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MARCH 19 Layout 1
Focus at MHA on Still no room Congresswoman Clark respect, integrity, sees value of loan repay compassion at the inn VIEWPOINTS: DITORIAL PROVIDER PROFILE: E : PAGE 5 PAGE 4 PAGE 3 Vol. 40 - No. 3 The Newspaper of the Providers’ Council March 2019 Roundtable Federal, state discussion policy work gone to pot in spotlight he Providers’ Council and Massa- Organizations need to chusetts Nonprofit Network sent Ta joint letter to Congressman update policies, train staff Richard Neal (D-Mass.), Chair of the he legalization of marijuana usage Joint Committee on Taxation, urging in Massachusetts – for both medic- the immediate repeal of the new income Tinal and recreational purposes – is tax on expenses incurred by nonprofits creating new challenges and questions for providing employee transportation for human services providers about use benefits, such as parking and transit by both employees and clients. passes. Together, the Council and MNN Nearly 40 people representing 27 represent nearly 1,000 nonprofit or- Providers’ Council member organizations ganizations throughout Massachusetts. attended an HR Roundtable on Mari- The new tax – officially Internal Rev- juana Legalization Policies and Proce- enue Code Section 512(a)(7) – is a part dures hosted by the Council on Feb. 20 of the sweeping tax code reform passed in Needham to discuss their challenges in 2017 and the first payments will be and learn about best practices. due in a matter of weeks. It imposes a A panel – including attorneys Jeffrey 21 percent tax on nonprofits offering Hirsch and Peter Moser from the law firm transportation-related benefits to em- Hirsch Roberts Weinstein LLP; Senior ployees. -
2013 Winter Newsletter
HHHHHHH LEGACY JOHN F. KENNEDY LIBRARY FOUNDATION Winter | 2013 Freedom 7 Splashes Down at JFK Presidential Library and Museum “I believe this nation should commit itself, to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the earth.” – President Kennedy, May 25, 1961 he John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum Joined on September 12 by three students from Pinkerton opened a special new installation featuring Freedom 7, Academy, the alma mater of astronaut Alan B. Shepard Jr., Tthe iconic space capsule that U.S. Navy Commander Kennedy Library Director Tom Putnam unveiled Freedom 7, Alan B. Shepard Jr. piloted on the first American-manned stating, “In bringing the Freedom 7 space capsule to our spaceflight. Celebrating American ingenuity and determination, Museum, the Kennedy Library hopes to inspire a new the new exhibit opened on September 12, the 50th anniversary generation of Americans to use science and technology of President Kennedy’s speech at Rice University, where he so for the betterment of our humankind.” eloquently championed America’s manned space efforts: Freedom 7 had been on display at the U.S. Naval “We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the Academy in Annapolis, MD since 1998, on loan from the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are Smithsonian Air and Space Museum. At the request of hard, because that goal will serve to organize and measure Caroline Kennedy, Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus, the best of our energies and skills, because that challenge is the U.S. -
Presidential Candidates Senate Candidates Congressional
Presidential Candidates Presidential Candidates Party Position Joe Biden Democrat Anti-Life Endorsed by Donald Trump* Republican Pro-Life the MCFL FedPAC Senate Candidates Senate Candidate Party Position Edward Markey* Democrat Anti-Life Kevin O'Connor Republican Congressional Candidates MCFL Fed PAC Congressional Candidates Candidate's Name Party Position Endorsements First District Richard E. Neal* Democrat Anti-Life James P. McGovern* Democrat Anti-Life Second District Tracy Lyn Lovvorn Republican Third District Lori L. Trahan* Democrat Anti-Life Jake Auchincloss Democrat Anti-Life Fourth District Julie A. Hall Republican Katherine M. Clark* Democrat Anti-Life Fifth District Endorsed by Caroline Colarusso Republican Pro-Life the MCFL Fed PAC Seth Moulton* Democrat Anti-Life Sixth District John P. Moran Republican Seventh District Ayanna S. Pressley* Democrat Anti-Life Eighth District Stephen F. Lynch* Democrat Anti-Life Bill Keating* Democrat Anti-Life Ninth District Helen Brady Republican State Senate Candidates Doctor- State Senate District Candidate's Name Party Abortion Prescribed Position Suicide Position Berkshire, Hampshire, Franklin & Adam G. Hinds* Democrat Anti-Life Hampden Bristol & Norfolk Paul R. Feeney* Democrat Anti-Life First Bristol and Plymouth Michael J. Rodrigues* Democrat Mixed Anti-Life Second Bristol and Plymouth Mark C. Montigny* Democrat Anti-Life Cape & Islands Julian A. Cyr* Democrat Anti-Life First Essex Diana Dizoglio* Democrat Anti-Life Second Essex Joan B. Lovely* Democrat Anti-Life Third Essex Brendan P. Crighton* Democrat Anti-Life First Essex & Middlesex Bruce E. Tarr* Republican Mixed Second Essex & Middlesex Barry R. Finegold* Democrat Anti-Life Hampden Adam Gomez Democrat Anti-Life First Hampden & Hampshire Eric P. Lesser* Democrat Anti-Life John C. -
New Exhibit Explores John F. Kennedy's Early Life
ISSUE 20 H WINTER 2016 THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION AND PUBLIC PROGRAMS AT THE JOHN F. KENNEDY PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM New Exhibit Explores John F. Kennedy’s Early Life efore he was president, John F. Kennedy was known simply as “Jack” to his friends and family. Young Jack, a new permanent exhibit at the BJohn F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, features documents, photographs, and objects that provide an intimate look at his childhood and family life, intellectual development, foreign travels, and military service. Through engagement with these primary sources, students may explore how a somewhat Senator John F. Kennedy signs a copy of Profiles rebellious, fun-loving and academically under-achieving teenager took a serious in Courage for a young fan, ca.1956–1957. interest in international affairs and started on the path of leadership that would Profiles in Courage one day lead to the White House. Turns 60! School Years In 1954, John F. Kennedy took a A wooden desk from Choate, the private boarding school he attended from leave of absence from the Senate 1931-35, evokes the time Jack spent there as a spirited high school student to undergo back surgery. During struggling to keep his grades up. Accompanying the desk are revealing excerpts his recuperation, he set to work researching and writing the stories from correspondence between Jack and his father, along with this quote from of US senators whom he considered a report by his housemaster: to have shown great courage under “Jack studies at the last minute, keeps appointments late, has little enormous pressure from their parties and their constituents: John Quincy sense of material value, and can seldom locate his possessions.” Adams, Daniel Webster, Thomas Hart Young people who are experiencing their own challenges, Benton, Sam Houston, Edmund G. -
Congressional Record on Choice
2019 Congressional Record on Choice Government Relations Department 1725 I Street, NW Suite 900 Washington, DC 20006 202.973.3000 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ON CHOICE 116TH CONGRESS, 1ST SESSION NARAL Pro-Choice America’s 2019 Congressional Record on Choice documents the key House and Senate votes on reproduc- For over 50 years, NARAL Pro-Choice tive freedom taken during the first session of the 116th Congress. The 116th Congress reflects a wave of historic firsts—most America has led the fight for repro- significantly the first pro-choice majority in the House of Representatives. There are a record number of women serving ductive freedom for everyone, includ- in the House, and more LGBTQ people serving in Congress than ever before. The freshman class is also younger than most ing the right to access abortion. recent incoming classes and the 116th Congress reflects record breaking racial, ethnic, and religious diversity. Nowhere was the new pro-choice House majority more NARAL Pro-Choice America is powered evident than in the appropriations process. House spending bills for fiscal year 2020 reflected increased funding for vital by our 2.5 million members—in every family planning programs, defunded harmful abstinence-on- ly-until-marriage programs, and blocked many of the Trump administration’s efforts to use the regulatory process to state and congressional district. restrict access to abortion and family planning services. Though the House bills were not passed by the Senate, we We represent the more than 7 in 10 now see what can happen when lawmakers committed to reproductive rights are in control. -
Politicians and Their Professors the Discrepancy Between Climate Science and Climate Policy
Better Future Project 30 Bow Street Cambridge, MA. 02138 Politicians and Their Professors The Discrepancy between Climate Science and Climate Policy By Craig S. Altemose and Hayley Browdy Massachusetts Edition Better Future Project 1 Politicians and Their Professors: The Discrepancy between Climate Science and Climate Policy By Craig Altemose and Hayley Browdy With research and editing assistance provided by Elana Sulakshana, Alli Welton, and Kristen Wraith © 2012, Better Future Project 30 Bow Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 About This Report This report seeks to highlight the discrepancy between the overwhelming consensus on climate change that exists among the nation’s scientific community and the lack of action by federal leaders. Past studies have shown that 97-98% of climate scientists who publish in peer-reviewed journals agree with the consensus that climate change is real, happening now, and man-made. Since many politicians seem to disregard the views of such scientific “elites” as a whole, we decided to compare politicians’ views on climate change to those of the climate experts at their alma maters. These politicians clearly valued the expertise of the academics at their schools enough that they chose to (usually) spend tens of thousands of dollars and up to four years of their lives absorbing knowledge from these institutions’ experts. We thought that even if these politicians choose to disregard the consensus of national experts, they might be persuaded by the consensus of the higher education institutions in which they trusted enough to invest great amounts of their time and money. This report and the research supporting it are available online at www.betterfutureproject.org/resources. -
The-Counter Hearing Aid
By Lise Hamlin The Hearing Loss Association of America has embarked on a campaign to support new legislation that, if passed, will change the face of hearing health care in America. And you can be part of it. On March 21, U.S. Senators Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.), and Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.), reintroduced legislation (Senate bill S. 670) to make hearing aids for those with mild to moderate hearing loss available over the counter (OTC). Senators Warren and Grassley first introduced the bill last December and have now reintroduced it for 2017. A companion bill (H.R. 1652), led by Representatives Joe Kennedy III (D-Mass.) and Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.), was also introduced in the House. Co-sponsors of the House bill (at press time) include Representatives Don Bacon (R-Neb.), Earl “Buddy” Carter (R-Ga.), Eleanor Holmes-Norton (D-DC), James P. McGovern (D-Mass.), and Niki Tsongas (D-Mass.). The Over-the-Counter Hearing Aid Act of 2017 would require the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to create a new category of over-the-counter hearing aids and remove unnecessary barriers to getting hearing aids. We need your help in support-ing Senators Warren and Grassley to get this groundbreaking piece of legislation passed! If the “Warren-Grassley bill” is enacted, the immediate benefit will of course © Cindy Dyer Cindy © be for those whom these new devices are intended—people with mild to moderate hearing loss who might otherwise be unable to purchase that first hearing aid because it’s too expensive or because the process is so confusing. -
SNAP Gap Cosponsors - H.1173/S.678 91 Representatives & 28 Senators
SNAP Gap Cosponsors - H.1173/S.678 91 Representatives & 28 Senators Rep. Jay Livingstone (Sponsor) Representative Daniel Cahill Representative Jack Patrick Lewis Senator Sal DiDomenico (Sponsor) Representative Peter Capano Representative David Linsky Senator Michael Barrett Representative Daniel Carey Representative Adrian Madaro Senator Joseph Boncore Representative Gerard Cassidy Representative John Mahoney Senator William Brownsberger Representative Michelle Ciccolo Representative Elizabeth Malia Senator Harriette Chandler Representative Mike Connolly Representative Paul Mark Senator Sonia Chang-Diaz Representative Edward Coppinger Representative Joseph McGonagle Senator Jo Comerford Representative Daniel Cullinane Representative Paul McMurtry Senator Nick Collins Representative Michael Day Representative Christina Minicucci Senator Brendan Crighton Representative Marjorie Decker Representative Liz Miranda Senator Julian Cyr Representative David DeCoste Representative Rady Mom Senator Diana DiZoglio Representative Mindy Domb Representative Frank Moran Senator James Eldridge Representative Daniel Donahue Representative Brian Murray Senator Ryan Fattman Representative Michelle DuBois Representative Harold Naughton Senator Paul Feeney Representative Carolyn Dykema Representative Tram Nguyen Senator Cindy Friedman Representative Lori Ehrlich Representative James O'Day Senator Anne Gobi Representative Nika Elugardo Representative Alice Peisch Senator Adam Hinds Representative Tricia Farley-Bouvier Representative Smitty Pignatelli Senator -
CPF ID Full Name Reverse Receipt Total Expenditure Total
CPF_ID Full_Name_Reverse Receipt_Total Expenditure_Total 80769 1199 SEIU MA PAC $ 751,545.68 $ 428,576.84 80479 MA & Northern NE Laborers' District Council Pol Action Comm $ 595,238.86 $ 288,586.08 80153 Retired Public Employees PAC $ 349,568.69 $ 285,399.17 80826 Committee for a Democratic House Political Action Committee $ 217,837.30 $ 215,066.64 80221 International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 103 Pol Action Comm $ 170,192.30 $ 151,869.21 80229 Pipefitters Local #537 Pol Action Comm $ 89,668.65 $ 121,304.73 80220 Chapter 25 Associated the Nat'l DRIVE PAC of the Int'l Brotherhood of Teamsters $ 69,593.09 $ 109,840.99 80096 Massachusetts Dental Society Political Action Committee $ 45,606.66 $ 92,764.01 80219 Ironworkers Union Local 7 Pol Action Comm $ 130,281.95 $ 92,094.05 80530 Int'l Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local Union 2222 Pol Action Comm $ 84,602.91 $ 72,795.90 80112 MA Assoc. of Realtors Pol Action Comm. - MA RPAC $ 96,661.15 $ 69,803.81 80144 Painters District Council #35 PAC $ 117,615.07 $ 59,220.92 80374 Professional Fire Fighters of MA People's Cttee $ 82,165.96 $ 57,315.79 80194 Sheet Metal Workers Local Union 17 People's Ctte $ 45,591.19 $ 48,884.00 80227 American Federation of Teachers MA PAC $ 37,247.31 $ 43,000.00 80323 Massachusetts Brick Layers People's Committee $ 39,408.13 $ 42,410.00 80325 Committee for a Democratic Senate Pol Action Comm. $ 82,885.71 $ 33,014.11 80577 Boston Carmen's Union PAC $ 15,483.50 $ 32,700.00 80690 MA Correction Officers Federated Union PAC M.C.O.F.U PAC $ 36,226.61 $ 30,850.00 80224 Local 509 Service Employees Int'l Union Comm on Pol Ed, MA Workers' Pol Action Comm. -
GUIDE to the 117Th CONGRESS
GUIDE TO THE 117th CONGRESS Table of Contents Health Professionals Serving in the 117th Congress ................................................................ 2 Congressional Schedule ......................................................................................................... 3 Office of Personnel Management (OPM) 2021 Federal Holidays ............................................. 4 Senate Balance of Power ....................................................................................................... 5 Senate Leadership ................................................................................................................. 6 Senate Committee Leadership ............................................................................................... 7 Senate Health-Related Committee Rosters ............................................................................. 8 House Balance of Power ...................................................................................................... 11 House Committee Leadership .............................................................................................. 12 House Leadership ................................................................................................................ 13 House Health-Related Committee Rosters ............................................................................ 14 Caucus Leadership and Membership .................................................................................... 18 New Members of the 117th -
RFK Really Changed My Life. They Made Me Feel Safe and Helped Me Get Back Home with My Family
RFK really changed my life. They made me feel safe and helped me get back home with my family. ANNUAL REPORT 2009 ROBERT F. KENNEDY CHILDREN’S ACTION CORPS ROBERT F. KENNEDY CHILDREN’S ACTION CORPS Senator Edward M. Kennedy In 2009, we mourned together over the loss of Senator Edward M. Kennedy, one of the most passionate and articulate advocates for children, health and social justice. At our 2006 Embracing the Legacy event, he quoted from the words of Nobel Laureate Gabriela Mistral, telling us, “We are guilty of many errors and many faults, but our worst crime is abandoning the children, neglecting the fountain of life. Many of the things we need can wait. The child cannot. To him we cannot answer “Tomorrow.” His name is “Today.” “There has been no more faithful champion of the poor, of working families, of all those who depend on essential government services and the positive role that the government can and should play, than Senator Edward Kennedy.” ~ Ed McElroy, American Federation of Teachers Convention, Boston July 21, 2006 “For all those whose cares have been our concern, the work goes on, the cause endures, the hope still lives and the dream shall never die.” “There is a new wave of change all around us, and if we set our President Obama has described his compass true, we will reach our breathtaking span of accomplishment: destination” “For five decades, virtually every major piece of legislation to advance the civil rights, health, and economic well being of the American people bore his name and resulted from his efforts.” “He has proven himself, time and again, to be a fighter for children and educators,” said Reg Weaver, the immediate past President of the National Education Association. -
2014 Annual Report M Ission
2014 ANNUAL REPORT M ISSION The New England Council is an alliance of businesses, academic and health institutions, and public and private organizations throughout New England formed to promote economic growth and a high quality of life in the New England region. The New England Council is a leading voice on the issues that shape the region’s economy and quality of life. The Council focuses on key industries that drive the region’s economic growth including education, energy, transportation, technology and innovation, healthcare and financial services. THE NEW ENGLAND COUNCIL TABLE OF CONTENTS 2014 4 President’s Letter 5 Chairman’s Letter ADVOCACY & INITIATIVES 6 Overview 7 Advanced Manufacturing 9 Defense 10 Energy & Environment 12 Financial Services 14 Healthcare 15 Higher Education 17 Trade 19 Transportation EVENTS 20 Annual Spring Event 22 Annual Dinner 24 Congressional Roundtable Series 26 Capital Conversations Series 28 Featured Events 30 Politics & Eggs Series ABOUT THE COUNCIL 31 DC Dialogue 32 Board of Directors 35 Members 3 THE NEW ENGLAND COUNCIL 2014 PRESIDENT’S LETTER DEAR NEW ENGLAND COUNCIL MEMBER: I am delighted to report that 2014 was yet another remarkable year for The New England Council. The Council saw success on several fronts, including growth in membership, informative programs and events, and strong advocacy for issues and policies that foster economic growth in our region. Council members in all six New England states came together for a wide range of events throughout 2014. By year’s end, the Council hosted over 50 programs, ranging from Congressional Roundtables with many members of the New England delegation, to a variety of other informative programs on issues that are critical to our economy.