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Two Items for Immediate Attention

DK
Deborah Kennedy
Wed, Jun 19, 2019 3:00 PM

Good morning, all,

Please respond asap on the following two matters:

  1. After some discussion with Jeff Carter, I've determined that NCL could (and should) nominate Congressman John Yarmuth (KY) for a 2019 CEF award. NCL gave Congressman Yarmuth a Literacy Leadership Award in 2010, but he has never received recognition from CEF. I've approached NCFL about co-sponsoring the award nomination, and have received an enthusiastic "yes" from them. Please let me know whether or not you approve this nomination.

  2. I need your thoughts on whether or not NCL should sign on to the letter referenced below. I'm of two minds about this for a couple of reasons.

      - I'm not comfortable with the letter's unsubstantiated use of adjectives such as "arbitrary"

      - I'm somewhat concerned about the letter's reference to the requirement for increased census funding, which I think could be taken negatively

However, I'm in favor of an increase to the caps. Your thoughts?

Thanks!

Deborah

Deborah Kennedy

Senior Consultant / Owner, Key Words

President, National Coalition for Literacy

office: 202-364-1964 (September-May)

office: 603-293-2402 (June-August)

http://www.key-words.us

http://www.national-coalition-literacy.org

============ Forwarded message ============
From: Jeff Carter jcarter@literacypolicy.org
To: "Nation Coalition for Literacy"members@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 2019 10:05:10 -0400
Subject: [NCL Members] Fwd: Nat’l Orgs: Please sign letter to lift budget caps
============ Forwarded message ============

This was in my update yesterday. Recommend that NCL sign on, and other organizations subscribed to this list may want to do the same.

I know there was an NDD United letter on the caps last spring, but nothing new from NDDU appears to be forthcoming at this time and in light of the current situation in the Senate I wrote about yesterday, I think it’s a good time for NDD groups to voice their concerns.

Jeff

Begin forwarded message:

From: info mailto:info@chn.org

Subject: FW: Nat’l Orgs: Please sign letter to lift budget caps

Date: June 18, 2019 at 9:55:18 AM EDT

Hello Human Needs Allies,

 

I’m bumping this sign-on letter up to the top of your inbox.  If you have already signed, thank you and please share it with your national allies.  If you haven’t yet signed on, please consider joining over 120 national organizations in urging Congress to raise the budget caps.

 

Thank you,

 

CHN

 

 

Dear Human Needs Allies:

The House of Representatives has begun the work of approving FY 2020 appropriations bills, and there has been some real progress so far:  for example, a $2.4 billion increase in child care funding (up 45 percent from this year); enough funding to fully renew rent subsidies for the 3.4 million households now served plus 9,000 new rental vouchers for homeless veterans and very poor families with children; and 7-8 percent increases for K-12 education for poor children and for special education funding.  These advances have been approved in committee and are likely to be enacted by the full House.  But instead of steps forward, human needs programs will face severe cuts if Congress does not change the law that sets harsh limits on appropriations for the next two years.  

To protect vital services and meet needs, we need your organization's help.  Please sign a letter from national groups urging Congress to raise the budget caps.  The deadline for signing is Monday, June 24.

To read and sign the letter, click https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScmMu5IdW34JW7vpa9rJmc-oUTJNRoNDdH0KIIACRMGmm2Cqw/viewform.

A failure to raise the caps will result in sharply reduced funding for domestic and international discretionary programs (together known as “non-defense” or NDD) from $597 billion in FY 2019 to $543 billion in FY 2020, a $54 billion drop, or 9 percent, not counting inflation.  That, however, understates the impact, because certain programs must receive increases, including the 2020 Census and veterans’ health care services, meaning other programs will be cut even more deeply.

The House has set its total for domestic/international appropriations at $631 billion.  President Trump has proposed keeping the $543 billion cap in place; the Senate has not yet set a total.  We need a united front in calling for at least the House level.  That’s what this letter does.

Since FY 2010, NDD programs were cut 4.7 percent, counting inflation.  Over the last two years, because Congress agreed to lift the caps, we’ve started to do better. 

We must not go backwards.

With your help, we can show that organizations representing millions of people nationwide want Congress to lift the caps and invest in the programs people need.

You can read and sign the letter https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScmMu5IdW34JW7vpa9rJmc-oUTJNRoNDdH0KIIACRMGmm2Cqw/viewform?usp=sf_link.

And here’s another important way to help:  please also share this letter with your national partners.

Many thanks,

Deborah Weinstein
Executive Director
Coalition on Human Needs
mailto:dweinstein@chn.org


National Coalition for Literacy Members mailing list
Members@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org
To unsubscribe: http://lists.national-coalition-literacy.org/mailman/listinfo/members_lists.national-coalition-literacy.org

Good morning, all, Please respond asap on the following two matters: 1. After some discussion with Jeff Carter, I've determined that NCL could (and should) nominate Congressman John Yarmuth (KY) for a 2019 CEF award. NCL gave Congressman Yarmuth a Literacy Leadership Award in 2010, but he has never received recognition from CEF. I've approached NCFL about co-sponsoring the award nomination, and have received an enthusiastic "yes" from them. Please let me know whether or not you approve this nomination. 2. I need your thoughts on whether or not NCL should sign on to the letter referenced below. I'm of two minds about this for a couple of reasons.       - I'm not comfortable with the letter's unsubstantiated use of adjectives such as "arbitrary"       - I'm somewhat concerned about the letter's reference to the requirement for increased census funding, which I think could be taken negatively However, I'm in favor of an increase to the caps. Your thoughts? Thanks! Deborah Deborah Kennedy Senior Consultant / Owner, Key Words President, National Coalition for Literacy office: 202-364-1964 (September-May) office: 603-293-2402 (June-August) http://www.key-words.us http://www.national-coalition-literacy.org ============ Forwarded message ============ From: Jeff Carter <jcarter@literacypolicy.org> To: "Nation Coalition for Literacy"<members@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org> Date: Tue, 18 Jun 2019 10:05:10 -0400 Subject: [NCL Members] Fwd: Nat’l Orgs: Please sign letter to lift budget caps ============ Forwarded message ============ This was in my update yesterday. Recommend that NCL sign on, and other organizations subscribed to this list may want to do the same. I know there was an NDD United letter on the caps last spring, but nothing new from NDDU appears to be forthcoming at this time and in light of the current situation in the Senate I wrote about yesterday, I think it’s a good time for NDD groups to voice their concerns. Jeff Begin forwarded message: From: info <mailto:info@chn.org> Subject: FW: Nat’l Orgs: Please sign letter to lift budget caps Date: June 18, 2019 at 9:55:18 AM EDT Hello Human Needs Allies,   I’m bumping this sign-on letter up to the top of your inbox.  If you have already signed, thank you and please share it with your national allies.  If you haven’t yet signed on, please consider joining over 120 national organizations in urging Congress to raise the budget caps.   Thank you,   CHN     Dear Human Needs Allies: The House of Representatives has begun the work of approving FY 2020 appropriations bills, and there has been some real progress so far:  for example, a $2.4 billion increase in child care funding (up 45 percent from this year); enough funding to fully renew rent subsidies for the 3.4 million households now served plus 9,000 new rental vouchers for homeless veterans and very poor families with children; and 7-8 percent increases for K-12 education for poor children and for special education funding.  These advances have been approved in committee and are likely to be enacted by the full House.  But instead of steps forward, human needs programs will face severe cuts if Congress does not change the law that sets harsh limits on appropriations for the next two years.   To protect vital services and meet needs, we need your organization's help.  Please sign a letter from national groups urging Congress to raise the budget caps.  The deadline for signing is Monday, June 24. To read and sign the letter, click https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScmMu5IdW34JW7vpa9rJmc-oUTJNRoNDdH0KIIACRMGmm2Cqw/viewform. A failure to raise the caps will result in sharply reduced funding for domestic and international discretionary programs (together known as “non-defense” or NDD) from $597 billion in FY 2019 to $543 billion in FY 2020, a $54 billion drop, or 9 percent, not counting inflation.  That, however, understates the impact, because certain programs must receive increases, including the 2020 Census and veterans’ health care services, meaning other programs will be cut even more deeply. The House has set its total for domestic/international appropriations at $631 billion.  President Trump has proposed keeping the $543 billion cap in place; the Senate has not yet set a total.  We need a united front in calling for at least the House level.  That’s what this letter does. Since FY 2010, NDD programs were cut 4.7 percent, counting inflation.  Over the last two years, because Congress agreed to lift the caps, we’ve started to do better.  We must not go backwards. With your help, we can show that organizations representing millions of people nationwide want Congress to lift the caps and invest in the programs people need. You can read and sign the letter https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScmMu5IdW34JW7vpa9rJmc-oUTJNRoNDdH0KIIACRMGmm2Cqw/viewform?usp=sf_link. And here’s another important way to help:  please also share this letter with your national partners. Many thanks, Deborah Weinstein Executive Director Coalition on Human Needs mailto:dweinstein@chn.org _______________________________________________ National Coalition for Literacy Members mailing list Members@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org To unsubscribe: http://lists.national-coalition-literacy.org/mailman/listinfo/members_lists.national-coalition-literacy.org
MD
Michele Diecuch
Fri, Jun 21, 2019 4:55 PM

Hi Deborah,
Re: Congressman Yarmuth, I agree, and think the timing is good for nominating him.

Personally, I would be in favor of signing onto the letter below. While it’s not perfect, the overall goal of raising the caps is important.

My 2 cents!

Have a good weekend everyone.
Michele

From: Board [mailto:board-bounces@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org] On Behalf Of Deborah Kennedy
Sent: Wednesday, June 19, 2019 11:01 AM
To: board board@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org
Subject: [NCL Board] Two Items for Immediate Attention

Good morning, all,

Please respond asap on the following two matters:

  1. After some discussion with Jeff Carter, I've determined that NCL could (and should) nominate Congressman John Yarmuth (KY) for a 2019 CEF award. NCL gave Congressman Yarmuth a Literacy Leadership Award in 2010, but he has never received recognition from CEF. I've approached NCFL about co-sponsoring the award nomination, and have received an enthusiastic "yes" from them. Please let me know whether or not you approve this nomination.

  2. I need your thoughts on whether or not NCL should sign on to the letter referenced below. I'm of two minds about this for a couple of reasons.

    • I'm not comfortable with the letter's unsubstantiated use of adjectives such as "arbitrary"
    • I'm somewhat concerned about the letter's reference to the requirement for increased census funding, which I think could be taken negatively
      However, I'm in favor of an increase to the caps. Your thoughts?

Thanks!

Deborah

Deborah Kennedy
Senior Consultant / Owner, Key Words
President, National Coalition for Literacy

office: 202-364-1964 (September-May)
office: 603-293-2402 (June-August)

www.key-words.ushttp://www.key-words.us
www.national-coalition-literacy.orghttp://www.national-coalition-literacy.org

============ Forwarded message ============
From: Jeff Carter <jcarter@literacypolicy.orgmailto:jcarter@literacypolicy.org>
To: "Nation Coalition for Literacy"<members@lists.national-coalition-literacy.orgmailto:members@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org>
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 2019 10:05:10 -0400
Subject: [NCL Members] Fwd: Nat’l Orgs: Please sign letter to lift budget caps
============ Forwarded message ============

This was in my update yesterday. Recommend that NCL sign on, and other organizations subscribed to this list may want to do the same.

I know there was an NDD United letter on the caps last spring, but nothing new from NDDU appears to be forthcoming at this time and in light of the current situation in the Senate I wrote about yesterday, I think it’s a good time for NDD groups to voice their concerns.

Jeff

Begin forwarded message:

From: info <info@chn.orgmailto:info@chn.org>
Subject: FW: Nat’l Orgs: Please sign letter to lift budget caps
Date: June 18, 2019 at 9:55:18 AM EDT

Hello Human Needs Allies,

I’m bumping this sign-on letter up to the top of your inbox.  If you have already signed, thank you and please share it with your national allies.  If you haven’t yet signed on, please consider joining over 120 national organizations in urging Congress to raise the budget caps.

Thank you,

CHN

Dear Human Needs Allies:
The House of Representatives has begun the work of approving FY 2020 appropriations bills, and there has been some real progress so far:  for example, a $2.4 billion increase in child care funding (up 45 percent from this year); enough funding to fully renew rent subsidies for the 3.4 million households now served plus 9,000 new rental vouchers for homeless veterans and very poor families with children; and 7-8 percent increases for K-12 education for poor children and for special education funding.  These advances have been approved in committee and are likely to be enacted by the full House.  But instead of steps forward, human needs programs will face severe cuts if Congress does not change the law that sets harsh limits on appropriations for the next two years.
To protect vital services and meet needs, we need your organization's help.  Please sign a letter from national groups urging Congress to raise the budget caps.  The deadline for signing is Monday, June 24.
To read and sign the letter, click herehttps://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScmMu5IdW34JW7vpa9rJmc-oUTJNRoNDdH0KIIACRMGmm2Cqw/viewform.
A failure to raise the caps will result in sharply reduced funding for domestic and international discretionary programs (together known as “non-defense” or NDD) from $597 billion in FY 2019 to $543 billion in FY 2020, a $54 billion drop, or 9 percent, not counting inflation.  That, however, understates the impact, because certain programs must receive increases, including the 2020 Census and veterans’ health care services, meaning other programs will be cut even more deeply.
The House has set its total for domestic/international appropriations at $631 billion.  President Trump has proposed keeping the $543 billion cap in place; the Senate has not yet set a total.  We need a united front in calling for at least the House level.  That’s what this letter does.
Since FY 2010, NDD programs were cut 4.7 percent, counting inflation.  Over the last two years, because Congress agreed to lift the caps, we’ve started to do better.
We must not go backwards.
With your help, we can show that organizations representing millions of people nationwide want Congress to lift the caps and invest in the programs people need.
You can read and sign the letter herehttps://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScmMu5IdW34JW7vpa9rJmc-oUTJNRoNDdH0KIIACRMGmm2Cqw/viewform?usp=sf_link.
And here’s another important way to help:  please also share this letter with your national partners.
Many thanks,
[cid:image001.jpg@01D52830.969AB440]
Deborah Weinstein
Executive Director
Coalition on Human Needs
dweinstein@chn.orgmailto:dweinstein@chn.org


National Coalition for Literacy Members mailing list
Members@lists.national-coalition-literacy.orgmailto:Members@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org
To unsubscribe: http://lists.national-coalition-literacy.org/mailman/listinfo/members_lists.national-coalition-literacy.org

Hi Deborah, Re: Congressman Yarmuth, I agree, and think the timing is good for nominating him. Personally, I would be in favor of signing onto the letter below. While it’s not perfect, the overall goal of raising the caps is important. My 2 cents! Have a good weekend everyone. Michele From: Board [mailto:board-bounces@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org] On Behalf Of Deborah Kennedy Sent: Wednesday, June 19, 2019 11:01 AM To: board <board@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org> Subject: [NCL Board] Two Items for Immediate Attention Good morning, all, Please respond asap on the following two matters: 1. After some discussion with Jeff Carter, I've determined that NCL could (and should) nominate Congressman John Yarmuth (KY) for a 2019 CEF award. NCL gave Congressman Yarmuth a Literacy Leadership Award in 2010, but he has never received recognition from CEF. I've approached NCFL about co-sponsoring the award nomination, and have received an enthusiastic "yes" from them. Please let me know whether or not you approve this nomination. 2. I need your thoughts on whether or not NCL should sign on to the letter referenced below. I'm of two minds about this for a couple of reasons. - I'm not comfortable with the letter's unsubstantiated use of adjectives such as "arbitrary" - I'm somewhat concerned about the letter's reference to the requirement for increased census funding, which I think could be taken negatively However, I'm in favor of an increase to the caps. Your thoughts? Thanks! Deborah Deborah Kennedy Senior Consultant / Owner, Key Words President, National Coalition for Literacy office: 202-364-1964 (September-May) office: 603-293-2402 (June-August) www.key-words.us<http://www.key-words.us> www.national-coalition-literacy.org<http://www.national-coalition-literacy.org> ============ Forwarded message ============ From: Jeff Carter <jcarter@literacypolicy.org<mailto:jcarter@literacypolicy.org>> To: "Nation Coalition for Literacy"<members@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org<mailto:members@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org>> Date: Tue, 18 Jun 2019 10:05:10 -0400 Subject: [NCL Members] Fwd: Nat’l Orgs: Please sign letter to lift budget caps ============ Forwarded message ============ This was in my update yesterday. Recommend that NCL sign on, and other organizations subscribed to this list may want to do the same. I know there was an NDD United letter on the caps last spring, but nothing new from NDDU appears to be forthcoming at this time and in light of the current situation in the Senate I wrote about yesterday, I think it’s a good time for NDD groups to voice their concerns. Jeff Begin forwarded message: From: info <info@chn.org<mailto:info@chn.org>> Subject: FW: Nat’l Orgs: Please sign letter to lift budget caps Date: June 18, 2019 at 9:55:18 AM EDT Hello Human Needs Allies, I’m bumping this sign-on letter up to the top of your inbox. If you have already signed, thank you and please share it with your national allies. If you haven’t yet signed on, please consider joining over 120 national organizations in urging Congress to raise the budget caps. Thank you, CHN Dear Human Needs Allies: The House of Representatives has begun the work of approving FY 2020 appropriations bills, and there has been some real progress so far: for example, a $2.4 billion increase in child care funding (up 45 percent from this year); enough funding to fully renew rent subsidies for the 3.4 million households now served plus 9,000 new rental vouchers for homeless veterans and very poor families with children; and 7-8 percent increases for K-12 education for poor children and for special education funding. These advances have been approved in committee and are likely to be enacted by the full House. But instead of steps forward, human needs programs will face severe cuts if Congress does not change the law that sets harsh limits on appropriations for the next two years. To protect vital services and meet needs, we need your organization's help. Please sign a letter from national groups urging Congress to raise the budget caps. The deadline for signing is Monday, June 24. To read and sign the letter, click here<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScmMu5IdW34JW7vpa9rJmc-oUTJNRoNDdH0KIIACRMGmm2Cqw/viewform>. A failure to raise the caps will result in sharply reduced funding for domestic and international discretionary programs (together known as “non-defense” or NDD) from $597 billion in FY 2019 to $543 billion in FY 2020, a $54 billion drop, or 9 percent, not counting inflation. That, however, understates the impact, because certain programs must receive increases, including the 2020 Census and veterans’ health care services, meaning other programs will be cut even more deeply. The House has set its total for domestic/international appropriations at $631 billion. President Trump has proposed keeping the $543 billion cap in place; the Senate has not yet set a total. We need a united front in calling for at least the House level. That’s what this letter does. Since FY 2010, NDD programs were cut 4.7 percent, counting inflation. Over the last two years, because Congress agreed to lift the caps, we’ve started to do better. We must not go backwards. With your help, we can show that organizations representing millions of people nationwide want Congress to lift the caps and invest in the programs people need. You can read and sign the letter here<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScmMu5IdW34JW7vpa9rJmc-oUTJNRoNDdH0KIIACRMGmm2Cqw/viewform?usp=sf_link>. And here’s another important way to help: please also share this letter with your national partners. Many thanks, [cid:image001.jpg@01D52830.969AB440] Deborah Weinstein Executive Director Coalition on Human Needs dweinstein@chn.org<mailto:dweinstein@chn.org> _______________________________________________ National Coalition for Literacy Members mailing list Members@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org<mailto:Members@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org> To unsubscribe: http://lists.national-coalition-literacy.org/mailman/listinfo/members_lists.national-coalition-literacy.org
JM
judy.mortrude@gmail.com
Fri, Jun 21, 2019 5:44 PM

Wonderful!
Approve the Yarmuth nomination and agree with Michele on the importance of a united front on raising the caps.

Judy

On Jun 21, 2019, at 12:55 PM, Michele Diecuch MDiecuch@proliteracy.org wrote:

Hi Deborah,
Re: Congressman Yarmuth, I agree, and think the timing is good for nominating him.

Personally, I would be in favor of signing onto the letter below. While it’s not perfect, the overall goal of raising the caps is important.

My 2 cents!

Have a good weekend everyone.
Michele

From: Board [mailto:board-bounces@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org] On Behalf Of Deborah Kennedy
Sent: Wednesday, June 19, 2019 11:01 AM
To: board board@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org
Subject: [NCL Board] Two Items for Immediate Attention

Good morning, all,

Please respond asap on the following two matters:

  1. After some discussion with Jeff Carter, I've determined that NCL could (and should) nominate Congressman John Yarmuth (KY) for a 2019 CEF award. NCL gave Congressman Yarmuth a Literacy Leadership Award in 2010, but he has never received recognition from CEF. I've approached NCFL about co-sponsoring the award nomination, and have received an enthusiastic "yes" from them. Please let me know whether or not you approve this nomination.

  2. I need your thoughts on whether or not NCL should sign on to the letter referenced below. I'm of two minds about this for a couple of reasons.

    • I'm not comfortable with the letter's unsubstantiated use of adjectives such as "arbitrary"
    • I'm somewhat concerned about the letter's reference to the requirement for increased census funding, which I think could be taken negatively
      However, I'm in favor of an increase to the caps. Your thoughts?

Thanks!

Deborah

Deborah Kennedy
Senior Consultant / Owner, Key Words
President, National Coalition for Literacy

office: 202-364-1964 (September-May)
office: 603-293-2402 (June-August)

www.key-words.us
www.national-coalition-literacy.org

============ Forwarded message ============
From: Jeff Carter jcarter@literacypolicy.org
To: "Nation Coalition for Literacy"members@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 2019 10:05:10 -0400
Subject: [NCL Members] Fwd: Nat’l Orgs: Please sign letter to lift budget caps
============ Forwarded message ============

This was in my update yesterday. Recommend that NCL sign on, and other organizations subscribed to this list may want to do the same.

I know there was an NDD United letter on the caps last spring, but nothing new from NDDU appears to be forthcoming at this time and in light of the current situation in the Senate I wrote about yesterday, I think it’s a good time for NDD groups to voice their concerns.

Jeff

Begin forwarded message:

From: info info@chn.org
Subject: FW: Nat’l Orgs: Please sign letter to lift budget caps
Date: June 18, 2019 at 9:55:18 AM EDT

Hello Human Needs Allies,

I’m bumping this sign-on letter up to the top of your inbox.  If you have already signed, thank you and please share it with your national allies.  If you haven’t yet signed on, please consider joining over 120 national organizations in urging Congress to raise the budget caps.

Thank you,

CHN

Dear Human Needs Allies:
The House of Representatives has begun the work of approving FY 2020 appropriations bills, and there has been some real progress so far:  for example, a $2.4 billion increase in child care funding (up 45 percent from this year); enough funding to fully renew rent subsidies for the 3.4 million households now served plus 9,000 new rental vouchers for homeless veterans and very poor families with children; and 7-8 percent increases for K-12 education for poor children and for special education funding.  These advances have been approved in committee and are likely to be enacted by the full House.  But instead of steps forward, human needs programs will face severe cuts if Congress does not change the law that sets harsh limits on appropriations for the next two years.

To protect vital services and meet needs, we need your organization's help.  Please sign a letter from national groups urging Congress to raise the budget caps.  The deadline for signing is Monday, June 24.

To read and sign the letter, click here.

A failure to raise the caps will result in sharply reduced funding for domestic and international discretionary programs (together known as “non-defense” or NDD) from $597 billion in FY 2019 to $543 billion in FY 2020, a $54 billion drop, or 9 percent, not counting inflation.  That, however, understates the impact, because certain programs must receive increases, including the 2020 Census and veterans’ health care services, meaning other programs will be cut even more deeply.

The House has set its total for domestic/international appropriations at $631 billion.  President Trump has proposed keeping the $543 billion cap in place; the Senate has not yet set a total.  We need a united front in calling for at least the House level.  That’s what this letter does.

Since FY 2010, NDD programs were cut 4.7 percent, counting inflation.  Over the last two years, because Congress agreed to lift the caps, we’ve started to do better.

We must not go backwards.

With your help, we can show that organizations representing millions of people nationwide want Congress to lift the caps and invest in the programs people need.

You can read and sign the letter here.

And here’s another important way to help:  please also share this letter with your national partners.

Many thanks,

<image001.jpg>

Deborah Weinstein
Executive Director
Coalition on Human Needs
dweinstein@chn.org


National Coalition for Literacy Members mailing list
Members@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org
To unsubscribe: http://lists.national-coalition-literacy.org/mailman/listinfo/members_lists.national-coalition-literacy.org


National Coalition for Literacy Board mailing list
Board@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org
http://lists.national-coalition-literacy.org/mailman/listinfo/board_lists.national-coalition-literacy.org

Wonderful! Approve the Yarmuth nomination and agree with Michele on the importance of a united front on raising the caps. Judy > On Jun 21, 2019, at 12:55 PM, Michele Diecuch <MDiecuch@proliteracy.org> wrote: > > Hi Deborah, > Re: Congressman Yarmuth, I agree, and think the timing is good for nominating him. > > Personally, I would be in favor of signing onto the letter below. While it’s not perfect, the overall goal of raising the caps is important. > > My 2 cents! > > Have a good weekend everyone. > Michele > > > From: Board [mailto:board-bounces@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org] On Behalf Of Deborah Kennedy > Sent: Wednesday, June 19, 2019 11:01 AM > To: board <board@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org> > Subject: [NCL Board] Two Items for Immediate Attention > > Good morning, all, > > Please respond asap on the following two matters: > > 1. After some discussion with Jeff Carter, I've determined that NCL could (and should) nominate Congressman John Yarmuth (KY) for a 2019 CEF award. NCL gave Congressman Yarmuth a Literacy Leadership Award in 2010, but he has never received recognition from CEF. I've approached NCFL about co-sponsoring the award nomination, and have received an enthusiastic "yes" from them. Please let me know whether or not you approve this nomination. > > 2. I need your thoughts on whether or not NCL should sign on to the letter referenced below. I'm of two minds about this for a couple of reasons. > - I'm not comfortable with the letter's unsubstantiated use of adjectives such as "arbitrary" > - I'm somewhat concerned about the letter's reference to the requirement for increased census funding, which I think could be taken negatively > However, I'm in favor of an increase to the caps. Your thoughts? > > Thanks! > > Deborah > > > Deborah Kennedy > Senior Consultant / Owner, Key Words > President, National Coalition for Literacy > > office: 202-364-1964 (September-May) > office: 603-293-2402 (June-August) > > www.key-words.us > www.national-coalition-literacy.org > > > ============ Forwarded message ============ > From: Jeff Carter <jcarter@literacypolicy.org> > To: "Nation Coalition for Literacy"<members@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org> > Date: Tue, 18 Jun 2019 10:05:10 -0400 > Subject: [NCL Members] Fwd: Nat’l Orgs: Please sign letter to lift budget caps > ============ Forwarded message ============ > > This was in my update yesterday. Recommend that NCL sign on, and other organizations subscribed to this list may want to do the same. > > I know there was an NDD United letter on the caps last spring, but nothing new from NDDU appears to be forthcoming at this time and in light of the current situation in the Senate I wrote about yesterday, I think it’s a good time for NDD groups to voice their concerns. > > Jeff > > Begin forwarded message: > > From: info <info@chn.org> > Subject: FW: Nat’l Orgs: Please sign letter to lift budget caps > Date: June 18, 2019 at 9:55:18 AM EDT > > Hello Human Needs Allies, > > I’m bumping this sign-on letter up to the top of your inbox. If you have already signed, thank you and please share it with your national allies. If you haven’t yet signed on, please consider joining over 120 national organizations in urging Congress to raise the budget caps. > > Thank you, > > CHN > > > Dear Human Needs Allies: > The House of Representatives has begun the work of approving FY 2020 appropriations bills, and there has been some real progress so far: for example, a $2.4 billion increase in child care funding (up 45 percent from this year); enough funding to fully renew rent subsidies for the 3.4 million households now served plus 9,000 new rental vouchers for homeless veterans and very poor families with children; and 7-8 percent increases for K-12 education for poor children and for special education funding. These advances have been approved in committee and are likely to be enacted by the full House. But instead of steps forward, human needs programs will face severe cuts if Congress does not change the law that sets harsh limits on appropriations for the next two years. > > To protect vital services and meet needs, we need your organization's help. Please sign a letter from national groups urging Congress to raise the budget caps. The deadline for signing is Monday, June 24. > > To read and sign the letter, click here. > > A failure to raise the caps will result in sharply reduced funding for domestic and international discretionary programs (together known as “non-defense” or NDD) from $597 billion in FY 2019 to $543 billion in FY 2020, a $54 billion drop, or 9 percent, not counting inflation. That, however, understates the impact, because certain programs must receive increases, including the 2020 Census and veterans’ health care services, meaning other programs will be cut even more deeply. > > The House has set its total for domestic/international appropriations at $631 billion. President Trump has proposed keeping the $543 billion cap in place; the Senate has not yet set a total. We need a united front in calling for at least the House level. That’s what this letter does. > > Since FY 2010, NDD programs were cut 4.7 percent, counting inflation. Over the last two years, because Congress agreed to lift the caps, we’ve started to do better. > > We must not go backwards. > > With your help, we can show that organizations representing millions of people nationwide want Congress to lift the caps and invest in the programs people need. > > You can read and sign the letter here. > > And here’s another important way to help: please also share this letter with your national partners. > > Many thanks, > > <image001.jpg> > > Deborah Weinstein > Executive Director > Coalition on Human Needs > dweinstein@chn.org > > > _______________________________________________ > National Coalition for Literacy Members mailing list > Members@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org > To unsubscribe: http://lists.national-coalition-literacy.org/mailman/listinfo/members_lists.national-coalition-literacy.org > > > _______________________________________________ > National Coalition for Literacy Board mailing list > Board@lists.national-coalition-literacy.org > http://lists.national-coalition-literacy.org/mailman/listinfo/board_lists.national-coalition-literacy.org