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The Federal Emergency Relief Act 1933
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The Act was the first direct-relief operation under the New Deal, and was headed by Harry L. Hopkins, a New
York social worker who was one of Franklin D.
Roosevelt's most influential advisers. Hopkins was a believer in relief
efforts that emphasized work, and that FERA's main goal was to alleviate adult
unemployment. In order to achieve this goal, FERA provided state assistance for
the unemployed and their families. From when it began in May 1933 until it
closed its operations in December, 1935, it gave states and localities $3.1
billion to operate local work projects and transient programs. FERA provided
work for over 20 million people and developed facilities on public lands across
the country. Faced with continued high unemployment and concerns for public
welfare during the coming winter of 1933-34, FERA instituted the Civil Works
Administration (CWA) as a $400 million short-term measure to get people to
work. The Federal Emergency Relief Administration was terminated in 1935 and its
work taken over by the WPA and
the Social
Security Board.
It put $500,000,000 into state-run relief money
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