a special report the Sundoy daily by John Espenshade and Lewis Hlays " .9 Night Editor: Robert Kraftowitz Sunday, January 17, 1971 ixon's Conference on Children: A study in cA haos By JOHN ESPENSHADE ONCE A DECADE, since 1909, the Pre- sident of the United States has convened a national conference to assess and make recommendations on the needs of children. Obliging this tradition, Richard Nix- on opened the seventh such confer- ence last December 13. To Washington came somer .E .I d oe Q 0larcred with the task of blueprinting federal legislative policy affecting the lives of children in the Seventies. Stephen Hess, appointed by Nixon as chairman of the conference, had asked for action proposals, concrete recommendations designed for implementation, and the delegates seemed eager for the chal- lenge.-' As planned, the delegates were split up into 25 forums dealing with various aspects of child development including health, learning, parents and famil- ies, communities and environments, and rights and responsibilities. Work- ing papers with specific recommenda- tions included had been prepared in advance of the conference, and were to be . the focal points for small work- shop discussions and debates. The ideas surfacing in the discussion would be in- corporated into final proposals. FROM THE outset, however, organiza- tional difficulties and factional The dissidents, still unsatisfied, charged the administration with cal- culated aversion to a plenary session, for fear it would result in nationally broadcast criticism of Nixon's domestic and foreign policies. A call for a col- lective session went out, in order that an entire group of delegates c o u 1 d focus on the, reordering of Federal priorities and the reallocation of re- sources to meet the needs of Amer- ica. THE PLENARY session finally t o o k place - without the blessing of the White House staff and the rump ses- sion was attended by clearly more than half of the delegates. Those delegates passed resolutions urging total immediate withdrawal of U.S. forces from Indochina, condemn- ing Nixon's lack of urgency in dealing with poverty and racism at home, and advocating a ban on funds for the SST project. Sweeping resolutions were also pass- ed calling for food, clothing, shelter and health and education services to be automatically provided by the gov- ernment to all of America's 55 mil- lion children under 14 years of age. Another sore point for delegates was their experience with the smaller work- shop sessions - some of which were the concern of the delegates that the finished papers they submitted would, like those of their predecessors, be pigeonholed. Too, it was suspected that in work- shops, recommendations should be realistic and feasible, i.e., palatable to the Nixon administration, in order to have some chance of implementation. (Stephen Hess had in fact suggest- ed at a strategy session held a year be- fore the conference that one of the reasons the 1960 Conference on Child- ren failed to see its recommendations become reality was because it came at the end of the Eisenhower era. He further suggested that since the Nixon government could endure for e i g h t years, it would increase the likelihood of implementing the 1970 recommenda- tions if they were palatable to the Nixon administration.) DESPITE THE constraints, pessimism and confusion of shuttling to and from the three Washington hotels in which the workshops were being held, the delegates conscientiously labored over many of the working papers to come up with viable proposals. Those who remained unhappy went sight- seeing, Christmas shopping, or j o b hunting. The recommendations contained in the final reports, to be published this spring, will probably not differ substan- tially from those in the working papers. The following major recommendations and overriding concerns of the dele- gates were selected during balloting at the close of the session as having top priority: -Comprehensive family-orient- ed child development programs, In- cluding health services, day care and early childhood education; -The development of programs to eliminate the racism which crip- ples all children; -Re-ordering of national priori- ties beginning with a guaranteed family income adequate for the needs of children; -A federally financed national child health care program w hi e h assures comprehensive care for all children; -A system of early identifica- tion of children with special needs and which delivers prompt and appropriate treatment; -Establishment of a child ad- vocacy agency financed by the Federal government and other sources with full ethnic, cultural, racial and sexual representation; -Re-design of education to ach- ieve individualized, humanized child- centered learning. -Establishment of a citizen-com- munity action group to implement the recommendations of the confer- ence. THESE RECOMMENDATIONS, as im- portant and urgent as they are, do not vary radically from those made by other presidentially convened bodies, notably the Joint Commission on Men- tal Health of Children and the 1969 White House conference on Nutrition and Hunger. And perhaps therein lies part of their convincing strength. To insure that the recommendations of the conference and the documenta- tion of their urgency are not passed over, one forum dealt specifically with strategies for bringing about the im- plementation of the proposals. In addi- tion, six regional meetings are to be held in Omaha next month as a follow up. THE SIGNIFICANCE of the 1970 White House Conference on Chil- dren will ultimately be decided on the basis of those proposals which become reality. In part, the follow-up process may well serve as a catalyst to facili- tate that process and the prestige of the conference should lend weight to the recommendations which emerged from it. Hopefully, amid charges of delegate manipulation and rigged conference procedures, the plight of the hungry, sick, or neglected child was not ob- scured; in addition to pinpointing goals for immediate action the confer- ence should have dramatized to the *1 -Daly-Torn(Gottlieb On holding a conference on children sans -Daily-Terry McCarthy "If nothing else, the conference should have dramatized to the nation the need for a total commitment to our children. 'It's time to put people into the lives of our children, and children into the lives of people,' said one delegate." By LEWIS HAYS THE STATED objectives of the White H o u s e Conference on Children (WHCC) were to "protect and benefit children today, and project what ac- tions will be necessary to improve the quality of life for children during the coming decade." For this purpose, delegates repre- senting a broad range of professions and backgrounds from across the Unit- ed States gathered in Washington, D.C., to discuss the current plight of the 55 million children in the United States below the age of 14 and suggest desperately needed improvements in our national policy concerning chil- dren - all in the notable absence of children. It was quickly discovered by many delegates and forum members that the conference was designed to be for children, about children, but not of children. Although 20 per cent of the delegates were under 24, very few had b e e n chosen who were under 18. This type of age segregation was decried by the noted social psychologist, Dr. Urie Bronfenbrenner, chairman of one of the conference forums, as "lying at the root of the growing alienation, apathy, and confusion among the younger gen- eration." Yet younger children were specific- ally not included. In fact, while former White House conferences had d e a 1 t with "Children and Youth" this one was divided into two sections. The con- ference on Youth, which will deal bas- ically with the 14-to 21-year-old range, and where more youthful delegates are likely to attend to speak their minds and embarrass the Nixon administra- tion, is now scheduled to be held in late March and April in distant Estes Park, Colorado, far from the sight of the Washington press corps. This change further substantiated the accusations of so many of the dele- gates that planners of the conference had deliberately excluded younger rep- resentatives to the WHCC. FOR TWO Ann Arbor youths, this ap- parent attempt by the conference staff to prevent younger people from marticinatinv in the WWCC Dresented and took a bus f r o m Ann Arbor to Washington. David and Liz immediately sought o u t those conference staff members who might be able to gain admittance for them into the conference and ex- plained their situation. Directed to a "volunteers" lounge, they were asked to wait, and run errands for the con- ference staff. They were promised that their predicament would be explored. More than six hours later, at 4 o,clock that afternoon, they were told t h e y shouldn't have come to the conference, and to "go home and come back to- morrow." The White House staff showed a to- tal lack of concern for the welfare of the two children - no questions were asked about lodging, transportation, or food for two youngsters 600 miles away from home. This was ironic in light of the standard excuse for not including younger delegates in the first place - "they might not be able to take care of themselves and might get hit by a bus or molested in Washington." THE NEXT DAY David and Liz again met only resistance to their at- tempts to be admitted to the confer- ence. This was to be the case through- out the remainder of the conference. All their attempts through official channels failed. By this time, however, many dele- gates had become aware of the plight of the two youths, and David and Liz were invited by two forum chairmen to attend their discussions and work- shops. They did this and found that children the delegates of the forums "listened to us" and treated the two as equals. Dave and Liz were not the only two children at the conference. One forum leader, after circumventing consider- able opposition from Chairman Hess and his staff, brought 30 youths be- tween the ages of 14-17 into his dis- cussions as "special consultants." That leader, Howard James, Pulitzer Prize-winning correspondent for t h e Christian Science Monitor, said he took it upon himself to include children be- cause they were, simply, necessary. James stressed that no o n e knows and better understands the plight of children better than children them- selves. At the end of the week, he call- ed the participation of the children "a major contributing factor to the suc- cess of our forum." EVEN IF THE 1970 White House con- ference on children has no imme- diate impact on our national policy to- ward children, it should have at least signaled to this country the increasing segregation and alienation of our chil- dren from the rest of our society. "It is time," one forum leader .said, "to bring the people back into the lives of children, and children back into the lives of people." It is indeed time to re-consider our handling of the nation's most valuable resource - its children - so that at the next White House Conference, no staff member will say, as one did to David and Liz, "I wouldn't want my children to be here." 4 4io splits tore the conference apart. More delegate frustrations than recommend- ations emerged from the 5-day session. The conference came under attack from a caucus of delegates represent- ing national organizations even before the official start of the conference. The dissatisfaction centered on the refusal of the White House staff to schedule a plenary session - as had occurred in the past- where overriding issues could be discussed before all delegates at one time. The dissenting groups, coordinated by the Day Care and Child Develop- ment Council, condemned the confer- ence leadership for its "refusal to in- vite active citizen participation a n d consultation in the planning and or- ganization of the conference" and call- ed on Hess to "assure the citizen's dele- gates . . . of an opportunity to express plagued by a feeling of skepticism and uselessness; delegates were seeming- ly arbitrarily assigned workshops and discussion sessions for which they had expressed no preference, and in which many felt they had little expertise. Hess explained that in order to get a multi-disciplinary mixture of dele- gates he randomly assigned some dele- gates to workshops not of their f i r s t choosing. But still, some assignments to for- ums came at a late date, leaving little time for study and preparation for those not already intimately familiar with the topic of their workshop. Some groups, in fact, did not receive the position papers on which their discus- sions were to be based until after the conference had begun. Tnis confusion was supplemented by A ~ t+ 1 '1 a ri tt M~i ....A'!Y1 3[ Y. ~rn ~ ,A