New Directions
On December 18, 1967, the Advisory Board of Catholic Social Services appointed Mr. Raymond J. Micco to succeed Sr. Marie Baptiste as the Agency's supervisor. A major consideration affecting the Agency at this time was its location within St. Joseph's Home for Children. During the summer of 1968 and continuing for the next two years, the Advisory Board devoted a major portion of its effort to discussions of how best to use St. Joseph's Home. With costs rising from $2.50 per day per child in the mid 60's to $13.63 in 1969, it was clear that something had to be done. In 1969, an independent evaluation by the United Fund indicated the Home was superfluous in Erie County. On November 1, 1970, when the Home was officially closed, Catholic Social Services moved to its present location at 329 West 10th Street.
The Agency continued to expand its formal programs. Although international adoptions had occurred since 1958 (primarily from Ireland, Italy and Germany but also some from China, Newfoundland and Lebanon), in February 1960, the Board approved a program to begin finding homes for Asian children. In addition, the Agency had also approved its first single parent adoption.
In addition, 1973 saw the beginning of the Agency's Emergency Pregnancy Service. This service was the result of a request by Bishop Watson who asked the Agency to respond in a positive manner to the United States Supreme Court's decision on abortion. Between 1973 and 1988, over 8,000 people used the service.
In 1968, Catholic Social Services had hired Sr. Teresa Marie Bohren, ACSW, and in April 1973, the Advisory Board had made her Supervisor. By 1979 when the Agency's finances seemed critical, Sr. Teresa Marie was named Director.
The financial problems of the 70's and 80's did not deter the Agency from finding new ways to serve its mission. Between 1975 and 1976, over 163 Vietnamese orphans were placed or served in some manner. And over 300 Southeast Asian refugees were assisted by Catholic Social Services. By 1980, Catholic Social Services was one of eleven groups contractually related to the U.S. Catholic Conference's Refugee Resettlement Program aiding refugees from Cuba and Southeast Asia.
Today
CCCAS has main offices in Erie and Dubois, with several more contributing offices throughout the Erie Catholic Diocese (13 counties). The majority of our funding comes from program fees/reimbursements, financial support from the Erie Diocese, agencies such as United Way, as well as resources from generous grants, gifts, and donations.
The future for CCCAS remains positive. We continually strive to provide our communities with the services that are needed in a caring and compassionate manner that befits our Catholic beliefs. To paraphrase Cardinal Hickey, “We don’t serve people because THEY are Catholic, we do it because WE are”.