Case Study 5.2: Hiding the Real Story at Midwestern
Community Action
Recently, life at Midwestern Community Action has been
anything but smooth. The nonprofit runs a variety of programs
in a midsized city, including preschools, teen drop-in centers, a
food pantry, a medical clinic, and low-income housing. Health
problems forced founding executive director Sally May, who
was well loved by staff, to quit after 20 years in her position.
The board then appointed Josiah Lang, who had served as the
manager of a local government service agency, as the next
executive director.
When Lang arrived at Community Action, he discovered that
May had been a hands-off leader. She allowed coordinators to
run their programs without much supervision. Used to operating
on their own, they resisted Lang’s efforts to institute
performance evaluations, to evaluate the effectiveness of each
program, and to reallocate funds between programs. It didn’t
help that Lang made little effort to get to know his subordinates
and has an abrasive personality. Three coordinators and a half
dozen front-line staff quit. Lang has the support of the board,
which believes that the organization needs more structure and
accountability, but staff morale is low. Employees have lost
faith in the organization’s leadership. However, they remain
committed to helping the disadvantaged and to Community
Action’s mission. For that reason, they largely keep their
frustrations to themselves and are careful to protect the
organization’s public image. Community Action continues to be
well regarded by clients, government officials, donors, and the
public at large.
This week Community Action will interview an applicant for its
housing coordinator position, a vacancy created when the
previous coordinator left in frustration. This is the most
important open position to fill. The housing coordinator
oversees three apartment complexes with 200 tenants and
manages the most employees. Failure to fill the vacancy soon
could reduce Community Action’s outreach to the homeless.
The applicant, Albert Singh, appears to be highly qualified. If
he takes the position, Singh will move his family from out of
state. He has no idea that Community Action is dealing with
significant conflict and poor morale.
Singh will make a brief presentation to the entire staff during
his visit and then meet for an extended time with the current
program coordinators. During this session, the coordinators
(without the director present) will question him and present an
overview of Community Action. Albert will also have an
opportunity to ask questions of the coordinators.
Discussion Probes
1. What ethical duties are in conflict in this situation?
2. Are Community Action employees justified in keeping their
concerns “in house,” out of the public eye? Why or why not?
3. If you were one of the current program coordinators, how
much would you reveal about the turmoil at Community Action
to Singh?
4. As a coordinator, what would you say if Singh asked why the
previous housing coordinator quit? How would you answer if
asked your opinion of the executive director?
5. Is withholding the truth as damaging as lying? Why or why
not?

More Related Content

PPTX
Explain the role and function of Social Work.pptx
PPTX
componentsofcaseworkppt.pptx based on st
PDF
Management And Leadership In Social Work Practice And Education 1st Edition H...
PDF
Big Society & Harnessing The Power Of The Uk
PDF
Mission one, Mission two
DOC
Social case work
PDF
The community manager reporting
PDF
Informe 2012 sobre Community Management
Explain the role and function of Social Work.pptx
componentsofcaseworkppt.pptx based on st
Management And Leadership In Social Work Practice And Education 1st Edition H...
Big Society & Harnessing The Power Of The Uk
Mission one, Mission two
Social case work
The community manager reporting
Informe 2012 sobre Community Management

Similar to Case Study 5.2 Hiding the Real Story at Midwestern Community Acti.docx (20)

PDF
El informe Community Manager 2012
PDF
The Community Manager Report 2012
DOCX
Organizational Analysis Change Happens” A. Introducti.docx
PPTX
Beyond protest and policy 041817 emailed
PPTX
Week9 sw.Modern concept of social work.pptx
PPTX
1- Introduction.pptx
DOCX
Running Head CAPSTONE PROJECT STRATEGIC PLAN1CAPSTONE PROJ.docx
PDF
Social entrepreneurship research paper
PPTX
The Discipline of SOCIAL WORK_for 2nd Quarter
PPTX
Brief introduction to social work
PPTX
Importance of Understanding Community Dynamics and Community Action.pptx
PPTX
1968 A Manual for Contacts With Minority Community Leaders and Organizations
PPTX
Social casework slideshare
DOC
Pittsburgh Project Paper Paul&Xie
PPTX
SOSCIAL SCIENCE.pptx
PDF
Mission 1, Mission 2
PPTX
HRBA & gender mainstreaming
DOCX
Paper Instructions 5) Paper should be 5-7 pages (excluding title pag.docx
PDF
Rural Minnesota Journal: Rural Community Leadership
PDF
Social_Case_Work_Practice_Working_with_Individuals_unit_1.pdf
El informe Community Manager 2012
The Community Manager Report 2012
Organizational Analysis Change Happens” A. Introducti.docx
Beyond protest and policy 041817 emailed
Week9 sw.Modern concept of social work.pptx
1- Introduction.pptx
Running Head CAPSTONE PROJECT STRATEGIC PLAN1CAPSTONE PROJ.docx
Social entrepreneurship research paper
The Discipline of SOCIAL WORK_for 2nd Quarter
Brief introduction to social work
Importance of Understanding Community Dynamics and Community Action.pptx
1968 A Manual for Contacts With Minority Community Leaders and Organizations
Social casework slideshare
Pittsburgh Project Paper Paul&Xie
SOSCIAL SCIENCE.pptx
Mission 1, Mission 2
HRBA & gender mainstreaming
Paper Instructions 5) Paper should be 5-7 pages (excluding title pag.docx
Rural Minnesota Journal: Rural Community Leadership
Social_Case_Work_Practice_Working_with_Individuals_unit_1.pdf
Ad

More from moggdede (20)

DOCX
CASE STUDY COMMENTARY•  Individual written task in Harvard sty.docx
DOCX
Case Study Chapter 5 100 wordsTranscultural Nursing in the.docx
DOCX
Case Study Chapter 10 Boss, We’ve got a problemBy Kayla Cur.docx
DOCX
CASE STUDY Caregiver Role Strain Ms. Sandra A. Sandra, a 47-year-o.docx
DOCX
Case Study Answers Week 7 and 8Group OneIn your grou.docx
DOCX
Case Study and Transition Plan TemplateCase StudyD.docx
DOCX
Case Study AnalysisRead Compassion for Samantha Case Study.docx
DOCX
Case Study AnalysisAn understanding of cells and cell behavi.docx
DOCX
Case Study Analysis and FindingsThe final assignment for this co.docx
DOCX
Case Study Analysis A TutorialWhat is it Case studies are a .docx
DOCX
Case Study AlcoholCertain occasional behaviors can cause more tro.docx
DOCX
Case study A group of nurse educators are having a discussion about.docx
DOCX
Case study ;1Callista Roy and Betty Neumans theories view the.docx
DOCX
Case Study 9Running head BP & THE GULF OF MEXICO OIL SPILLC.docx
DOCX
Case Study 9-1 IT Governance at University of the Southeast. Answer .docx
DOCX
Case Study 7-2 Sony Pictures The Criminals Won. Answer question 2 W.docx
DOCX
Case Study 8.1 Team DenialEmory University Holocaust studies pr.docx
DOCX
Case Study 7 Solving Team Challenges at DocSystems Billing, Inc.docx
DOCX
Case Study 5.1Write a 3 to 4 (not including title or reference.docx
DOCX
Case Study 5.2 California’s High-Speed Rail ProjectA goal of .docx
CASE STUDY COMMENTARY•  Individual written task in Harvard sty.docx
Case Study Chapter 5 100 wordsTranscultural Nursing in the.docx
Case Study Chapter 10 Boss, We’ve got a problemBy Kayla Cur.docx
CASE STUDY Caregiver Role Strain Ms. Sandra A. Sandra, a 47-year-o.docx
Case Study Answers Week 7 and 8Group OneIn your grou.docx
Case Study and Transition Plan TemplateCase StudyD.docx
Case Study AnalysisRead Compassion for Samantha Case Study.docx
Case Study AnalysisAn understanding of cells and cell behavi.docx
Case Study Analysis and FindingsThe final assignment for this co.docx
Case Study Analysis A TutorialWhat is it Case studies are a .docx
Case Study AlcoholCertain occasional behaviors can cause more tro.docx
Case study A group of nurse educators are having a discussion about.docx
Case study ;1Callista Roy and Betty Neumans theories view the.docx
Case Study 9Running head BP & THE GULF OF MEXICO OIL SPILLC.docx
Case Study 9-1 IT Governance at University of the Southeast. Answer .docx
Case Study 7-2 Sony Pictures The Criminals Won. Answer question 2 W.docx
Case Study 8.1 Team DenialEmory University Holocaust studies pr.docx
Case Study 7 Solving Team Challenges at DocSystems Billing, Inc.docx
Case Study 5.1Write a 3 to 4 (not including title or reference.docx
Case Study 5.2 California’s High-Speed Rail ProjectA goal of .docx
Ad

Recently uploaded (20)

DOCX
Cambridge-Practice-Tests-for-IELTS-12.docx
PDF
PUBH1000 - Module 6: Global Health Tute Slides
PDF
LIFE & LIVING TRILOGY- PART (1) WHO ARE WE.pdf
PPTX
What’s under the hood: Parsing standardized learning content for AI
PDF
Skin Care and Cosmetic Ingredients Dictionary ( PDFDrive ).pdf
PDF
1.Salivary gland disease.pdf 3.Bleeding and Clotting Disorders.pdf important
PDF
Literature_Review_methods_ BRACU_MKT426 course material
PDF
Myanmar Dental Journal, The Journal of the Myanmar Dental Association (2015).pdf
PDF
Journal of Dental Science - UDMY (2022).pdf
PDF
Nurlina - Urban Planner Portfolio (english ver)
PDF
Disorder of Endocrine system (1).pdfyyhyyyy
PDF
THE CHILD AND ADOLESCENT LEARNERS & LEARNING PRINCIPLES
PDF
Hospital Case Study .architecture design
PDF
Lecture on Viruses: Structure, Classification, Replication, Effects on Cells,...
PPTX
Climate Change and Its Global Impact.pptx
PPTX
CAPACITY BUILDING PROGRAMME IN ADOLESCENT EDUCATION
PDF
Everyday Spelling and Grammar by Kathi Wyldeck
PPTX
Integrated Management of Neonatal and Childhood Illnesses (IMNCI) – Unit IV |...
PDF
LIFE & LIVING TRILOGY - PART - (2) THE PURPOSE OF LIFE.pdf
DOCX
Ibrahim Suliman Mukhtar CV5AUG2025.docx
Cambridge-Practice-Tests-for-IELTS-12.docx
PUBH1000 - Module 6: Global Health Tute Slides
LIFE & LIVING TRILOGY- PART (1) WHO ARE WE.pdf
What’s under the hood: Parsing standardized learning content for AI
Skin Care and Cosmetic Ingredients Dictionary ( PDFDrive ).pdf
1.Salivary gland disease.pdf 3.Bleeding and Clotting Disorders.pdf important
Literature_Review_methods_ BRACU_MKT426 course material
Myanmar Dental Journal, The Journal of the Myanmar Dental Association (2015).pdf
Journal of Dental Science - UDMY (2022).pdf
Nurlina - Urban Planner Portfolio (english ver)
Disorder of Endocrine system (1).pdfyyhyyyy
THE CHILD AND ADOLESCENT LEARNERS & LEARNING PRINCIPLES
Hospital Case Study .architecture design
Lecture on Viruses: Structure, Classification, Replication, Effects on Cells,...
Climate Change and Its Global Impact.pptx
CAPACITY BUILDING PROGRAMME IN ADOLESCENT EDUCATION
Everyday Spelling and Grammar by Kathi Wyldeck
Integrated Management of Neonatal and Childhood Illnesses (IMNCI) – Unit IV |...
LIFE & LIVING TRILOGY - PART - (2) THE PURPOSE OF LIFE.pdf
Ibrahim Suliman Mukhtar CV5AUG2025.docx

Case Study 5.2 Hiding the Real Story at Midwestern Community Acti.docx

  • 1. Case Study 5.2: Hiding the Real Story at Midwestern Community Action Recently, life at Midwestern Community Action has been anything but smooth. The nonprofit runs a variety of programs in a midsized city, including preschools, teen drop-in centers, a food pantry, a medical clinic, and low-income housing. Health problems forced founding executive director Sally May, who was well loved by staff, to quit after 20 years in her position. The board then appointed Josiah Lang, who had served as the manager of a local government service agency, as the next executive director. When Lang arrived at Community Action, he discovered that May had been a hands-off leader. She allowed coordinators to run their programs without much supervision. Used to operating on their own, they resisted Lang’s efforts to institute performance evaluations, to evaluate the effectiveness of each program, and to reallocate funds between programs. It didn’t help that Lang made little effort to get to know his subordinates and has an abrasive personality. Three coordinators and a half dozen front-line staff quit. Lang has the support of the board, which believes that the organization needs more structure and accountability, but staff morale is low. Employees have lost faith in the organization’s leadership. However, they remain committed to helping the disadvantaged and to Community Action’s mission. For that reason, they largely keep their frustrations to themselves and are careful to protect the organization’s public image. Community Action continues to be well regarded by clients, government officials, donors, and the public at large. This week Community Action will interview an applicant for its housing coordinator position, a vacancy created when the previous coordinator left in frustration. This is the most important open position to fill. The housing coordinator oversees three apartment complexes with 200 tenants and
  • 2. manages the most employees. Failure to fill the vacancy soon could reduce Community Action’s outreach to the homeless. The applicant, Albert Singh, appears to be highly qualified. If he takes the position, Singh will move his family from out of state. He has no idea that Community Action is dealing with significant conflict and poor morale. Singh will make a brief presentation to the entire staff during his visit and then meet for an extended time with the current program coordinators. During this session, the coordinators (without the director present) will question him and present an overview of Community Action. Albert will also have an opportunity to ask questions of the coordinators. Discussion Probes 1. What ethical duties are in conflict in this situation? 2. Are Community Action employees justified in keeping their concerns “in house,” out of the public eye? Why or why not? 3. If you were one of the current program coordinators, how much would you reveal about the turmoil at Community Action to Singh? 4. As a coordinator, what would you say if Singh asked why the previous housing coordinator quit? How would you answer if asked your opinion of the executive director? 5. Is withholding the truth as damaging as lying? Why or why not?