forth the needs of the
                                 public for outdoor
                                 recreation

                                 (B-2-F-G1-1-7-S-N)

                               • P.L. 90 542
                                 Wild & Scenic Rivera Act
                                 Establishes guidelines to
                                 protect the outstanding
                                 recreational value of vild
                                 and scenic rivers

                                 (B-2-F-C1-I-7-N-H)
                                                                                                   Ability to Influence
                                                                + "Hov do you feel about:  The
                                                                  outdoor space there is for
                                                                  you to use outside your
                                                                  home?" (Hay 1972)(Institute
                                                                  for Social Research, Univer-
                                                                  sity of Michigan)
                                                                  Delia.  Pleat.  Mas. Sat.
                                                                   18%     371       241
                                                                  Mixed  Moi. Dls».  Onhap.

                                                                   81       SI        41
                                                                  terr.
                                                                   4X
+ "Hov do you feel about :
  Outdoor places you can
  go in your spare time?"

  Pellg.  Pleas.  Hos.Sat.
   171     34*      29*
  Mixed

    9*

  Terr.

    IX
  The sports or recrea-
  tion facilities you your-
  self use, or would like
  to use- -I ncan things
  like parks, bowling
  alleys, beaches?"  14
  chose not to answer
  this question)  (May
  1972) (Institute of
  Social Kesearcit, univer-
  sity of Michigan)
  Pelig.  Pleas.  Mos.Sat.

    91     321     331
  Mixed  Mos.Dlss.  Unhap.

   121      7S       41
                                                                                              •f ?How do  you feel  about:
                                                                                                Nearby places  you can
                                                                                                use  for  recreation or
                                                                                                sports?"
                                                                                                Your chances for relsxa-
                                                                                                t ion- -even for a short
                                                                                                time?"  Nov. 1972)
                                                                                                (Institute for Social
                                                                                                Research, University of
                                                                                                Michigan)
                                                                                                        Fleas.  Mps. Sat.

                                                                                                  61     33Z      42Z

                                                                                                Mixed  jfas.Dtss.   Unhap .

                                                                                                          6Z       2X
                                            B-182

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PHYSICAL SECTOR
ISSUE:  Commercial & Industrial Products
  B!
    Basle Seed/Threshold       	
Concern: Are commercial and
industrial products
sufficiently safe?
         B.
           Security
Concern: How secure to
people feel about the safety
of coomercial and industrial
products?
                                        Equal Access
Concern: To what portion of
the population are the
assurances of commercial
and industrial product
safety applicable?
    Ability to Influence
Concern: To what degree  is
the individual able to
influence commercial and
industrial product safety
standards?
• P.L. 91.601
  Poison Prevention Packag-
  ing Act.
  Provides for special
  packaging to protect
  children from serious
  personal injury or
  serious Illness resulting
  from handling, using or
  ingesting houshold
  substances
  (B-1-F-G1-2-1-Y-N)

• Sherman Antitrust Act
  Minimum retail prices
  sanctioned by federal
  government in 36 of the
  50  states.
  Minimum retail prices
  sanctioned by federal
  government in 36 states
  known  as "Fair trade
  lavs."
• Rational Bureau of Stand-
  ards, Technical Note 762
  Tabulation of Voluntary
  Standards and Certifica-
  tion Proerams for Con-
  sumer Products.
  Provides a listing of de-
  tailed standards references
  for 700 product areas, 1000
  standards titles covering
  products found in the home
  (B-1-F-NG1-1-1-N-N)

• P.L. 92-573 S 3419
  Consumer Product Safety
  Act
  Establishes the Consumer
  Product Safety Commission
  to protect consumers from
  unreasonable risk of injury
  from hazardous products by
  setting standards for per-
  formance, composition,
  design construction, finish
  or packaging, & for labels
  & instructions
• D.S.C. 1261-1274
  Federal Hazardous Substan-
  ces Act 15
  Establishes policy and pro-
  vides for the setting of
  standards & regulations
  declaring hazardous sub-
  stances, prohibited acts &
  penalties, etc. to protect
  consumers from unsafe
  products
  (B-2-F-G1-1-5-Y-Y)

• P.L 91-113. S1689            ,
  Amending the Federal Hazard-
  (IHLiBubstances Act to protect
  chwiren from toys and other
  articles which are hazardous
  due to the presence of
  electrical, mechanical or
  thermal hazards 4 for
  purposes
  (B-2-F-G1-1-5-Y-Y)
  The Price Reduction Act of
  197j (Pending Legislation)
  Abolishing federal anti-
  trust exemption for fair
  trade
* In ten states which hare
  abolished fair trade laws,
  rate of failure of small
  retail firms between 1933
  and 1968 was no larger than
  in 36 states where the laws
  have been retained. (Federal
  Trade Commission Report)

* Consumer Federation
  (publishers of Consumer
  Reports magazine) states
  that in fair trade states
  an item sells for one-
  fourth higher than in non-
  fair trade states3
» P.L. 92-573 S 3419
  Consumer Product Safety
  Act   /
  Establishes the Consumer
  Products Safety Commission
  to protect consumers from
  unreasonable risk of injury
  from hazardous products
  by setting standards for per-
  formance, composition,
  design construction, finish
  or packaging, & for labels
  & instructions
 • P.L. 92-573-S 3419
   Consumer Product Safety
   Act
   Provides regional offices
   and a toll-free telephone
   number whereby consumers
   can register product
   complaints or report
   product-related injuries
   (B-2-P-61-2-3-Y-Y)
   F.L-.  92-573  S  3419
   Consumer  Product_ ^afety
   Act

   Any interested person may
   petition  the Commission
   to begin  proceedings  to
   issue, amend,.or revoke
   a consumer product  safety
   rule

   (B-3-F-G1-2-2-Y-Y)
  (B-1-F-Gl-l-l-Y-t)
  (B-2-F-G1-1-1-Y-Y)
                                                           B-183

-------
PHYSICAL SECTOR
ISSUE:  G
              cial & Industrial Products  (continued)

                                        V
    Basic Need/Threshold

  Consumer Product Safety
  Commission

  List of banned Products.
  Regularly issued and up-
  dated list of hazardous
  consumer products that are
  banned from the marketplace
            Security
i  Refrigerator Safety Act
  Title 15.  U.S.C.
  Chapter 26

  Provides for the  regu-
  lation of  unsafe  refriger-
  ators by requiring that
  refrigerators for inter-
  state coranerce be manu-
  factured such that they can
  be opened  from the inside

  (B-1-F-G1-3-1-Y-N)
•  15 P.S.C.  1191

   The Flammable Fabrics Act

   Provides for the establish-
   ment of standards & regula-
   tions to protect the public
   against unreasonable risk
   of the occurrence of fire
   from flammable fabrics

   (B-2-F-G1-1-5-Y-N)
+Rov do you  feel about: The
goods and services you can
get when you buy in this
area—things like food,
appliances, clothes?  (May
1972)
Delig.  Pleas.  Mos. Sat.

  4%     261       40%
Mixed.  Mas.  Piss.  Dhhap.

 18%       81        21
Terr.
 2Z  1
                                        Equal Access
• Numbers of product com-
  plaints and injury reports
  received by the CPSC

• Numbers of petitions to
  the CPSC to investigate
  allegedly hazardous
  products
                                                                  Ability to Influence
                               • Federal Environmental Pesti-
                                 cide Control Act
                                 CFR Title 7

                                 Provides for and specifies
                                 regulations for the  use of
                                 pesticides
                                 (B-2-F-G1-2-3-X-N)

                               • Federal Trade Commission
                                 Regulation - 1972 Door-to-
                                 Door  Sales
                                 Gives consumers a three-
                                 day cooling off period in
                                 which to cancel,  without
                                 penalty or fee,  a purchase
                                 from  a  door-to-door  sales-
                                man.  The  rule  applies only
                                to consumer  goods and ser-
                                vices costing $25 or more.
                                                         B-184

-------
PHYSICAL SECTOR
 ISSUE;  Non-Residential  Buildings,  Structures
    Basic Need/Threshold
Concern: Are  existing non-
residential buildings and
structures of adequate
quality?
           Security
Concern: How secure do
people feel about the quality
of existing non-residential
buildings and structures?
                                        Equal Access
Concern: To what portion of
the population are the
assurances of quality non-
residential buildings and
structures applicable?
    Ability to Influence
Concern: To what  degree  is
the individual able  to
influence quality standards
for non-residential  buildings
and structures?
                                  Uniform Mechanical Code
                                  International Association
                                  of Plumbing & Mechanical
                                  Officials, and the Inter-
                                  national Conference of
                                        Officials
                                  Contains requirements for
                                  the installation heating,
                                  ventilation, cooling &
                                  refrigeration systems
                                  (B-2-L-NGI-1&3-1&3-Y-N)

                                  Uniform Building Code
                                  Standards
                                  International Conference of
                                  Building Officials

                                  Presents in a compact manner
                                  all of the national test,
                                  material & design standards
                                  referred to in the Uniform
                                  Building Code
                                  (B-2-L-NG1-3-1-Y-N)
                                  Uniform Building Code
                                  ICBO
                                  Covers the fire, life,  and
                                  structural safety aspects of
                                  all buildings and related
                                  structures
                                  (B-2-L-NG1-3-1-Y-N)

                                  Uniform Plumbing Code
                                  International Association of
                                  Plumbing and Mechanical
                                  Officials
                                  Provides standards for materi-
                                  als, design & construction of
                                  plumbing facilities

                                  (B-2-L-NG1-3-1-Y-N)
                                  Uniform Fire Code
                                  ICBO
                                  Establishes safety standards
                                  for the flamability of certain
                                  industrial plants, recreation-
                                  al facilities, storage  facili-
                                  ties, and places of assembly
                                  (B-2-L-NG1-3-1-Y-N)
                                  Guide for Space Plann: g &
                                  Layout
                                  General Services Administration

                                  Establishes space program plan-
                                  ning standards  (occupancy,
                                  interim space, etc.)  for all
                                  public buildings

                                  (B-2-F-G3-1&2-1&5-Y-N)
                                  P.L.  90-480
                                  Elimination of Architec-
                                  tural Barriers to the
                                  Handicapped
                                  Establishes standards for
                                  certain federally-financed
                                  buildings to assure access-
                                  ibility to the physically
                                  handicapped

                                  (B-3-F-G1-1-5&6-N-H)
                                      B-185

-------
PHYSICAL SECTOR
Non-Residential  Buildings, Structures (continued)
    Basic Need/Threshold
                                         B_
                                           Security
                                *  Minimum Requirements  of
                                   Construction & Equipment
                                   for Hospital & Medical
                                   Facilities   HEW

                                   HEW requirements  to con-
                                   form with Title VI of the
                                   Public Health Service Act
                                   ensuring properly planned
                                   and well constructed
                                   health care  facilities of
                                   all types.
                                   (B-2-F-G3-1&3-1S.3&5-N-N)

                                •  Palo Alto Municipal Code
                                   Title 16 Building Code

                                   Adds to and  amends the
                                   Uniform Building  Code,
                                   with detailed  standards
                                   for zoning,  density,  etc.

                                   (B-2-L-G3-3-1&3&5-Y-N)

                                •  Occupational Safety &
                                   Health  Act

                                   Establishes  legally en-
                                   forceable regulations to
                                   assure  safe  and healthful
                                  workis'*  conditions;
                                   detailed standards  are
                                   published in the  CFR.

                                   (B-2-V-G1-3-1-Y-N)

                                •  Administrative Services
                                   and Facilities for
                                   Hospitals—a Planning
                                   Guide  HEW

                                   Establishes  planning  guide-
                                   lines for the  design  & con-
                                   struction of hospital
                                   facilities.

                                   (B-2-F-G3-16.2-1&5-Y-N)
                                                                        Equal Access
                                                                                                  Ability  to  Influence
                                                          B-186

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                     PHYSICAL SECTOR-BIBLIOGRAPHY

Food and Drugs

Code of Federal Regulations, Title 9, Chapter III,  Subchapter A:
     Meat Inspection Regulations; Title 21, Parts 10 to 129,  Office of
     the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Service,
     General Services Administration, Washington, D.C. (1 April 1974).

Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, As Amended (August 1972).

Poultry Products Inspection Act.

Public Health Service Act.

U. S. Department of Agriculture, "Federal Food Standards,"  AMS-548,
     Agricultural Marketing Service  (April 1974).

            ,  "USDA Standards for Food and Farm Products," Agricultural
     Handbook No. 341, Agricultural Marketing Service  (April 1973).

             ,  "Meat  and Poultry  Inspection Manual," MPI-7, Meat and
     Poultry  Inspection Program, Animal and Plant Health Inspection
     Service  (September 1973).

            ,  "Meat  and Poultry  Inspection  Regulations," Meat and Poultry
     Inspection Program,  Animal  and  Plant Health Inspection Service
      (May 1973).

	,  "Standards for Meat  and Poultry Products—A Consumer
     Reference List "Meat and Poultry  Inspection Program, Animal and
     Plant Health  Inspection Service (1974).

The  Agricultural Marketing Act  of  1946.

The  Federal Meat Inspection Act.

Housing

 Gallup Poll, "Rating of Condition of House and  Property and  Attractiveness
      of Neighborhood" (November 1974).

 International Conference  of Building Officials,  Uniform Building Code (1973)

              , Uniform Building Code Standards.

              , Uniform Code for the Abatement of Dangerous Buildings.
                                  B-187

-------
               , Uniform Housing Code.

               , Uniform Mechanical Code,  International Association  of
       Plumbing and Mechanical Officials.

          	, Uniform Sign Code.
  Palo Alto Municipal Code.
       Title 18, Zoning
       Title 21, Subdivisions and Other Divisions of Land

  U. S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, "Land Planning
       Principles for Home Mortgage Insurance," No. 4140.1, Housing
       Production and Mortgage Credit - Federal Housing Administration
       (May 1973).

              , "Volume I - Minimum Property Standards for One and Two
       Family Dwellings," HUD 4900.1.

              , "Volume 2 - Mimimum Property Standards for Multifamily
       Housing," HUD 4910.1.
                "Volume 3 - Minimum Property Standards for Care-Type
       Housing," HUD 4920.1.

               , "Volume 4 - Manual of Acceptable Practices," HUD 4930.1,
       U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C. (1973).

  Public Services

  Insurance Services Office, "Grading Schedule for Municipal Fire Pro-
       tection," New York, New York 10038 (1974).

  International Conference of Building Officials, Uniform Fire Code,
       Western Fire Chiefs Association, Inc. (1973).

 Palo Alto Municipal Code.
      Title 5  - Health and Sanitation.
      Title 12 - Public Works and Utilities
      Title 13 - Improvement Procedure
      Title 15 - Fire Protection

 Solid Waste Disposal .Act, 42 U.S.C.  3251-3259.
Recreation and Open Space

Association of Bay Area Governments, "How to Implement Open Space Plans
     for the San Francisco Bay Area, Volume 1," a report prepared by  the
     Overview Corporation (June 1973).
                                    B-188

-------
City of Menlo Park, "Open Space and Conservation Element of the Menlo  Park
     General Plan," prepared by the Department of Community Development
     (June 1973).

Committee on Merchant Marine and Fisheries, U, S. House of Representatives,
     A Compilation of Federal Laws Relating to Conservation and Development
     of Our Nation's Fish and Wildlife Resources, Environmental Quality,
     and Ocean_o_gr_aphy_, committee print (January 1973).

Federal Water Project Recreation Act, 16 U.S.C. 460.

Menlo Park Municipal Code.
     Title 15, Design and Improvement Standards
     Title 16, Zoning

Palo Alto Municipal Code.
     Title 22, Parks

Recreational Use of Fish and Wildlife Areas, 16 U.S.C.  406k to 406 k-4.

U. S. Department of the Interior, "America Voices Its Recreation Con-
     cerns, 10 Public Forums on Nationwide Outdoor Recreation Planning,"
     Bureau of Outdoor Recreation (June - July 1972).

          , "Digest, Federal Outdoor Recreation Programs and Recreation-
     Related Environmental Programs," Bureau of Outdoor Recreation,
     Washington, D. C.  (1973).

          , "Outdoor Recreation:  A Legacy for America, A Summary of Outdoor
     Recreation  in America:   1972-1978, Office of Economic Analysis
     (December 1973).

    	, "Outdoor Recreation Space Standards" (March 1970).

          , "Selected Outdoor  Recreation Statistics, 1971."

           "The  Bureau  of Outdoor Recreation, Focal Point for Outdoor
     America,"  (0)-508-474, Washington, D. C. (1974).

Manufactured  Goods  and Products

Business Week,  p. 56  ff.  (18 May 1974).

Christian  Science Monitor.

Chuman, Sophie  J.,  "Tabulation of Voluntary Standards and Certification
     Programs for Consumer Products," National Bureau of Standards Tech-
     nical Note 762,  National Bureau of Standards, U. S. Department of
     Commerce (March  1973).

Conference Board Record,  p. 30 ff.  (April 1974).

Consumer Produce Safety Act ( P. L. 92-573 ), 15 U.S.C. 2051.
                                 B-189

-------
 "CPSC Sets Its Rules for Standards-Setting,"  Industry Week, p. 23  ff.
      (20 May 1974).

 "CPSC—What You Don't Know Can Hurt You,"  Industry Week, p. 38 ff.
      (29 October 1973).

 Executive Office of the President:   Office of Management and Budget,
      Social Indicators 1973,  U. S.  Government Printing Office,
      Washington, D.  C. (1973).

 Journal of Marketing, p. 68 ff. (October 1973).

 "Making America Safe for Consumers," Management Review, p. 9 ff.
      (August 1974).

 National Commission on Product Safety, Final Report, presented to  the
      President and Congress (June  1970).

 National Observer.

 "New CPSC Rules May Start Standards Writing 'Industry'," Industry Week,
      p. 19 ff. (21 January 1974).

 New York Times.

 "Product Safety—Remember This Number," Sales Management ( 18 March 1974).

 San Francisco Chronicle,

 The Child Protection and Toy  Safety Act of 1969 (P. L. 91-113), 15 U.S.C. 1262

 The Federal Hazardous Substances Act, 15 U.S.C. 1261.

 The Flamable Fabrics Act,  15  U.S.C.  1191.

 The Poison Prevention Packaging Act of 1970, 15 U.S.C. 1471.

 The  Refrigerator Safety Act of 1956,  15 U.S.C. 1211.

 U.  S. Consumer  Product Safety Commission, "Background Paper, Item 1:
     News Briefing -  Consumer Product Hazard Index" (28 September 1973).

	,  "Banned  Products,  Volume I, Part l" (1 October 1974).

	,  "Crib Safety," CPSC Publication No. 6305-74 (1974).
                                  B-190

-------
    	,  "Fact Sheets," Numbers 1 to 43.

    	,  First Annual Report,  Fiscal Year 1973 (November 1973).

    	,  "Gasoline is Made to  Explode," 0-535-599 (1974).

    	,  "Hazards of Flammable Liquids,"  0-551-933 (1974).

    	,  "National Electronic  Injury Surveillance System (NEISS),
     Fiscal Year 1974 Tabulation of Data from July 1,  1973 -  June  30,
     1974," Bureau of Epidemiology, National Injury Information
     Clearinghouse, Bethesda, Maryland.

    	, "Preventing Childhood  Poisonings," 0-527-801  (1973).

           , "Your Voice Counts," 0-536-933 (1974).
U. S. Department of Commerce, "List of Voluntary Product Standards,
     Commercial Standards, and Simplified Practice Recommendations,"
     National Bureau of Standards List of Publications 53 (Revised
     November 1973).

Wall jtreet Journal^

Watts, William and Free, Lloyd A., State of the Nation 1974,  Washington,
     D. C., Potomac Associates (1974).

Nonresidential Buildings and Structures

City of Palo Alto, "1974, A Report to the Citizens of Palo Alto".

General Services Administration, Guide for Space Planning and Layout,
     Public Buildings Service, Federal Stock Number 7610-145-0168.

International Conference of Buildings Officials, Uniform Building Code (1973)

	, Uniform Building Code Standards.

           , Uniform Code for the Abatement of Dangerous Buildings.

	, Uniform Housing Code.

           , Uniform Mechancial Code, International Association of
     Plumbing and Mechanical Officials.

             , Uniform Sign Code.
                                 B-101

-------
Palo Alto  Municipal  Code.
     Title 16, Building  Regulations.

U.  S.  Department of  Health,  Education and Welfare, A Summary of Selected
     Legislation Relating  to the Handicapped, 1972 (June 1973).

	,  "Administrative Services and Facilities for Hospitals,
     A Planning  Guide,"  Health Services and Mental Health Administration.

	, "Minimum Requirements of Construction and Equipment for
     Hospital  and Medical  Facilites," HEW Publication No. (HRA) 74-4000,
     Division  of Facilities  Utilization, Health Resources Administration,
     Public Health Service,  U. S. Government Printing Office, Washington,
     D. C. (1974).

	, "The Respiratory Care Service, Functional Programing Work-
      sheets,"  DHEW Publication No. (HRA) 74-4004, Division of Facilities
     Utilization, Health Resources Administration, Public Health Service.

	,  "The Surgical  Suite, Functional Programing Worksheets,"
     DHEW  Publication No.  (HSM) 73-4005, Health Care Facilites Service,
     Health Services and Mental Health Administration, U. S. Government
     Printing  Office,  Washington, D. C.  (February 1973).

U.  S.  Department of  Labor, "All About OSHA," OSHA 2056, Occupational
     Safety and  Health Administration.

	, "Questions  and  Answers to Part 1910, the OSHA General
      Industry  Standards,  Office of Standards, Occupational Safety
      and Health Administration (1973).

	, "Setting New Standards for Job Safety and Health,"
      OSHA  2027, Occupational Safety and Health Administration, U. S.
      Government Printing Office 926-325.

General

American Society for Testing and Materials, 1973 Annual Book of ASTM
      Standards, Part 33, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
                                          "T
Andrews, Frank B. and Withey, Stephen B.,  Developing Measures of Perceived
     Life Quality; Results from Several National Surveys," Social Indicators
     Research, I  (1974).
                                 B-192

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Code of Federal Regulations (1 July 1973).

Executive Office of the President:  Office of Management and Budget,
     Social Indicators, 1973, U. S. Government Printing Office,  Washington,
     D. C. (1973).

General Services Administration, "index of Federal Specifications and
     Standards, January 1, 1974," FPMR 101-29.1 (41 CFR 101.29.1),
     Federal Supply Service.

U. S. Department of Labor, "Employment and Earnings" (May 1974).

	, "Employment Standards Administration Pocket Packet."

          , "Major Programs 1973," Bureau of Labor Statistics.
          , "Manpower Report to the President" (April 1974).

          , "Sixty-First Annual Report, Fiscal Year 1973."
U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Current Laws, Statues and
     Executive Orders"  (January 1972).

  	,  "index of EPA Legal Authority, Statutes and Legislative His-
      tory, Executive Orders, Regulations."
     	,  "Legal Compilation, Statues and Legislative History, Execu-
      tive Orders, Regulations, Guidelines and Reports" (January 1973).

          ,  "The Challenge of  the Environment:  A Primer on EPA's Statu-
      tory Authority  "  (December 1972).
                                B-193

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                                 TECHNICAL REPORT DATA
                          (Please read Instructions on the reverse before completing)
1. REPORT NO.
    EPA-600/5-75-012
                                                        3. RECIPIENT'S ACCESSION NO.
4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE
    MINIMUM STANDARDS FOR QUALITY OF LIFE
                                                        5. REPORT DATE
                                                             May 1975
                                                        6. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION CODE
7, AUTHOR(S)
    O.W.  Markley & Marilyn D. Bagley
                                                        8. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION REPORT NO.
9. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME AND ADDRESS


    Stanford  Research Institute
    Menlo Park,  California
         10. PROGRAM ELEMENT NO.

               1HA098      	
         11. CONTRACT/GRANT NO.

            R-803056-01-0
12. SPONSORING AGENCY NAME AND ADDRESS
    Environmental Protection Agency
    WERC
    CM-2,  Rm.  1026,  Wash.,  D.C.  20460
                                                        13. TYPE OF REPORT AND PERIOD COVERED
          14. SPONSORING AGENCY CODE

                EPA-ORD
15. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES
16-ABSTRACTThis study"addresses  a number  of  issues of concern under various sectors of
man's environment.  For each  issue three  types of available information are compiled:
(l)public laws and  other  less formal  understandings that set minium standards, ^obj-
ective data that reflect  how well those  standards are being met, and(3)subjective data
that reflect how people feel about that  aspect of the quality of their life.
Man's needs are grouped into two major areas—(1) basic needs, including minimal life
conditions necessary to meet physiological  and security needs, and (2)higher needs, to
include social needs,  ego needs, and  a needfor self-fulfillment. Standards are being
categorized under each major need area,  according to four levels of concern, arranged
in a heirarchical order:  First,  the existing welfare concern—a statement of the
threshold level; second,  security—standards insuring the welfare for all persons; and
finally, ability to influence—standards that allow individuals to influence threshold
levels and their own access  to  welfare.In addition to identifying the range of minimal
standards that have been  'edified, this  study will: (1)assess the various ways in which
these standards apply to  re'al conditions(e.g.,social indicators and additudinal data),
(2)  identify 'gaps' and inconsistencies  in  existing standards that need to be remedied,
and  (3) analyze the policy implications  and effectiveness of using this approach as a
way  to describe and improve  quality of life in the United States.
17.
                              KEY WORDS AND DOCUMENT ANALYSIS
                 DESCRIPTORS
                                            b.IDENTIFIERS/OPEN ENDED TERMS
                      c.  COS AT I Field/Group
Analytical  Techniques;  Data  Gatherin
Quality of  Life;  Legislation;
Surrey; Matrix Analysis; Norms
Quality  of Life;
Data Collection
Analytical Techniqi
Matrix Analysis
Minium Standards &
Legislation
                                                                     es;
13. DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT
                                            19. SECURITY CLASS (This Report)
                                                                     21. NO. OF PAGES
                                            20. SECURITY CLASS (This page)
                                                                     22. PRICE
EPA Form 222O-1 (9-73)

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                                                         INSTRUCTIONS
     1.   REPORT NUMBER
          Insert the EPA report number as it appears on the cover of the publication.
     2.   LEAVE BLANK
     3.   RECIPIENTS ACCESSION NUMBER
          Reserved for use by each report recipient.
     4.   TITLE AND SUBTITLE
          Title should indicate clearly and briefly the subject coverage of the report, and be displayed prominently. Set subtitle, if used, in smaller
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     6.   REPORT DATE
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          approval, date of preparation, etc.).
     6.   PERFORMING ORGANIZATION CODE
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     7.   AUTHOR(S)
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          zation.
     8.   PERFORMING ORGANIZATION REPORT NUMBER
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          Give name, street, city, state, and ZIP code.  List no more than two levels of an organizational hirearchy.
     10.  PROGRAM ELEMENT NUMBER
          Use the program element number under which the report was prepared. Subordinate numbers may be included in parentheses.
     11.  CONTRACT/GRANT NUMBER
          Insert contract or grant number under which report was prepared.
     12. SPONSORING AGENCY NAME AND ADDRESS
          Include ZIP code.
     13. TYPE OF REPORT AND PERIOD COVERED
          Indicate interim final, etc., and if applicable, dates covered.
     14. SPONSORING AGENCY CODE
          Leave blank.
     15. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES
         Enter information not included elsewhere but useful, such as:  Prepared in cooperation with, Translation of, Presented at conference of,
         To be published in, Supersedes, Supplements, etc.
     16. ABSTRACT
         Include a brief (200 words or less) factual summary of the most significant information contained in the report.  If the report contains a
         significant bibliography or literature survey, mention it here.
     17. KEY WORDS AND DOCUMENT ANALYSIS
         (a) DESCRIPTORS - Select from the Thesaurus of Engineering and Scientific Terms the proper authorized terms that identify the major
         concept of the research and are sufficiently specific and precise to be used as index entries for cataloging.
         (b) IDENTIFIERS AND OPEN-ENDED TERMS - Use identifiers for project names, code names, equipment designators, etc. Use open-
         ended terms written in descriptor form for those subjects for which no descriptor exists.
         (c) COSATI FIELD GROUP - Field and group assignments are to be taken from the 1965 COSATI Subject Category List. Since the ma-
         jority of documents are multidisciplinary in nature, the Primary Field/Group assignment(s) will be specific discipline, area of human
         endeavor, or type of physical object.  The application(s) will be cross-referenced with secondary  Field/Group assignments that will follow
         the primary posting(s).
    18.  DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT
         Denote releasability to the public or limitation for reasons other than security for example "Release Unlimited." Cite any availability to
         the public, with address and price.
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         DO NOT submit classified reports to the National Technical Information service.
    21.  NUMBER OF PAGES
         Insert the total number of pages, including this one and unnumbered pages, but exclude distribution list, if any.
    22.  PRICE
         Insert the price set by the National Technical Information Service or the Government Printing Office, if known.
EPA Form 2220-1 (9-73) (Reverse)                                               *U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE:1975 631-577/904  1-3

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