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Interagency Task Force on Indochina Refugees - Award For Julia Taft - February 18-26, 1976
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1554450
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Interagency Task Force on Indochina Refugees - Award For Julia Taft - February 18-26, 1976
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White House Special Files Unit Files
Issue Decision Papers for the President
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The original documents are located in Box 5, folder "Interagency Task Force on Indochina Refugees - Award for Julia Taft - February 18-26, 1976" of the White House Special Files Unit Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Copyright Notice The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Gerald Ford donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections. Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Digitized from Box 5 of the White House Special Files Unit Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library ITEM TRANSFER REFERENCE FORM The item described below has been removed. m New File Location: audiovisual collection Document Description: 8 X 10 b & W glossie 6f Julia Taft Old File Location: Special Files, Issue Papers for the President Interagency Task Force, Award for Julia Taft By PLC Date 4/13/84 NLFP - 11/4/77 I called Ted Marrs office to find out where original letter to President was he has it --- he received it by hand from HEW --- I told him that it should have come thru channels (nobody knew where it was). He will send to me --- I did not tell him about the approval -- as I do not think we can consider this final until it is staffed out to find if in fact Julia Taft can be given this award. Trudy Fry 2/25/76 HEALTH. EDUCATION OF THE MISSING AND THE SECRETARY OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE WASHINGTON, D.C. 20201 U.S.A. February 18, 1976 MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for the President's Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service Mrs. Julia Vadala Taft served from May 1975 through December 1975 as Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees. As a result of her outstanding abilities, this program has been concluded with the successful resettlement into American society of 130, 000 Indochina refugees. The demands of this Presidentially mandated mission and the challenging complexity of the resettlement process have been superbly managed and successfully resolved by this highly dedicated and talented young woman. The attached documentation outlines her specific accom- plishments. Accordingly, we respectfully request your favorable consideration of our nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for the President's Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service. A. Henry A. Kissinger David Mathews Secretary of State Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare Attachment Julia Vadala Taft A. BIOGRAPHICAL DATA 1. Date and Place of Birth July 27, 1942 New York, New York 2. Educational Background University of Colorado - B.A. 1964 Political Science (Cited for Superior Scholarship) University of Colorado - M.A. 1969 Political Science (International Politics) 3. Federal Employment Background Director, Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees May 1975 - December 1975 Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Development Department of Health, Education, and Welfare August 1973 - Present Deputy Director (Health) Cabinet Committee on Human Resources March 1973 - June 1973 Special Assistant to the Secretary for External Affairs Department of Health, Education, and Welfare September 1971 - September 1973 White House Fellow Office of the Vice President September 1970 - September 1971 4. Appointment Status Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Development Department of Health, Education, and Welfare Secretarial Appointment Non-career (Schedule C) GS-17 Julia Vadala Taft Page 2 B. PROPOSED CITATION For her exceptional performance as Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees. Mrs. Taft's leadership of the Indochina Refugee Resettlement Program has been an outstanding example of dedication to public service and sensitivity to human needs. Her ability to inspire cooperation and to motivate public and private institutions to initiate and successfully complete an important and complex humanitarian endeavor reflect the highest ideals of the United States. Julia Vadala Taft Page 3 C. NARRATIVE STATEMENT 1. Description of Accomplishment and Outstanding Achievement The emergency migration to the United States of over 140,000 Indochinese refugees in a period of only a few months is unprecedented in United States history. That the cultural and religious heritage of these refugees is substantially different from our own heritage added to the difficulty of absorbing these people. Furthermore, the political and economic climate in the United States at the time of their exodus from Southeast Asia dampened the enthusiasm with which these unfortunate refugees might otherwise have been welcomed by the American people. Without question, the United States has never in so short a period of time engaged in a refugee resettlement of such size and complexity as the Indochinese refugee resettlement program. As of December 20, 1975, all Indochinese refugees who were in U.S. reception centers had been resettled into American society. The remarkable success of this resettlement is due substantially to the perseverance, leadership, initiative and unremitting energy of Julia Vadala Taft. Mrs. Taft provided skillful oversight and policy direction in the organization of the reception centers and the effective and humane processing of the refugees through these centers. In numerous public appearances she reminded Americans of their own immigrant and refugee heritage and achieved significant public support for this program. Her accessibility to the press and her honest and forthright response to criticism in the media provided for this effort a degree of public credibility which is unusual for a Federal program. The effectiveness and success of the Indochina refugee resettlement program has been dependent upon the active participation of numerous public and private American institutions. Mrs. Taft's outstanding ability has been to successfully achieve the participation, cooperation and active interest of these institutions. Julia Vadala Taft Page 4 Throughout the entire resettlement process, Mrs. Taft's leadership, high standards, humanitarian concerns, and ability to inspire the cooperation of diverse public and private interests on behalf of this complex endeavor have been in the finest tradition of public service. The number and diversity of the organizations whose participation Mrs. Taft successfully obtained and effectively coordinated on behalf of this program is extraordinary - - the four United States military services, 12 Federal departments and agencies, 15 Voluntary resettle- ment agencies, State and local governments and agencies of the United Nations. In addition, there was daily contact with and frequent presentation of legislative and oversight testimony to the Congress of the United States. Mrs. Taft's ability to coordinate the diverse interests of these groups and to achieve harmony in working toward the specific goal of effective refugee resettlement has been exceptional. Her performance in achieving this cooperation has been equally remarkable since she has received the highest praise for her abilities from her colleagues within these organizations. This is high praise indeed, since the possibility of failing in such a multi-institutional endeavor has been historically greater than the possibility of succeeding. Mrs. Taft's leadership, persistence and ability to inspire cooperation among diverse organizations have, without question, been the catalytic force behind the success of this program. 2. Additional Details As Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees, Mrs. Taft has had the unique and substantial responsibility for coordinating the activities of 12 Federal departments and agencies and 15 Voluntary resettlement agencies, and for establishing policy and guidance on all aspects of the refugee resettlement program. Julia Vadala Taft Page 5 Some of her specific duties were: 1. Operational responsibility for staging areas at Guam and Wake Island and for the four refugee reception centers in the United States. These centers were located at Camp Pendleton, California; Fort Chaffee, Arkansas; Eglin Air Force Base, Florida; and Indiantown Gap Military Reservation, Pennsylvania. 2. The reception into these centers of over 140,000 Indochinese refugees. 3. The organization and coordination of health, social security, immigration status and security check procedures, as well as organizing education, acculturation and broad counselling programs. 4. Provision of testimony to the Congress which led to the enactment of "The Indochina Migration and Refugee Assistance Act of 1975" authorizing the refugee program. This act was signed by the President on May 24, 1975. 5. The negotiation of contracts with voluntary resettlement agencies. The work of these agencies has been critical in arranging sponsors and resettlement for the refugees. 6. Negotiations with interested State and local governments for special resettlement programs in their communities. 7. Organization of special programs with private American business organizations to provide jobs and housing for refugees. 8. The establishment of guidelines for the States which explain the nature of Federal government financial support in the fields of health and medical services, education, and welfare services. 9. The special attention and planning which was required for nearly 2,000 evacuees who preferred repatriation to their homeland. 10. The phase down and closure of the reception centers with transfer of on-going responsibilities to the Department of State and the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. Julia Vadala Taft Page 6 The principal tangible benefit of this program was the effective and humane resettlement into American society of the Indochina refugees. It is becoming increasingly apparent that they too will make substantial contributions to their communities and to the nation just as other refugee populations have. A further tangible benefit to the Government is the effectiveness with which the program was managed. Despite the chaotic conditions under which this program began, it has been concluded after only nine months. In addition, $25 million of unexpended appropriated funds have been earmarked for transfer to the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare to supplement the refugee social services activities which are now the responsibility of the HEW Refugee Task Force, and approximately $27 million will be available for further refugee operations or will be returned to the United States Treasury. The successful completion of a Federal program and the potential return of substantial appropriated monies to the Treasury is a rare, if not unparalled program conclusion in the recent annals of Federal program management. The most significant intangible benefit of this program is that it has shown that the institutions of the Federal Government do work; they work together creatively, they work in the public interest, and they work effectively with State governments and private institutions. If the effects of this program have served in part to modify the apprehension with which the American public has come to regard its public and private institutions in recent years, this is a significant intangible benefit indeed. Julia Vadala Taft Page 7 D. OTHER SIGNIFICANT AWARDS 1. Secretary's Special Citation - 1973 Department of Health, Education, and Welfare 2. Nominated by the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare for the 1976 Arthur S. Flemming Award for the Ten Outstanding Young Men and Women in the Federal Government HEALTH. THE SECRETARY OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE WASHINGTON, D.C. 20201 U.S.A. February 18, 1976 MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for the President's Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service Mrs. Julia Vadala Taft served from May 1975 through December 1975 as Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees. As a result of her outstanding abilities, this program has been concluded with the successful resettlement into American society of 130,000 Indochina refugees. The demands of this Presidentially mandated mission and the challenging complexity of the resettlement process have been superbly managed and successfully resolved by this highly dedicated and talented young woman. The attached documentation outlines her specific accom- plishments. Accordingly, we respectfully request your favorable consideration of our nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for the President's Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service. Henry A. Kissinger David Mathews Secretary of State Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare Attachment THE WHITE HOUSE ACTION MEMORANDUM WASHINGTON LOG NO.: Date: February 26, 1976 Time: FOR ACTION: CC (for information): Phil Buchen Douglas P. Bennett Jim Cannon Jim Lynn Bob Hartmann Jack Marsh FROM THE STAFF SECRETARY DUE: Date: Monday, March 1 Time: 10 A.M. SUBJECT: Memorandum from Secretary Kissinger & Secretary Mathews re: Nomination of Julia Vadala Taft fljur tjästinguished Federal Civilian Ser vice ACTION REQUESTED: For Necessary Action X For Your Recommendations Prepare Agenda and Brief Draft Reply X For Your Comments Draft Remarks REMARKS: Bennett- - enclose wholeheartedly Y Hartimann-see commets Buchen - concurs Marsh- BERNED PLEASE ATTACH THIS COPY TO MATERIAL SUBMITTED. If you have any questions or if you anticipate C. delay in submitting the required material, please James E. Connor telephone the Staff Secretary immediately. For the President THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON February 19, 1976 MEMORANDUM FOR: DICK CHENEY THROUGH: PHIL BUCHEN JACK MARSH From Ted mark SUBJECT: JULIA TAFT PROPOSED AWARD I would like to arrange an awards ceremony with representatives from the inter-departmental task force and the members of the White House Staff who supported Julia in this effort. She earned an award at this level for the unique accomplishments of doing this job with a mini- mun of adverse publicity or Congressional com- plication. APPROVE DISAPPROVE Enclosures THE SECRETARY OF HEALTH. EDUCATION. AND WELFARE WASHINGTON. D. C.20201 STUDENT February 18, 1976 MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for the President's Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service Mrs. Julia Vadala Taft served from May 1975 through December 1975 as Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees. As a result of her outstanding abilities, this program has been concluded with the successful resettlement into American society of 130,000 Indochina refugees. The demands of this Presidentially mandated mission and the challenging complexity of the resettlement process have been superbly managed and successfully resolved by this highly dedicated and talented young woman. The attached documentation outlines her specific accom- plishments. Accordingly, we respectfully request your favorable consideration of our nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for the President's Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service. Henry A, Kissinger David Mathews Secretary of State Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare Attachment 192840 FORD Julia Vadala Taft A. BIOGRAPHICAL DATA 1. Date and Place of Birth July 27, 1942 New York, New York 2. Educational Background University of Colorado - B.A. 1964 Political Science (Cited for Superior Scholarship) University of Colorado - M.A. 1969 Political Science (International Politics) 3. Federal Employment Background Director, Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees May 1975 - December 1975 Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Development Department of Health, Education, and Welfare August 1973 - Present Deputy Director (Health) Cabinet Committee on Human Resources March 1973 - June 1973 Special Assistant to the Secretary for External Affairs Department of Health, Education, and Welfare September 1971 - September 1973 White House Fellow Office of the Vice President September 1970 - September 1971 4. Appointment Status Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Development Department of Health, Education, and Welfare Secretarial Appointment Non-career (Schedule C) GS-17 Julia Vadala Taft Page 2 B. PROPOSED CITATION For her exceptional performance as Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees. Mrs. Taft's leadership of the Indochina Refugee Resettlement Program has been an outstanding example of dedication to public service and sensitivity to human needs. Her ability to inspire cooperation and to motivate public and private institutions to initiate and successfully complete an important and complex humanitarian endeavor reflect the highest ideals of the United States. Julia Vadala Taft Page 3 C. NARRATIVE STATEMENT 1. Description of Accomplishment and Outstanding Achievement The emergency migration to the United States of over 140,000 Indochinese refugees in a period of only a. few months is unprecedented in United States history. That the cultural and religious heritage of these refugees is substantially different from our own heritage added to the difficulty of absorbing these people. Furthermore, the political and economic climate in the United States at the time of their exodus from Southeast Asia dampened the enthusiasm with which these unfortunate refugees might otherwise have been welcomed by the American people. Without question, the United States has never in so short a period of time engaged in a refugee resettlement of such size and complexity as the Indochinese refugee resettlement program. As of December 20, 1975, all Indochinese refugees who were in U.S. reception centers had been resettled into American society. The remarkable success of this resettlement is due substantially to the perseverance, leadership, initiative and unremitting energy of Julia Vadala Taft. Mrs. Taft provided skillful oversight and policy direction in the organization of the reception centers and the effective and humane processing of the refugees through these centers. In numerous public appearances she reminded Americans of their own immigrant and refugee heritage and achieved significant public support for this program. Her accessibility to the press and her honest and forthright response to criticism in the media provided for this effort a degree of public credibility which is unusual for a Federal program The effectiveness and success of the Indochina refugee resettlement program has been dependent upon the active participation of numerous public and private American institutions. Mrs. Taft's outstanding ability has been iv successfully achieve the participation, cooperation and active interest of these institutions. Julia Vadala Taft Page 4 Throughout the entire resettlement process, Mrs. Taft's leadership, high standards, humanitarian concerns, and ability to inspire the cooperation of diverse public and private interests on behalf of this complex endeavor have been in the finest tradition of public service. The number and diversity of the organizations whose participation Mrs. Taft successfully obtained and effectively coordinated on behalf of this program is extraordinary - - the four United States military services, 12 Federal departments and agencies, 15 Voluntary resettle- ment agencies, State and local governments and agencies of the United Nations. In addition, there was daily contact with and frequent presentation of legislative and oversight testimony to the Congress of the United States. Mrs. Taft's ability to coordinate the diverse interests of these groups and to achieve harmony in working toward the specific goal of effective refugee resettlement has been exceptional. Her performance in achieving this cooperation has been equally remarkable since she has received the highest praise for her abilities from her colleagues within these organizations. This is high praise indeed, since the possibility of failing in such a multi-institutional endeavor has been historically greater than the possibility of succeeding. Mrs. Taft's leadership, persistence and ability to inspire cooperation among diverse organizations have, without question, been the catalytic force behind the success of this program. 2. Additional Details As Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees, Mrs. Taft has had the unique and substantial responsibility for coordinating the activities of 12 Federal departments and agencies and 15 Voluntary resettlement agencies, and for establishing policy and guidance on all aspects of the refugee resettlement program. Julia Vadala Taft Page 5 Some of her specific duties were: 1. Operational responsibility for staging areas at Guam and Wake Island and for the four refugee reception centers in the United States. These centers were located at Camp Pendleton, California; Fort Chaffee, Arkansas; Eglin Air Force Base, Florida; and Indiantown Gap Military Reservation, Pennsylvania. 2. The reception into these centers of over 140,000 Indochinese refugees. 3. The organization and coordination of health, social security, immigration status and security check procedures, as well as organizing education, acculturation and broad counselling programs. 4. Provision of testimony to the Congress which led to the enactment of "The Indochina Migration and Refugee Assistance Act of 1975" authorizing the refugee program. This act was signed by the President on May 24, 1975. 5. The negotiation of contracts with voluntary resettlement agencies. The work of these agencies has been. critical in arranging sponsors and resettlement for the refugees. 6. Negotiations with interested State and local governments for special resettlement programs in their communities. 7. Organization of special programs with private American business organizations to provide jobs and housing for refugees. 8. The establishment of guidelines for the States which explain the nature of Federal government financial support in the fields of health and medical services, education, and welfare services. 9. The special attention and planning which was required for nearly 2,000 evacuees who preferred repatriation to their homeland. 10. The phase down and closure of the reception centers with transfer of on-going responsibilities to the Department of State and the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. Julia Vadala Taft Page 6 The principal tangible benefit of this program was the effective and humane resettlement into American society of the Indochina refugees. It is becoming increasingly apparent that they too will make substantial contributions to their communities and to the nation just as other refugee populations have. A further tangible benefit to the Government is the effectiveness with which the program was managed. Despite the chaotic conditions under which this program began, it has been concluded after only nine months. In addition, $25 million of unexpended appropriated funds have been earmarked for transfer to the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare to supplement the refugee social services activities which are now the responsibility of the HEW Refugee Task Force, and approximately $27 million will be available for further refugee operations or will be returned to the United States Treasury. The successful completion of a Federal program and the potential return of substantial appropriated monies to the Treasury is a rare, if not unparalled program conclusion in the recent annals of Federal program management. The most significant intangible benefit of this program is that it has shown that the institutions of the Federal Government do work; they work together creatively, they work in the public interest, and they work effectively with State governments and private institutions. If the effects of this program have served in part to modify the apprehension with which the American public has come to regard its public and private institutions in recent years, this is a significant intangible benefit indeed. Julia Vadala Taft Page 7 D. OTHER SIGNIFICANT AWARDS 1. Secretary's Special Citation - 1973 Department of Health, Education, and Welfare 2. Nominated by the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare for the 1976 Arthur S. Flemming Award for the Ten Outstanding Young Men and Women in the Federal Government THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON Yes -redorse wholzhrautedly. D 0 THE WHITE HOUSE ACTION MEMORANDUM WASHINGTON LOG NO.: Date: February 26, 1976 Time: FOR ACTION: CC (for information): Phil Buchen Douglas P. Bennett Jim Cannon Jim Lynn Bob Hartmann Jack Marsh FROM THE STAFF SECRETARY DUE: Date: Monday, March 1 Time: 10 A.M. SUBJECT: Memorandum from Secretary Kissinger & Secretary Mathews re: Nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for Distinguished Federal Civilian Ser vice ACTION REQUESTED: For Necessary Action X For Your Recommendations Prepare Agenda and Brief Draft Reply X For Your Comments Draft Remarks REMARKS: GERALD Dang Return To: To: 2/27/24 PLEASE ATTACH THIS COPY TO MATERIAL SUBMITTED. If you have any questions or if you anticipate a delay its submitting the required material, please James E. Connor telephone the Staff Secretary immediately. For the President THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON February 19, 1976 MEMORANDUM FOR: DICK CHENEY THROUGH: PHIL BUCHEN JACK MARSH From Ted mark SUBJECT: JULIA TAFT PROPOSED AWARD I would like to arrange an awards ceremony with representatives from the inter-departmental task force and the members of the White House Staff who supported Julia in this effort. She earned an award at this level for the unique accomplishments of doing this job with a mini- mun of adverse publicity or Congressional com- plication. APPROVE DISAPPROVE Enclosures THIN THE SECRETARY OF HEALTH. EDUCATION, AND WELFARE WASHINGTON, D.C.20201 STATES February 18, 1976 MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for the President's Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service Mrs. Julia Vadala Taft served from May 1975 through December 1975 as Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees. As a result of her outstanding abilities, this program has been concluded with the successful resettlement into American society of 130,000 Indochina refugees. The demands of this Presidentially mandated mission and the challenging complexity of the resettlement process have been superbly managed and successfully resolved by this highly dedicated and talented young woman. The attached documentation outlines her specific accom- plishments. Accordingly, we respectfully request your favorable consideration of our nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for the President's Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service. A. Henry A. Kissinger David Mathews Secretary of State Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare Attachment Julia Vadala Taft A. BIOGRAPHICAL DATA 1. Date and Place of Birth July 27, 1942 New York, New York 2. Educational Background University of Colorado - B.A. 1964 Political Science (Cited for Superior Scholarship) University of Colorado - M.A. 1969 Political Science (International Politics) 3. Federal Employment Background Director, Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees May 1975 - December 1975 Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Development Department of Health, Education, and Welfare August 1973 - Present Deputy Director (Health) Cabinet Committee on Human Resources March 1973 - June 1973 Special Assistant to the Secretary for External Affairs Department of Health, Education, and Welfare September 1971 - September 1973 White House Fellow Office of the Vice President September 1970 - September 1971 4. Appointment Status Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Development Department of Health, Education, and Welfare Secretarial Appointment Non-career (Schedule C) GS-17 Julia Vadala Taft Page 2 B. PROPOSED CITATION For her exceptional performance as Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees. Mrs. Taft's leadership of the Indochina Refugee Resettlement Program has been an outstanding example of dedication to public service and sensitivity to human needs. Her ability to inspire cooperation and to motivate public and private institutions to initiate and successfully complete an important and complex humanitarian endeavor reflect the highest ideals of the United States. Julia Vadala Taft Page 3 C. NARRATIVE STATEMENT 1. Description of Accomplishment and Outstanding Achievement The emergency migration to the United States of over 140,000 Indochinese refugees in a period of only a few months is unprecedented in United States history. That the cultural and religious heritage of these refugees is substantially different from our own heritage added to the difficulty of absorbing these people. Furthermore, the political and economic climate in the United States at the time of their exodus from Southeast Asia dampened the enthusiasm with which these unfortunate refugees might otherwise have been welcomed by the American people. Without question, the United States has never in so short a period of time engaged in a refugee resettlement of such size and complexity as the Indochinese refugee resettlement program. As of December 20, 1975, all Indochinese refugees who were in U.S. reception centers had been resettled into American society. The remarkable success of this resettlement is due substantially to the perseverance, leadership, initiative and unremitting energy of Julia Vadala Taft. Mrs. Taft provided skillful oversight and policy direction in the organization of the reception centers and the effective and humane processing of the refugees through these centers. In numerous public appearances she reminded Americans of their own immigrant and refugee heritage and achieved significant public support for this program. Her accessibility to the press and her honest and forthright response to criticism in the media provided for this effort a degree of public credibility which is unusual for a Federal program. The effectiveness and success of the Indochina refugee resettlement program has been dependent upon the active participation of numerous public and private American institutions. Mrs. Taft's outstanding ability has been to successfully achieve the participation, cooperation and active interest of these institutions. Julia Vadala Taft Page 4 Throughout the entire resettlement process, Mrs. Taft's leadership, high standards, humanitarian concerns, and ability to inspire the cooperation of diverse public and private interests on behalf of this complex endeavor have been in the finest tradition of public service. The number and diversity of the organizations whose participation Mrs. Taft successfully obtained and effectively coordinated on behalf of this program is extraordinary the four United States military services, 12 Federal departments and agencies, 15 Voluntary resettle- ment agencies, State and local governments and agencies of the United Nations. In addition, there was daily contact with and frequent presentation of legislative and oversight testimony to the Congress of the United States. Mrs. Taft's ability to coordinate the diverse interests of these .groups and to achieve harmony in working toward the specific goal of effective refugee resettlement has been exceptional. Her performance in achieving this cooperation has been equally remarkable since she has received the highest praise for her abilities from her colleagues within these organizations. This is high praise indeed, since the possibility of failing in such a multi-institutional endeavor has been historically greater than the possibility of succeeding. Mrs. Taft's leadership, persistence and ability to inspire cooperation among diverse organizations have, without question, been the catalytic force behind the success of this program. 2. Additional Details As Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees, Mrs. Taft has had the unique and substantial responsibility for coordinating the activities of 12 Federal departments and agencies and 15 Voluntary resettlement agencies, and for establishing policy and guidance on all aspects of the refugee resettlement program. Julia Vadala Taft Page 5 Some of her specific duties were: 1. Operational responsibility for staging areas at Guam and Wake Island and for the four refugee reception centers in the United States. These centers were located at Camp Pendleton, California; Fort Chaffee, Arkansas; Eglin Air Force Base, Florida; and Indiantown Gap Military Reservation, Pennsylvania. 2. The reception into these centers of over 140,000 Indochinese refugees. 3. The organization and coordination of health, social security, immigration status and security check procedures, as well as organizing education, acculturation and broad counselling programs. 4. Provision of testimony to the Congress which led to the enactment of "The Indochina Migration and Refugee Assistance Act of 1975" authorizing the refugee program. This act was signed by the President on May 24, 1975. 5. The negotiation of contracts with voluntary resettlement agencies. The work of these agencies has been critical in arranging sponsors and resettlement for the refugees. 6. Negotiations with interested State and local governments for special resettlement programs in their communities. 7. Organization of special programs with private American business organizations to provide jobs and housing for refugees. 8. The establishment of guidelines for the States which explain the nature of Federal government financial support in the fields of health and medical services, education, and welfare services. 9. The special attention and planning which was required for nearly 2,000 evacuees who preferred repatriation to their homeland. 10. The phase down and closure of the reception centers with transfer of on-going responsibilities to the Department of State and the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. Julia Vadala Taft Page 6 The principal tangible benefit of this program was the effective and humane resettlement into American society of the Indochina refugees. It is becoming increasingly apparent that they too will make substantial contributions to their communities and to the nation just as other refugee populations have. A further tangible benefit to the Government is the effectiveness with which the program was managed. Despite the chaotic conditions under which this program began, it has been concluded after only nine months. In addition, $25 million of unexpended appropriated funds have been earmarked for transfer to the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare to supplement the refugee social services activities which are now the responsibility of the HEW Refugee Task Force, and approximately $27 million will be available for further refugee operations or will be returned to the United States Treasury. The successful completion of a Federal program and the potential return of substantial appropriated monies to the Treasury is a rare, if not unparalled program conclusion in the recent annals of Federal program management. The most significant intangible benefit of this program is that it has shown that the institutions of the Federal Government do work; they work together creatively, they work in the public interest, and they work effectively with State governments and private institutions. If the effects of this program have served in part to modify the apprehension with which the American public has come to regard its public and private institutions in recent years, this is a significant intangible benefit indeed. Julia Vadala Taft Page 7 D. OTHER SIGNIFICANT AWARDS 1. Secretary's Special Citation - 1973 Department of Health, Education, and Welfare 2. Nominated by the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare for the 1976 Arthur S. Flemming Award for the Ten Outstanding Young Men and Women in the Federal Government THE WHITE HOUSE ACTION MEMORANDUM WASLINGTON LOG NO.: Date: February 26, 1976 Time: FOR ACTION: CC (for information): Phil Buchen Douglas P. Bennett Jim Cannon Jim Lynn Bob Hartmann Jack Marsh FROM THE STAFF SECRETARY DUE: Date: Monday, March 1 Time: 10 A. M. SUBJECT: Memorandum from Secretary Kissinger & Secretary Mathews re: Nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for Distinguished Federal Civilian Ser vice ACTION REQUESTED: For Necessary Action X For Your Recommendations Prepare Agenda and Brief Draft Reply For Your Comments Draft Remarks REMARKS: PLEASE ATTACH THIS COPY TO MATERIAL SUBMITTED. If you have any questions or if you anticipate a delay in submitting the required material, please James E. Connor telephone the Staff Secretary immediately. For the President THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON February 19, 1976 MEMORANDUM FOR: DICK CHENEY THROUGH: PHIL BUCHEN JACK MARSH From Ted mark SUBJECT: JULIA TAFT PROPOSED AWARD I would like to arrange an awards ceremony with representatives from the inter-departmental task force and the members of the White House Staff who supported Julia in this effort. She earned an award at this level for the unique accomplishments of doing this job with a mini- mun of adverse publicity or Congressional com- plication. APPROVE DISAPPROVE Enclosures THE SECRETARY OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE WASHINGTON, D.C. 20201 INVOICE USA February 18, 1976 MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for the President's Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service Mrs. Julia Vadala Taft served from May 1975 through December 1975 as Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees. As a result of her outstanding abilities, this program has been concluded with the successful resettlement into American society of 130,000 Indochina refugees. The demands of this Presidentially mandated mission and the challenging complexity of the resettlement process have been superbly managed and successfully resolved by this highly dedicated and talented young woman. The attached documentation outlines her specific accom- plishments. Accordingly, we respectfully request your favorable consideration of our nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for the President's Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service. A. Henry A. Kissinger David Mathews Secretary of State Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare Attachment Julia Vadala Taft A. BIOGRAPHICAL DATA 1. Date and Place of Birth July 27, 1942 New York, New York 2. Educational Background University of Colorado - B.A. 1964 Political Science (Cited for Superior Scholarship) University of Colorado - M.A. 1969 Political Science (International Politics) 3. Federal Employment Background Director, Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees May 1975 - December 1975 Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Development Department of Health, Education, and Welfare August 1973 - Present Deputy Director (Health) Cabinet Committee on Human Resources March 1973 - June 1973 Special Assistant to the Secretary for External Affairs Department of Health, Education, and Welfare September 1971 - September 1973 White House Fellow Office of the Vice President September 1970 - September 1971 4. Appointment Status Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Development Department of Health, Education, and Welfare Secretarial Appointment Non-career (Schedule C) GS-17 Julia Vadala Taft Page 2 B. PROPOSED CITATION For her exceptional performance as Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees. Mrs. Taft's leadership of the Indochina Refugee Resettlement Program has been an outstanding example of dedication to public service and sensitivity to human needs. Her ability to inspire cooperation and to motivate public and private institutions to initiate and successfully complete an important and complex humanitarian endeavor reflect the highest ideals of the United States. Julia Vadala Taft Page 3 C. NARRATIVE STATEMENT 1. Description of Accomplishment and Outstanding Achievement The emergency migration to the United States of over 140, 000 Indochinese refugees in a period of only a few months is unprecedented in United States history. That the cultural and religious heritage of these refugees is substantially different from our own heritage added to the difficulty of absorbing these people. Furthermore, the political and economic climate in the United States at the time of their exodus from Southeast Asia dampened the enthusiasm with which these unfortunate refugees might otherwise have been welcomed by the American people. Without question, the United States has never in so short a period of time engaged in a refugee resettlement of such size and complexity as the Indochinese refugee resettlement program. As of December 20, 1975, all Indochinese refugees who were in U.S. reception centers had been resettled into American society. The remarkable success of this resettlement is due substantially to the perseverance, leadership, initiative and unremitting energy of Julia Vadala Taft. Mrs. Taft provided skillful oversight and policy direction in the organization of the reception centers and the effective and humane processing of the refugees through these centers. In numerous public appearances she reminded Americans of their own immigrant and refugee heritage and achieved significant public support for this program. Her accessibility to the press and her honest and forthright response to criticism in the media provided for this effort a degree of public credibility which is unusual for a Federal program. The effectiveness and success of the Indochina refugee resettlement program has been dependent upon the active participation of numerous public and private American institutions. Mrs. Taft's outstanding ability has been to successfully achieve the participation, cooperation and active interest of these institutions. Julia Vadala Taft Page 4 Throughout the entire resettlement process, Mrs. Taft's leadership, high standards, humanitarian concerns, and ability to inspire the cooperation of diverse public and private interests on behalf of this complex endeavor have been in the finest tradition of public service. The number and diversity of the organizations whose participation Mrs. Taft successfully obtained and effectively coordinated on behalf of this program is extraordinary the four United States military services, 12 Federal departments and agencies, 15 Voluntary resettle- ment agencies, State and local governments and agencies of the United Nations. In addition, there was daily contact with and frequent presentation of legislative and oversight testimony to the Congress of the United States. Mrs. Taft's ability to coordinate the diverse interests of these groups and to achieve harmony in working toward the specific goal of effective refugee resettlement has been exceptional. Her performance in achieving this cooperation has been equally remarkable since she has received the highest praise for her abilities from her colleagues within these organizations. This is high praise indeed, since the possibility of failing in such a multi-institutional endeavor has been historically greater than the possibility of succeeding. Mrs. Taft's leadership, persistence and ability to inspire cooperation among diverse organizations have, without question, been the catalytic force behind the success of this program. 2. Additional Details As Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees, Mrs. Taft has had the unique and substantial responsibility for coordinating the activities of 12 Federal departments and agencies and 15 Voluntary resettlement agencies, and for establishing policy and guidance on all aspects of the refugee resettlement program. Julia Vadala Taft Page 5 Some of her specific duties were: 1. Operational responsibility for staging areas at Guam and Wake Island and for the four refugee reception centers in the United States. These centers were located at Camp Pendleton, California; Fort Chaffee, Arkansas; Eglin Air Force Base, Florida; and Indiantown Gap Military Reservation, Pennsylvania. 2. The reception into these centers of over 140,000 Indochinese refugees. 3. The organization and coordination of health, social security, immigration status and security check procedures, as well as organizing education, acculturation and broad counselling programs. 4. Provision of testimony to the Congress which led to the enactment of "The Indochina Migration and Refugee Assistance Act of 1975" authorizing the refugee program. This act was signed by the President on May 24, 1975. 5. The negotiation of contracts with voluntary resettlement agencies. The work of these agencies has been critical in arranging sponsors and resettlement for the refugees. 6. Negotiations with interested State and local governments for special resettlement programs in their communities. 7. Organization of special programs with private American business organizations to provide jobs and housing for refugees. 8. The establishment of guidelines for the States which explain the nature of Federal government financial support in the fields of health and medical services, education, and welfare services. 9. The special attention and planning which was required for nearly 2,000 evacuees who preferred repatriation to their homeland. 10. The phase down and closure of the reception centers with transfer of on-going responsibilities to the Department of State and the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. Julia Vadala Taft Page 6 The principal tangible benefit of this program was the effective and humane resettlement into American society of the Indochina refugees. It is becoming increasingly apparent that they too will make substantial contributions to their communities and to the nation just as other refugee populations have. A further tangible benefit to the Government is the effectiveness with which the program was managed. Despite the chaotic conditions under which this program began, it has been concluded after only nine months. In addition, $25 million of unexpended appropriated funds have been earmarked for transfer to the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare to supplement the refugee social services activities which are now the responsibility of the HEW Refugee Task Force, and approximately $27 million will be available for further refugee operations or will be returned to the United States Treasury. The successful completion of a Federal program and the potential return of substantial appropriated monies to the Treasury is a rare, if not unparalled program conclusion in the recent annals of Federal program management. The most significant intangible benefit of this program is that it has shown that the institutions of the Federal Government do work; they work together creatively, they work in the public interest, and they work effectively with State governments and private institutions. If the effects of this program have served in part to modify the apprehension with which the American public has come to regard its public and private institutions in recent years, this is a significant intangible benefit indeed. Julia Vadala Taft Page 7 D. OTHER SIGNIFICANT AWARDS 1. Secretary's Special Citation - 1973 Department of Health, Education, and Welfare 2. Nominated by the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare for the 1976 Arthur S. Flemming Award for the Ten Outstanding Young Men and Women in the Federal Government THE WHITE HOUSE due Mon ACTION MEMORANDUM WASHINGTON LOG NO.: FEB 26 1376 3/1/76 Date: February 26, 1976 Time: FOR ACTION: cc (for information): Phil Buchen Douglas P. Bennett Jim Cannon Jim Lynn Bob Hartmann Jack Marsh FROM THE STAFF SECRETARY DUE: Date: Monday, March 1 Time: 10 A. M. SUBJECT: Memorandum from Secretary Kissinger & Secretary Mathews re: Nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for Distinguished Federal Civilian Ser vice ACTION REQUESTED: For Necessary Action X For Your Recommendations Prepare Agenda and Brief Draft Reply X For Your Comments Draft Remarks ( LIBRARY REMARKS: Isn't this award the same as one previously suggested for which she is inelig. be not being < career civilian PLEASE ATTACH THIS COPY TO MATERIAL SUBMITTED. If you have any questions or if you anticipate a James E June Connor delay in submitting the required material, please telephone the Staff Secretary immediately. For the President THE WHITE HOUSE washington February 19, 1976 MEMORANDUM FOR: DICK CHENEY THROUGH: PHIL BUCHEN JACK MARSH From Ted marks SUBJECT: JULIA TAFT PROPOSED AWARD I would like to arrange an awards ceremony with representatives from the inter-departmental task force and the members of the White House Staff who supported Julia in this effort. She earned an award at this level for the unique accomplishments of doing this job with a mini- mun of adverse publicity or Congressional com- plication. APPROVE DISAPPROVE Enclosures NEW THE SECRETARY OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE WASHINGTON, D.C. 20201 February 18, 1976 MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for the President's Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service Mrs. Julia Vadala Taft served from May 1975 through December 1975 as Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees. As a result of her outstanding abilities, this program has been concluded with the successful resettlement into American society of 130,000 Indochina refugees. The demands of this Presidentially mandated mission and the challenging complexity of the resettlement process have been superbly managed and successfully resolved by this highly dedicated and talented young woman. The attached documentation outlines her specific accom- plishments. Accordingly, we respectfully request your favorable consideration of our nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for the President's Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service. A. Henry A. Kissinger David Mathews Secretary of State Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare Attachment Julia Vadala Taft A. BIOGRAPHICAL DATA 1. Date and Place of Birth July 27, 1942 New York, New York 2. Educational Background University of Colorado - B.A. 1964 Political Science (Cited for Superior Scholarship) University of Colorado - M.A. 1969 Political Science (International Politics) 3. Federal Employment Background Director, Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees May 1975 - December 1975 Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Development Department of Health, Education, and Welfare August 1973 - Present Deputy Director (Health) Cabinet Committee on Human Resources March 1973 - June 1973 Special Assistant to the Secretary for External Affairs Department of Health, Education, and Welfare September 1971 - September 1973 White House Fellow Office of the Vice President September 1970 - September 1971 4. Appointment Status Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Development Department of Health, Education, and Welfare Secretarial Appointment Non-career (Schedule C) GS-17 Julia Vadala Taft Page 2 B. PROPOSED CITATION For her exceptional performance as Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees. Mrs. Taft's leadership of the Indochina Refugee Resettlement Program has been an outstanding example of dedication to public service and sensitivity to human needs. Her ability to inspire cooperation and to motivate public and private institutions to initiate and successfully complete an important and complex humanitarian endeavor reflect the highest ideals of the United States. Julia Vadala Taft Page 3 C. NARRATIVE STATEMENT 1. Description of Accomplishment and Outstanding Achievement The emergency migration to the United States of over 140,000 Indochinese refugees in a period of only a few months is unprecedented in United States history. That the cultural and religious heritage of these refugees is substantially different from our own heritage added to the difficulty of absorbing these people. Furthermore, the political and economic climate in the United States at the time of their exodus from Southeast Asia dampened the enthusiasm with which these unfortunate refugees might otherwise have been welcomed by the American people. Without question, the United States has never in so short a period of time engaged in a refugee resettlement of such size and complexity as the Indochinese refugee resettlement program. As of December 20, 1975, all Indochinese refugees who were in U.S. reception centers had been resettled into American society. The remarkable success of this resettlement is due substantially to the perseverance, leadership, initiative and unremitting energy of Julia Vadala Taft. Mrs. Taft provided skillful oversight and policy direction in the organization of the reception centers and the effective and humane processing of the refugees through these centers. In numerous public appearances she reminded Americans of their own immigrant and refugee heritage and achieved significant public support for this program. Her accessibility to the press and her honest and forthright response to criticism in the media provided for this effort a degree of public credibility which is unusual for a Federal program. The effectiveness and success of the Indochina refugee resettlement program has been dependent upon the active participation of numerous public and private American institutions. Mrs. Taft's outstanding ability has been to successfully achieve the participation, cooperation and active interest of these institutions. Julia Vadala Taft Page 4 Throughout the entire resettlement process, Mrs. Taft's leadership, high standards, humanitarian concerns, and ability to inspire the cooperation of diverse public and private interests on behalf of this complex endeavor have been in the finest tradition of public service. The number and diversity of the organizations whose participation Mrs. Taft successfully obtained and effectively coordinated on behalf of this program is extraordinary -- the four United States military services, 12 Federal departments and agencies, 15 Voluntary resettle- ment agencies, State and local governments and agencies of the United Nations. In addition, there was daily contact with and frequent presentation of legislative and oversight testimony to the Congress of the United States. Mrs. Taft's ability to coordinate the diverse interests of these groups and to achieve harmony in working toward the specific goal of effective refugee resettlement has been exceptional. Her performance in achieving this cooperation has been equally remarkable since she has received the highest praise for her abilities from her colleagues within these organizations. This is high praise indeed, since the possibility of failing in such a multi-institutional endeavor has been historically greater than the possibility of succeeding. Mrs. Taft's leadership, persistence and ability to inspire cooperation among diverse organizations have, without question, been the catalytic force behind the success of this program. 2. Additional Details As Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees, Mrs. Taft has had the unique and substantial responsibility for coordinating the activities of 12 Federal departments and agencies and 15 Voluntary resettlement agencies, and for establishing policy and guidance on all aspects of the refugee resettlement program. Julia Vadala Taft Page 5 Some of her specific duties were: 1. Operational responsibility for staging areas at Guam and Wake Island and for the four refugee reception centers in the United States. These centers were located at Camp Pendleton, California; Fort Chaffee, Arkansas; Eglin Air Force Base, Florida; and Indiantown Gap Military Reservation, Pennsylvania. 2. The reception into these centers of over 140,000 Indochinese refugees. 3. The organization and coordination of health, social security, immigration status and security check procedures, as well as organizing education, acculturation and broad counselling programs. 4. Provision of testimony to the Congress which led to the enactment of "The Indochina Migration and Refugee Assistance Act of 1975" authorizing the refugee program. This act was signed by the President on May 24, 1975. 5. The negotiation of contracts with voluntary resettlement agencies. The work of these agencies has been critical in arranging sponsors and resettlement for the refugees. 6. Negotiations with interested State and local governments for special resettlement programs in their communities. 7. Organization of special programs with private American business organizations to provide jobs and housing for refugees. 8. The establishment of guidelines for the States which explain the nature of Federal government financial support in the fields of health and medical services, education, and welfare services. 9. The special attention and planning which was required for nearly 2,000 evacuees who preferred repatriation to their homeland. 10. The phase down and closure of the reception centers with transfer of on-going responsibilities to the Department of State and the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. Julia Vadala Taft Page 6 The principal tangible benefit of this program was the effective and humane resettlement into American society of the Indochina refugees. It is becoming increasingly apparent that they too will make substantial contributions to their communities and to the nation just as other refugee populations have. A further tangible benefit to the Government is the effectiveness with which the program was managed. Despite the chaotic conditions under which this program began, it has been concluded after only nine months. In addition, $25 million of unexpended appropriated funds have been earmarked for transfer to the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare to supplement the refugee social services activities which are now the responsibility of the HEW Refugee Task Force, and approximately $27 million will be available for further refugee operations or will be returned to the United States Treasury. The successful completion of a Federal program and the potential return of substantial appropriated monies to the Treasury is a rare, if not unparalled program conclusion in the recent annals of Federal program management. The most significant intangible benefit of this program is that it has shown that the institutions of the Federal Government do work; they work together creatively, they work in the public interest, and they work effectively with State governments and private institutions. If the effects of this program have served in part to modify the apprehension with which the American public has come to regard its public and private institutions in recent years, this is a significant intangible benefit indeed. Julia Vadala Taft Page 7 D. OTHER SIGNIFICANT AWARDS 1. Secretary's Special Citation - 1973 Department of Health, Education, and Welfare 2. Nominated by the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare for the 1976 Arthur S. Flemming Award for the Ten Outstanding Young Men and Women in the Federal Government THE WHITE HOUSE ACTION MEMORANDUM WASHINGTON LOG NO.: Date: February 26, 1976 Time: FOR ACTION: cc (for information): Phil Buchen Douglas P. Bennett Jim Cannon Jim Lynn Bob Hartmann Jack Marsh FROM THE STAFF SECRETARY DUE: Date: Monday, March 1 Time: 10 A.M. SUBJECT: 2/26 - 4:30 pm Memorandum from Secretary Kissinger & Secretary Mathews re: Nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for Distinguished Federal Civilian Ser vice ACTION REQUESTED: For Necessary Action X For Your Recommendations Prepare Agenda and Brief X For Your Comments Draft Draft momories Reply Remarks <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< REMARKS: S Bar gerable I An of and its noT at this RAD PLEASE ATTACH THIS COPY TO MATERIAL SUBMITTED. If you have any questions or if you anticipate a delay in submitting the required material, please James E. Connor telephone the Staff Secretary immediately. For the President THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON February 19, 1976 MEMORANDUM FOR: DICK CHENEY THROUGH: PHIL BUCHEN JACK MARSH From Ted mark SUBJECT: JULIA TAFT PROPOSED AWARD I would like to arrange an awards ceremony with representatives from the inter-departmental task force and the members of the White House Staff who supported Julia in this effort. She earned an award at this level for the unique accomplishments of doing this job with a mini- mun of adverse publicity or Congressional com- plication. APPROVE DISAPPROVE Enclosures MONTH THE SECRETARY OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE HEALTH WASHINGTON, D.C.20201 February 18, 1976 MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for the President's Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service Mrs. Julia Vadala Taft served from May 1975 through December 1975 as Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees. As a result of her outstanding abilities, this program has been concluded with the successful resettlement into American society of 130,000 Indochina refugees. The demands of this Presidentially mandated mission and the challenging complexity of the resettlement process have been superbly managed and successfully resolved by this highly dedicated and talented young woman. The attached documentation outlines her specific accom- plishments. Accordingly, we respectfully request your favorable consideration of our nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for the President's Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service. A. him Henry A. Kissinger David Mathews Secretary of State Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare Attachment Julia Vadala Taft A. BIOGRAPHICAL DATA 1. Date and Place of Birth July 27, 1942 New York, New York 2. Educational Background University of Colorado - B.A. 1964 Political Science (Cited for Superior Scholarship) University of Colorado - M.A. 1969 Political Science (International Politics) 3. Federal Employment Background Director, Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees May 1975 - December 1975 Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Development Department of Health, Education, and Welfare August 1973 - Present Deputy Director (Health) Cabinet Committee on Human Resources March 1973 - June 1973 Special Assistant to the Secretary for External Affairs Department of Health, Education, and Welfare September 1971 - September 1973 White House Fellow Office of the Vice President September 1970 - September 1971 4. Appointment Status Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Development Department of Health, Education, and Welfare Secretarial Appointment Non-career (Schedule C) GS-17 Julia Vadala Taft Page 2 B. PROPOSED CITATION For her exceptional performance as Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees. Mrs. Taft's leadership of the Indochina Refugee Resettlement Program has been an outstanding example of dedication to public service and sensitivity to human needs. Her ability to inspire cooperation and to motivate public and private institutions to initiate and successfully complete an important and complex humanitarian endeavor reflect the highest ideals of the United States. Julia Vadala Taft Page 3 C. NARRATIVE STATEMENT 1. Description of Accomplishment and Outstanding Achievement The emergency migration to the United States of over 140, 000 Indochinese refugees in a period of only a few months is unprecedented in United States history. That the cultural and religious heritage of these refugees is substantially different from our own heritage added to the difficulty of absorbing these people. Furthermore, the political and economic climate in the United States at the time of their exodus from Southeast Asia dampened the enthusiasm with which these unfortunate refugees might otherwise have been welcomed by the American people. Without question, the United States has never in so short a period of time engaged in a refugee resettlement of such size and complexity as the Indochinese refugee resettlement program. As of December 20, 1975, all Indochinese refugees who were in U.S. reception centers had been resettled into American society. The remarkable success of this resettlement is due substantially to the perseverance, leadership, initiative and unremitting energy of Julia Vadala Taft. Mrs. Taft provided skillful oversight and policy direction in the organization of the reception centers and the effective and humane processing of the refugees through these centers. In numerous public appearances she reminded Americans of their own immigrant and refugee heritage and achieved significant public support for this program. Her accessibility to the press and her honest and forthright response to criticism in the media provided for this effort a degree of public credibility which is unusual for a Federal program. The effectiveness and success of the Indochina refugee resettlement program has been dependent upon the active participation of numerous public and private American institutions. Mrs. Taft's outstanding ability has been to successfully achieve the participation, cooperation and active interest of these institutions. Julia Vadala Taft Page 4 Throughout the entire resettlement process, Mrs. Taft's leadership, high standards, humanitarian concerns, and ability to inspire the cooperation of diverse public and private interests on behalf of this complex endeavor have been in the finest tradition of public service. The number and diversity of the organizations whose participation Mrs. Taft successfully obtained and effectively coordinated on behalf of this program is extraordinary the four United States military services, 12 Federal departments and agencies, 15 Voluntary resettle- ment agencies, State and local governments and agencies of the United Nations. In addition, there was daily contact with and frequent presentation of legislative and oversight testimony to the Congress of the United States. Mrs. Taft's ability to coordinate the diverse interests of these groups and to achieve harmony in working toward the specific goal of effective refugee resettlement has been exceptional. Her performance in achieving this cooperation has been equally remarkable since she has received the highest praise for her abilities from her colleagues within these organizations. This is high praise indeed, since the possibility of failing in such a multi-institutional endeavor has been historically greater than the possibility of succeeding. Mrs. Taft's leadership, persistence and ability to inspire cooperation among diverse organizations have, without question, been the catalytic force behind the success of this program. 2. Additional Details As Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees, Mrs. Taft has had the unique and substantial responsibility for coordinating the activities of 12 Federal departments and agencies and 15 Voluntary resettlement agencies, and for establishing policy and guidance on all aspects of the refugee resettlement program. Julia Vadala Taft Page 5 Some of her specific duties were: 1. Operational responsibility for staging areas at Guam and Wake Island and for the four refugee reception centers in the United States. These centers were located at Camp Pendleton, California; Fort Chaffee, Arkansas; Eglin Air Force Base, Florida; and Indiantown Gap Military Reservation, Pennsylvania. 2. The reception into these centers of over 140,000 Indochinese refugees. 3. The organization and coordination of health, social security, immigration status and security check procedures, as well as organizing education, acculturation and broad counselling programs. 4. Provision of testimony to the Congress which led to the enactment of "The Indochina Migration and Refugee Assistance Act of 1975" authorizing the refugee program. This act was signed by the President on May 24, 1975. 5. The negotiation of contracts with voluntary resettlement agencies. The work of these agencies has been critical in arranging sponsors and resettlement for the refugees. 6. Negotiations with interested State and local governments for special resettlement programs in their communities. 7. Organization of special programs with private American business organizations to provide jobs and housing for refugees. 8. The establishment of guidelines for the States which explain the nature of Federal government financial support in the fields of health and medical services, education, and welfare services. 9. The special attention and planning which was required for nearly 2,000 evacuees who preferred repatriation to their homeland. 10. The phase down and closure of the reception centers with transfer of on-going responsibilities to the Department of State and the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. Julia Vadala Taft Page 6 The principal tangible benefit of this program was the effective and humane resettlement into American society of the Indochina refugees. It is becoming increasingly apparent that they too will make substantial contributions to their communities and to the nation just as other refugee populations have. A further tangible benefit to the Government is the effectiveness with which the program was managed. Despite the chaotic conditions under which this program began, it has been concluded after only nine months. In addition, $25 million of unexpended appropriated funds have been earmarked for transfer to the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare to supplement the refugee social services activities which are now the responsibility of the HEW Refugee Task Force, and approximately $27 million will be available for further refugee operations or will be returned to the United States Treasury. The successful completion of a Federal program and the potential return of substantial appropriated monies to the Treasury is a rare, if not unparalled program conclusion in the recent annals of Federal program management. The most significant intangible benefit of this program is that it has shown that the institutions of the Federal Government do work; they work together creatively, they work in the public interest, and they work effectively with State governments and private institutions. If the effects of this program have served in part to modify the apprehension with which the American public has come to regard its public and private institutions in recent years, this is a significant intangible benefit indeed. Julia Vadala Taft Page 7 D. OTHER SIGNIFICANT AWARDS 1. Secretary's Special Citation - 1973 Department of Health, Education, and Welfare 2. Nominated by the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare for the 1976 Arthur S. Flemming Award for the Ten Outstanding Young Men and Women in the Federal Government THE WHITE HOUSE ACTION MEMORANDUM WASHINGTON LOG NO.: Date: February 26, 1976 Time: FOR ACTION: CC (for information): Phil Buchen Douglas P. Bennett Jim Cannon Jim Lynn Bob Hartmann Jack Marsh FROM THE STAFF SECRETARY DUE: Date: Monday, March 1 Time: 10 A.M. SUBJECT: Memorandum from Secretary Kissinger & Secretary Mathews re: Nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for Distinguished Federal Civilian Ser vice ACTION REQUESTED: For Necessary Action X For Your Recommendations Prepare Agenda and Brief Draft Reply X For Your Comments Draft Remarks REMARKS: No objections. Concur -- Spence Johnson Eleculent idea m PLEASE ATTACH THIS COPY TO MATERIAL SUBMITTED. If you have any questions or if you anticipate a delay in submitting the required material, please James E. Connor telephone the Staff Secretary immediately. For the President THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON February 19, 1976 MEMORANDUM FOR: DICK CHENEY THROUGH: PHIL BUCHEN JACK MARSH From Ted marks SUBJECT: JULIA TAFT PROPOSED AWARD I would like to arrange an awards ceremony with representatives from the inter-departmental task force and the members of the White House Staff who supported Julia in this effort. She earned an award at this level for the unique accomplishments of doing this job with a mini- mun of adverse publicity or Congressional com- plication. APPROVE DISAPPROVE Enclosures THE SECRETARY OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE Identity STATE WASHINGTON. D.C.20201 February 18, 1976 MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for the President's Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service Mrs. Julia Vadala Taft served from May 1975 through December 1975 as Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees. As a result of her outstanding abilities, this program has been concluded with the successful resettlement into American society of 130,000 Indochina refugees. The demands of this Presidentially mandated mission and the challenging complexity of the resettlement process have been superbly managed and successfully resolved by this highly dedicated and talented young woman. The attached documentation outlines her specific accom- plishments. Accordingly, we respectfully request your favorable consideration of our nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for the President's Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service. A. Henry A. Kissinger David Mathews Secretary of State Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare Attachment Julia Vadala Taft A. BIOGRAPHICAL DATA 1. Date and Place of Birth July 27, 1942 New York, New York 2. Educational Background University of Colorado - B.A. 1964 Political Science (Cited for Superior Scholarship) University of Colorado - M.A. 1969 Political Science (International Politics) 3. Federal Employment Background Director, Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees May 1975 - December 1975 Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Development Department of Health, Education, and Welfare August 1973 - Present Deputy Director (Health) Cabinet Committee on Human Resources March 1973 - June 1973 Special Assistant to the Secretary for External Affairs Department of Health, Education, and Welfare September 1971 - September 1973 White House Fellow Office of the Vice President September 1970 - September 1971 4. Appointment Status Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Development Department of Health, Education, and Welfare Secretarial Appointment Non-career (Schedule C) GS-17 Julia Vadala Taft Page 2 B. PROPOSED CITATION For her exceptional performance as Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees. Mrs. Taft's leadership of the Indochina Refugee Resettlement Program has been an outstanding example of dedication to public service and sensitivity to human needs. Her ability to inspire cooperation and to motivate public and private institutions to initiate and successfully complete an important and complex humanitarian endeavor reflect the highest ideals of the United States. Julia Vadala Taft Page 3 C. NARRATIVE STATEMENT 1. Description of Accomplishment and Outstanding Achievement The emergency migration to the United States of over 140, 000 Indochinese refugees in a period of only a few months is unprecedented in United States history. That the cultural and religious heritage of these refugees is substantially different from our own heritage added to the difficulty of absorbing these people. Furthermore, the political and economic climate in the United States at the time of their exodus from Southeast Asia dampened the enthusiasm with which these unfortunate refugees might otherwise have been welcomed by the American people. Without question, the United States has never in so short a period of time engaged in a refugee resettlement of such size and complexity as the Indochinese refugee resettlement program. As of December 20, 1975, all Indochinese refugees who were in U.S. reception centers had been resettled into American society. The remarkable success of this resettlement is due substantially to the perseverance, leadership, initiative and unremitting energy of Julia Vadala Taft. Mrs. Taft provided skillful oversight and policy direction in the organization of the reception centers and the effective and humane processing of the refugees through these centers. In numerous public appearances she reminded Americans of their own immigrant and refugee heritage and achieved significant public support for this program. Her accessibility to the press and her honest and forthright response to criticism in the media provided for this effort a degree of public credibility which is unusual for a Federal program. The effectiveness and success of the Indochina refugee resettlement program has been dependent upon the active participation of numerous public and private American institutions. Mrs. Taft's outstanding ability has been to successfully achieve the participation, cooperation and active interest of these institutions. Julia Vadala Taft Page 4 Throughout the entire resettlement process, Mrs. Taft's leadership, high standards, humanitarian concerns, and ability to inspire the cooperation of diverse public and private interests on behalf of this complex endeavor have been in the finest tradition of public service. The number and diversity of the organizations whose participation Mrs. Taft successfully obtained and effectively coordinated on behalf of this program is extraordinary the four United States military services, 12 Federal departments and agencies, 15 Voluntary resettle- ment agencies, State and local governments and agencies of the United Nations. In addition, there was daily contact with and frequent presentation of legislative and oversight testimony to the Congress of the United States. Mrs. Taft's ability to coordinate the diverse interests of these .groups and to achieve harmony in working toward the specific goal of effective refugee resettlement has been exceptional. Her performance in achieving this cooperation has been equally remarkable since she has received the highest praise for her abilities from her colleagues within these organizations. This is high praise indeed, since the possibility of failing in such a multi-institutional endeavor has been historically greater than the possibility of succeeding. Mrs. Taft's leadership, persistence and ability to inspire cooperation among diverse organizations have, without question, been the catalytic force behind the success of this program. 2. Additional Details As Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees, Mrs. Taft has had the unique and substantial responsibility for coordinating the activities of 12 Federal departments and agencies and 15 Voluntary resettlement agencies, and for establishing policy and guidance on all aspects of the refugee resettlement program. Julia Vadala Taft Page 5 Some of her specific duties were: 1. Operational responsibility for staging areas at Guam and Wake Island and for the four refugee reception centers in the United States. These centers were located at Camp Pendleton, California; Fort Chaffee, Arkansas; Eglin Air Force Base, Florida; and Indiantown Gap Military Reservation, Pennsylvania. 2. The reception into these centers of over 140,000 Indochinese refugees. 3. The organization and coordination of health, social security, immigration status and security check procedures, as well as organizing education, acculturation and broad counselling programs. 4. Provision of testimony to the Congress which led to the enactment of "The Indochina Migration and Refugee Assistance Act of 1975" authorizing the refugee program. This act was signed by the President on May 24, 1975. 5. The negotiation of contracts with voluntary resettlement agencies. The work of these agencies has been critical in arranging sponsors and resettlement for the refugees. 6. Negotiations with interested State and local governments for special resettlement programs in their communities. 7. Organization of special programs with private American business organizations to provide jobs and housing for refugees. 8. The establishment of guidelines for the States which explain the nature of Federal government financial support in the fields of health and medical services, education, and welfare services. 9. The special attention and planning which was required for nearly 2,000 evacuees who preferred repatriation to their homeland. 10. The phase down and closure of the reception centers with transfer of on-going responsibilities to the Department of State and the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. Julia Vadala Taft Page 6 The principal tangible benefit of this program was the effective and humane resettlement into American society of the Indochina refugees. It is becoming increasingly apparent that they too will make substantial contributions to their communities and to the nation just as other refugee populations have. A further tangible benefit to the Government is the effectiveness with which the program was managed. Despite the chaotic conditions under which this program began, it has been concluded after only nine months. In addition, $25 million of unexpended appropriated funds have been earmarked for transfer to the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare to supplement the refugee social services activities which are now the responsibility of the HEW Refugee Task Force, and approximately $27 million will be available for further refugee operations or will be returned to the United States Treasury. The successful completion of a Federal program and the potential return of substantial appropriated monies to the Treasury is a rare, if not unparalled program conclusion in the recent annals of Federal program management. The most significant intangible benefit of this program is that it has shown that the institutions of the Federal Government do work; they work together creatively, they work in the public interest, and they work effectively with State governments and private institutions. If the effects of this program have served in part to modify the apprehension with which the American public has come to regard its public and private institutions in recent years, this is a significant intangible benefit indeed. Julia Vadala Taft Page 7 D. OTHER SIGNIFICANT AWARDS 1. Secretary's Special Citation - 1973 Department of Health, Education, and Welfare 2. Nominated by the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare for the 1976 Arthur S. Flemming Award for the Ten Outstanding Young Men and Women in the Federal Government THE WHITE HOUSE ACTION MEMORANDUM WASHINGTON LOG NO.: Date: February 26, 1976 Time: FOR ACTION: CC (for information): Phil Buchen Douglas P. Bennett Jim Cannon Jim Lynn Bob Hartmann Jack Marsh FROM THE STAFF SECRETARY DUE: Date: Monday, March 1 Time: 10 A. M. SUBJECT: Memorandum from Secretary Kissinger & Secretary Mathews re: Nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for Distinguished Federal Civilian Ser vice ACTION REQUESTED: For Necessary Action X For Your Recommendations Prepare Agenda and Brief Draft Reply x For Your Comments Draft Remarks REMARKS: Counsel's Office concurs in the recommendation. Ken Lazarus for Phil Buchen 3/1/76 PLEASE ATTACH THIS COPY TO MATERIAL SUBMITTED. If you have any questions or if you anticipate a delay in submitting the required material, please James E. Connor telephone the Staff Secretary immediately. For the President THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON February 19, 1976 MEMORANDUM FOR: DICK CHENEY THROUGH: PHIL BUCHEN JACK MARSH From Ted mark SUBJECT: JULIA TAFT PROPOSED AWARD I would like to arrange an awards ceremony with representatives from the inter-departmental task force and the members of the White House Staff who supported Julia in this effort. She earned an award at this level for the unique accomplishments of doing this job with a mini- mun of adverse publicity or Congressional com- plication. APPROVE DISAPPROVE Enclosures THE SECRETARY OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE WASHINGTON, D. C.20201 INPART SECURITY February 18, 1976 MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for the President's Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service Mrs. Julia Vadala Taft served from May 1975 through December 1975 as Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees. As a result of her outstanding abilities, this program has been concluded with the successful resettlement into American society of 130,000 Indochina refugees. The demands of this Presidentially mandated mission and the challenging complexity of the resettlement process have been superbly managed and successfully resolved by this highly dedicated and talented young woman. The attached documentation outlines her specific accom- plishments. Accordingly, we respectfully request your favorable consideration of our nomination of Julia Vadala Taft for the President's Award for Distinguished Federal Civilian Service. A. Henry A. Kissinger David Mathews Secretary of State Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare Attachment Julia Vadala Taft A. BIOGRAPHICAL DATA 1. Date and Place of Birth July 27, 1942 New York, New York 2. Educational Background University of Colorado - B.A. 1964 Political Science (Cited for Superior Scholarship) University of Colorado - M.A. 1969 Political Science (International Politics) 3. Federal Employment Background Director, Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees May 1975 - December 1975 Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Development Department of Health, Education, and Welfare August 1973 - Present Deputy Director (Health) Cabinet Committee on Human Resources March 1973 - June 1973 Special Assistant to the Secretary for External Affairs Department of Health, Education, and Welfare September 1971 - September 1973 White House Fellow Office of the Vice President September 1970 - September 1971 4. Appointment Status Deputy Assistant Secretary for Human Development Department of Health, Education, and Welfare Secretarial Appointment Non-career (Schedule C) GS-17 Julia Vadala Taft Page 2 B. PROPOSED CITATION For her exceptional performance as Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees. Mrs. Taft's leadership of the Indochina Refugee Resettlement Program has been an outstanding example of dedication to public service and sensitivity to human needs. Her ability to inspire cooperation and to motivate public and private institutions to initiate and successfully complete an important and complex humanitarian endeavor reflect the highest ideals of the United States. Julia Vadala Taft Page 3 C. NARRATIVE STATEMENT 1. Description of Accomplishment and Outstanding Achievement The emergency migration to the United States of over 140,000 Indochinese refugees in a period of only a few months is unprecedented in United States history. That the cultural and religious heritage of these refugees is substantially different from our own heritage added to the difficulty of absorbing these people. Furthermore, the political and economic climate in the United States at the time of their exodus from Southeast Asia dampened the enthusiasm with which these unfortunate refugees might otherwise have been welcomed by the American people. Without question, the United States has never in so short a period of time engaged in a refugee resettlement of such size and complexity as the Indochinese refugee resettlement program. As of December 20, 1975, all Indochinese refugees who were in U.S. reception centers had been resettled into American society. The remarkable success of this resettlement is due substantially to the perseverance, leadership, initiative and unremitting energy of Julia Vadala Taft. Mrs. Taft provided skillful oversight and policy direction in the organization of the reception centers and the effective and humane processing of the refugees through these centers. In numerous public appearances she reminded Americans of their own immigrant and refugee heritage and achieved significant public support for this program. Her accessibility to the press and her honest and forthright response to criticism in the media provided for this effort a degree of public credibility which is unusual for a Federal program. The effectiveness and success of the Indochina refugee resettlement program has been dependent upon the active participation of numerous public and private American institutions. Mrs. Taft's outstanding ability has been to successfully achieve the participation, cooperation and active interest of these institutions. Julia Vadala Taft Page 4 Throughout the entire resettlement process, Mrs. Taft's leadership, high standards, humanitarian concerns, and ability to inspire the cooperation of diverse public and private interests on behalf of this complex endeavor have been in the finest tradition of public service. The number and diversity of the organizations whose participation Mrs. Taft successfully obtained and effectively coordinated on behalf of this program is extraordinary the four United States military services, 12 Federal departments and agencies, 15 Voluntary resettle- ment agencies, State and local governments and agencies of the United Nations. In addition, there was daily contact with and frequent presentation of legislative and oversight testimony to the Congress of the United States. Mrs. Taft's ability to coordinate the diverse interests of these groups and to achieve harmony in working toward the specific goal of effective refugee resettlement has been exceptional. Her performance in achieving this cooperation has been equally remarkable since she has received the highest praise for her abilities from her colleagues within these organizations. This is high praise indeed, since the possibility of failing in such a multi-institutional endeavor has been historically greater than the possibility of succeeding. Mrs. Taft's leadership, persistence and ability to inspire cooperation among diverse organizations have, without question, been the catalytic force behind the success of this program. 2. Additional Details As Director of the Interagency Task Force for Indochina Refugees, Mrs. Taft has had the unique and substantial responsibility for coordinating the activities of 12 Federal departments and agencies and 15 Voluntary resettlement agencies, and for establishing policy and guidance on all aspects of the refugee resettlement program. Julia Vadala Taft Page 5 Some of her specific duties were: 1. Operational responsibility for staging areas at Guam and Wake Island and for the four refugee reception centers in the United States. These centers were located at Camp Pendleton, California; Fort Chaffee, Arkansas; Eglin Air Force Base, Florida; and Indiantown Gap Military Reservation, Pennsylvania. 2. The reception into these centers of over 140,000 Indochinese refugees. 3. The organization and coordination of health, social security, immigration status and security check procedures, as well as organizing education, acculturation and broad counselling programs. 4. Provision of testimony to the Congress which led to the enactment of "The Indochina Migration and Refugee Assistance Act of 1975" authorizing the refugee program. This act was signed by the President on May 24, 1975. 5. The negotiation of contracts with voluntary resettlement agencies. The work of these agencies has been critical in arranging sponsors and resettlement for the refugees. 6. Negotiations with interested State and local governments for special resettlement programs in their communities. 7. Organization of special programs with private American business organizations to provide jobs and housing for refugees. 8. The establishment of guidelines for the States which explain the nature of Federal government financial support in the fields of health and medical services, education, and welfare services. 9. The special attention and planning which was required for nearly 2,000 evacuees who preferred repatriation to their homeland. 10. The phase down and closure of the reception centers with transfer of on-going responsibilities to the Department of State and the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. Julia Vadala Taft Page 6 The principal tangible benefit of this program was the effective and humane resettlement into American society of the Indochina refugees. It is becoming increasingly apparent that they too will make substantial contributions to their communities and to the nation just as other refugee populations have. A further tangible benefit to the Government is the effectiveness with which the program was managed. Despite the chaotic conditions under which this program began, it has been concluded after only nine months. In addition, $25 million of unexpended appropriated funds have been earmarked for transfer to the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare to supplement the refugee social services activities which are now the responsibility of the HEW Refugee Task Force, and approximately $27 million will be available for further refugee operations or will be returned to the United States Treasury. The successful completion of a Federal program and the potential return of substantial appropriated monies to the Treasury is a rare, if not unparalled program conclusion in the recent annals of Federal program management. The most significant intangible benefit of this program is that it has shown that the institutions of the Federal Government do work; they work together creatively, they work in the public interest, and they work effectively with State governments and private institutions. If the effects of this program have served in part to modify the apprehension with which the American public has come to regard its public and private institutions in recent years, this is a significant intangible benefit indeed. Julia Vadala Taft Page 7 D. OTHER SIGNIFICANT AWARDS 1. Secretary's Special Citation - 1973 Department of Health, Education, and Welfare 2. Nominated by the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare for the 1976 Arthur S. Flemming Award for the Ten Outstanding Young Men and Women in the Federal Government