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A new study shows health disparities cost Texas billions of dollars; Senate rejects impeachment articles against Mayorkas, ending trial against Cabinet secretary; Iowa cuts historical rural school groups.

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The Senate dismisses the Mayorkas impeachment. Maryland Lawmakers fail to increase voting access. Texas Democrats call for better Black maternal health. And polling confirms strong support for access to reproductive care, including abortion.

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Rural Wyoming needs more vocational teachers to sustain its workforce pipeline, Ohio environmental advocates fear harm from a proposal to open 40-thousand forest acres to fracking and rural communities build bike trail systems to promote nature, boost the economy.

Obama Urged to Make Washington’s Birth Month: Kinship Care Month

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Friday, August 16, 2013   

NEW YORK – New Yorkers have the opportunity today to join Americans across the nation in petitioning the White House to declare February, George Washington's birth Month, as Kinship Care Month.

There are more than 130,000 kinship caregivers in New York, and millions more across the nation.

Cate Newbanks, executive director of National Kinship Alliance for Children, says the nation's first president understood the struggles many families go through when relatives, often older and struggling financially, take on the responsibilities and burdens of raising their children's children or other close family members.

"George Washington was himself raised by relatives, off and on, when his family was struggling,” Newbanks says. “And then he was a kinship caregiver, as was Martha, for the grandchildren."

While the term kinship care hadn't been invented yet, Newbanks notes the very first children to live in the White House were step-grandchildren.

If you want to support the effort, go to Petitons.WhiteHouse.gov. New Yorkers can learn more about kinship care in their state at nysnavigator.org.

Newbanks says some kinship caregivers raising multiple children in New York receive as little as a few hundred dollars a month in assistance, compared to families raising foster children who can receive as much as $2,000 per month.

"And kinship caregivers aren't asking for the same benefits as foster parents,” she says. “But they do need help because this is not something that was planned in their lives.

“And the children who are oftentimes coming to them have suffered immense traumas, and need other kinds of supports and services."

Newbanks notes the president also knows how kinship families struggle.

"Given that President Obama was himself raised by a grandparent, that makes him the perfect president to kind of tie this altogether,” she says, “from the first president to President Obama.

“Relatives are continually stepping up to the plate to provide children with what they need."

Only 30 days remain to gather 100,000 signatures on the petition.






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