Statement of leaders of MomsRising, an on-the-ground organization of more than one million mothers and their families, on this morning’s oral arguments before the U.S. Supreme Court in California v. Texas:
“Moms and families have a tremendous amount at stake in California v. Texas, the case the U.S. Supreme Court is hearing this morning. A ruling in favor of Texas and the Trump administration would throw our health care system into disarray in the midst of a deadly, raging pandemic. It would return us to the time when insurers charged women more than men for the same plans; denied coverage for pre-existing medical conditions, prescription drugs, maternity care, and mental health services; and imposed caps that took our coverage away when we got sick and needed it most.
“An adverse ruling would leave few people unscathed. Twenty million people would lose their health insurance and more than 130 million people with pre-existing conditions, most of them women, would be unable to get affordable coverage – or any coverage at all, even as COVID-19 gives millions more of us a pre-existing condition. It would end the Medicaid expansion that has covered millions and throw adult children off their moms’ and dads’ insurance policies. It would strip funding from our country’s public health system, just when we need it most. It would devastate millions of moms and families and make our country sicker, poorer, and with millions more uninsured. The dangers this case poses would be even more deadly during the pandemic and economic crisis it created.
“President Trump and his unprincipled allies in the U.S. Senate packed the U.S. Supreme Court with conservative ideologues. Trump’s legacy will be even more shameful if his Supreme Court strikes down the Affordable Care Act, which has saved countless lives and become a cornerstone of our health care system for a decade now. America’s moms call on the new Congress to secure and strengthen this essential law.”
-Statement of Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner, Executive Director and CEO, MomsRising
“Despite trying dozens of times, the Trump administration failed to overturn the ACA in Congress because Americans support and recognize the value of this law. Now the administration and 18 Republican-led states are trying to overturn the ACA in the courts. A ruling in favor of the Trump administration and Texas would be a disaster for moms, families and our country.
“That must not happen. This lawsuit puts millions of us at risk. This is repeal without the replace President Trump has been promising since he first ran for office, but never delivered on. Tens of thousands of MomsRising volunteers have spoken out against Trump’s irresponsible attacks on the Affordable Care Act and it is clear these attacks on our health care were a driving force behind the election of President-Elect Joe Biden last week.
“We are stronger and more successful when we all have access to quality, affordable health coverage and care. We urge the new Congress to make preserving and strengthening this law a high priority soon after it is sworn in.”
-Statement of Felicia Burnett, National DIrector for Health Care, MomsRising
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Statement
Murder of Daunte Wright a Call to Action to End Police Violence
Statement of leaders of MomsRising, the online and on-the-ground organization of more than one million mothers and their families, on the murder of Daunte Wright by police:
“There comes a point when no words can capture our sorrow and our rage, as police violence takes Black life, after Black life, after Black life. Daunte Wright is only the latest – a young man, a father, a son, a person with his whole life ahead of him. That Wright was murdered just miles from where police brutally murdered George Floyd only underscores how pervasive police violence against people of color is in our country. That Wright was murdered during the trial of former police officer Derek Chauvin only compounds our trauma and our pain.
“Black people have been demanding accountability for police killings for generations. We are tired of seeing those whose lives were taken indicted, instead of justice served. We don't deserve to be the constant victims of gratuitous racial violence. We deserve to live and breath in a world where skittles, air fresheners, toys, cell phones or sleeping in your bed or opening your front door does not make you a criminal or someone whose life can be taken with no recourse or accountability.
“After the murder of Philando Castille, the state of Minnesota poured $12 million into police training but it did not save George Floyd and it did not save Daunte Wright. If we are committed to creating a world where Black Lives Matter, we must have real police accountability. We must shift resources so we invest in communities rather than extracting resources to criminalize them. The scourge of police violence must end.”
-Statement of Beatriz Beckford, National Director, Youth & Family Justice, MomsRising
“Police violence must end. The deadly mix of white supremacy and police terror must be stopped. This state-sanctioned violence tears at the fabric of our society. It cannot continue. Only when there is real accountability, when we begin to imagine safety beyond policing, will there be real change.
“The days when police can act with impunity and violate the rights and take the lives of Black and Brown people must end. America’s moms want our country to reimagine public safety, overhaul our criminal justice systems, and hold police fully accountable for every life they take or harm. Only when that happens will we have the just and healthy communities our children and families deserve.”
-Statement of Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner, Executive Director and CEO, MomsRising
You may qualify for
Free or Low-Cost Child Care!
Thanks to the Fair Start for Kids Act, financial assistance for child care has been expanded to include more families across Washington State. The good news doesn’t stop there! Co-payments have been eliminated for some families and considerably lowered for others.
Even if you haven’t qualified in the past, call the Child Care Subsidy Contact Center at 1-844-626-8687 to see if you might qualify now through expansion of our state’s child care assistance program. The easiest way to determine eligibility is by phone. Interpretation in multiple languages is available through the phone too!
Not a phone person? You can visit Washington Connection at www.washingtonconnection.org to see if you qualify and to begin an application. Things are hard right now, hopefully this information -- and more affordable child care -- will help make things just a bit easier for you and for your family.
Frequently asked questions about child care assistance:
But first, the most frequently asked question by parents with young children all across our state: Why is child care so expensive and so hard to find?! Because we’ve failed to recognize child care as the public good that every parent, provider, and employer knows it is. Thankfully, that’s starting to change! In May 2021 Governor Jay Inslee signed the Fair Start for Kids Act (Senate Bill 5237) into law and made child care more affordable and accessible for families and more sustainable for providers. Through a new capital gains tax on the ultra-rich, affordable child care will be expanded to more families over the next decade.
Washington State helps some families pay for all or part of the cost of child care! Through Working Connections Child Care, The State of Washington’s child care assistance program, the state will make payments directly to the child care provider you choose for your family. Child care assistance is paid directly to the provider through a voucher that covers the cost of the authorized attendance minus the family’s copayment.
Families participating in the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program, our state’s welfare program, and families with very low incomes will have no co-payment -- that means zero out of pocket expenses. For all other families who qualify for initial eligibility, copayments are limited to no more than $215 per month.
Families who earn at or below 60% of the State Median Income may be eligible for child care assistance. For a family of three that’s $51,804 per year and for a family of four that’s $61,675 per year. What is State Median Income? It’s just a way of measuring how your income compares to the incomes of other families in Washington so that child care assistance can be prioritized for those who need it most.
Parents and caregivers who are working at licensed or certified child care centers and homes and have confirmed or verified employment recorded in MERIT may be eligible up to 85% State Median Income (SMI) with no copayment.
Families who are in their first 12 months of their state-registered apprenticeship may be eligible up to 75% State Median Income (SMI), which is currently $7,018 per month for a family of four.
Families participating in specialty or therapeutic courts and referred in court proceedings are categorically eligible; this means they are eligible regardless of income or approved activities.
Children who reside in Washington state regardless of citizenship status who are otherwise eligible.
Check out this helpful table to get a sense of whether your family might qualify based on your household’s TOTAL GROSS income (for families with two grown ups, that means adding both grown ups’ PRE-TAX incomes together):
Step 1: Find your family size on the horizontal line. Step 2: Find your family’s monthly income before taxes on the vertical line. Step 3: Follow the horizontal and vertical lines to the point where they meet to estimate your copayment.
If your family size (the vertical, or hotdog line) and your monthly income (the horizontal, or hamburger line) don’t line up that means you may not qualify right now -- but call 1-844-626-8687 to be sure. We’ve got good news though! Child care assistance will be expanded to serve more families in 2025 and even more families in 2027.
There are some additional eligibility requirements that Public Benefits workers can help you better understand when you call 1-844-626-8687, including:
Parents in the household must have taxable employment OR meet all WorkFirst (our state’s welfare program) requirements OR be attending full-time community, technical, or tribal college and participating in an approved program
The child must be younger than 13 years old or younger than 19 years with special needs
The child receiving care needs to be a U.S. citizen or legal resident
Washington State doesn’t necessarily define family in the same way that families define themselves. For the purposes of applying for child care assistance, family size typically includes just the parent(s) and child(ren) living under the same roof. Other grownups and children in the house, for example grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins, aren’t included in the calculation of family size. If the parents live separately only the parent and child(ren) living under the same roof are considered in the calculation of family size. When you call 1-844-626-8687 Public Benefits workers can help you better understand how your family size should be calculated.
How is child care assistance inclusive of children with physical, intellectual, and/or developmental disabilities?
Parents of children with special needs may qualify for child care assistance that pays the provider an increased rate to accommodate additional support. For the purposes of eligibility, “children with special needs” generally have physical, emotional or mental challenges limiting one or more major life activities. Major life activities mean breathing, hearing, seeing, speaking, walking, using arms and hands, learning and playing. To apply for an increased rate for your child’s care, complete the paperwork in English and Spanish. Looking for additional support? Consider reaching out to the organizations below:
Aging and Disability Services Administration, http://www.aasa.dshs.wa.gov, 1-800-422-3263 The Arc of WA, Parent to Parent, http://www.arcwa.org, 1-888-754-8798 Early Intervention Services, Birth to Three www.withinreachwa.org 1-800-322-2588 Child Care Aware of Washington, http://wa.childcareaware.org/ 1-800-446-1114
How does child care assistance serve children and families experiencing homelessness?
Families experiencing homelessness may be eligible for 12-months without an approved work activity. You may qualify for a grace period if you: Live temporarily with family or friends; do not have a home; live in a shelter, car or park; live in transitional housing; live in Domestic Violence program housing; and/or experience other temporary living situations. Looking for help accessing the homeless child care grace period? Child Care Aware of Washington and Child Care Resources can help!
Are high school student parents eligible to receive child care assistance?
Yes, high school student parents and parents 21 years old or younger that are completing a high school equivalency certificate are eligible for child care assistance as long as they earn less than 85 percent of the State Median Income (SMI). A high school student parent is eligible regardless of the other parent’s circumstances. How much is 85 percent of SMI? For a family of two it’s $4,951.25 per month; for a family of three it’s $6,115.75 per month; and for a family of four it’s $7,281.10 per month.
Are college students eligible for child care assistance?
Yes! Parents participating in a vocational education program at a community, technical, or tribal college that will lead to an associate degree or registered apprenticeship program will not have to meet work requirements to receive child care assistance. Parents must meet other eligibility requirements.
There are three different ways to apply for child care assistance:
By phone: Call the Child Care Subsidy Contact Center at 1-844-626-8687. The Contact Center has a full staff of Public Benefits workers who can answer your specific questions, determine initial eligibility, and start the application process. ***The easiest way to determine eligibility is by phone. Interpretation in multiple languages is available through the phone too!***
Online: Visit Washington Connection at https://www.washingtonconnection.org/ to see if you qualify and to begin an application -- but calling 1-844-626-8687 is highly recommended for a faster response
In person: Visit a Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS) office in your community to submit an application for child care assistance, along with other public benefits. Find your community office here: https://www.dshs.wa.gov/office-locations
What information will I need to apply for child care assistance?
When you call the Child Care Subsidy Contact Center at 1-844-626-8687, Public Benefits workers may be able to process your application within a number of days by cross-verifying your information. The very first thing you should do is call 1-844-626-8687 to begin your application and then, afterwards, begin to gather the following documentation if requested as part of the process:
Proof of your child’s citizenship or legal residency;
Household members;
Household income.
If you’d rather apply online or at a DSHS office you are more likely to need to provide hard-copy documentation of the items listed above. Note that documentation will need to be provided through snail mail or through fax to protect your private data.
When you’ve selected your child care provider, be sure to provide the Child Care Subsidy Contact Center with their information so they can receive payment.
Families with child care assistance can choose the care setting and provider that matches their unique needs, including licensed child care centers and licensed family child care homes. Licensed child care providers follow minimum licensing requirements set by the state to ensure children are in safe, healthy and nurturing places. Not sure where to start? Call Child Care Aware of Washington’s Family Center at 1-800-446-1114 for help finding high-quality, licensed child care in your community. In addition to providing you a list of child care options that fit your criteria, Child Care Aware can also share with you about using Early Achievers, our state’s Quality Rating and Improvement System, as one measure for understanding quality. Support is available in more than 250 languages!
Many families using our state’s child care assistance program choose Family, Friend, and Neighbor (FFN) care. FFN care is license exempt, though non-relative caregivers are required to meet health and safety standards. Subsidized FFN care makes it possible for families to choose care settings that closely match their cultural, linguistic, and community ties and it is an essential part of our state’s care infrastructure.
How can I use child care assistance in a Family, Friend, and Neighbor (FFN) caregiving setting?
Family, friend and neighbor (FFN) providers include grandparents, aunts and uncles, elders, older siblings, friends, neighbors, and others who help families by providing child care. Both in Washington and around the nation, FFN care is the most common type of child care for infants and toddlers and for school-age children before and after school.
Some families prefer to have an FFN care for their child or to have care provided in the child's home. When you choose a child care provider who is exempt from licensing, you have extra responsibilities. The provider you choose must:
Be 18 years of age or older;
Be a citizen or a legal resident of the United States;
Pass the DCYF background check. If care is provided in the provider’s home, then anyone older than 16 who lives in the home must also pass a background check;
Be physically and mentally healthy enough to meet all the needs of the child in care;
Not be the child’s biological parent, step-parent, adoptive parent, legal guardian, in-loco parentis, sibling, or the spouse of any of these individuals
Meet the health and safety requirements if not related to the child.
Families or caregivers considering subsidized FFN care can learn more about requirements and regulations online: https://www.dcyf.wa.gov/services/early-learning-providers/ffn.
Is there support for families and providers who choose Family, Friend, and Neighbor (FFN) care?
Kaleidoscope Play & Learn (KP&L) groups offer parents and other caregivers the opportunity to support their children's early learning through everyday activities, and build relationships with other participants. More about Play & Learn is available online through Child Care Resources: https://www.childcare.org/family-services/find-care-ffn.aspx .
Statement of Donna Norton, Executive Vice President of MomsRising, the online and on-the-ground organization of more than one million mothers and their families, on the Biden administration decision to extend the use of Title 42 to continue expelling asylum-seekers, forcing them to wait for months or years in Mexico for asylum hearings:
“It is deeply disappointing that the Biden administration has extended the use of Title 42. Coming at the same time the administration is re-implementing the ‘Remain in Mexico’ protocols, this will force even more immigrants to wait for long periods of time in unsafe, life-threatening conditions, at risk from smugglers and drug cartels, in Mexico for their asylum hearings. This combination of dangerous, unethical policies will make it practically impossible for people seeking asylum to get protection at our southern border.
“Title 42 is a provision of health law that the Trump administration mis-used to deny immigrants the opportunity to seek safety in the United States. This Trump-era scapegoating policy puts asylum-seekers’ lives at risk. Using it to validate deportations is as indefensible now as it was when the Trump administration did so.
“Countless health experts have said there is no scientific basis for this policy. Instead, public health measures such as testing, quarantining and vaccination can effectively prevent the spread of COVID-19. We urge Secretary Mayorkas and the Biden administration to end the use of Title 42, and work to deliver a fair immigration process that respects the human rights of all children and families. Families belong together. Every asylum-seeker should be treated fairly and with dignity and respect.”
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Statement
Moms Welcome New Biden Administration Public Charge Rule
Statement of Xochitl Oseguera, Vice President of MamásConPoder and MomsRising, the online and on-the-ground organization of more than one million mothers and their families, on the public charge rule the Biden administration published today:
“The Trump administration’s ‘public charge’ rule was cruel and racist, and moms are thrilled that the Biden administration replaced it with a fair, compassionate rule that will allow hard-working immigrant families to access food, health care, and other essential services they need to thrive. ThePublic Charge Rule the Biden administration published today is welcome and badly needed – not just because it puts an end to an unfortunate chapter in our history during which a heartless, anti-immigrant administration used public policies to intimidate and punish immigrant families, but also because it makes clear that neither use of health, nutrition and housing assistance nor benefits used by a U.S. citizen child will not be considered in citizenship applications of their family members.
“MomsRising and its Spanish-speaking community, MamásConPoder,will work hard to get the word out about the new rule, so that immigrant parents will no longer fear applying for food, housing, and health care supports that they or their children are entitled to access.
“America’s moms want every child and family to be able to access food, housing, and health care, every immigrant to be treated with compassion and respect, and our government to reject racism and anti-immigrant sentiment in all their forms.”
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Statement
Exploitation of Migrant Children Is Horrifying and Must Stop
Statement of leaders of MomsRising, the online and on-the-ground organization of more than one million mothers and their families, on the news that more than a dozen employers in some 20 states are exploiting migrant children:
“The carefully documented, credible news reports that U.S. companies are exploiting and abusing migrant children is horrifying and absolutely unacceptable. Basic protections against child labor apply to migrant children too, and every employer that has exploited minors should face extreme penalties. That many of these children apparently did dangerous work during long, overnight hours makes these violations even more egregious. America’s moms expect the federal and state governments to hold employers accountable for these shocking, horrendous human rights abuses.
“In the United States, no company should ever profit by exploiting children and doing so is unforgivable. All children, regardless of where they come from, deserve to live in peace and free of danger. We look to the U.S. Department of Labor and state governments to step up enforcement of child labor laws. We look to community social service agencies to do much more to protect migrant children and support the families that want to protect them. And we look to the federal government to provide the legal representation these minors need and deserve.”
-Statement of Donna Norton, Executive Vice President, MomsRising
“We are also keenly aware that the conditions that enable this kind of exploitation stem from the demonization of immigrants, an immigration system that has been broken for much too long, the racism and xenophobia too many Republican politicians have stoked, the extreme poverty many immigrant families have been forced into, and a workforce shortage exacerbated by cutting the number of immigrants we welcome to our country. All that, too, must end.
“America’s moms want every immigrant to be treated with compassion, dignity and respect, and every child to be free from exploitation. We can and must do better as a caring nation.”
- Statement of Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner, Executive Director and CEO, MomsRising
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Statement
SCOTUS Ruling Maintains Access to Mifepristone for Moms, Women, Pregnant People In States Where Abortion Is Legal – For Now
Statement of Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner, Executive Director and CEO of MomsRising, the online and on-the-ground organization of more than one million mothers and their families, on the U.S. Supreme Court action to maintain access to mifepristone as court cases continue:
“America’s moms, women, health care providers, pregnant people, and all those who support democracy can breathe a sigh of relief that SCOTUS is rejecting restrictions on access to mifepristone, for now. The lower courts should never have allowed restrictions on an FDA-approved medication that has been used safely and effectively for 23 years, is proven safer than penicillin, Tylenol and Viagra, and is the only option many of us have left for abortion. It is deeply concerning that Justices Thomas and Alito dissented from this evening’s action, and that lower courts will now consider these baseless, harmful restrictions on medication abortion.
“We thank the Biden/Harris administration for fighting so hard for our health and autonomy. The attacks on mifepristone have intensified the immense hardship and chaos SCOTUS caused with its ruling in Dobbs last summer, and unfortunately that will continue. Low-income women and moms, women of color, young, rural and immigrant women, people with disabilities, and those who are LGBTQIA+ are suffering the most. We must restore access to abortion for everyone.
“The weaponization of our courts and the attacks on our fundamental liberties must end. Most people who have abortions are moms, and moms want abortion care to be accessible to all who need it, regardless of where they live, their financial status, or the source of their health coverage. Being able to choose if we have children, and if so, when and how many children to have, which includes access to abortion care, is a fundamental right. Denying people medications proven to be safe and effective, denying health care of any kind, and forced births are unacceptable.”
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News release
Diverse Books for All Coalition Partners with MomsRising to Support Parent Engagement
WASHINGTON, D.C. (Aug. 9, 2023) – The Diverse Books for All Coalition, a national collaboration of 38 nonprofits working to tackle the lack of affordable, diverse children’s books, is partnering with MomsRising to bring the insights and perspective of parents to help shape the Coalition’s work. As part of that mandate, MomsRising will create and facilitate a parent ambassador group to provide ongoing input regarding diverse books and the resources that parents and caregivers need to advocate for and use them.
The 2020 U.S. Census revealed that 53 percent of U.S. children are non-white, yet children’s books do not reflect that diversity. Out of 3,450 children’s books published in the U.S. in 2022 and reviewed by the Cooperative Children’s Book Center, 493 have a Black/African American primary or significant secondary character (fiction) or human subject (nonfiction), setting, or topic; 369 feature Asian; 238 feature Latine; and 60 feature Indigenous peoples.
“In our increasingly diverse nation and world, all children need access to diverse books – regardless of their parents’ socio-economic, racial or cultural background,” said Kyle Zimmer, president and CEO of the nonprofit First Book, which spearheaded the launch of the Diverse Books for All Coalition. “This is especially critical for children growing up in historically under-represented communities. The Coalition has a bold goal: to ensure that young children across the country have consistent access to books that reflect their families and communities – as well as books that help them learn about others. MomsRising will ensure that the voices and perspectives of parents and caregivers – who know their children best – are front and center in our work.”
Building upon its long experience, MomsRising will develop and support a panel of parents to provide real-time feedback on diverse books, help parents and caregivers recognize the benefits they offer, and provide them with resources to make them accessible to children and youth. Those resources may include webinars, trainings, videos, and tool kits.
“MomsRising members – and moms all across the country – are eager to find quality children’s books that reflect the experiences of their communities,” said Nina Perez, MomsRising’s national director for early learning. “When children read more, and see themselves in the books they read, it expands their horizons and helps them discover new interests and passions. MomsRising is delighted to join the Diverse Books for All Coalition, to contribute our experiences and expertise, and to support the very important work the Coalition does.”
Launched in October 2022, the Diverse Books for All Coalition is working to increase access to affordable, high-quality, children’s books by and about diverse races, cultures, abilities, and identities, with a goal of doubling the number of affordable, quality diverse children’s books over the next five years.
To support educational and racial equity, the Diverse Books for All Coalition, which includes many of the nation’s largest nonprofits that distribute books to children, will leverage the power of aggregate buying to influence the availability and pricing of diverse children’s books for members, who serve children in low-income communities; frame a narrative to promote the importance of diverse books for all children; and provide educators, parents, and caregivers with support and resources to advocate for and use diverse books. The W.K. Kellogg Foundation awarded First Book with a $1 million, 18-month grant to support the Coalition’s work.
Members of the Coalition are: First Book, American Academy of Pediatrics-CA3, Barbershop Books, Birdie’s Book Mobile, Book Harvest, Books for Kids, BookSpring, Campaign for Grade-Level Reading, Future Forward, Heart of America, Homegrown, Jumpstart, Leaders Readers Network, MomsRising, National Association for the Education of Young Children, National Black Child Development Institute, National Parent Leadership Institute, ParentChild+, Parents as Teachers, Promising Pages, Raising a Reader, Reach Out and Read, Inc., Reach Out and Read Greater New York, Reach Out and Read Rhode Island, Read On Arizona, Reading Is Fundamental, Room to Read, Save the Children, Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators, Start Early, The American Federation of Teachers, The Patterson Foundation, Too Small to Fail, Turn the Page KC, UnidosUS, United Through Reading, We Need Diverse Books, and ZERO TO THREE.
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Statement
Military Families Are Better Off Because Congress Included the MOMS Act in the NDAA – But Restricting Health Care for Trans Youth Is Cruel & Unjustified
Statement of Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner, Executive Director and CEO of MomsRising, the online and on-the-ground organization of more than one million mothers and their families, on the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) Congress passed and President Biden is expected to sign into law:
“Our country’s military families will be healthier and stronger because Congress included the Maintaining our Obligation to Moms who Serve (MOMS) Act in the National Defense Authorization Act both chambers have passed. It will improve the mental health of military moms by supporting a badly needed 5-year pilot program to prevent and treat maternal mental health conditions and bring evidence-based maternal mental health programs into the military’s health care system.
“Maternal mental health problems are common and often devastating, and military mothers — those who serve and those with spouses who serve — have a 2-3 times higher risk of experiencing them than their civilian counterparts, according to a 2022 Government Accountability Office study. Mental health conditions are a leading cause of our country’s devastating maternal health crisis, which takes an especially terrible toll on Black and Indigenous women. So we are extremely pleased that Congress has taken this action and thank U.S. Senator Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) and Representative Chrissy Houlahan (D-PA) for championing the MOMS Act. We will work to ensure the progress continues with enactment of the Black Maternal Health Momnibus Act very soon.
“But moms are deeply disappointed that House Speaker Mike Johnson and House Republicans added a provision to the NDAA at the last minute that prohibits military health programs from providing care to transgender children of service members. Politics has no place in medical decisions and this provision undermines both the wishes of parents and the health of military families. It is truly disgraceful that Republican leaders continue stoking cruel, divisive culture wars by stigmatizing and demonizing trans children.”
About MomsRising Education Fund
As a charity, MomsRising Education Fund is nonpartisan and does not support or oppose any candidate for elected public office.