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White House Briefing Successfully Conducted
A historic briefing to bring a proposal for a federal
government Effective Parenting Initiative to the
attention of the President of the United States was
conducted on December 12, 2006.
The briefing took place at the White House Office of
National Drug Control Policy in Washington, D.C. and
was attended by an invited audience of executives
from that major
White House Office and from the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Included was the executive who facilitated the
briefing, the Associate Commissioner of the
Administration on Children, Youth and Families in
Health and Human Services, Harry Wilson.
The Effective Parenting
Initiative that
was
proposed was based on a comprehensive
conceptualization of the central roles that effective
parenting and parenting education play in promoting
the healthy growth of America’s 88 million children,
and in preventing such costly and tragic domestic
problems as child abuse and neglect, drug abuse,
juvenile delinquency, school drop out, as well as a
variety of other health, mental health, learning and
social problems.
The briefing
included a PowerPoint presentation that covered the
history of the proposal, which dates back to the
mid-1990s. The purpose of the proposal is to make
effective parenting and parenting education societal
priorities.
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As shown above, the proposal calls for the creation
of
either a cabinet-level Department of Effective
Parenting or a White House Office of Effective
Parenting, with a secretary or director reporting to
the President.
The Department/Office would be supported by a
prestigious National Council on Effective Parenting
consisting of leaders from all segments of American
society as well as leaders from government and
private sector organizations with expertise in
effective parenting and parenting education.
The policies and programs of the Department/Office
and the National Council would be carried out by (1)
a Clearinghouse to educate the public about the
importance of effective parenting and to celebrate
and honor America’s parents, by (2) a Training
Center to ensure that all communities have
professionally trained instructors and educators that
provide high quality parenting and family life skill
building programs, and by (3) a research and
evaluation Institute to generate knowledge about
effective parenting, what can be expected from
modern programs, and what will be the cost savings
in regard to decreases in human misery and
decreases in tax spending for making effective
parenting a priority.
Creative ways of
funding the
proposed Initiative were also shared.
Possible Outcomes of the Briefing
The discussion of the Initiative not only included
bringing it to the President’s attention and
consideration, but also what could be done through
current federal government vehicles. A series of
ideas were suggested, including the possibility of the
Surgeon General including a parenting initiative as a
means of helping to achieve Healthy America 2010
goals, and including a parenting initiative as part of
the current Helping America’s Youth program in which
the First Lady is involved.
The presentation was delivered by Dr.
Kerby T. Alvy, (shown second from left in
photo)
a board member of the organization behind the
proposal, NEPI, the National Effective Parenting
Initiative, and the founder and executive director of
the 32 year old, Center for the Improvement of Child
Caring in California.
Also participating from
NEPI was
Dr. Karol Kumpfer of the University of Utah (far
right) and one
of Dr. Alvy’s daughters, Lisa (second from
right).
Also
pictured (far left), Harry Wilson, Associate
Commissioner of
the
Administration on Children, Youth and Families in
Health and Human Services.
Other Accomplishments of the D.C. Visit
The visit to Washington for this White House Briefing
was also used to bring the Initiative to the attention
of various members of congress, including Senator
Hillary Rodham Clinton, who has a long history of
supporting parenting programs beginning with her
being the First Lady of the State of
Arkansas.
In addition, the visit allowed for discussions with
other
national organizations about supporting the Initiative.
For example, there was a meeting with the
National Consumers League, the 100 year old
social
and economic justice organization that was pivotal in
creating the Children’s Bureau, the first federal
government agency devoted to the needs of
America’s children.
Actions emerging from the White House Briefing and
the visits in Washington will be shared through
subsequent announcements.
Copies of the White House Briefing presentation, and
the PowerPoint charts that supported the
presentation, are available on the home page of the
NEPI
website.
Click here to show your
support for NEPI by signing
the Effective Parenting Petition.
phone:
800-325-2422
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