[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 60 (Wednesday, April 25, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H2074-H2075]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING DUNCAN CAMPBELL
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Tonight, in Portland, Oregon, there's a special
ceremony as Duncan Campbell is honored at the 84th Annual Portland
First Citizen Award Banquet. I'm sorry that duties require me to be
here in Washington, DC, instead of with hundreds of Duncan's friends
and admirers back home in Portland.
This is a very special award for a unique human being. Duncan has a
very compelling personal story, working his way through a childhood
marred by neglect and alcoholism. He put himself through college at
Portland State University and eventually did the same at law school,
earning his
[[Page H2075]]
degree at the University of Oregon. He founded the Campbell Group, a
very successful firm, pioneering work establishing timber investment
funds. He soon became recognized as an innovator and an industry
leader, but his real story is his lifelong commitment to children.
Shaped by his own difficult early experiences, Duncan has focused on
ways that he can use his success financially and intellectually to
advance the cause of disadvantaged children. He's done this in numerous
ways, but I think his greatest achievement is the establishment of an
organization known as Friends of the Children. He put part of the
proceeds of the sale of his company to establish the program in 1993.
Starting small, it was built around the principle that troubled young
people need a constant adult presence supporting, guiding, and not just
mentoring but really becoming a part of their lives. Over the years, it
has proven to be spectacularly successful.
Currently, there are 90 friends who are paid, full-time mentors, each
serving as a caring adult--a constant presence for a handful of
children. These friends are not just in Portland, Oregon, but in rural
Oregon, in Sisters and Klamath Falls, and now in projects in Boston,
New York, and Seattle.
Duncan's vision is to focus on the children with the very highest
risk factors. These children statistically would undoubtedly fail to
complete school. Most would have problems with drugs or alcohol, early
unplanned out-of-wedlock pregnancy, and almost all would fall into the
criminal justice system.
The results of his handiwork are overwhelming and compelling:
Eighty-five percent of these children, who most experts agree would
otherwise fall through the cracks or worse, graduate from high school;
Ninety percent avoid involvement with the criminal justice system,
even though 60 percent of these at-risk children are part of a program
that have a parent who's been incarcerated;
Despite the fact that 60 percent of these children were born to a
teen parent, 95 percent avoid early parenting themselves;
According to a report by the Harvard Business School Association of
Oregon, every dollar invested in the organization results in more than
$7 in reduced social costs for the community and untold richness for
the children involved.
This is an amazing program with compelling results. It was willed
into existence by my friend, Duncan Campbell. Portland honors him this
evening, but all Americans should honor not just the example but the
specifics.
Friends of the Children is a program that works and should be
replicated. I will do all I can to help the Federal Government find a
way for it to be a partner in this unparalleled success story. This is
the best way to honor Duncan, his vision, and his commitment.
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