Yes it is!
men and women
No.
The Civil Works Administration (CWA) was the first public employment program of the New Deal. It was created in the fall of 1933 but disbanded the following spring. It employed about four million workers doing jobs that eventually were turned over to the WPA, Works Project Administration. The CWA got several million people off the federal "dole" and gave them a job and regular paychecks.
The Public Works Administration was a New Deal program, started in 1933 to shore up the US infrastructure. It rebuilt and repaired schools and hospitals, bridges and dams. The PWA folded in 1943.
Well, the PWA was actually a RECOVERY agency, and it was created to hire workers for thousands of public works projects such as bulding the Grand Coulee Dam and Los Angeles. It started around 1934 and went until 1941.
yes
yes
yes
men and women
The civil works administration, also known as the CWA, was a program created during the Great Depression to give unemployed people temporary manual labor jobs.
No, it does not exist anymore
No.
Civil Works Administration
CWA stands for the Civil Works Administration. It gave public works jobs at $15 a week to about 4 million workers in 1934.
The Civil Works Administration (CWA) was the first public employment program of the New Deal. It was created in the fall of 1933 but disbanded the following spring. It employed about four million workers doing jobs that eventually were turned over to the WPA, Works Project Administration. The CWA got several million people off the federal "dole" and gave them a job and regular paychecks.
to provide immediate employment in any type of government job
The Civil Works Administration.