These proposals [of Majority Report] raise many questions in regard to which there could not but be differences of opinion among members of the Society---differences especially relating to the work of the present Poor Law, its sufficiency to meet the requirements of the time, and the principles on which it is founded. On the issue of the Commissioners' reports the Administrative Committee arranged that the Secretary should, ina series of papers, submite to the Council at special meetings the main recommendations of the Commission, and, as far as might be, the evidence on which they were based. Susequently, as the reports were sutudied, the divergence of opinion became more clear. Some of the Society's members expressed themselves as strongly oppsed to any fundamental changes in the present Poor Law ot its methods of administration. Thus, after a lapse of time that in the circumstances could not but be regretted, it appeared that , apart from the redommendations in regard to voluntary aid, the Council could not with advantage tale any common action for the promotion of the recommendations of the Majority Report. Accordingly, in December last, they passen the following resolutins:
Later, at a large general meeting, a resolution was adopted in favour of the establishment of a society for the reform of the Poor Law, at which one chief issue---insistence on the principle of unity of administration in all public relief---became the central point of associative action and a common propaganda. For the institution of this new Society there was the more reason, since a widespread agitation was being promoted by a Society formed for the promulgation of the views of the Minority, for break-up of the Poor Law and for the distribution of its functions among some four or five separate departments; and, judging from experience, it seemed to very many members of Charity Organisation Society that such a proposal would kead to very great confusion in administraton, to great and unnecessary expense, and to a quite needless and very injurious increase in dependence and pauperism.
[SW 276-278]