Social Work in the Public Eye
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| Linda Kulik |
NASW member Linda Kulik has been elected to serve as the
district president for the School Social Workers Association of
Georgia-District 7, according to an article on CatWalkChatt.com. Kulik, who is
a resident of Chickamauga, Ga., previously worked in Northern Virginia schools
as a social worker and has more than 25 years of experience in the field.
“I have participated in committee meetings at NASW, which
resulted in the development of a NASW position statement on confidentiality in
schools,” she said.
School social workers serve the system by supporting educators
who work with students as they prepare to go to college and start their
careers, the article says. They also help students achieve maximum results
during their pre-college education by involving the family, community and
school to address any issues that may keep a student from achieving his or her
full potential.
District 7 covers school systems in northern Georgia. Kulik
has been with Chickamauga City Schools since 2002.
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| Marci Ybarra |
New research shows that the 1996 federal welfare reform, while
bringing some improvements to the nation’s poor, has made extremely poor people
in America worse off, according to an article on phys.org.
NASW member Marci Ybarra, assistant professor at the School of
Social Service Administration at the University of Chicago, analyzed these
changes and their potential outcomes in a study called “The Welfare Reforms of
the 1990s and the Stratification of Material Well-being among Low-income
Households with Children,” published in September in “Children and Youth
Services Review.”
The article says the reforms greatly changed welfare (cash
assistance) by requiring recipients to work and placing a cap on the aid that
one can receive. In addition, social policies set in place in the 1990s raised
the benefits of work for low-income families. As a result of these changes,
millions of people — mainly single mothers — who previously received welfare
joined the workforce.
At the same time, welfare has become more difficult to obtain
for families at the very bottom who have more difficulty entering the
workforce. “The Welfare Reforms of the 1990s” paper, written by Ybarra and a
team of scholars, compares the material well-being trends of very poor families
with incomes of $11,500 for a family of four in 2012 — or below 50 percent of
the poverty level — with those of near-poor families with incomes between
$23,051 and $34,500.
“This is the first study to use nationally representative
survey data to compare the material hardships of deeply poor households with
children to other low-income groups of lower-income households with children,
before and after the 1990s welfare reforms,” Ybarra wrote.
Some of the findings include:
- Among deeply poor households with children, 48 percent
reported in 2005 they did not have enough money to cover most of their essential
household expenses, compared with 45 percent in 1992 and 37 percent in 1995.
- Among near-poor households with children, 30 percent
reported in 2005 that they had difficulty meeting their household expenses,
down from 37.9 percent in 1992.
- While the amount of public aid received by deeply poor
households fell dramatically, it increased substantially for near-poor
families, particularly through expansions of the Earned Income Tax Credit, a
benefit that reduces income taxes for certain people with low or moderate wages
- Even among deeply poor households, 41 percent of household
heads were working in 2005. But this is well below the proportion for near-poor
households, in which 88 percent of household heads work. This may be because
household heads among the deeply poor were more likely to report a
work-limiting disability.
This should “prompt policymakers to be more aware of the
income diversity among the poor and the ways in which policy may increase
stratification among the poor,” Ybarra said. “Social workers as well need to be
aware of the variety of forms poverty takes so that supports they offer can be
consistent with the needs of the clients they serve.”
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| Peter Manoleas |
NASW member Peter Manoleas received the 2012 Champions of
Health Professions Diversity Award from the California Wellness Foundation, and
was interviewed by the foundation.
The award recognizes people who have demonstrated a commitment
to increasing California’s health care workforce and its diversity. Manoleas is
a lecturer and a field social work consultant at the School of Social Welfare
at the University of California, Berkeley, and has a private practice in
Oakland, Calif. He serves on the board of directors for La Clinica de la Raza,
which provides accessible health care for Alameda, Contra Costa and Solomeda
counties in California.
“We’re all looking forward to health care reform,” Manoleas
says in the interview on YouTube. “That has profound implications for the way
everyone does their jobs, including nonmedical folks like social workers.”
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| Samantha Smith |
NASW student member Samantha Smith has been elected to serve
on the NASW-Missouri Chapter board of directors, according to a news release on
Avila University News online. Smith is a senior pursuing a BSW at Avila
University in Kansas City, Mo. She also is a committee member of the
NASW-Political Action for Candidate Endorsement.
Smith said she sees her position on the NASW-Missouri board as
opening up opportunities in macro social work. She is serving as an ambassador
for the NASW continuing education instruction program at her school, where
professionals from all levels of social work come together to provide
continuing education opportunities.
“By introducing guest speakers … I have been able to network
with those in the social work community and practice my public speaking skills
in front of peers,” Smith said, stating that the ambassador position is another
advantage to her board appointment.
Smith says the values her parents taught her gave her a
foundation for good social work. She decided to attend Avila to uphold a family
tradition of sorts, following two aunts who graduated from the school and
joining a cousin who is a fellow senior studying business administration.
“I always wanted to go to Avila as long as I can remember,”
Smith says in the release. “… It’s more than lived up to my expectations. Avila
has set up a foundation to provide me confidence, but also resources and
networking opportunities. It’s just provided me many opportunities all around.”
From November 2012 NASW News. © 2012 National
Association of Social Workers. All Rights Reserved. NASW News
articles may be copied for personal use, but proper notice of
copyright and credit to the NASW News must appear on all copies
made. This permission does not apply to reproduction for advertising,
promotion, resale, or other commercial purposes.
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