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Welcome to our Public Policy Center
As a leading community impact organization, United Way knows that real and sustained change in community conditions requires more than money. United Way engages decision-makers and policy leaders at the local, state and national levels to help address the most important community needs.
UWSEPA Joins Governor to Help Kindergarten Kids Get the Right Start
Educators and policymakers have learned that getting children ready for school includes building a strong pathway between preschool and grade school that will guide the youngest students as they transition into kindergarten. That’s why United Way of Southeastern Pennsylvania brought together an innovative Community Engagement Team that is building and strengthening this pathway for at-risk children in Philadelphia.
On December 4th and 5th, Governor Ed Rendell’s Linking Ready Kids to Ready Schools forum kicks off a statewide effort to establish and improve kindergarten transition initiatives across the Commonwealth. United Way of Southeastern Pennsylvania and its Community Engagement Team partners is there to share what they’ve learned through their successful kindergarten transition work and to participate in shaping the state’s plans for making such support available to more Pennsylvania children in the future.
To learn more about Pennsylvania’s Early Childhood Initiatives and declare your support for our young children, visit www.papromiseforchildren.com.
Bailout Uninsured Children
Nine million uninsured children in American need a health coverage "bailout."
Inflation adjustments, bailout bill expand tax benefits
For 2009, personal exemptions and standard deductions will rise and tax brackets will widen because of inflation adjustments announced by the Internal Revenue Service.
By law, the dollar amounts for a variety of tax provisions must be revised each year to keep pace with inflation. As a result, more than three dozen tax benefits, affecting virtually every taxpayer, are being adjusted for 2009. Key changes affecting 2009 returns, filed by most taxpayers in early 2010, include the following:
- The maximum earned income tax credit for low and moderate income workers and working families with two or more children is $5,028, up from $4,824. The income limit for the credit for joint return filers with two or more children is $43,415, up from $41,646.
- The value of each personal and dependency exemption, available to most taxpayers, is $3,650, up $150 from 2008.
- The new standard deduction is $11,400 for married couples filing a joint return (up $500), $5,700 for singles and married individuals filing separately (up $250) and $8,350 for heads of household (up $350). Nearly two out of three taxpayers take the standard deduction, rather than itemizing deductions, such as mortgage interest, charitable contributions and state and local taxes.
- Tax-bracket thresholds increase for each filing status. For a married couple
filing a joint return, for example, the taxable-income threshold separating
the 15-percent bracket from the 25-percent bracket is $67,900, up from $65,100
in 2008.
Also, a Child Tax Credit expansion passed as part of the bailout legislation will benefit 13 million children — 2.9 million who will become newly eligible for the benefit and 10.1 million who will see their credit increased due to this provision, according to the Tax Policy Center. These 13 million children come from families with parents who work in such jobs as nursing home aides, cook, pre-school teachers, and construction workers.
Families that are “newly eligible” are those with incomes between $8,500 and $12,050. A broader group of low-income families would see their credit increase as a result of this provision, because the size of their credit is based on the amount by which the family’s earnings exceed the threshold. Specifically, the provision would temporarily expand the credit by lowering — for tax year 2008 — the earnings threshold that families must meet to qualify for the refundable portion of the credit. Families would qualify for a refundable credit if their earnings exceeded $8,500; under current law, by contrast, families must have earnings above $12,050 in 2008 to qualify for the refundable child tax credit.
Senior centers condemn state funding problems
The Pennsylvania Senior Support Coalition has challenged state legislators and the Governor for what Philadelphia Senior Center director Bob Groves calls an “outrageous lack of support” for senior centers and other groups.
The Senior Support Coalition includes AARP, the Pennsylvania Association of Senior Centers, the Pennsylvania Homecare Association, CARIE, the Pennsylvania Adult Day Care Association, the Alzheimer’s Association, and the Association of Area Agencies on Aging.
In a letter to state legislators, the group criticized the state’s FY 2009 budget for failing to provide a cost-of-living increase to senior services supported by lottery and Medicaid Waiver funds. Senior centers in particular have received less than 1% per year in cost of living adjustments since 2003.
The group notes that by under-funding community services that seek to identify and support isolated seniors, the state only increased the financial burden on more costly institutional care programs for these seniors.
While the state reported a $66 million surplus in lottery proceeds last fiscal year, most of the money was used to balance the state budget in other areas.
To download an analysis of the funding crisis prepared by the coalition, click here.
Petition supports senior choice
Research shows that Pennsylvania elders would rather stay at home than live in a nursing home. Research also shows that it is significantly cheaper for the state to support elders at home where they'd rather be. In fact, research shows that Pennsylvania taxpayers currently spend approximately $60,000 a year or more to put someone into a nursing home - while it costs $20,000 or less to keep someone in their own home and their community.
My Life, My Choice: PA Seniors for Homecare is a growing movement fighting for the dignity, respect, and rights of all Pennsylvanians to choose to live at home, if they want to. The group is sponsoring a petition drive to let the Governor and legislators know that voters support senior choice and asking them to create a statewide solution for quality home care for Pennsylvania seniors.
By 2020 over 20% of Pennsylvanian will be over 65 years old - and the over-85 population will have increased by 52%.
Click here to sign the petition.
School aid for homeless children declines in Pennsylvania
An analysis by Philadelphia’s People’s Emergency Center indicates that the number of homeless students enrolled in Pennsylvania schools decreased by over 50% between the 2005-06 and 2006-07 school year, from about 25,000 to slightly more than 12,000. About 5,000 of these youth attend Philadelphia public schools.
But PEC says that the numbers don't indicate a real reduction in the number of homeless children, but rather result from regulations that make it harder to count them.
Nationally, the number of enrolled homeless school age students declined from
907,228 to 679,000, according to the PEC report. 264,000 enrolled homeless
school age students were supported by their school districts but without support
from the Education for Homeless Children and Youth program in FY 2006-07.
PEC says that the dramatic change is due to a number of procedural factors,
including changes in federal regulations on counting students, and incomplete
reports from large school districts. PEC says that based on its discussions
with education officials, the decline is due to federal changes in how it counts
students rather than an actual decline in the number of homeless students.
Homeless children and youth are defined as enrolled if they are attending classes and participating fully in school activities. In the Federal Data Collection, 679,000 children were enrolled in the 2006-2007 school year, a decrease from the previous year of 907,228. Twenty-nine states reported increases in the total homeless children and youth enrolled, while twenty-four states reported a decrease. The report analyzed by PEC suggests that the numbers are significantly different due to the effects of hurricanes that struck the United States during 2005-06, including hurricanes Katrina and Rita.
In Pennsylvania, the decline in the total number of homeless children and youth enrolled in schools is the lowest total in the past four years:
The number of all homeless students proficient in reading in grades 3-8 decreased from 49% in FY 2005-06 to 45% in FY 2006-07. The number proficient in mathematics in grades 3-8 increased from 45% to 46%.
PEC’s report says that Philadelphia’s 5,000 homeless children are among the most at-risk children for academic failure. It said it produced this analysis in the hope that understanding national trends will assist policy and program leaders in their development of sound policies to assist homeless students.
The Education of Homeless Children and Youth (EHCY) program was added to the McKinney Vento Act Homeless Assistance Act in 1987. In 1990, the McKinney Vento program was amended and the authorized funding level was increased, which enables states to give grants to local education agencies (LEA’s) to provide direct services. EHCY was attached to the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB) legislation. The new purpose of the EHCY program is to help homeless students succeed in school by providing enrollment assistance, help in obtaining school records and other documentation, providing school supplies, providing transportation assistance, conducting identification and outreach programs, and coordinating referrals for services.
The debate over the numbers of homeless arises because federal agencies do not use a consistent definition of homelessness which lead to the inability of a community to know how many homeless children actually reside within its boundaries. Most notably, according to PEC, the US Department of Education and the US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) have different definitions. HUD does not considered homeless people “doubled up” with others to be homeless, even though the majority of homeless children are believed to reside in such arrangements rather than in public shelters or programs. Thus a doubled up homeless child would receive educational services but the same doubled up family will not receive housing services. Congress is debating this issue as it considers changing the McKinney Vento homeless law.
The full federal report on which PEC based its analysis can be found here.
Action Alerts:
- United Way’s Stuff the Bus project will benefit 2,000 children in 40 shelters throughout the region by supplying each of them with everything they need to start school off on the right foot. For more information, visit www.liveunitedphilly.org.
Casey Foundation calls for new poverty guidelines
The Annie E. Casey Foundation (AECF) wants the federal government to adopt a new way to measure poverty that provides a more accurate statistical portrait of economically struggling Americans.
Appearing before a House Ways & Means subcommittee, AECF President and CEO Douglas W. Nelson testified that the time is right to rethink the way data about low-income Americans is collected. To illustrate the need, Nelson cited surveys that show growing public interest in anti-poverty efforts, including a Spotlight on Poverty & Opportunity (SPO) survey showing 56% of respondents do not think the media has devoted an adequate amount of time during the presidential campaign to the issue of poverty.
Nelson says the current poverty measure, which was created in the 1960s, does not accurately portray the real costs of living for low-income families because it does not account for key expenses such as transportation to work, child care, state and local taxes, or the value of benefits such as food stamps, housing assistance, and the earned income and child tax credits.
Saying that other efforts to measure child well-being in the United States also are inadequate and obsolete, Nelson called for the creation of a state-level survey of child well-being that would provide reliable data in a range of areas, including education, social and emotional development, health and safety, and family well-being. Such a survey is currently supported by legislation in both chambers of Congress.
In Pennsylvania, PathwaysPA, with the help of state agencies and United Way, publishes the Pennsylvania Self-Sufficiency Standard, which details how much it costs to meet the cost of living in each of the state’s 67 counties. Pathways also published the Elder Economic Security Standard, which focuses on the special challenges faced by senior citizens in making ends meet. Both documents are available from PathwaysPA on their website.
2-1-1…The Time is Now
What is 2-1-1?
2-1-1
is an easy-to-remember telephone number that can be used to connect people
with important community services and volunteer opportunities. While 2-1-1
currently serves approximately 215 million Americans in 43 states, unfortunately,
Pennsylvania has not yet adopted it’s own 2-1-1 system.
Why 211?
2-1-1 provides better service and access to human services, creates efficiencies, complements emergency systems, and creates an "information utility" that would provide data on an estimated 1 million calls in Pennsylvania for needed services.
For more information on how you can be a part of bringing 2-1-1 to Pennsylvania, please visit www.PA211.org
Action Alerts:
LIVE UNITED. Wear the Shirt.
Wear the shirt and be a part of the LIVE UNITED movement. LIVE UNITED. It's a credo. A mission. A goal. A constant reminder that when we reach out our hand to one, we influence the condition of all. We build the strength of our neighborhoods. We bolster the health of our communities. And we change the lives of those who walk by us everyday.
Advocate for Education
Action Alerts:
- Learn more about Pennsylvania’s Early Childhood Initiatives and declare your support for our young children. Visit www.papromiseforchildren.com.
- Support the Homeless Children and Youth Amendment to HR 840
- Support The Education Begins At Home Act [S. 667-H.R. 2343]
Advocate for Income
Action Alerts:
- Support The Savings for Working Families Act [S. 871-H.R.1514]
- Support the Family Tax Relief Act of 2008 [S. 3079]
Advocate for Health
Action Alerts:


