David R. Jones has been President and Chief Executive Officer of the Community Service Society of New York, a nonpartisan, not-for-profit organization that promotes economic advancement and full civic participation for low-income New Yorkers, since 1986. He writes a bi-weekly newspaper column in the New York Amsterdam News, “The Urban Agenda,” that serves to educate the public and government officials on issues of importance to minority and poor communities. Prior to joining CSS, Mr. Jones served as Executive Director of the New York City Youth Bureau and, from 1979 to 1983, as Special Advisor to Mayor Koch. He has been appointed by Mayor Bloomberg to several committees, including the
Commission for Economic Opportunity, a task force to address poverty and unemployment. From 1996 to 2000, Mr. Jones was Chairman of the Board of Carver Federal Savings Bank, the largest African-American managed bank in the nation.

Mr. Jones is currently co-chairman of the Commission on School Governance. He is also chairman of the National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy, a leading philanthropic watchdog organization. He was co-chairman of the New York City Council Commission on the Campaign for Fiscal Equity. While receiving his Bachelor of Arts degree from Wesleyan University, Mr. Jones interned for the late Senator Robert F. Kennedy in Washington, D.C. He received a Juris Doctor degree from the Yale Law School, afterwards clerking for Judge Constance Baker Motley of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. Mr. Jones was a recipient of the Thomas J. Watson Fellowship. He served for 12 years on the board of trustees of Wesleyan University and is now a Trustee Emeritus. Prior to his nonprofit and public service careers, he specialized in corporate antitrust cases and contract litigation at the law firm of Cravath, Swaine & Moore.

Blog Entries by David Jones

The Black Middle Class

8 Comments | Posted November 12, 2009 | 10:58 AM (EST)


Growing up in Crown Heights in the 1950's-60's was not only to be witness to the end of overt racial discrimination in New York City, but also to see the huge expansion of the black middle class. Black professionals had always lived in my neighborhood. In fact, a segregated New...

Read Post

Concern for the Attacks on Rangel

2 Comments | Posted November 4, 2009 | 06:28 PM (EST)


It must be hard to be an elected official today and ten times harder if you're a controversial one taking on unpopular causes for people without power. It seems to me that a whole generation of elected black officials is under scrutiny for financial improprieties and missteps. Some of them...

Read Post

Latinos and the Unheard Third

6 Comments | Posted October 30, 2009 | 01:10 PM (EST)


I was born in 1948, on the forward edge of baby boomers. If it's one thing we have in common as a group, it is that we almost all had parents who talked endlessly (or so it seemed to me as an adolescent) about what they and their parents had...

Read Post

Goldman and Homelessness

3 Comments | Posted October 21, 2009 | 03:13 PM (EST)


Two recent news stories keep coming together in my mind. The first is the incredible Goldman Sachs bonuses amounting to more than $16 billion. It will provide approximately 31,700 of its employees $700,000 each even if they were somewhat mediocre, and multiple millions for the stars! The news story is...

Read Post

A GED Scandal

Posted October 14, 2009 | 03:18 PM (EST)


Sometimes I wonder if advocacy for people without political power, money or political influence can be effective. At least today after a lead editorial in the New York Times supporting the findings and recommendations of a report we are releasing on the state of GED in New York City, I'm...

Read Post

Let Them Eat Cake

2 Comments | Posted October 8, 2009 | 02:30 PM (EST)


Over the last few weeks, I've had the feeling that I'm living through an episode of the Twilight Zone. We've now seen innumerable articles about Roman Polanski and how he's being mistreated for drugging and raping a 13-year-old girl (I admit I'm biased because I have a young daughter and...

Read Post

ACORN: A Case of Selective Prosecution

23 Comments | Posted October 5, 2009 | 05:18 PM (EST)


From town-hall-meeting-bullies shouting down members of Congress to Joe "You Lie" Wilson of South Carolina disrespecting the President at a joint session of Congress, 2009 has been a year of dramatic political theater. A conservative activist with a hidden video camera set out to embarrass ACORN -- and succeeded --...

Read Post

Make Them Work for a Living

4 Comments | Posted October 1, 2009 | 03:24 PM (EST)


It's time to be really tough on criminals, make it so they have to get a job when they get out of jail -- let them suffer like the rest of us.

But over the last two decades, the New York State Legislature and governors have been doing precisely the...

Read Post

Philanthropy Turns Away from Aggressive Advocacy for the Poor

Posted September 24, 2009 | 12:36 PM (EST)


As my friend Pablo Eisenberg, Senior Fellow at Georgetown University's Public Policy Institute, wrote in a recent article in The Chronicle of Philanthropy, the Senate Democrats' recent passage of a measure to deny all federal funding to Acorn, the nation's leading community organizing organization, strikes me as pandering to the...

Read Post

Predatory Equity

6 Comments | Posted September 17, 2009 | 11:42 AM (EST)


I know it's not nice to gloat -- to say "I told you so" -- but the recent news reports on the financial turmoil at Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper Village -- involving over 11,000 apartments in 110 buildings -- is just too good a story of greed and stupidity...

Read Post

West Indian Day Parade

Posted September 9, 2009 | 01:44 PM (EST)


I've lived on the same block in Prospect Heights Brooklyn for 30 years and I grew up on Dean Street, 15 blocks away in Crown Heights, so I know about this part of Brooklyn. One of the constants for the last 30 years is that you know the summer is...

Read Post

Keep Sick Workers Home for All Our Sakes

1 Comments | Posted September 2, 2009 | 05:41 PM (EST)


Some years ago, the Community Service Society (CSS) issued a report, Shortchanging Security, on the working conditions for non-unionized security guards in New York City. We found that working conditions were pretty bleak; 63,000 mostly Black and Latino men got around $10.00 an hour, with no benefits, no vacation...

Read Post

Page One Doesn't Reflect the Times

Posted August 27, 2009 | 11:53 AM (EST)


I'm starting to feel that I don't live in the same New York City as everyone else does. I've read my four newspapers today (New York Times, Daily News , Wall Street Journal, New York Post) and, from their perspective, Jeter's MVP hopes, Madoff's cancer, lobster boat racing (you guess),...

Read Post

Why Call It Charity Care?

Posted August 19, 2009 | 05:36 PM (EST)


When I mention to people I meet for the first time that I lead a nonprofit, I often get the look I sometimes display when introduced to a priest or naïve young person -- how nice for you to do good deeds, the rest of us have to work for...

Read Post

Justice Sotomayor: Thurgood Would Be Pleased

3 Comments | Posted August 12, 2009 | 05:14 PM (EST)


I guess I, like many others, get the feeling that we go through experiences in life that don't seem to be particularly important, which we only recognize in hindsight were significant historical moments. I feel a bit like the character in Forest Gump or the movie Zelig, where you are...

Read Post

CTE

1 Comments | Posted August 5, 2009 | 03:46 PM (EST)


A debate raged in the Black intellectual community in the early twentieth century (1895-1915) that still has relevance in 2009. Should the movement focus on the promotion of a "talented 10th" of highly educated Black intellectuals as the means toward Black progress or focus instead on the technical education...

Read Post

Institutional Racism at the NYC Fire Department

3 Comments | Posted July 30, 2009 | 12:44 PM (EST)


I have a couple of things that start me off on out-of- control "rants." Probably everyone has one or two subjects that, once you get started, people in the room start to shift in their chairs, children go find other things to do, and spouses begin kicking you under the...

Read Post

The Recession: A New Disaster for Black Men

1 Comments | Posted July 22, 2009 | 04:29 PM (EST)


Last week, the New York City Comptroller issued a report that should be sending up red flags across dozens of cities in America. While unemployment rose steadily for White New Yorkers for the first quarter of '08 through the first 3 months of this year, the number of unemployed Blacks...

Read Post

Racist Healthcare: A New York Story

1 Comments | Posted July 15, 2009 | 04:18 PM (EST)


Growing up in Crown Heights Brooklyn in the 1950's and '60's had its advantages. In an overwhelmingly African-American neighborhood, as an adolescent, I was largely insulated from the virulent racism that characterized much of New York City during that period. This was a time that restricted covenants against blacks buying...

Read Post

Culture in NYC ? Bring Lots of Cash

7 Comments | Posted July 8, 2009 | 05:59 PM (EST)


A strange thing has been happening in New York City over the last few decades. Cultural institutions which used to be free or very low cost have increased their admission fees to make it virtually impossible for anyone but the upper middle class and wealthy from attending them. I guess...

Read Post