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For Immediate
Release
July 2, 2003 |
Contact
NASW Public Affairs
Office
Lahne Mattas-Curry
202-336-8228
lcurry@naswdc.org
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Rep. Barbara Lee named NASW Public Elected Official of the Year
Washington — The National Association of Social Workers
(NASW) is pleased to name Rep. Barbara Lee (D-CA) the 2003 NASW
Public Elected Official of the Year, for her vital role in reconnecting
the social work profession to its activist roots. Lee’s outstanding
service and political career has deeply influenced global peace,
civil and human rights, health and human services, and social work
practice. Her long history of political activism makes her a unique
role model for social workers throughout the nation.
Throughout Lee’s political career, she has sought to use
her training as a social worker to help solve the problems and
challenges that confront the people of East Bay, Calif.— the
9th district, which she represents—and those of the nation.
She has worked to build bipartisan coalitions to provide for the
basic and interrelated needs of all Americans: health care, affordable
housing, education, jobs, and the quest to create livable communities
in a peaceful world.
Reminiscent of another social worker in Congress — Jeanette
Rankin, who was the first woman elected to the House of Representatives
in 1917 — Lee has taken a courageous stand for peace. On
September 14, 2001, Lee said, “As we act, let us not become
the evil that we deplore,” as she cast the sole vote against
authorizing the president to use “all necessary and appropriate
force” against
anyone associated with the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.
This action, coupled with her continued leadership in the global
peace movement, exemplifies the principles that guide our work
as professional social workers.
Currently, Lee is co-chair of the Progressive Caucus, chair of
the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) Task Force on Global HIV/AIDS,
and whip for the Minority Business Task Force. She has emerged
as a key leader in Congress in the fight against HIV/AIDS and has
helped secure more than $5 million in funding for HIV/AIDS services
in Alameda County, Cailf. Recognizing that national boundaries
will not stop the spread of the disease — and that AIDS represents
the crucial humanitarian issue of our time— she has worked
successfully to pass meaningful legislation that will initiate
multilateral international efforts to fight the disease. Most recently,
Rep. Lee has introduced legislation to increase the worldwide affordability
of AIDS drugs, and to link international debt relief to HIV/AIDS
prevention, treatment, and social and health infrastructures.
Lee has also played a leading role in the fight for affordable
housing—a key issue affecting people in the region she represents.
As a member of the Financial Services Subcommittee on Housing,
Lee helped secure a $34 million grant from the Department of Housing
and Urban Development for the City of Oakland. Additonally, through
the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, she convened a Western
Regional Summit on Housing and Wealth Accumulation in which Fannie
Mae contributed $500,000 to the Northern California Land Trust
for low cost housing.
Rep Lee continually works to make connections between local, national,
and global issues. From the beginning of her political career as
an intern in the office of Rep. Ron Dellums‘ (D-CA)—another
social worker—Barbara Lee has consistently demonstrated her
commitment to social work values and ethics in all her political
activities.
The National Association of Social Workers (NASW), in Washington,
DC,
is the largest membership organization of professional social
workers with 150,000 members. It promotes, develops and protects
the practice of social work and social workers. NASW also seeks
to enhance the well being of individuals, families and communities
through advocacy.
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