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United States Housing Authority

United States Housing Authority. Hannah Havick. USHA.

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United States Housing Authority

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  1. United States Housing Authority Hannah Havick

  2. USHA • The agency that had overseen the nation's controversial, federally subsidized, low-income public housing program since the passage of the United States Housing Act in 1937, was abolished and its activities were transferred to the National Housing Agency's Federal Public Housing Authority. (The book definition)

  3. How It Began • 1937 • USHA was mostly set up to help the low- income families. • 650,000 people were put into units • Governor of New York- Al Smith started these housing programs.

  4. Housing units people lived in.

  5. Coming to an End • Lasted for about five years • Housed many homeless families • Was changed into the Federal Public Housing Agency. • Ended in 1942

  6. National Labor Relations Act Hannah Havick

  7. National Labor Relations Act • Also called the Wagner Act • July 5, 1935 it came into play • Stressed collective bargaining • Protect the workers • Section 9- prevents wildcat strikes from the workers • National Labor Relations Board

  8. Fighting for Labor Laws.

  9. Continued • National Relation Board • Board of workers that fought the workers rights. • Supported and enforced labor unions. • This act does apply to agricultural employees, domestic employees, supervisors, federal, state or local government workers, independent contractors and some close relatives of individual employers.[1]

  10. Men fighting for better wages!

  11. http://www.texashousing.org/phdebate/past5.html • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Housing_Authority • http://www.novelguide.com/a/discover/egd_02/egd_02_00529.html • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Labor_Relations_Act

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