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OCR Page 1 of 4senatorial papers (war Relocation Board)
VERTICAL FILE
April 20, 1942
Japanese in the U.S.
INFORMAL REPORT OF THE WAR RELOCATION AUTHORITY
The War Relocation Authority has been moving rapidly toward an
organization capable of handling the total problem of relocating approxi-
mately 120,000 Japanese being evacuated from the West Coast military area.
Washington, D. C. -- The War Relocation Authority does not as yet
have space of its own. Consequently, for the time being it is occupying
a few rooms in the Administration Building, Department of Agriculture.
M. S. Eisenhower, formerly Land Use Coordinator of the Department of
Agriculture, is Director of WRA. Colonel E. F. Cress, of the United
States Army, is Deputy Director. Philip M. Glick is Solicitor, John Bird
is Director of Information, and Leland Barrows is Executive Officer.
San Francisco, California - The western regional office of WRA
is located at the Whitcomb Hotel Building, San Francisco. E. R. Fryer,
formerly Superintendent of the Navajo Indian Reservation, is Regional
Director. The regional office has three major branches: (1) An Economic
Management branch under which are the divisions of public works, indus-
trial management, agricultural management, site selection - headed by
R. B. Cozzens, formerly State Coordinator of the Soil Conservation Serv-
ice in California; (2) the Community Lanagement branch, dealing with
education, recreation, health, community enterprises, and civic organiza-
tion - headed by Harvey M. Coverly, .formerly Assistant Regional Director
of the Farm Security Administration, San Francisco. The Services of
Supply branch (transportation, provisioning, equipment, etc.) is headed
by Lt. Gol. L. W. Foy of the United States Army.
Each war-duration project will be managed by a Project Director.
The project organization will include community works, community serv-
ices, war works, public works, housing, employment, supply, transporta-
tion, and plant maintenance. Each project will be as productive as
possible, and it will be the policy to encourage the evacuees themselves
to develop the highest degree of community services consistent with the
situation.
Site Selection -- Because of the tremendous pressure to find
adequate sites so that the construction of housing and other facilities
could get under way, the War Relocatión Authority obtained, immediately
after it was established by the President, the cooperation of numerous
agencies in the West. With personnel loaned by these agencies, WRA set
up four regional teams, each one composed of qualified persons assigned
from the Soil Conservation Service, Forest Service, Office of Indian
Affairs, Bureau of Reclamation, Bureau of Agricultural Economics, Farm
Security Administration, and Federal Security Agency. Persons on these
teams are expertly qualified on questions of water supply, soil, climate,
crops, and other physical and economic factors.
Removal from Senatorial fapors (Wa. Relocation Bears)
10/15/59 pdl. B250
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