Archive for the 'Legislative Update' Category

Support The Child Welfare Workforce Improvement Act (S. 2837)


December 11th, 2009

Take Action!

S. 2837, The Child Welfare Workforce Improvement Act, was recently introduced by Senator Lincoln and aims to improve the child welfare workforce for the thousands of children and families who depend on this system every day. NASW lobbyists worked for many years to create this legislation, in collaboration with the Children’s Defense Fund and other coalition partners, and we are fully committed to enhancing the federal response to protect children and to prevent abuse and neglect. Highlights of the bill:

  • A study that would result in recommendations to recruit and retain a high quality workforce to include training, workloads, and staff supervision.
  • Flexible use of Title IV-E training dollars to support child welfare staff providing preventive, protective, reunification, and post-permanency services in addition to foster care, kinship guardianship, and adoption services.
  • A demonstration grant program to help states and municipalities improve their workforce. Projects would focus on improving the child welfare systems’ ability to conduct needs assessments and secure resources.

Action Requested:

Please contact your Senator and ask them to cosponsor The Child Welfare Workforce Improvement Act (S. 2837). Let them know that passage of this important legislation will enable social workers and other professionals to improve the crucial services for children and families in the child welfare system.

Thanks for your advocacy!

NASW Health Care Reform Roundup - December 9, 2009


December 10th, 2009

Several Amendments Dominate Debate in Senate on Health Care Reform

There are 91 amendments to the Senate Health Care Reform bill. A list of all the Senate amendments to the Health Care Reform bill can be found here. The list is compiled by OpenLeft.com, a news, analysis and action website dedicated toward building a progressive governing majority in America.

State-by State Analysis of the Impact of Health Care Reform

The Department of Health and Human Services has released an analysis of the impact of healthcare reform on a state-by-state basis.


Senate Tables the Nelson Abortion Amendment

On December 8, the Senate voted to table or set aside the amendment offered by Senator Ben Nelson (D-NE).  The Nelson amendment to the health care reform bill would have banned the use of federal taxpayer money for abortions failed by a vote of 54-45.

The Nelson amendment was similar to the Stupak/Pitts abortion amendment that was added to the passed House health care reform bill last month.   With the inclusion of the Stupak/Pitts amendment, the House bill would prohibit the proposed new government-run insurance plan from covering abortions except in cases of rape, incest or to save a mother’s life, and bars any health plan receiving federal subsidies in a new insurance marketplace from offering abortion coverage.

NASW strongly opposes the Stupak/Pitts inclusion in the House bill and advocates for its removal when the House and Senate negotiates the bills during conference committee.


Rally for Reproductive Rights in Health Care Reform a Success

Hundreds of people came to Capitol Hill from as far away as California to rally for reproductive rights in health care reform. NASW sponsored the event along with other organizations. The room in the Capitol building was filled to capacity and there was need to use an overflow room to accommodate the participants. In addition to the rally, individuals lobbied their members of Congress.

Rep. Lee, Social Worker and Chair of the CBC Leading the Special Order on Job Creation Tonight


December 9th, 2009

Wednesday, December 09, 2009
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: J. Jioni Palmer

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Members of the Congressional Black Caucus will be on the House Floor TONIGHT to discuss job creation in the African American community.

The Special Order Hour will be anchored by CBC Chairwoman Barbara Lee (D-CA). The Special Order Hour will be broadcast on C-SPAN.

WHAT: Special Order Hour on job creation in the African American community

WHO: Members of the Congressional Black Caucus

WHEN: TONIGHT, Wednesday, December, 2009 at approximately 7:00/8:00 pm.

WHERE: U.S. House of Representatives, House Floor

www.thecongressionalblackcaucus.com

Stressful Jobs with Low Pay


November 25th, 2009

Dear Colleague,

I am writing to ask you, and every single NASW member, to contact your members of Congress and show your full support for the Dorothy I. Height and Whitney M. Young, Jr. Social Work Reinvestment Act (H.R. 795/ S.686) . This is the first piece of federal legislation ever introduced that will directly address the workforce challenges that our profession is facing. These challenges, such as low salaries, high educational debt, and serious safety concerns are making it difficult to assist the 10 million clients that social workers across the country serve each day. Take a moment to view this CNNmoney.com study, which rates social work at the top of the list of stressful jobs that pay badly. Rep. Towns recently discussed this study in a “Dear Colleague” he sent to his fellow members of Congress asking for their support for H.R. 795.

The Dorothy I. Height and Whitney M. Young, Jr. Social Work Reinvestment Act is designed to address the workforce challenges we are facing, thereby helping to ensure that millions of individuals and families throughout the nation can continue to receive competent social work care.  The legislation will establish a Social Work Reinvestment Commission to provide a comprehensive analysis of current workforce trends and develop long-term recommendations and strategies to ensure an adequate social work workforce.  In addition, demonstration programs will award grants in the areas of workplace improvements, research, education, training, and community-based programs of excellence.

We also want to thank social workers, Representative Towns and Senator Mikulski, for introducing this legislation and for their consistent dedication and leadership of the social work profession.  We hope you will take a moment to thank them too. You can print this postcard and mail it to Senator Mikulski and Representative Towns or you can send them a quick thank you email. (View Senator Mikulski’s and Representative Towns’ contact information.) It’s important to remember and thank our social work advocates in Congress!

As always, we appreciate your advocacy and leadership on the issues that are important to our profession.

Sincerely,

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Executive Director
Elizabeth J. Clark, PhD, ACSW, MPH

Rally for Comprehensive Reproductive Health Care in Health Care Reform Legislation


November 19th, 2009

Background
The U.S. House of Representatives passed an amendment to the health care reform legislation sponsored by Bart Stupak (MI-1) and Joe Pitts (PA-16). This amendment would restrict access to abortion procedures for consumers who receive subsidies to buy insurance in a reconfigured health care system. Pro-choice organizations are very concerned that the new language threatens the availability of private insurance coverage for comprehensive reproductive health care services.

Action Requested
Attend a rally from 11:30am to 1:00 pm and hill day in the afternoon on Wednesday, December 2 in Washington, DC on Capitol Hill to prevent the Stupak/Pitts amendment from being included in the Senate version of health care reform. If you would like to attend, please contact Dina Kastner at advocacy@naswdc.org. She will help you set up hill visits with your Senators and provide you with further information about the rally and the agenda for the day.

Rep. Towns releases HR795 Dear Colleague letter regarding low social work salaries and high stress


November 6th, 2009

The Honorable Edolphus Towns
Date: 11/6/2009

Dear Colleague:

I wanted to call your attention to an article on cnn.com highlighting the top 15 “stressful jobs that pay badly.” The number 1 job listed — social work. This article highlights one  of the key problems in recruiting and retaining qualified individuals who will “step in when others step aside.”

My bill, HR 795, the Dorothy I. Height and Whitney M. Young Social Work Reinvestment Act, aims to solve this problem by establishing a commission to study the policies needed to recruit and retain qualified social workers in a time when they are needed the most. Social workers focus their practice on those who are most vulnerable in society. With the economic downturn, their caseloads are only increasing, while salaries and positions are being cut.

For more information, here is the article from cnn.com:

Social worker

Median pay: $43,200
% who say their job is stressful: 72%

Social workers step in when everyone else steps aside to help people and families in vulnerable situations. They provide patients with education and counseling, advise care givers and make referrals for other services. And with social workers in short supply and programs underfunded, few must juggle the work of many, while reaping little reward.

Just ask Heather Griffith, a social worker who works with children in intensive foster care in Boston: “You’re getting paid $12 an hour and kids are screaming at you, telling you that you are just in it for the money and you’re just like, really?”

http://money.cnn.com/galleries/2009/pf/0910/gallery.stressful_jobs/index.html

Regards,

Edolphus “Ed” Towns
Member of Congress

NASW Health Care Roundup - November 4, 2009


November 4th, 2009

NASW Calls for Increased Mental Health Funding

The National Association of Social Workers has joined with the Mental Health Liaison Group (MHLG), a coalition of national organizations representing the diverse mental health advocacy community, in calling for higher federal funding levels for mental health services, supports and research.  The coalition argues that higher federal funding levels are essential to meet the extraordinary mental health needs of communities throughout the nation, which are especially strained by the extraordinary economic crisis. NASW and MHLG called on the Congress to go above the Administration’s proposed increases for the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH), which includes funding for the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH).

In a coalition letter signed by NASW, the group called for funding increases in overlooked federal mental health programs, including increases for the mental health block grant and consumer-centered programs, among others, whose funding levels have remained stagnant for nearly a decade.  NASW and the coalition are pursuing a comprehensive funding approach, advocating for a broad array of services and supports to address the needs of all communities with many residents who have been affected by the crisis, and because of the likelihood that every state will be forced to reduce services. For a copy of NASW’s coalition letter to Congress, see here

Congress Negotiates Health Reform Details

Democratic leaders continue to convene in high level meetings to work out the details of comprehensive health reform bills headed soon to the House and Senate floor. With critical decisions being worked out behind closed doors, advocacy organizations are scrambling to learn how their top priority concerns are faring in the ongoing negotiations. NASW continues to press for a variety of priorities including expanding coverage of the uninsured and ensuring that health disparities are addressed. NASW members interested in learning the details of the various bills may access two new resources to compare the various bills on a wide range of variables.  Follow this link to a new Kaiser Family Foundation’s side by side document comparing the major health care reform bills and also this one of a new Commonwealth Fund analysis of the major health care reform bills.

Social Work Medicare Equity Act Language Included in House Bill

Section 1307 of the House Bill (H.R. 3200) includes language that removes clinical social work services from the Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) per diem rate and alternatively authorizes independent practitioners to bill for them independently. With this provision, licensed clinical social workers that participate in Medicare will be able to bill Medicare directly. This is a long-sought change by NASW and a critical parity provision for clinical social workers that will expand the availability of services to certain Medicare SNF residents. 

 Political Climate

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid has sent a health care reform bill containing a “state opt out” to the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) for scoring, or a determination of how much the bill would cost.  The “opt out” would permit individual states to remove themselves from the federal insurance program if they wish.  Sending the bill to the CBO is a strong indication that Reid believes he can pass a “state opt out” bill through the Senate with at least 60 votes (and exactly 60 votes, in all likelihood).  Speaker Pelosi has expressed a strong preference for a bill containing some kind of public option, but has indicated that a “state opt out” would accomplish many of the same goals and does not believe it would hinder the progress of a final bill.  If Sen. Reid can secure 60 votes for this bill, the process of reconciliation with the House bill would then commence, before a final version is sent to the White House.

Best Practices and Lessons Learned: Shaping National Health Care Reform

Kyrsten Sinema, MSW, JD is a social worker, NASW member and a member of the Arizona legislature, serving as Arizona’s Assistant House Democratic Leader. She led a Lunch Time Series teleconference to discuss federal health care reform. Sinema is one of 32 state legislators nationwide — the only state lawmaker from Arizona — selected for President Obama’s White House Health Reform Task Force. She provided an overview of the various health reform proposals being considered. NASW members can read the transcript online.

Benjamin Confirmed as U.S. Surgeon GeneralOn October 29, the full senate unanimously approved Regina Benjamin, MD as U.S. Surgeon General.  The Surgeon General of the United States is the operational head of the Public Health Service Commissioned Corps (PHSCC) and thus the leading spokesperson on matters of public health in the federal government.

 

First announced as the U.S. Surgeon General nominee on July 13, 2009, Dr. Regina Benjamin was the founder and chief executive officer of the Bayou La Batre Rural Health Clinic in La Batre, LA, the immediate past chair of the Federation of State Medical Boards of the United States and previously served as associate dean for rural health at the University of South Alabama College of Medicine. In 2002, as the president of the Medical Association of the State of Alabama, she became the first black woman to be president of a U.S. state medical society. 

NASW supported Dr. Benjamin’s confirmation.

Letter of Support from NASW for H.R. 3962 “Affordable Health Care for America Act of 2009″


November 4th, 2009

Congress is working to pass major health care reform legislation, and the full House will consider a bill over the next several days that will meet many of the needs of the American populace. “The Affordable Health Care for America Act of 2009,” (H.R. 3692) provides more affordable quality coverage for millions, calls for shared responsibility by individuals, employers and government, and expands health insurance coverage choices, including being able to retain one’s current coverage, having additional private plan options and offering a public health insurance option designed to lower costs and keep insurance companies accountable. NASW strongly supports this compromise legislation and has called on Congress to pass comprehensive health care reform now. See NASW’s letter of support here.

NASW Health Care Reform Roundup - October 26, 2009


October 26th, 2009

Congress Extends the Ryan White Act

Last week, Congress passed the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Treatment Extension Act of 2009. The bill will extend for four years the Ryan White Program, which provides lifesaving and life-extending health care, medications and support services to over 530,000 low-income people living with HIV/AIDS in the United States. On October 21, the bill passed the House floor on a vote of 408 to 9. On October 19, the Senate passed the same bill by unanimous consent. The bill is awaiting President Obama’s signature. The Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program was originally authored in 1990 and reauthorized three times since, always with strong bipartisan support.

Update Health Care Reform

On October 13, the Senate Finance Committee voted on its version of the bill to overhaul health care in the United States.  The Senate Finance committee was the last congressional committee of jurisdiction to tackle the issue of health care reform.  The Senate leadership is in the process of merging the Finance Committee legislation with a bill approved by the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP). The HELP bill contained several provisions supported by NASW and not included in the Finance Committee proposal, including a public option plan.

According to Senate rules, they will permit a huge number of floor amendments, threatening perhaps several weeks of debate, if opponents have the votes to tie up consideration. It is likely that at least some of these amendments will raise high-priority concerns for NASW.   For example, one such amendment would focus on including the public plan option in the final bill.  Please go here to see an earlier NASW action alert supporting the public option plan.

The House leadership has been meeting over the past month in an effort to merge the bills passed out of three committees of jurisdiction (Energy and Commerce, Ways and Means and Education and Labor).

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Hate Crimes Passes: On to President


October 23rd, 2009

The National Association of Social Workers has steadfastly been involved with hate crimes legislation for over a decade. On October 22, 2009 NASW’S tireless efforts came to fruition with the passage, by the Senate, of the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act by a 68-29 vote. The hate crimes initiative was included in the Fiscal Year 2010 Department of Defense Authorization Report passed previously by the House of Representatives. The historic enactment of hate crimes legislation represents a vital victory for social justice advocates and all Americans who affirm that inequality and intolerance corrupt Democratic principles and ideals.

Consistently, many Americans are victims of violent crimes due to their race, religion, sexual orientation, gender, gender identity and disability. The Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act will realign significant federal resources to aide local law enforcement efforts in the fight against hate crimes, racism and intolerance against those who exercise their right to alternative lifestyles. Further, the bill acknowledges that gender identity must be protected under federal law. The Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act is our nation’s sincerest attempt statutorily at protecting the civil rights of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities. NASW strongly believes that the enactment of this legislation affirms America’s commitment and moral imperative that all of its citizens are one. Today, Social Workers should be proud that lawmakers have reaffirmed the intrinsic values of our profession and its unwavering pursuit of equality for all.