Posts Tagged ‘Barack Obama’ (Feed)

 

Children Among Hardest Hit by Recession – July 20th, 2009

The economic downturn makes the need for The Children’s Aid Society in New York more urgent than ever.

CBS News’ Children of the Recession series reports that child abuse is spiking, summer jobs for youth are more urgently needed and are becoming scarcer, and economic stress is hampering children’s performance in school. Perhaps most startlingly, it notes that one in 50 school-aged children is now homeless. Yet, as President Obama has reminded us via the Huffington Post “The homeless problem was bad even when the economy was good.”

The recession has not created issues like child homelessness – it has only made them more prevalent among the middle class.  According to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, Goldman Sachs predicts the unemployment rate will rise above 9 percent by the start of 2010, thrusting even more New York families and children into deep poverty, homelessness and worse. In harrowing first-hand accounts, ABC News tells the stories of such child victims of the recession in their own words.

Over the last 150 years, The Children’s Aid Society has served the most pressing needs of children through supportive housing services as well as emergency assistance, health services, health insurance enrollment, after-school and legal advocacy.  Now more than ever, your help is necessary. Volunteer or donate today.

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Recognize President Obama's National Health Care Day of Service – June 26th, 2009

During President Barack Obama’s National Health Care Day of Service on Saturday June 27th, please keep in mind that currently, of the 2.6 million New Yorkers without insurance, 400,000 are children.

The Children’s Aid Society is working hard to decrease that number through our Health Care Access Program. This program assists New York City children and families with the complicated task of enrolling in and accessing their state provided health insurance. The Children’s Aid Society employs Facilitated Enrollers, people who are specially trained assist in this process and tirelessly help the uninsured until they have secured an adequate health plan. health-care-day-of-service-photo

Facilitated Enrollers are particularly necessary because many of the families in the communities we serve are immigrants or non-English-speaking New Yorkers; the language barrier makes the already complex application procedure even more challenging. Facilitated Enrollers, or FEs, provide culturally sensitive outreach and enrollment services in more than 40 languages.

A huge part of why HCAP is able to reach and gain the trust of many uninsured families is the integral role that The Children’s Aid Society already plays in their lives. The Children’s Aid Society provides school-based health services in Community Schools in Harlem and Washington Heights, in addition to serving the wider community with three community health centers, so that health care can be convenient as well as affordable for New York City families.

All children in New York City deserve adequate medical care and the Children’s Aid Society works toward this goal. At Children’s Aid, every day is a Health Care Day of Service.

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East Harlem Against Deportation Campaign Seeks Reform of Harsh Immigration Policies – June 8th, 2009

immigration-reform2casOn a warm and sunny Friday, April 24, a gathering of politicians, advocates, families, members of the community and media crowded the sidewalk and street outside Children’s Aid’s East Harlem Center to hear elected officials and community organizers speak passionately about the ongoing deportations of undocumented immigrants and the ensuing havoc this wreaks on families and children.

State Senator José M. Serrano, who organized the event, announced a letter-writing campaign that will tell President Obama about the impact of deportations. “One thousand letters doesn’t sound like a lot, but it will have an impact,” he promised.

Congressman Charles B. Rangel declared that “this is not just a legislative issue, but a moral issue … it’s about human beings, about families, and relationships.”

Congressman José E. Serrano, the State Senator’s father, asserted that “a country that turns its back on immigrants turns its back on itself.”

City Councilmember Melissa Mark-Viverito said, “it is painful to be here” because of the nature of the issue, and urged the community to continue the letter-writing campaign and to keep the pressure on officials. The Children’s Aid image_casimmigrationreform-picSociety’s East Harlem Center will collect the letters.

Moria Cappio, Children’s Aid’s director of Head Start at the East Harlem Center, talked about the agency’s history of working with immigrant families in the community, and introduced two parents, both American citizens, who read letters from undocumented parents that were powerful and moving.

All spoke about the need to pass HR 182, the Child Citizen Protection Act, and deplored the cruel and inhuman treatment of undocumented immigrants in detention. Under this legislation, according to Congressman Serrano, judges would have the power to use their judgment to keep families together.

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