NASW News


Jan 12, 2012

NASW extends its deepest sympathies to the family of former NASW Executive Director Mark Battle, who died Oct. 26. He was 87. As executive director, Battle demonstrated a pioneering leadership that stimulated the organization and the social work profession to broader areas of social concerns. “He was a social worker, educator, consultant, businessman and former government official,” said NASW Executive Director Elizabeth J. Clark. “Throughout his career, he blended expertise in management and labor issues with social work skills and knowledge.” Battle later co-founded the NASW Social Work Pioneers® and rece...

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Jan 11, 2012

‘Purge’ survivor Elizabeth Clark’s editorial made me stand up and applaud. I am one of the few “survivors” of the medical social work “purge” throughout the nation’s hospitals. Now, I am joyfully witnessing the resurgence of social work in our own hospital system here in Virginia. Ida Cannon, we are still flying your banner! Sherry S Parker, ACSW LCSW ACM Manager, Social Work Services, Sentara HealthCare   The moral compass I’m writing in response to the article, “LGBT Families Hurt by Misguided Policies,” that was published in the November 2011 issue. Shouldn&rsquo...

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Jan 10, 2012

The National Association of Social Workers Legal Defense Fund has a lot to celebrate during its 40th anniversary in 2012. During the past four decades, the LDF has assisted members in paying legal fees in cases related to their professional practice; filed hundreds of legal briefs to support the rights of marginalized groups, such as immigrants, children and LGBT individuals; put out reference publications that help social workers navigate complex legal issues; and offered online law and ethics training and continuing education programs for social workers. “We pride ourselves on the level of services and products we are able to provi...

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Jan 09, 2012

Richard Jones, center, former president and CEO of Chicago-based Metropolitan Family Services, stands outside one of the organization’s campus buildings, which was recently named in his honor to recognize 13 years of leadership for the organization that serves the critical needs of families in the metropolitan area. Jones is joined by his mother, Wilhelmina Manns, right, a retired social work professor at Howard University; and his sister, Shelly Johnson. Jones, who was honored in November by the NASW Illinois Chapter’s statewide conference with a Lifetime Achievement Award, has also served NASW on a national level as president ...

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Jan 08, 2012

The National Association of Social Workers strongly urged the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to include social workers in plans that will be offered in the new affordable health care insurance exchanges that will be available across the United States by Jan. 1, 2014. NASW also made recommendations to ensure these insurance exchanges better serve consumers, especially underserved populations — those with low literacy or English skills or people who live in low-income neighborhoods with limited computer and Internet access. “NASW is a strong supporter of the Affordable Care Act and we eagerly await the full implemen...

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Jan 07, 2012

The Council on Social Work Education held its 57th annual program meeting in Atlanta in October, with the theme “Increasing Access: Confronting Disparity and Inequality.” Over the course of the four-day conference — which included presentations, preliminaries and networking opportunities — NASW members Trudy B. Festinger and Leon H. Ginsberg were presented with the Significant Lifetime Achievement in Social Work Education award in recognition of their achievements as educators in the profession. NASW member Tricia B. Bent-Goodley received the Distinguished Recent Contributions in Social Work Education award. Rep. J...

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Jan 06, 2012

“Attention to the contributions, strengths, needs and goals of family caregivers of older adults are integral to social work practice.” This statement summarizes the intent of the NASW Standards for Social Work Practice with Family Caregivers of Older Adults. The document celebrated its one-year publication anniversary in November. The resource continues to be used not only by students, faculty, practitioners and aging-services organizations, but also by consumers. Sandra Edmonds Crewe, associate dean for Academic and Student Advancement and director of the Multidisciplinary Center for Gerontology at Howard University in Wa...

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Jan 05, 2012

Delegation co-leader Richard Jones, left, listens to one of the tour guides in Rio de Janeiro, the second-largest city in Brazil. The teeming metropolises of Rio de Janeiro and San Paulo in Brazil are saturated with people — a combined population of up to 30 million. Transitioning from a monarchy to dictatorship, the Portuguese- speaking country is now a modern democracy led by President Dilma Roussef. However, despite a growing economy and large trade export, Brazil has extreme poverty, a high crime rate and sexual trafficking. But the first thing NASW Executive Director Elizabeth Clark noticed was beauty, and being among natural...

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Jan 04, 2012

The Action Network for Social Work Education and Research met in October to discuss legislative, policy and organizational updates that have affected the social work profession throughout the 112th Congress. ANSWER members — including the National Association of Social Workers — discussed their continued support on the progress of the Dorothy I. Height and Whitney M. Young Jr. Social Work Reinvestment Act (H.R.1106/S. 584), which addresses workforce challenges facing the social work profession. Members at the meeting announced their commitment to more visibly advocate for the legislation. Coalition members also were briefed ...

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Jan 03, 2012

From the Director We all recognize that time is continuous, that the separation of time into days, months, years and centuries is artificial, an invention of society. Yet, these time boundaries take on great importance in our lives. We count our birthdays in years, our months in days and our workweek in hours. There are privileges attached to some time milestones. After 16 years you can drive. At 18 years you can vote. For several generations, we have used 65 years as the start of retirement and the beginning of Social Security benefits. There hasn’t been much attention to the fact that you actually need to be 66 now to draw full b...

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