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After fourteen dynamic and visionary years at the helm of Advocates for Youth, James Wagoner will step down as President and Executive Director as of January 1, 2012 while continuing to work half-time, off-site as a senior advisor to the organization. Advocates' Board of Directors has named Debra Hauser, currently Executive Vice President of the organization, to be the next President and Executive Director, also effective January 1, 2012.
"James has been a terrific leader for Advocates, and Deb will strike the right balance between continuity and new directions as we move forward," said Kate Stewart, Chair of Advocates for Youth's Board of Directors. "In addition, her strategic and communications skills make her the right person to advance Advocates' vision of Rights.Respect.Responsibility.® in the current political, policy, and cultural environment."
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by Emily Bridges, Director, Public Information Services
Whether you're enjoying a holiday break or just looking forward to the new year, here are a few quick ways you can support adolescent health and rights now and throughout 2012!
1) Have a conversation about healthy relationships with your teen - including clear and honest communication around sexuality. Need help getting started? Check out the Parents' Sex Ed Center for guidance.
2) Sign the petition asking the Milton Hershey school not to discriminate against a student who has HIV. Let them know they shouldn't engage in bigotry against HIV positive young people.
3) Donate to Advocates - even the smallest amount supports programs and policies which help protect the health and rights of young people!
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Thursday, 15 December 2011 20:29 |
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President Obama’s Teen Pregnancy Prevention Initiative Will Receive Funding at Current Levels
Late last night, the U.S. House of Representatives introduced an appropriations bill that would fund the federal government through the end of Fiscal Year 2012. This bill contains a $5 million earmark that would resurrect funding for discontinued and discredited abstinence-only-until-marriage programs. At a time when Congress is constantly reminding the country of the need to cut unnecessary spending, it is dismaying that politicians would decide to once again waste taxpayers’ money by resurrecting the now-defunct Community-Based Abstinence Education (CBAE) grant program that decades of research has shown to have no effect on teen behavior.
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Wednesday, 14 December 2011 16:09 |
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By Nicole Clark
Last week, we were all psyched because the Food and Drug Administration recommended that Plan B One-Step (also known as emergency contraception) be approved over-the-counter for women and young people of all ages...then the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) gave the FDA the shaft, with Secretary Kathleen Sebelius ruling that younger adolescents don't have the same capacity to think as critically as their older peers. Everybody had something to say about it, including Jessica Valenti, Jezebel, NARAL, The Washington Post, doctors groups, The New York Times, the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health, and RH Reality Check.
Then President Obama decided to defend the Secretary Sebelius's decision, stating that, as a father of two daughters, the government should "apply some common sense" — as opposed to what? Listening to science? While I understand President Obama's stance and I can see where Secretary Sebelius is coming from to a certain degree, I also understand a couple of things:
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