Thanks so much to all of you who sent your stories about the importance of being with your children after their birth. They are moving. It’s so important to provide people’s real experiences to legislators.
So join us to:
MARCH TO THE CAPITOL on MLK DAY this MONDAY, JANUARY 20THat 11:30 am!
You’re invited to a breakfast workshop at Darby’s Café at 9 am. We will discuss POWER’s legislative agenda and practice talking to our legislators in preparation for dropping off letters to their offices when we get to the Capitol.
At 11, we’ll gather kids, sack lunches and be in front of Darby’s to join WACAN members for the 11:30 march to the Capitol. Marching music will be provided by the Artesian Rumble Arkestra!
At the Capitol, we’ll eat lunch and deliver letters to legislators. See you Monday!
Let us know if you have any questions:
POWER
Parents Organizing For Welfare and Economic Rights
309 5th Avenue SE, Olympia, WA 98501
360-352-9716 toll free 866-343-9716
Find us on Facebook.
POWER is an organization of low-income parents and allies advocating for a strong social safety net while working toward a world where children and care giving are truly valued, and the devastation of poverty has been eradicated.
Below:
1.Also happening on Monday – join Children’s Alliance members to sign in at legislative hearing to support increased dental access.
2.Question – have any of you had to change the head of household on your section 8 voucher? We need to hear from you!
3.WA House pass the Dream Act on the first day of session! Call your Senators.
4.50th Anniversary of the War on Poverty website.
5.Stephanie Coontz article on the Maria Shriver report.
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1. Together we are building momentum to win better access to care for kids, elders and adults across Washington. There is a critical opportunity for action this Monday in Olympia.
You are invited to join with Children’s Alliance and the Washington Dental Access Campaign to show support forHouse Bill 2321: increasing access to affordable oral health care in Washington state for kids and their families. This bill will bring Washington a mid-level dental provider that can provide care to people and communities who are going without. Please join us for the hearing!
Monday, January 20 (MLK Jr. Day)
1:30 to 3:30 PM
House Health Care and Wellness Committee, John L. O’Brien Bldg. Hearing Rm B
Find Directions and parking information here
Here’s what you can do:
1. Come to the hearing! Legislators need to see a room packed with people who expect them to do the right thing. If you can come:
2. Sign in PRO for House Bill 2321. The sign-up sheet will be outside the hearing room.
3. Stop by John L. O’Brien Room B12 for a quick update and sticker between 1:00 and 1:30 PM on the day of the hearing.
If you can’t come to the hearing, (we know, it’s miles and hours away for some of you) stay tuned. We’ll be launching an online action alert Monday morning that you can share with your friends, family, and colleagues.
Background:
HERE IN WASHINGTON AND AROUND THE NATION, momentum is building for a quality, cost-effective, community-driven solution to the oral health crisis. Policymakers, health advocates and community-based leaders are working to authorize highly trained oral health care providers, called mid-level dental professionals, to work as part of the dental team.
Right now, too many people in low-income households and children of color in Washington state can’t get the oral health care they need to stay healthy. It doesn’t have to be this way.
· Left untreated, chronic pain interferes with nutrition, work, and school and leads to heart disease, diabetes, stroke, and even death.
· Over 700,000 adults are eligible for dental coverage as of 2014 through Medicaid. Only 1 in 4 dentists take Medicaid.
· 35 of 39 Washington Counties have federally designated dental provider shortages.
· Improvements in access to care for kids aren’t reaching all kids equally – low-income kids, children of color, and children in immigrant families do not have adequate access to care.
Restoring adult dental in Medicaid coverage was a good step forward. Now we need make sure make sure people in our communities can get the care they need.
For more information please contact Pam Johnson, Oral Health Outreach Coordinator,, 206-755-4309.
Thank you for being part of Children’s Alliance,
Siobhan
Siobhan Ring
Mobilization Director | Children’s Alliance
206.324.0340 x 13
Join us on Facebook | Follow us on Twitter | Read our blog
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2. Has anyone been in the situation where they are receiving Section 8 and the person listed as head of household leaves the family? Is it difficult to change head the of household to the other parent?
If you have any information about this, reply to this email or contact us at .
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3. Washington State House Passes the Dream Act:Tell Your Senator to Support Our DREAMers!
It has been a great week for our communities and our state – and it’s only the first week of session! This past Monday, the State House passed HB1817, the Washington State Dream Act. This bill will allow undocumented students the ability to qualify for the State Need Grant, a critical resource for helping low-income students pay for college. In a bold move, our state representatives passed one of our network’s top legislative priorities and sent a strong message that every young person in our state, regardless of national origin or citizenship status, deserves the opportunity to obtain higher education and help keep Washington competitive in the global marketplace. The work is not done. Unfortunately, the State Senate is a hostile place for DREAMers, where the Dream Act faces an uncertain future. This is where you come in. We need to bring this bill to a vote. A major opponent of the Dream Act is Sen. Barbara Bailey (LD10-Oak Harbor), who is also the chair of the Higher Education Committee.The road to making the Dream Act a reality goes through Oak Harbor and Sen. Bailey needs to hear us loud and clear. Send Sen. Bailey and your own Senator a message on the Dream Act. Let's clear the path for a vote in the Senate.
It’s time for the Senate to stop blocking the will of the people. Let your Senator know you support the thousands of DREAMers in our state; click here: to send them a message.
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4. The 50th Anniversary of the War on Poverty has brought forth many very helpful reports and analyses. The Coalition on Human Needs is compiling them in a new webpage - we hope you'll check it out now and in the future, as we will continually update it. Think of it as convenient one-stop shopping.
CHN webpage: The War on Poverty: 50 Years Later:
Of special note: TV reporter Maria Shriver has released her latest Shriver Report, done with the Center for American Progress. It's called The Shriver Report: A Woman's Nation Pushes Back from the Brink, and it documents the high prevalence of poverty and near-poverty in America today, with practical solutions from the public and private sectors. You can download the report for free: through January 15. You'll find it very useful, and it will be associated with continued media attention, culminating in an HBO documentary that will air on March 17.
We will be sending out occasional emails and blog posts with information antipoverty advocates can use - more soon!
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New York Times SundayReview|Opinion
5. How Can We Help Men? By Helping Women
By STEPHANIE COONTZ JAN. 11, 2014
THIS week Maria Shriver brings together a star-studded cast of celebrities, from Hillary Rodham Clinton to Beyoncé, to call attention to the economic plight of American women and demand that women’s needs be put “at the center of policy making.”
But is this really the time to focus on women? For nearly four decades, feminists have decried “the feminization of poverty.” However, since the 1980s there has been a defeminization of poverty, as a growing proportion of men have fallen on hard times. In recent years men have experienced especially significant losses in income and job security.
Although women are still more likely to be poor than men, on average women’s income and labor-force participation have been rising since the 1970s. By contrast, between 1970 and 2010 the median earnings of men fell by 19 percent, and those of men with just a high school diploma by a stunning 41 percent. And while women have regained all the jobs they lost during the recession, men have regained just 75 percent.
Since about 1980 the percentage of men and women in middle-skill jobs has declined. But for women, nearly all of that decline was because of increased representation in higher-skill jobs. Women’s employment in low-skill jobs increased by just 1 percent. By contrast, for men, half the decline in middle-skill jobs was a result of increases in low-skill jobs.
The most urgent issue facing working Americans today is not the glass ceiling. It is the sinking floor. So wouldn’t it make more sense to focus on gender-neutral economic policies?
Actually, it wouldn’t, because “gender-neutral” work practices and social policies were traditionally based on a masculine model. Employers assumed that there was no need to accommodate caregiving obligations because the “normal” worker had a wife to do that. Policy makers assumed there was no need for universal programs such as family allowances and public child care because the “normal” woman had a husband to support her and her children. Accordingly, most social benefits, such as Social Security and unemployment insurance, were tied to prior participation in the labor market. Welfare was a stigmatized and stingy backup for misfits who were not in a male-breadwinner family.
Social and economic policies constructed around the male breadwinner model have always disadvantaged women. But today they are dragging down millions of men as well. Paradoxically, putting gender equity issues at the center of social planning would now be in the interests of most men.
This was not so evident 40 or 50 years ago, when the struggle for gender equity threatened many male entitlements. In those days, men of every skill and income level had preferential access to jobs that provided security, benefits and rising wages. As the sociologist Erin Hatton shows, when employers needed cheap temporary workers, they turned to companies like Kelly Girl, whose ads bragged that unlike the gimme-gimme male worker, the Kelly Girl was a “Never-Never” employee: “Never costs you a dime for slack time. (When the workload drops, you drop her.) Never has a cold, slipped disk or loose tooth. (Not on your time anyway!)”
Today, however, becoming a “never-never” employee is increasingly a gender-neutral fate. Millions of men face working conditions that traditionally characterized women’s lives: low wages, minimal benefits, part-time or temporary jobs, and periods of joblessness. Poverty is becoming defeminized because the working conditions of many men are becoming more feminized.
Whether they realize it or not, men now have a direct stake in policies that advance gender equity. Most of the wage gap between women and men is no longer a result of blatant male favoritism in pay and promotion. Much of it stems from general wage inequality in society at large.
IN most countries, women tend to be concentrated in lower-wage jobs. The United States actually has a higher proportion of skilled and highly paid female workers than countries like Sweden and Norway. Yet as a whole, Swedish and Norwegian women earn a higher proportion of the average male wage than American women because the gap between high and low wages is much smaller in those countries.
Establishing a “livable wage” floor would immediately reduce the gap in average pay between American women and men. But it would also boost the wages of millions of low-income male workers, who earn a much lower percentage of the average male wage than their counterparts in other wealthy countries. In 2009, one in every four American workers earned less than two-thirds of the national median hourly wage, the highest proportion of low-wage work in 19 Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development countries, according to the economist John Schmitt of the Center for Economic and Policy Research.
Another source of the gender pay gap is the lack of reliable, affordable child care, which forces many mothers to stay home or work part time even when they need and want full-time work.
Prioritizing child care would not just be a boon for mothers but for millions of fathers as well. The highest proportion of stay-at-home moms is found among women married to men in the bottom 25 percent of the country’s income distribution. Most of these women cannot afford to work because of the high cost of child care, even though their partners and children would benefit from the increased income.
Putting women first would mean strengthening America’s social safety net, because a higher proportion of single-mother families live in poverty here than in any other wealthy country. But a stronger safety net would help single-father families and two-parent families, too, because these families also have higher poverty rates than their counterparts in other wealthy countries.
Putting women first would also mean changing unemployment insurance rules that leave many part-time workers ineligible for benefits and disqualify people who leave a job due to a family member’s medical emergency. Women are especially affected by such rules, but the expansion of part-time and temporary jobs since the 1970s has left a growing number of male workers vulnerable as well. And a recent Pew poll found that almost 30 percent of fathers had reduced their work hours and 10 percent quit a job to care for a family member.
Putting women’s traditional needs at the center of social planning is not reverse sexism. It’s the best way to reverse the increasing economic vulnerability of men and women alike.
Given the increasing insecurity of many American men, they have good reason to back feminist policies. And if those policies alienate some women in the upper echelons, then maybe feminism isn’t for every woman, and doesn’t need to be.
Stephanie Coontz is a faculty member at The Evergreen State College and co-chairwoman of the Council on Contemporary Families.
A version of this op-ed appears in print on January 12, 2014, on page SR6 of the New York edition with the headline: How Can We Help Men? By Helping Women