Breaking through barriers for women and girls

AAUW-PA Conference Call, September 10, 2009

Lisa Maatz, Director of Public Policy and Government Relations

Attendees at the 2009 AAUW Convention were encouraged to call and urge their senators to support pay equity and the Paycheck Fairness Act. The first state delegation to fill their senators’ voice mailboxes with these messages would receive a special prize. With wonderful activism, tenacity, and enthusiasm, the AAUW Pennsylvania delegation won! Congrats for shutting down Senator Specter’s mailbox!!

The prized one-hour conference call with Lisa Maatz included 50 members across PA as Lisa described current AAUW thinking on education policies, No Child Left Behind (NCLB), Health Care Reform, the Paycheck Fairness Act, and effective public policy action. Lisa spent 30 minutes discussing topics before answering questions. Her remarks are summarized here.

No Child Left Behind: NCLB reauthorization is in limbo this year because Congress is focused on health care and other appropriations. Next year, the mid-term elections are expected to be top priority. Without official reauthorization, NCLB continues under existing rubrics and current funding. This delay in reauthorization may enable the work needed to examine and determine common core standards.

AAUW is focusing on these issues:

⁃ Strengthen STEM education (science, technology, engineering, math), especially for girls.

⁃ Build support for collection of Title IX data from high schools, bringing those numbers to public attention. Current Title IX data collection focuses on colleges and universities.

⁃ Encourage, to a greater extent, the Safe and Drug Free School Act as it applies to bullying and harassment, which are not part of Title IX.

⁃ Increase multiple measures and standardized testing that monitor school standards of Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP)

⁃ Close achievement gap (see AAUW’s report Where the Girls Are),

⁃ Expand after-school programs and early childhood education opportunities.

Health Care Reform

The AAUW approach is framed as an economic security issue for women, with support given to these specific positions:

⁃ Eliminate gender rating which charges women more than men for services.

⁃ Cover reproductive health issues: Birth control needs, PAP tests, etc.

⁃ Ensure preventative care coverage for health education; screenings, depending on age, gender, medical history; and immunizations.

Lisa expects Congress to be in session through Christmas trying to get health care reform done. The House goes first because any health bill is, by definition, a tax bill. The House presents a tax bill before moving it to the Senate for reconciliation.

Paycheck Fairness Act

Senator Casey is one co-sponsor on the Paycheck Fairness act; Senator Specter is not.

The Paycheck Fairness Act remains a priority even as Health Care Reform receives center-stage attention. We need to speed up the process of updating the enforcement and civil rights portions of the 1963 Equal Pay Act. The Ledbetter bill was a good first step.

The Paycheck Fairness Act is a bigger bill that includes employer issues and negotiation of contracts and salaries.

Public Policy Programming Ideas

Make Public Policy issues a part of branch programming during the year. Add a mission-based twist to each meeting.

⁃ Target one meeting for an issue or thread a PP issue into regular meetings on other topics.

⁃ Utilize Program in a Box ideas on the website; PP will soon add seven more (PP luncheons, district mtgs, town-hall issue meetings, etc.).

⁃ Publicize April 20, 2010, as Equal Pay Day; use the Pay =T resource kit; attend a rally, hand out fun-size Payday candy bars (buy in bulk at Halloween and freeze) with stickers comparing women’s earnings @ 77 cents to men’s @ $1 for the same work, this according to the latest 2008 census data.

⁃ Hold a bake sale where items cost men a dollar and women 77 cents.

⁃ Thread PP positions into book, bridge, gourmet clubs, book sales, and house tours.

⁃ Share the latest Action Alert with an interest group and bring a copy of the action letter for petition style signatures; mail it to a local representative’s office.

⁃ Use PP position papers or the Federal Policy Agenda as a good discussion starter to publicize a variety of issues that AAUW works on.

Ways to motivate Branch Members in areas of Public Policy

⁃ Always leave room for civil debate in conversation.

⁃ Spur public policy action by reminding everyone that AAUW public policy debate is needed now more than ever. Our non-partisan background, backed by research, is a valuable tool.

⁃ Attend town hall meetings and speak out as an AAUW member, demonstrating that you care and are able to speak on issues intelligently.

Use AAUW resources as preparation materials, e.g., Washington Update, Action Alert. Everything is available at aauw.org or aauwpa.org.

Q & A and Remarks

Will you suggest coalition partners to work with as we can move our issues forward?

Pull in other groups to share the load. Different issues may appeal to different groups. Highlight AAUW’s non-partisan reputation when building partnerships. Collaborative groups may include: BPW, LWV, Women’s Clubs, advocacy groups, PTOs, C/U women’s studies and education departments, Altrusa clubs, Soroptomists, Planned Parenthood, and NARAL.

Equal Pay Day (4/20/2010) is perfect for coalition building and producing event(s) that can be planned early or late. Invite a member of Congress, hold a WAGE workshop, include high school girls in discussion of the wage gap.

When speaking on behalf of AAUW, you may not adopt a position that AAUW doesn’t have policy on or one that is contrary to an AAUW public policy position. In that case, speak as an individual. Call or e-mail AAUW to find out or look at the position papers on the www.aauw.org website.

Education: AAUW does not oppose charter schools as long as they meet stringent standards. AAUW is opposed to vouchers.

Tap into experiences of school principals and superintendents for updates on No Child Left Behind. Engage them as speakers at a program, juxtaposed with AAUW positions on the same subject.

Host a town hall meeting to discuss education funding as well as bring individual knowledge to the table.

Have a Public Policy luncheon and invite a school superintendent, state legislator, and/or member of Congress to speak about education in your county.

International: Research and discuss the Global Resources and Opportunities for Women to Thrive (Growth Act) as it concerns helping women in developing countries.

AAUW has supported the U.N. Millennium Development Goals since they were first instituted. Carolyn Donovan is our UN representative.

Arlen Specter’s office number is 202-224-4254. Call and urge him to join other sponsors of the Paycheck Fairness Act – S182. Thank him for his work on healthcare. We appreciate his vote on the Ledbetter Act.

In conclusion: Lisa is a very motivational speaker and researches her topics well. Thanks to her for information on AAUW’s healthcare positions, economic self-sufficiency for women, and more confidence in working with community coalitions. She gifted AAUW-PA members with a stimulating hour of listening and conversation.

Women in Politics – Awareness at Home and Abroad

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>> Download Flyer

>> Download Registration Form

 

Women all over the world are interested in politics. How do we continue to keep this interest alive? Through discussion and through education!!!

Hosted by AAUW Pennsylvania

Join us November 14, 2009           10:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.

Pittsburgh Athletic Association

4215 Fifth Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15213

Lunch Buffet 12-1

Speakers:

Dr.Flora Mosaka-Wright, International Studies, University of Pittsburgh

Dr. Fatma El-Hamidi, Adjunct Professor, Graduate School of Public and Economic Affairs, University of Pittsburgh; Online Professor, Social Development and Economics, University of Phoenix

University of Pittsburgh Nationality Room Tours

>> Download Flyer

>> Download Registration Form

Some Notable Leading Women Around the World

Angela Merkel- Chancellor of Germany

Tarja K Halogen- President of Finland

Vaira Vike-Freiberga- President of Latvia

Mary McAleese- President of Ireland

Luisa Dioga-Prime Minister of Mozambique

Chandrika Kumaratunga- President of Sri Lanka

Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo- President of the Philippines

Hillary R Clinton – Secretary of State, United States of America

Women & Girls Foundation of SW PA Offers Funding for Public Policy Work

 

Deadline: October 1, 2009

The Women and Girls Foundation of Southwest Pennsylvania seeks proposals to increase the rights of women and girls in the region through community organizing or policy advocacy initiatives implemented by agencies that serve women and/or girls in the eleven counties of Southwest Pennsylvania.

Grants may be used for direct lobbying support, grassroots advocacy efforts, and community organizing initiatives focused on a specific legislative or policy change/enforcement goal. Proposed initiatives should have as a goal the passage of new public policy, or increased enforcement of existing public policies, aimed at increasing women and girls’ rights in Southwest Pennsylvania. Programs may also seek to identify specific advocacy strategies and coalition partners, or clearly articulate a strategic effort to mobilize diverse stakeholders and engage women and girls directly in advocacy efforts that will achieve long-term systems-level change.

For more information, go to: http://foundationcenter.org/pnd/rfp/rfp_item.jhtml?id=264900051

Message from AAUW President Garfein

Carolyn Garfein of Georgia was elected president of AAUW for 2009-2011. Here is her initial message to the members:

Read Carolyn Garfein’s Press Release >> More

Read about other activities/results from AAUW Convention in the What’s New column to the right.

District 3 Meeting

Saturday, October 17, 2009
10 a.m.-3 p.m.
Montgomery County Community College
Blue Bell, PA

For more information, download the flyer.

On Saturday, October 17, the AAUW-PA District 3 (Eastern PA) branches will gather at Montgomery County Community College in Blue Bell, PA, from 10:00 a.m. until 3:00 p.m. The cost, including lunch, is $18.00.

The day will start with Kate Sweeney, AAUW-PA Co-President, presenting an update on the AAUW Convention in St. Louis.

Our focus will then turn to a topic in the news every day – health care reform. Dr. Walter Tsou, MD, MPH, a public health and health policy consultant, will discuss options being considered. We hope to add an additional speaker on health care reform to our agenda (stay tuned).

A networking lunch will follow the health care reform discussion.

After lunch topics will include:

Social Networking 101: Facebook, Linked-In, Twitter, Second Life…

Alternate Branch Structures – should your branch change how it operates?

Gateway to Equity Awards – a great way to recognize organizations and people who partner with your branch

Pay Equity & WAGE Project: Learn the latest on one of AAUW’s highest profile public policy efforts and learn what you can do to help on a local level (Dot McLane & Graham Boose)

After the Regional Meeting, enjoy the Pennsylvania Guild of Craftsmen’s Fine Craft Fair on the other side of the MCCC campus.