Voices for America's Children
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| Type | Child Advocacy |
|---|---|
| Founded | 1984 |
| Location | Washington, DC |
| Area served | United States |
| Mission | To improve the lives of children in the United States by advocating for effective public policies. |
| Revenue | $2,723,275 (in 2009) |
| Members | 60 |
| Website | http://www.voices.org |
| References: Formerly known as the National Association of Child Advocates (renamed in 2003) | |
Contents |
[edit] About
Voices for America's Children is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization located in Washington, DC. Voices is a U.S. nonpartisan, national organization that advocates for the well-being of children at the federal, state and local levels of government. It addresses areas such as early childhood education, health, juvenile justice, child welfare, tax and budget decisions.[1] It was renamed from National Association of Child Advocates in 2003.[2]
[edit] History
Voices for America's Children began when child advocates from the US met for the first time in 1981 and formed the National Association of State-based Child Advocacy Organization (ACA) in 1984. ACA later changed its name to Voices for America's Children.
[edit] Timeline
From ACA to NACA to Voices for America’s Children
2006 – Member Leadership Council is inaugurated
2006 – Board of Trustees is reconfigured as an independent Board
2004 – First national agenda is adopted
2003 – Name is changed to Voices for America’s Children
1991 – Role is expanded to aid in member fundraising, facilitate collaboration among members, and enhance member influence in national policy making debates
1992 – ACA moves from Cleveland to Washington D.C. and becomes NACA
1984 – National Association of Sate-based Child Advocacy Organization (ACA) is incorporated in Cleveland, OH
1981 – Leaders of child advocacy organizations from around the country meet for the first time
[edit] Goals
Voices for America's Children has 6 areas of focus for childrens wellbeing:[citation needed]
[edit] Equity and Diversity
All children achieve their full potential in a society that closes opportunity gaps and that recognizes and values diversity.[clarification needed]
[edit] Health
All children receive affordable, comprehensive, high-quality health care.
[edit] School Readiness
All children and their parents receive the services and supports to enable them to start school prepared for success.
[edit] School Success
All children have an equal opportunity to attend an adequately and equitably financed public school meeting rigorous academic standards aligned with the needs of the 21st century workforce.
[edit] Safety
All children are safe in their homes and communities from all forms of abuse, neglect, exploitation and violence, avoid risky behaviors, and contribute to community well-being.
[edit] Economic Stability
All children live in families that can provide for their needs and make investments in their future.
[edit] Members
Voices has 62 member organizations in 46 states of the US, as well as in The US Virgin Islands and the District of Columbia (DC).. A member is an organization that belongs to the Voices network and is a nonprofit organization that is either: a provider coalition with an advocacy component to its overall agenda; or the state or community affiliate of a national single-issue child advocacy organization; or a state or community-based organization focused primarily on public awareness, resource or referral or direct services, with child advocacy as part of its mission; or a KIDS COUNT grantee without child advocacy as any component of its agenda.
[edit] Funding
Financial backing is provided by membership fees and grants from the following foundations:[3]
- The Annie E. Casey Foundation
- The Atlantic Philanthropies
- The David and Lucile Packard Foundation
- The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation
- The William Penn Foundation
[edit] References
- ^ "About Us". Voices for America's Children. http://www.voices.org/about/. Retrieved 2009-11-08.
- ^ "Our History". Voices for America's Children. http://www.voices.org/. Retrieved 2009-11-08.
- ^ "Annual Report 2006". Voices for America's Children. http://www.voices.org/uploads/2006AnnualReport.pdf. Retrieved 2009-11-08.[dead link]
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