THE MICHIGAN CITIZEN APRIL 26 - AY 2, 1987 3 With a little love, a lot can happen ancy, 11, and Joshua, 10, sister and brother were abu d when they were toddlers. For veral years they were shuffled among relatives and foster homes and longed for affection and permanence in their lives. Today, they are happy, enthu '- tic children who share a thir t for the history inherent in downtown Philadelphia. ancy, thought to be mildly mentally retarded, now attends regular c1 s in her elemen­ tary hool and is doing well ... ene, musically talented 13-ye -old comes from orth Carolina. She a thought to h ve learning disabilit ies hich ere 'responsible for her poor gr de and 0 progre in hool. ow she proudly di pl ys a report card with practically all B's ... Qwynton, a 23-month-old toddler from Florida, wa born to a young, immature mother who w not able to take care of him. Hi younger ister, an infant, created additional pro­ blem for her mother who wa overwhelmed at the thought of being respon ible for two young children. ancy, Joshua, Rene, Qwyn­ ton and hi sister, Tiffani, are luc y ... they have been dopt­ ed by families who are giving them what they need most . '. . a permanent home ith love and st bility to help them gro up into productive, ful­ filling adulthood. But there re more than 35,00 children throughout the United St tes who are still WITII A LOT OF WVE - QwyntoD (second from ri ht) and Tiffani (in highchair) are happy in the' De doptive home with the Armstead family. P' tured wi h the children their parents, J cqueline nd John Ann d nd the' . er, Kaneene. waiting for familie of their own. They are not the healthy infants traditionally associated with adoption. Rather, they are children with physical, emo­ ti nal, and mental disabilities or brothers and sisters who need a home together. any are older; approximately 13,000 . are Black. Consider Carlo , age 9 who is still waiting for a family of his own. Born with cerebral palsy, Carlos is. considered a child with "special needs." He receives physical therapy and is now able to get about with or without the help of his crutch­ es. Despite his disabilities, Carlos' friendly and talkative manner makes one forget about his problems. Fourteen-year-old Patricia is waiting too. A frightened and confused teenager, she attends weekly counselling sessions for emotional problems. While she is functioning in the slow range intellectually, it is felt that her potential is higher ... if she has the proper stimula­ tion. Rodney, 10,Tracy, 12, and Derrick, 13, dream about their tomorrows. But what these siblings think about most is o position mounts against Reagane orts 0, ASH GTO A) The Minority Bu sine s Enter­ pri Legal Defen nd Edu­ cation Fund, Inc. of Washing­ cation Fund, Inc. of Washing­ ton, D.C. announced a major resolution urging Congress to defeat Pre 'dent Reagan's 1988 bud et proposal transferring the inority Busine Development gency to the Small Business dmini tration. Parren J. it chell , the Fund' founder and chairman, id the Reagan Administra­ tion' transfer proposal ill have a negative affect that will prove deva ating to the minority business community and the economic progre of thi nation." itchell a former Congre • man and Chairman of the Hou Small Business commit- tee, the special resolution urge Congre to defeat the transfer proposal and to pass I i ati n trengthening BDA, whi i pre ntly located with­ in the U.S. Department of Commerce. itchell said the fact that BD i located within a C binet-level federal department uch the Commerce Depart- ment i critical to the continued federal effort to assist the creation and expansion of heal­ thy minority busine s. The Reagan Admini ration's specific proposal i to transfer MBDA from the Commerce Department to SBA effective October 1, 1987. An estimated 140 of MBDA's 240 employee would be transferred, along with the agency's largest program - the inority Busine Develop­ ment Centers Program. The remaining 100 employee will probably 10 their job ,Mitchell said. "The nation can ill-afford to 10 the momentum which has been established the past two dec des to expand economic markets for minority busine participation," Mitchell id. " illions of American today lead productive lives as employ­ ee of minority-owned firms," he noted. " eighborhood urban and rural communitie, once blighted by poverty and high unemployment, are now being rejuvenated because of the emergence of cce sful minority-o ned busine il- lions of dollars in t revenues have been gener- ated by minority firm - dollar th t might otherwi have been lost to the nation - had tho firms not existed. ." ow is certainly not the time in our history to turn back the cloc on federal effort to develop minority businesses that enhance our nation's industrial productivity and overall economic growth," Mitchell said. "It is imperative that Congress enact legislation granting BDA statutory. authority to strengthen the agency's minority business de­ velopment program." Such legislation would give MBDA stronger operating authority, far greater authority than the cur­ rent presidential Executive Orders 11458 and 11625 which authorize the agency's opera­ tions. having a permanent famil. Derric is a little behind academically, but hi biggest problem is a lack of motivation. Tracyis just beginning to blos- m into a young woman and is interested in fashion and cosmetics. Rodney yearn to be a policeman. In the past 14 years the ational Adoption I Center has found families for more than 3000 children. But its wor is only beginning and the Center is committed to the belief that "there are .no unwanted chil­ dren,ju t unfound parents." The Philadelphia-based organization maintains a nat­ ional computerized registry on which are li ted children waiting for families and farnilie appr v­ ed by licensed adoption agencies to adopt. In thi ay, a child from e VOT. f r instance, can be ' matched' ith a family from Minneapolis. For children for wh m no 'match­ es" can be made, extensive recruitment - both generi and for specific children - is con­ ducted. The registry i funded partly through a grant from the .S. Department of Health and Human Services and is the only such national re urce. Families interested in addit­ ional information may contact the ational Adoption Center 1218 Che tnut Street, Philadel­ phia, P A 19107 or phone 1- oo­ TO-ADOPT. BDA has a sisted min rity firms to receive 100 billion in finan ing $50 billion in government procurements 0 billion in tate and 10 al govern­ ment procurements, and $60 billion in purchases from m [or U.S. corporations since the agency was established 18 years ago. AACP ta es stand for minority business administration BALTIMORE - The AACP, in a resolution pa d by its Board of Director on February 21, 1987, expressed opposition to a proposal by President Reagan to transfer the Minority Business Development Agency (MBDA) from the U.S. De­ partment of Commerce to the Small Busine Administration with a reduction in both staff positions and funding. The resolution noted that over a period of 18 years, the BDA ha isted in the creation of over 300,000 of the 600,000 minority owned firms in existence, a si ted minority owned firms in obtaining $ 10 billion in financing, $50 bil­ lion in U.S. Government pro­ curements, and $60 billion in purch s from major U .. cor­ porations and created millions of jobs. The resolution said that the "current situation in SBA is not conducive to positive con­ tinuing operation of minority busine s focu d programming" and the a ency it If is the target of attempted elimin­ tion." The proposed transfer according to the AACP 'signals the abandonment of a rious program leading to economic empowerment of the minority communities through minority business development and the inclusion of the minor­ ity business community in the mainstream of the dome tic and international marketpla es of this nation." Support wa al given to "an immediate con re . nal initiative to pa legi ation imi­ lar to that introduced by former Con ressman Panen J. it chell e ablishing the in rity Busi­ ne Development dmini tra­ tion, headed by an Assistant -Secret ry of Commerce.