Collections : [New York State Modern Political Archive]
New York State Modern Political Archive
Elected officials, interest groups, and activists from New York State.
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Start Over You searched for: Collecting Area New York State Modern Political Archive Remove constraint Collecting Area: New York State Modern Political Archive Date range 1980 to 1984 Remove constraint Date range: <span class="from" data-blrl-begin="1980">1980</span> to <span class="to" data-blrl-end="1984">1984</span>Search Results
Citizen Action of New York Records, 1983-2008 11.1 cubic ft.
Administrative Files, 1984-2000 1.0 cubic ft.
This series contains minutes and correspondence of the Albany Central Federation of Labor as well as annual reports, constitutions, and by-laws from the Albany, New York State, and national AFL-CIO. Memorandum and financial statements are also included.
Albany Central Federation of Labor Records, 1965-2000 3.8 cubic ft.
Administrative Files, 1991-2002, Undated 0.33 cubic ft.
This series consists of meeting minutes, agendas and notes as well as publications, articles, news clippings, and memoranda all directly pertaining to the operation of the Saratoga Springs Open Space Project (OSP). The publications include issues of Common Ground, the OSP newsletter, from 1992-1997, with scattered issues thereafter until 2001. Also included are meeting minutes and agendas from 1993-1999.
Saratoga Springs Open Space Project Records, 1970-2003 10.68 cubic ft.
Administrative Files [RESTRICTED], 1975-1980 13.6 cubic ft.
The series consists of by-laws, correspondence, meeting materials, budget data, resumes, staff reports, vouchers and other expense information, executive director records, and other operational records of the Willowbrook Review Panel. There is also information about consultants to the WRP, and about other developmental centers. Correspondence issued by the WRP, meeting packets, and mailings constitute the largest sections of the series. The series is restricted because it contains information about specific named residents of Willowbrook and other state developmental centers, particularly in the folders marked "Mailings". The materials are arranged alphabetically in both letter-size and legal-size format.
Willowbrook Review Panel Records, 1968-1981, bulk 1975-1981 112.25 cubic ft.
Administrative Papers, 1967-1998, Undated 2.0 cubic ft.
Though this series has meeting minutes from the main executive committee of the CWA, they are very sporadic; only one or two sets of minutes exist for some years. There is a much stronger selection of meeting minutes from the local's own executive committee. There are also financial papers featuring a long run of reports and statements from the local's certified accountants. Constitutions in this series contain information on the process of the union's affiliation with CWA beginning in the mid-1980s.
Communications Workers of America Operators Division Local 1104 Records, 1949-2001, bulk 1980-1995 26.0 cubic ft.
Administrative Records, 1971-2000 1.17 cubic ft.
This series consists of materials relating directly to the operations of the Environmental Clearinghouse, Inc. There is one folder of correspondence covering 1971, but most of the series dates from 1972-1997. The records of the Board of Directors, Executive Committees and activities and programs committees are to be found here, as are some of their lists of participating members. Other items found in the series include financial reports, by-laws, fundraising materials, general correspondence, membership lists and materials, annual reports, program committee reports, program coordinator reports, director's reports, projects reports, annual meetings material, and records on all-member meetings.
Administrative Records, 1975-1997 1.74 cubic ft.
These records, located within the following sub-series, document the administrative functions of the organization. They include extensive information on grants, budgets, and other fiscal information. In addition, they contain some information about personnel within the organization. Folders containing correspondence will be found throughout the series.
New York Statewide Senior Action Council Records, 1974-2001 14.05 cubic ft.
Fundraising, 1983-1996 0.50 cubic ft.
These records document the general fundraising activities of NYSSAC. Consisting primarily of grant applications and related documents for funding of general expenses, they also include information on projects that were not funded and therefore did not generate any further records. Fiscal statistics, articles on NYSSAC activity and correspondence pertaining to fundraising are also found here. Specific projects' fundraising activities are documented in the sub-series relating to them. Prominent grantors include Chemical Bank, New York Foundation, and the Campaign for Human Development Foundation.
Administrative Records, 1977-2019, Undated 1.4 cubic ft.
This series contains files from the tenure of the Society's former presidents Marsha Wineburgh (1980-1981, 2012-2015), Hillel Bodek (2004-2007), and David Phillips (1992-1993); meeting minutes from the New York State Board for Social Work; documents concerning the incorporation of the society and its bylaws; and materials from the New York Board of Regents Professional Practice Committee.
Administrative Records, Undated 1.3 cubic ft.
The text Action Impact: A Manual For Family Planning Advocates published in 1988 by the organization details the manner in which family planning field operators could make legislative and organizational recommendations. The origins of the organization are outlined with a brief history called "Family Planning Advocates of New York State, Inc...How It All Began". The policy folders trace the issues of contraception, teenage pregnancy, parental consent for abortion, infant mortality rates, preventative care, and sex education. These issues were reported by the media and researched by local and federal government departments. The issues contained in the files ultimately were adopted as Family Planning Advocates' policies as recommendations to reproductive organizations and to legislators for state and federal guidelines and laws. Information on legislative activity is found in update sheets and as agenda brochures outlining the schedule and speakers used at issues conferences. This material document how the state legislature was enacting laws and debating issues in conference that would impact the organization's monies and policies. The personnel policies dating from 1979 appear to be the typewritten original document of "Personnel Policies and Practices for Salaried Employees", outlining the employment practices of the organization as it affected the staff. Also in the Administrative series are the minutes of meetings. The minutes are not of the general membership, but of the Executive Committee mostly, interspersed with the minutes of the annual Board meeting. Any documents that were used for focus in the meetings by either the Executive Committee or the Board of Directors are included and affixed to the minutes of the meeting when they were used. There are two alphabetical arrangements of the records in this series - those transferred in 1990 and those transferred in 2004 and 2006. Administrative records including Board and Executive Committee meeting minutes and other materials, particularly from the late 1980s-2000, can be found in the Correspondence series as those documents were mailed to the relevant constituencies.
Affordable Housing Partnership and Capitol Affordable Housing Funding Corporation Records, 1983-2001 1.7 cubic ft.
Subject Files, 1983-2001 0.6 cubic ft.
This series contains an alphabetized group of folders that concern several important aspects of the daily activities of the AHP and CAHFC. The Bank Protest subject file contains documents concerning the UTA's and AHP's bank protests that spanned from 1986 to1995. These include the testimonies of witnesses from housing institutions and applicants turned down for loans and the financial institutions' answers to these testimonies; letters calling for the support of revisions to the Community Reinvestment Act; and the legislation surrounding the regulation of financial institutions' loan practices. This series also includes the background information that was used to prove the allegations that these financial institutions' loan practices were prejudicial. This evidence includes reports and maps showing the demographics of those who successfully received loans from Albany County banks.