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News Release - 5/1/07
DAVENPORT AFTERSCHOOL ADVOCATE DECLARES MEETINGS
WITH MEMBERS OF CONGRESS ‘BIG SUCCESS’
‘Breakfast of Champions’ & Congressional Meetings
Send the Message: Afterschool Vital to Students and
Families Afterschool supporters from Davenport
returned home today after a two-day visit to
Washington, DC, where they met with Members of
Congress including Senator Charles Grassley and
Representative Bruce Braley to ask for increased
funding for afterschool programs. The visit was part
of the sixth annual “Afterschool for All Challenge”.
John Border, Community Education Project Manager for
Davenport Community Schools called the event “a
great opportunity to meet with afterschool leaders
from around the nation, and to remind our Members of
Congress about the vital role afterschool plays in
the lives of our children, our families, and our
community.”
Border serves as an Afterschool Ambassador,
appointed to the role by the Afterschool Alliance.
As part of the “Afterschool for All Challenge”, the
Afterschool Alliance sponsored a Breakfast of
Champions at which advocates from across the
country, including NFL star and afterschool champion
Michael Vick, were honored for their support of
afterschool. Participants then fanned out across
Capitol Hill for more than 100 meetings with Members
of Congress and their staff members. Border and his
group met with Senator Grassley and Representative
Braley, as well as staff representatives of Senator
Tom Harkin and Representative David Loebsack.
The goal of the visit was to increase federal
funding for afterschool programs and educate
lawmakers about the important work being done in
afterschool programs. The President’s proposed
Fiscal Year 2008 budget freezes funding for the 21st
Century Community Learning Centers initiative – the
chief federal funding stream for afterschool
programs – at less than $1 billion. That is far
short of the $2.5 billion Congress and the President
authorized in the landmark No Child Left Behind Act
for the current fiscal year and more than $20
million in real cuts to the funding provided in
2002.
“It was inspiring to be with hundreds of educators,
parents and students from around the country who all
came to Washington to ask for more afterschool
opportunities for our youth,” said Border. “I know
the commitment and enthusiasm made an impression on
Members of Congress and their aides. Without
adequate funding, afterschool programs and the
children and families they serve here in Davenport
and across the nation will suffer.”
The “Afterschool for All Challenge” was sponsored by
the Afterschool Alliance.
The Afterschool Alliance is a nonprofit public
awareness and advocacy organization working to
ensure that all children and youth have access to
quality afterschool programs by 2010. More
information is available at
www.afterschoolalliance.org.
NOTE: For more information about afterschool,
including research data and more, visit
www.afterschoolalliance.org or call Gretchen Wright
or Johanna Diaz at 202/371-1999.
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