Showing posts with label CHIFF. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CHIFF. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

CHIFF Momentum is Growing... Watch This Video!

The momentum is building for CHIFF! In the last 24 hours, over 1,500 people have signed the petition and hundreds more have 'Liked' CHIFF on Facebook. Let’s keep sharing the petition and the need for this life changing bill.

Below is a video explaining CHIFF. Feel free to share it as you continue to share with your contacts throughout the week. Together, we can make a huge impact!

Let's keep the momentum going! Keep spreading the word about CHIFF and together we can change the future for children who need our help.

Click here to see video.

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Monday, June 23, 2014

Support CHIFF—Children In Families First

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The safest place for a child is in the loving arms of a parent. Children without a family are at higher risk for trafficking, forced labor, and abuse. Learn how you can help. Support CHIFF Children In Families First at http://childreninfamiliesfirst.org/please-sign-chiff-petition-today #SupportCHIFF

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Progressives Believe In Child Welfare

Source: http://childrendeservefamilies.com/progressives-believe-child-welfare/

2014-05-18-11.16.04-e1400533116556 Have you noticed how there are new progressives in the adoption debate? Traditional liberals like me have begun to call ourselves “Progressives” instead because we are embarrassed by how the most radical and mindless liberals have taken center stage, and liberals who know better have been taken along for the ride.

As Progressives, we reject the idea that nationality should determine which children deserve a family and which do not. Our opponents come in a few categories.

Continue reading.

Thursday, May 22, 2014

Listen Up! UAA Webinar Recording from May 20, 2014

Here is the link to the recording of the May 20th CHIFF webinar.  https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/853896601

Please note that when you click on the link, you will be prompted to enter your email address.

Please feel free to distribute the link to your staff, constituents, families, etc.

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Thursday, January 16, 2014

Spread the Word: The Children in Families First Act is Gaining Momentum

The way Washington functions today, few people would guess that Senators Elizabeth Warren and Chuck Schumer and Representatives Michele Bachmann and Trent Franks would co-sponsor and advocate for the same piece of legislation. But the five of us and a continuingly growing coalition of 45 other lawmakers believe that children should be raised in families.

The Children in Families First (CHIFF) Act will realign U.S. foreign assistance to prioritize children growing up in families; focus on protecting children by preserving, reunifying or creating families through kinship, domestic an d international adoption; and strengthen procedures to prevent abuse of children without families.

Today, an estimated 18-20 million children worldwide languish in institutions and uncounted millions more live on the streets. Our foreign aid helps many children, but not these. They are overlooked with tragic consequences: of those who survive childhood privation, abuse, and neglect, many eventually die on the streets or become criminals, drug addicts, victims of trafficking, and even terrorists. We must make change, now, and start to rescue these precious children, for their own sakes, but also because they are our future.

To learn more about the effort I am leading to provide these children with nurturing and permanent families, read the Associated Press story that appeared in newspapers across the country. Read the AP’s coverage here or below.

Use Facebook or Twitter to tell your friends and family about this legislation that will place children in caring families.


Sincerely,

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AP: Spurring foreign adoptions is goal of bipartisan bill in Congress

December 25, 2013

By David Crary

Amid partisan conflict in Congress, dozens of lawmakers from both parties — including staunch liberals and conservatives — have united behind a bill that supporters say addresses a heart-rending issue beyond politics: the millions of foreign children languishing in orphanages or otherwise at risk because they have no immediate family.

The bill would encourage more adoptions of foreign orphans, which have declined steadily in recent years, and reflects impatience with current policies overseen by the State Department.

"Every child needs and deserves to grow up in a family," says the bill's chief advocate, Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La. "While our foreign policy has done much to keep children alive and healthy, it has not prioritized this basic human right."

Titled the Children in Families First Act, the measure has been introduced in slightly different forms in both the Senate and House. Its co-sponsors range from Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., a hero of the Democratic left, to Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., a favorite of tea party conservatives.

"It's not a slam dunk, but it is very possible," Landrieu said of the bill's chances. "We need voices from all parts of the political spectrum to make a change that many of us think is extremely important."

As of mid-December, the twin measures had 32 co-sponsors in the House and 17 in the Senate.

Landrieu, mother of two adopted children, hopes to keep building support for the bill with the goal of clearing committees in both chambers by spring.

However, some House Republicans are skeptical about creating more bureaucracy, and there is sentiment in the Obama administration that some key provisions of the bill are not needed.

"I think we've been pretty successful recently," said Susan Jacobs, the State Department's special adviser on children's issues. "We are proud of the work that we do to protect everyone involved in the adoption process — the birth families, the adopting families and of course the children."

Landrieu thinks differently, contending the government has been remiss in failing to establish an office that focuses on international child welfare. The bill would create a new bureau in the State Department assigned to work with non-governmental organizations and foreign countries to minimize the number of children without families — through family preservation and reunification, kinship care, and domestic and international adoption.

Under the legislation, the processing of international adoption cases would be assigned to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, while the U.S. Agency for International Development would become home to a center dedicated to implementing a 2012 plan to assist children in adversity.

There's no firm global count of children in orphanages, but they number in the millions. In Russia — which has banned adoptions by Americans — there are more than 650,000 children not in parental custody. In Kyrgyzstan — where foreign adoptions were disrupted for years due to corruption and political problems — orphanages are often ill-equipped, with limited specialized care for severely disabled children. In Haiti, where recovery from the 2010 earthquake has been slow, inspectors recently checked more than 700 orphanages, and said only 36 percent met minimum standards.

Much of the impetus for Landrieu's bill stems from shifting views about the Hague Convention on Inter-Country Adoption. That treaty establishes ethical standards for international adoptions, which it says are an acceptable option after efforts have been made to have a child adopted in his or her home country.

The U.S. entered into the agreement in 2008 with strong support from Landrieu and other adoption advocates who hoped it would curtail fraud and corruption, and then lead to a boom in legitimate adoptions.

Instead, the decrease in foreign adoption by Americans — which started in 2005 — has continued. There were 8,668 such adoptions in 2012, down from 22,991 in 2004.

"When I helped to pass this treaty, it was everyone's hope that the number would go up — doubled, tripled, quadrupled," Landrieu said. "Instead it's down by 60 percent. That's the best evidence I have that what State Department has in place isn't working."

There are multiple reasons for the decline — including increases in domestic adoptions in China and South Korea, and suspensions imposed on several countries due to concerns about fraud and trafficking.

However, many supporters of Landrieu's bill believe the Hague convention has been applied too punitively, and that the State Department has been overcautious rather than working creatively to halt the decline. Several prominent supporters wrote to Secretary of State John Kerry on Dec. 18 asking that he investigate the matter.

The letter cites Cambodia as an example. The U.S. and other Western countries have banned adoptions from there since 2001 out of concern that the adoption business was rife with bribery and child-trafficking. Cambodia, which imposed its own ban in 2009, now says it has made needed reforms and is ready to resume international adoptions, but the State Department says the U.S. ban will remain in place because of continuing concerns about Cambodia's child-welfare system.

Since 2001, the letter said, "tens of thousands of children in Cambodia have had no chance at a permanent family." Many grow up or even die in institutional care, it said, while others end up on the streets or trafficked into the sex trade.

Chuck Johnson, CEO of the National Council for Adoption and one of the letter's signatories, cited Vietnam and Nepal as other countries where adoptions were suspended because of corruption and trafficking, and which now feel ready to resume them.

"The State Department has assumed the regulation of inter-country adoption with a lot of gusto, but with a void in terms of advocacy," Johnson said. "There are countries that want to work with the U.S., but we won't work with them."

Johnson said his organization, which represents dozens of adoption agencies, had enjoyed a positive relationship with the State Department in the past but is now bracing for a rupture over Landrieu's bill.

"We're putting the gloves on," he said. "Children's lives are at stake."

The State Department's Susan Jacobs said the U.S. was successfully using the Hague standards to bring about improvements in some overseas adoptions systems that have been plagued by corruption and child-trafficking. For example, she said a pilot project to resume some adoptions from Vietnam is expected to start within a few months.

"Diplomacy is a slow process and can often be frustrating to people," she said. "But I think we have a really good record."

Landrieu, however, is losing patience.

"Slow is not something that works well for children," she said. "There's no legitimate excuse for the U.S. dragging its feet when it comes to saying, 'Yes, children do belong in families.'"

The senator plans to confer about the bill in the coming weeks with Kerry, a former Senate colleague. "He and his team are very supportive of what we're doing," she said.

Among the outspoken supporters of Landrieu's bill is professor Elizabeth Bartholet, founder of the Child Advocacy Program at Harvard Law School.

The bill's basic message, she says, is "the U.S. government should change itself from being a negative force, with respect to children who need homes, to being a positive force."

The State Department, according to Bartholet, has been too preoccupied with its reputation, favoring suspensions of adoption when corruption or trafficking allegations arise and then taking its time resuming them at the cost of prolonging orphans' stays in institutions.

"Keeping a child in an institution is systematic abuse and neglect," Bartholet said. "The bill says we the United States should see inter-country adoption as one of the best options — it should not be the last resort."

Bartholet is among a number of the bill's supporters who see it as a repudiation of UNICEF, the U.N. children's agency. She contends that UNICEF views international adoption as an undesirable last resort and has suggested that Congress consider suspending funding to the agency until its stance changes.

The official website promoting Landrieu's bill also takes a swipe at the U.N. agency.

"The U.S. Government has effectively relinquished its policy role on international child welfare to UNICEF," the site says. "We need to retake control of U.S. foreign policy on this critical issue and lead the way in shifting the world's focus on to the importance of family for all children."

Asked about Landrieu's bill, UNICEF said it does not comment on pending legislation in U.N. member nations.

However, in recent public statements, UNICEF's chief of child protection, Susan Bissell, been emphatic on two points. She insists that UNICEF is not against international adoption, despite what some critics say. She also does not favor approaches that would prioritize international adoption over alternatives giving children permanent homes in their own country.

According to Landrieu's staff, the bill's proposals would cost about $60 million annually, with the money reallocated from existing foreign aid. About half would go to the USAID Center for Excellence and half to fund the new State Department bureau.

Some supporters of UNICEF and of U.S. efforts to combat the global AIDS epidemic fear those programs could lose some funding as part of the shift. Final decisions won't be made until and unless the bill advances.

Kathleen Strottman, executive director of the Congressional Coalition on Adoption Institute, said she likes Landrieu's bill because of its scope — proposing a range of initiatives beyond adoption to help more of the millions of children worldwide living without a family.

"If the U.S. government is committed to reducing that number, this bill is the right strategy," Strottman said. "There's one perfect number — it must be as close to zero as we can get it."

Please contact Sen. Landrieu at the office nearest you.

Monday, October 7, 2013

The Safest Place for a Child is in the Loving Arms of a Parent

Children without a family are at higher risk for trafficking, forced labor and abuse.

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Food and Shelter Do Not Help Children Grow, Parents Do!

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Millions of children are stuck and forgotten, living in orphanages

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House & Senate: What It's Going To Take To Get Kids In Families

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Children Need Families & We Need Your Voice

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Children without parents are the most vulnerable children in the world. They are alone, they are often out of sight, and they are voiceless. They cannot fight for themselves; they need YOU to be their voice. CHIFF Children in Families First calls for the redirection of a modest portion of the $2 billion the United States currently spends on children living abroad toward ensuring that all children grow up in a family. What’s more, it calls for programs funded with US tax dollars to focus on reducing the number of children living without families and increasing the capacity of other governments to better protect their own children. The best protection for a child is a family. We protect children by preserving families, reunifying families or creating families through adoption.

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Children In Families FIRST!!

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It’s Day 5 of CHIFF Week!

Each day this week I’ve been sending you a note with one thing you can do that day to support CHIFF.  Here’s what you can do today – Day 5 of CHIFF Week.

CONTACT YOUR MEMBERS OF CONGRESS TODAY

60ef9049574fda3c72969ae680d676c8 Call Your Members of Congress

Surveys show that only 20 calls from constituents are needed for a bill to get the attention of our elected officials.  So if you only do one thing, please call.  Here is a sample script you can personalize for making that call! 

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902c73ca3f1115c519912a76e3339585 Double Up - Email A Letter to Congress

Tell your Members of Congress you want them to support the Children in Families

First Act of 2013!  Here’s a template letter but be sure to personalize it.

Thanks for being a Joint Council Partner and for helping us make a historic change in the way the US government serves children and families.

Best Wishes,

Tom DiFilipo

P.S.  If you didn’t see Day 1 through 4 click here to find out what you missed – it’s not too late to catch up!

|    website   |    adoption nutrition |     facebook     |       blog       |     twitter   |    donate   | 


   |   TOM DIFILIPO |   President & CEO  |   Joint Council   |  +1.703.535.8045  |       

CHIFF Week

Day 1 – Register for the CHIFF Webinar.  If you missed it, click here for a recorded version.

Day 2 -  Become a CHIFF Sponsoring Organization.  Send an email to    

info@childreninfamiliesfirst.org stating “NAME OF ORGANIZATION is a CHIFF Sponsoring

Organization.  

Day 3 – Like CHIFF’s Facebook page and post about CHIFF on yours.

Day 4 – Send out a Call To Action and rally your troops.

Day 5 -  Call your Members of Congress!

Friday, September 27, 2013

Spread the Word: Let's Adopt

I want to make you aware of a wonderful new effort to help Russian children who are being victimized by their country’s senseless ban on adoptions by American families.  As you know, these children are living in dismal conditions, with little hope of a permanent family except through inter-country adoption. These children have parents in America who want to bring them home, but instead, they are now suffering – even dying – in institutions. 

To take a stand against this tragedy, my good friend Laura Ingraham released a compelling video appeal to President Putin to reverse the ban. 

I know her video will inspire you as much as it inspires me:

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In addition to Laura’s efforts, there is a growing coalition of like-minded leaders, advocacy organizations and everyday people who are standing up to give a voice to orphaned and unparented children, not only in Russia but throughout the world.

Last week I led a coalition of nine other senators from both sides of the aisle to introduce Children in Families First (CHIFF).  We believe the U.S. government needs to do a better job of helping to ensure that all the world’s children grow up in safe, permanent and nurturing families.  CHIFF is about bringing our diplomatic influence and resources to bear to preserve families, reunify families, or create families through kinship, domestic or international adoption.  CHIFF does this by reallocating resources and realigning some government agencies to make the government more effective without any extra spending or bureaucracy.  

Watch our press conference introducing CHIFF.

Although CHIFF already has a lot of support from many key organizations and individuals, we need more to pass this important piece of legislation. If you would like to learn more about CHIFF and how you can become involved, please visit landrieu.senate.gov/chiff.  And of course, you can always reach out to me and my staff: Whitney Reitz at whitney_reitz@landrieu.senate.gov  or Libby Whitbeck at libby_whitbeck@landrieu.senate.gov.


Sincerely,

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Tuesday, September 24, 2013

CHIFF Web Page

Your reaction and response to the Children in Families First Act (CHIFF) over the last few days has been amazing. Thank you for your many phone calls and e-mails. The wave of enthusiasm offers us a good time for a reality check.

Reality Check: the 5 Percent

Since 1999, Congress has only passed about 5% of the bills it introduces. In simple statistical terms, CHIFF has an uphill battle.

There is more to consider about the challenges connected to Senate Bill 1530 (CHIFF):

  • In 2008, a similar bill was introduced called Families for Orphans Act. It failed to received a mass of public support, and never made it to the floor for a vote. A chance to serve the welfare of children went by the wayside.
  • CHIFF has opposition from some well-funded organizations. We are beginning to see their PR campaign with negative themes and information.
  • The base of organic support for CHIFF is not big enough to get this bill passed into law. We must find ways to expand public support to pass Senate Bill 1530.

CHIFF will most certainly become law if we secure 60 co-sponsors in the Senate and 150 co-sponsors in the House. The bill was introduced in the Senate with 10 co-sponsors: 5 Democrats and 5 Republicans.

This will not happen by itself —
It is up to us to make it happen

Generating co-sponsors is purely a function of social force. We can all make a difference if we focus on getting the country to rally behind this bill, and leverage the power in numbers to secure these critical co-sponsors. Contact your representatives to tell them that you support

CHIFF and want them to co-sponsor the bill. Research shows that twenty calls to a Congressional office is enough to convince a member of Congress that an issue is salient. (Find your members of Congress here: House Representative | Senators.)

Spreading the word is our first mission-critical objective. Visit the the official CHIFF website and share the link in your social media circles.

One great asset we already have to rally the country is STUCK. We have created a STUCK House Party program, a tool to grow grassroots support for CHIFF. We are testing the model this week. We will roll out the program as soon as the STUCK House Party model is sound.

The message is clear. We have a lot of work to do to defy the odds and get Senate Bill 1530 passed. As lives hang in the balance it is time to stop talking. It is time to roll up our sleeves and get to work!

Craig Juntunen
Founder, Both Ends Burning 

Friday, September 20, 2013

Children in Families First

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The Children in Families First working group is looking for child or family stories to highlight on the website. If you know of families whose stories clearly show the need for intercountry adoption reform and would be willing to briefly share their story and a photo please let me know. For examples of how the stories would be used click here to see the stories of Addison and Jean. You may contact me or put them in contact with me directly at mlindsey@adoptioncouncil.org or by phone at 703-299-6633.

Families are also welcome to share their stories directly on the CHIFF website at Add Your Story. Feel free to encourage your networks to share their stories there and to like Children in Families First on Facebook.

Megan Lindsey
Director of Public Policy and Education
National Council For Adoption
225 N. Washington Street
Alexandria, VA 22314
T: 703.299.6633 | F: 703.299.6004
mlindsey@adoptioncouncil.org
www.adoptioncouncil.org