Nothing required more urgent attention than the masses of unemployed workers who, with their families, had soon overwhelmed the miserably under-financed bodies that provided direct relief. On May 12, 1933, Congress established a Federal Emergency Relief Administration to distribute half a billion dollars to state and local agencies. Roosevelt also created the Civil Works Administration, which by January 1934 was employing more than 4,000,000 men and women. Alarmed by rising costs, Roosevelt dismantled the CWA in 1934, but the persistence of high unemployment led him to make another about-face. In 1935 the Emergency Relief Appropriation Act provided almost $5,000,000,000 to create work for some 3,500,000 persons. The Public Works Administration (PWA), established in 1933, provided jobs on long-term construction projects, and the Civilian Conservation Corps put 2,500,000 young men to work planting or otherwise improving huge tracts of forestland. For homeowners, the Federal Housing Administration began insuring private home-improvement loans to middle-income families in 1934; in 1938 it became a home-building agency as well.
Cohen thinks it should continue because the (WPA) will reduce the hardships of the unemployed workers.
They were unemployed or took menial jobs.
The three components of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal are Relief, Recovery, and Reform. These included the creation of Social Securiity, a federal minimum wage, and relief for unemployed workers, along with many other systems.
The Luddites
That figure is hard to measure as record keeping was not as effective and detailed as it is today. Four million workers lost their jobs during the first year of the Great Depression. By 1931, 100,000 workers a week lost their job. In 1932, about 25 percent of the workforce was unemployed. At the peak of the Depression, it is estimated that 35-40 percent of the workforce was unemployed. Many workers didn't even bother to try and look for jobs so there is no way to accurately gauge the correct percent of unemployed.
Labor
an outdoor program for unemployed young men
National Unemployed Workers' Movement was created in 1921.
National Unemployed Workers' Movement ended in 1946.
Cohen thinks it should continue because the (WPA) will reduce the hardships of the unemployed workers.
the works progress administration
(WPA) Workers Progress Administration
Unemployed.
illegal immigrants or lazy workers
They are considered discouraged workers.
Ray Broomhill has written: 'Unemployed workers' -- subject(s): Depressions, Economic conditions, History, Unemployed
They were unemployed or took menial jobs.