standing up for women and families
Transcription
standing up for women and families
national partnership for women & families 2011-2013 ANNUAL REPORT standing up for women and families MISSION STATEMENT For more than four decades, the National Partnership has fought for every major policy advance that has helped this nation’s women and families. Our mission is to foster a society in which every person can live with dignity and achieve economic security, workplaces are fair and family friendly, discrimination is a thing of the past, and everyone has access to quality, affordable health care. national partnership for women & families Founded in 1971 as the Women’s Legal Defense Fund, the National Partnership for Women & Families is a nonprofit, nonpartisan 501(c)3 organization located in Washington, D.C. 1 Letter from the President Dear Friends, These last two years have been exhilarating, energizing and eventful. On every issue on the National Partnership’s agenda — every issue that matters to women’s future and the country’s future — we have made progress or laid the foundation for the advances the country so urgently needs. In most cases, we overcame ferocious opposition to do so. Our victories have been plentiful, meaningful and robust. We led crucial work to shape health care reform and vital battles to defend it. We organized joyful celebrations of 20 years of unpaid family and medical leave, and positioned the country to take the next step by adopting paid leave. We fought every day to protect women’s access to reproductive health care. We won long-overdue breakthroughs on paid sick days, adopted new strategies to stop pregnancy discrimination, and went into the trenches to preserve the safety net and protect those who depend on it to survive. Time after time, we sharpened our messaging, honed our tactics, invested in our infrastructure, and kept our eyes on the prize — the programs and policies women and families need. Through it all, we fixed our focus on the next generation, educating, engaging and mobilizing because we know that will lead to the most enduring victories of all. Despite considerable progress and real reason for hope, these battles are not over and no victory is secure. But we are confident that, ultimately, we will prevail because our agenda is what Americans want and need. Thank you for being with us in this work. Debra L. Ness President contents 2 CONTENTS 1Letter from the President 3WORkPLACE PROGRAMS 4 Expanding Access to Affordable Leave 10 Eliminating Discrimination in the Workplace 15Health Care Programs 16 Protecting and Advancing Women’s Health 20 Improving Health Care Delivery 24 Improving Access to Care 26Annual Luncheon Highlights 28Our Supporters 36FINANCIAL REPORTS 37 Statement of Financial Position 38 Statement of Activities and Changes in Net Assets (2013) 39 Statement of Activities and Changes in Net Assets (2012) national partnership for women & families 40 Board of directors & Staff 3 Workplace Programs The National Partnership strives for workplaces that are fair and family friendly — so that women and all workers can provide for themselves and their families without suffering discrimination, and with the fundamental support they need to meet their responsibilities at home and on the job. workplace programs 4 Expanding Access to Affordable Leave At some point, nearly everyone will need to take time away from work to deal with a personal illness, or to care for a child or loved one. But for too many people this can result in significant financial strain or hardship. The country needs workplace policies that reflect the realities of our lives. national partnership for women & families The National Partnership works to advance laws at the federal, state and local levels that expand access to family and medical leave, guarantee workers the right to earn paid sick days and establish a national paid leave insurance program — all essential to the economic vitality of our nation and our families. 5 CELEBRATING AND EXPANDING FAMILY & MEDICAL LEAVE POLICY February 2013 marked the 20th anniversary of the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA). Drafted by the National Partnership and signed into law by President Clinton, the FMLA is the nation’s first and only federal law designed to help people meet the dual demands of job and family. Top: National Partnership Senior Advisor Judith Lichtman, former Sen. Christopher Dodd (D-CT), Sen. Tom Harkin (D-IA), and National Partnership President Debra Ness at the Night of 100 Million Thanks FMLA 20th Anniversary Congressional Reception. Bottom: National Partnership Board Chair Ellen Malcolm, Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-HI), and Rep. Tammy Duckworth (D-IL) at the FMLA 20th Anniversary Celebration. And it works. Mothers and fathers, husbands and wives, children and hardworking people across the country have used the FMLA more than 100 million times to take time when they needed it most, without having to worry about losing their jobs or their health insurance. But the FMLA was always intended to be just a first step. That’s why the National Partnership is leading a broad-based coalition that is working hard to safeguard this historic law and expand it to cover more workers who need leave for more reasons. “Let us …recommit ourselves to the values that inspired the [FMLA] and redouble our efforts on behalf of fairer workplaces and healthier, more secure families.” — President Barack Obama, statement by the President on the 20th Anniversary of the Family and Medical Leave Act workplace programs 6 “On the 20th Anniversary of the FMLA, DOL can conclude that the FMLA continues to make a positive impact on the lives of workers without imposing an undue burden upon employers. The FMLA is working.” national partnership for women & families U.S. Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division, February 2013 Members of Congress join Judith Lichtman, Debra Ness and former Senator and FMLA lead sponsor Christopher Dodd to celebrate the FMLA’s 20th Anniversary. OUR IMPACT ææ Brought national attention to the need to update and expand the nation’s family friendly policies by leading a highly visible celebration of the FMLA’s 20th anniversary. The anniversary generated bipartisan interest from former and current lawmakers and culminated in a series of high-profile op-eds, a resolution in the U.S. Senate, events attended by lawmakers in Washington and across the country and more than 500 media stories on the need to update the nation’s family friendly workplace policies. ææ Provided strategic and technical assistance to several state FMLA expansion efforts. In May 2013, Colorado expanded the FMLA to allow workers to take leave to care for a domestic partner or a partner in a civil union. ææ Ensured that more sons and daughters with disabilities and serious health conditions will get the critical care they need from their parents. Our advocacy efforts led the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) to issue a new administrator’s interpretation that acknowledged that a parent’s need to care for his or her child lasts beyond the age of 18. ææ Filed amicus (friend-of-the-court) briefs with our allies calling on the U.S. Supreme Court to recognize Proposition 8 and the Defense of Marriage Act as discriminatory and unconstitutional. Thanks to the Court’s decisions in both cases, FMLA leave benefits will now be extended to same-sex couples in states that recognize same-sex marriage. 7 PROMOTING PAID LEAVE National Partnership Government Affairs Manager Rachel Lyons, Gloria De Los Santos (Action NC), Jennifer Owens (Working Mother Magazine), Patricia Murray (Blueprint NC), Sabine Schoenbach (NC Justice Center), and Beth Messersmith (MomsRising) deliver paid leave petitions to Senator Kay Hagan (D-NC), center, during the Paid Sick Days and Paid Leave Summit. Our nation’s public policies are failing workers and their families. Despite the inevitable health and caregiving needs we all face, the majority of working people in the United States cannot take the time they need without risking their jobs or economic security. The federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) provides important access to job-protected, unpaid leave, but it is available to just 60 percent of workers — and many can’t afford to take it. Earlier this year, we celebrated the 20th anniversary of the FMLA, a law that many elected leaders say is one of the most significant accomplishments of their long and distinguished careers. At the National Partnership, the FMLA is one of our most significant accomplishments too. But we didn’t stop there, and are working for a national paid leave program. We have helped to advance this goal by supporting successful efforts to put paid family leave programs in place in California, New Jersey and, most recently, Rhode Island. These victories are evidence that our hard work is paying off — and that progress is possible and gaining momentum. National Partnership Director of Workplace Programs Vicki Shabo and Rhode Island Governor Lincoln Chafee at the RI paid family leave bill signing. “Like millions of women around the country, I used the Family and Medical Leave Act to take time off work after having a baby — two babies in fact. During my time to care for my babies, my job was secure. But because my time off work was unpaid, my husband and I needed months of saving and planning for our family to survive financially. We pieced together sick leave, vacation time, comp time, disability coverage and a few weeks of unpaid leave so I could stay at home for 12 weeks with my oldest son… We did the same saving before my second son…was born…The FMLA allowed me to focus on my health and pregnancy when I needed to. During the weeks and months I was home, I was able to recover from childbirth, adjust to motherhood and bond with my sons. I am so grateful that we could afford for me to take time off, but I know most American families are not so fortunate. Many cannot afford months or even weeks off work without pay. It’s time to do more and do better for women and families.” Matari Jones-Gunter (Texas) national partnership for women & families workplace programs 8 Only 12% of workers in the United States have access to paid family leave through their employers. OUR IMPACT ææ Won a major state paid family and medical leave victory — Rhode Island became the third state to adopt a comprehensive paid family and medical leave policy, helped by our strategic and technical assistance. ææ Commissioned new research and launched innovative public education campaigns to increase public awareness. We released the second edition of our landmark report Expecting Better that analyzes family friendly workplace policies in all 50 states; educated and engaged new activists through our partnerships with Working Mother, MomsRising and UltraViolet, generating 50,000 petition signatures in support of a national paid leave program; and released new research to continue building the empirical case for paid family leave. Laid the groundwork for a new nationwide paid leave program and campaign. We are playing a ææ “Laws like the Family and Medical Leave Act and New Jersey’s family leave insurance program create more activity and enthusiasm in the workforce. They create standards of mutual respect. Employees feel supported when they need to take time to care for a new baby or an ill loved one. And when employees return to work, they return more energized and ready to give back… I hope that someday soon, every employee and family in America will have the kind of paid leave insurance that’s available to workers in New Jersey. And I hope that employees and employers will join together to fight for these laws. State programs show that progress is possible, and that — like FMLA — paid leave works. Policies like these support our employees, our families and our businesses. And we all prosper.” — Herb Greenberg, founder, President and CEO of Caliper, an international management consulting firm leadership role in shaping and building support for the Family And Medical Insurance Leave Act (FAMILY Act), which would create a self-sustaining fund to ensure people have much-needed income when taking family and medical leave. Employees would earn a portion of their wages for a limited period of time to address their own serious health issue; to deal with the serious health issue of a parent, spouse, domestic partner or child; to care for a new child; and/or for particular military caregiving and leave purposes. The bill will be introduced by Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) and Representative Rosa DeLauro (D-CT) in December 2013. 9 ADVANCING PAID SICK DAYS Everyone gets sick, but not everyone has time to get better. More than 43 million people in the United States — and 81 percent of low-wage workers — cannot earn a single paid sick day to use to recover from common, short-term illnesses. Millions more don’t have paid sick time they can use to stay home with a sick child. photo: courtesy Jen Nance, Office of the Mayor Our nation’s failure to establish a basic paid sick days standard defies common sense and what we know America’s families want, need and deserve — and it’s costing workers, businesses, the public’s health and our economy. The National Partnership creates and seizes opportunities to raise the profile of paid sick days at the federal level, and to support state and local efforts to win paid sick days standards. We lead a nationwide coalition of more than 200 organizations that is pushing for the Healthy Families Act — national paid sick days legislation that would allow workers in businesses with 15 or more employees to earn up to seven job-protected paid sick days each year to recover from their own illness, access preventive care or provide care for a sick family member. OUR IMPACT ææ Won significant paid sick days victories in New York City, Seattle, Portland, Oregon, Jersey City and Connecticut, and progress in Philadelphia where the City Council passed paid sick days legislation; and provided strategic and technical support to state and local advocates along with broad coalitions of civic groups, public officials and labor unions. By 2015, roughly 1.8 million new workers will be guaranteed the right to earn paid sick days as a result of these victories. Increased legislative and political support for the Healthy Families Act in the 112th and 113th Congresses. The bill has more original co-sponsors than in previous years, including stronger support from congressional leaders. ææ ææ Strengthened the nationwide movement to advance paid sick days and increased visibility at the federal level by seizing every opportunity — both positive and negative — to raise the profile of the issue. In April 2013 we testified against the “Before paid sick days, I couldn’t afford to lose 20% of my weekly pay to take a sick day. I went to work sick and had contact with customers when I had a cold, the flu and upper respiratory infections. This is an amazing piece of legislation. If I am sick, I can stay home and get healthy; I can be there to take care of my sick kids and I’m not making other people sick. So many amazing people and organizations in Seattle and across the nation, including the National Partnership, worked on this legislation.” so-called “comp time” bill at a U.S. House Committee on Education and the Workforce hearing as the sole minority witness, exposing the bill as a misleading attempt to promote workplace flexibility that would actually mean a pay cut for workers with no guarantee of needed time off, and in May 2012 at a U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor & Pensions hearing titled, “Beyond Mother’s Day: Helping the Middle Class Balance Work and Family.” We also co-hosted two National Summits on Paid Sick Days and Paid Family Leave, twice bringing together more than 200 national, state, and local advocates, national policymakers and thought leaders, garnering significant local press coverage of the event and raising the profile of the issues. — Tasha West-Baker, a former grocery store worker in Seattle who was active in Seattle’s Paid Sick Days Campaign Tasha West-Baker, fourth from right, watches Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn sign Seattle’s Paid Sick Days bill into law. workplace programs 10 Women should not be paid less than men for doing the same work. Women should not be fired or lose promotions because they are pregnant. And women should never have to experience sexual harassment at work. It’s not right, but discrimination persists in the 21st century workplace. national partnership for women & families The National Partnership promotes policies that prevent women from being penalized because of their gender or caregiving or childbearing status. We push to expand job opportunities for women and vigorously enforce employment discrimination laws. We educate women about their legal rights and inform the public about the severe costs of discrimination for families and our economy. Eliminating Discrimination in the Workplace 11 FIGHTING FOR FAIR PAY Women deserve to be paid fairly. It’s that simple. But women who hold full-time jobs today are still paid only 77 cents for every dollar paid to men. And African American women and Latinas bring home even less. Fifty years after the passage of the Equal Pay Act, women are still suffering from discrimination in pay and promotions. And yet, women’s wages are more central than ever to the economic security of their families and our nation. Women make up nearly half of the United States workforce, and women are the primary or co-breadwinners in six out of 10 families. The wage gap is unacceptable, and it has real economic consequences for women and families. That’s why the National Partnership plays a leadership role in the effort to close the wage gap and is a leading advocate for passage of the Paycheck Fairness Act, which would strengthen equal pay laws by helping women challenge discriminatory pay practices in the workplace, protecting workers from retaliation if they talk about their salaries with colleagues, and requiring employers to prove that pay disparities exist for legitimate, job-related reasons. Top photos: National Partnership staff and supporters rally outside the Supreme Court as the Court hears arguments in Wal-Mart v. Dukes, to determine whether the women employed at Wal-Mart stores can challenge their discriminatory pay and promotion practices (March 2012), and a few months later on decision day (June 2012). Bottom images: Sharable images celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the Equal Pay Act, June 2013 (on the left); using National Partnership’s groundbreaking analysis of the wage gap in the top 50 metropolitan areas (on the right). workplace programs 12 OUR IMPACT ææ Conducted groundbreaking research to educate policymakers and the public about the impact of pay discrimination on women, in particular women of color and low-income women. We released the first-ever analysis of the wage gap in all 435 congressional districts, revealing its pervasiveness, and we analyzed the wage gap in each state as well as “The nation needs the National Partnership as much today as it did 40 years ago because... women are still paid 77 cents for every dollar a man makes” national partnership for women & families — U.S. Senator Barbara A. Mikulski (D-Md.) the 50 largest metropolitan areas in the country; our analysis prompted Seattle Mayor Mike McGinn to create a task force to investigate pay disparities in the city and provide recommendations to close the wage gap. ææ Led a successful effort to roll back a set of policies that made it more difficult for the U.S. Department of Labor’s Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs to investigate cases of pay discrimination. In February 2013, through our advocacy, the Department issued broader and more flexible guidance that will better enable it to fulfill its mission to eliminate pay discrimination; for several years, we led the fight to urge the administration to take these critical steps. Congress’ longest serving woman member of Congress Senator Barbara Mikulski (D-MD) holds a press conference with Judith Lichtman and members of the Fair Pay Coalition calling for passage of the Paycheck Fairness Act. ææ Co-led a working group that provided technical assistance to policymakers in crafting the Equal Employment Opportunity Restoration Act, which would restore the rights of workers to come together as a class to challenge unfair pay practices and other forms of systemic employment discrimination. We helped draft the bill in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Wal-Mart v. Dukes that dealt a devastating blow to workers throughout the country. The bill was first introduced in June 2012. 13 ENDING PREGNANCY DISCRIMINATION When a woman is fired, forced to take leave, denied a promotion or not hired because she is pregnant or because an employer fears she might become pregnant, she is experiencing discrimination — and it hurts her, her family and our economy. It’s also illegal. The National Partnership played a critical role in the passage of the Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978, which amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to protect employees from discrimination based on pregnancy, childbirth or pregnancy-related conditions. Unfortunately, pregnant workers still face discrimination in this country. That’s why the National Partnership continues to educate the public and policymakers about the increase in pregnancy discrimination complaints, the rights of women who experience discrimination, and the need for stronger laws to protect pregnant workers. OUR IMPACT ææ Helped draft the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act to prevent employers from forcing pregnant women out of the workplace and to help ensure reasonable accommodations that would enable them to continue working and supporting their families. Through our leadership, the bill was first introduced in 2012 and was reintroduced in May 2013 to mark Mother’s Day; it now has the support of more than 131 members of Congress. ææ Conducted the first-ever state-specific analysis of pregnant women in the workforce and disseminated the findings to policymakers to underscore the need for laws that protect pregnant workers from discrimination. Advocated for federal officials to address pregnancy discrimination and make enforcement of existing laws a strategic priority. Through our advocacy, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission agreed to update outdated guidance and has focused its enforcement efforts on pregnancy discrimination cases. The U.S. Department of Justice is bringing its ææ More than 60% of women, nationwide, work while pregnant. Sharable image calling for passage of the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act in honor of the 35th Anniversary of the Pregnancy Discrimination Act, October 2013. disability and pregnancy discrimination experts together to develop a coordinated strategy to help ensure that workers with pregnancy-related conditions receive the equal treatment the law guarantees. ææ Joined an amicus brief in the case of Young v. UPS supporting the right of pregnant workers to reasonable accommodations in the workplace under the Pregnancy Discrimination Act and the Americans with Disabilities Act. (The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals rejected Young’s claim, holding that she and other pregnant UPS workers are not entitled to accommodations; the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act would address this decision by giving all pregnant workers the right to be reasonably accommodated.) One in five charges of discrimination filed by women involve claims of pregnancy discrimination. The number of pregnancy discrimination charges has increased by 35% over the past decade. national partnership for women & families workplace programs 14 PROTECTING CIVIL RIGHTS Equality under the law is one of our nation’s most cherished principles. “The nation needs the National Partnership as much today as it did 40 years ago because the struggle for justice is never easy and never over; each victory becomes a platform on which the next must be built.” — Former U.S. Secretary of State, Madeleine K. Albright But too many people in this country still face discrimination on the basis of sex, race, religion, national origin, age, sexual orientation, gender identity, genetic information or disability. Every day, this discrimination denies people the opportunities they deserve. It is essential that lawmakers strengthen and enforce laws that prohibit discrimination and expand opportunities. We devote special attention to protecting and advancing key civil rights laws to help make the promise of equality a reality for everyone. A key part of our commitment to fairness and equality is preserving programs that have helped women make substantial gains, and educating the public about the benefits of equal opportunity for all. The National Partnership’s work with the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights (the Leadership Conference) highlights the pivotal role we have played in raising the profile of equal pay and paid leave in the civil rights community. National Partnership Senior Advisor Judith Lichtman is chairwoman of the Leadership Conference, and we co-chair its Employment Task Force. Both roles foster our engagement with civil rights groups across the nation and build support for fair pay, a minimum wage increase, an end to pregnancy discrimination, and policies that advance the economic security of workers and their families, including paid sick days and paid family and medical leave. Advocating in the courts For more than four decades, the National Partnership has been working to educate decision makers and the public about the importance of confirming only those judges and justices who demonstrate a clear commitment to equal justice and opportunity. Judges are the gatekeepers of our fundamental rights. They rule every day on issues that affect the quality of our lives. Federal judges determine whether companies will be penalized for failing to stop discrimination or sexual harassment, whether workers qualify for time off under the Family and Medical Leave Act, and whether women will have access to the reproductive care they need. Because judges are appointed for life, their impact lasts for decades. The stakes are particularly high for women. Much of the progress that has opened doors for women in the workplace, in education and in business could not have happened without judges willing to follow the law and extend its protections to all. From cases involving workers’ rights and affirmative action, to sexual harassment, to a woman’s right to make her own reproductive health decisions, to equal and full application of the Family and Medical Leave Act, to marriage equality and more, we fight to help ensure that women’s voices are heard and their rights protected. 15 HeaLth Care The National Partnership plays a central role in the fight to transform our health care system so that it delivers and rewards universal access to high quality, affordable, patient- and family-centered care and reduces health disparities. Health Care programs 16 Too many women are unable to access the essential care they need to lead full, healthy lives. national partnership for women & families The National Partnership works to ensure that all women have access to the health care they need, including the full range of reproductive health services, by fighting to take politics out of medicine, make care more accessible, eliminate barriers to coverage, and reduce disparities. Protecting and Advancing Women’s Health 17 DEFENDING AND ADVANCING REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH Whether trying to avoid pregnancy or plan a family, access to birth control and reproductive health services is a necessary component of basic health care for women. Despite the proven benefits of access to family planning for women’s health, too many women struggle to access reliable contraception and abortion services. That is why we are working to give every woman access to the full range of reproductive health information and services she needs — and ensure that public and private health insurance covers these services for all women. The National Partnership is a leader in advocacy at the federal level, and we are often one of only a handful of organizations called upon by the Administration when it comes to highlevel strategy on reproductive health. Whether it’s expanding reproductive rights or blocking attempts to reverse hard-won gains, the National Partnership has a deep, unwavering commitment to women’s reproductive health. “In addition to creating significant barriers for women, Missouri State Senate Bill 175 [SB175] and bills just like it appearing in legislatures across the country are medically unjustified and unnecessary. They are an inappropriate intrusion into the doctor-patient relationship and completely disregard patient autonomy, a cornerstone of medical ethics… Restrictions on medication abortion may discourage women from using medications to end a pregnancy, but it will not prevent them from having abortions… This type of legislation is designed to burden women and interfere with medical care. If lawmakers truly cared about women and reducing the need for abortion, they would work more to prevent unintended pregnancy through access to family planning and comprehensive sex education, and less on restricting access to safe medical procedures.” Dr. Colleen McNicholas, St Louis, MO, Physicians for Reproductive Health on a bill that requires an additional office visit for the administration of a medication-induced abortion. “…to the question of why I go to Mississippi, the answer is, I want for women there what I want for myself: a life of dignity, health, self-determination, and the opportunity to excel and contribute. We know that when women have access to abortion, contraception, and medically accurate sex education, they thrive. It should be no different for the women of Mississippi.” Willie J. Parker, MD, MPH, MSc is a board-certified obstetrician gynecologist who travels to Mississippi to provide abortions. He serves on the board of Physicians for Reproductive Choice and Health (PRCH) and The Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice (RCRC). Excerpts from blog posts published in conjunction with the National Partnership’s Repro Health Watch, an exciting new edition of the Women’s Health Policy Report, which compiles and distributes media coverage of proposed and enacted state laws, ballot initiatives and litigation affecting women’s access to comprehensive reproductive health care. Health Care programs 18 “I pledge to continue standing up, speaking out, and refusing to be silenced or intimidated no matter what our opponents say or do…I know that by being here and supporting one of the most effective organizations in this fight, that you are committed to doing the same. So I thank the National Partnership, and all of you who support this wonderful organization, for fighting every single day for women’s health.” Sandra Fluke, Women’s Health Advocate OUR IMPACT ææ Won a major victory by convincing lawmakers to include the Women’s Health Amendment in the Affordable Care Act (ACA). It requires new health plans to cover contraception services without cost sharing. We continue to work to protect and implement this provision so that all women have access to the birth control they need without barriers. ææ Won bipartisan support for the Shaheen Amendment, which expands abortion coverage for women in the armed services who are survivors of sexual violence. In January 2013 President Obama signed the legislation that includes this provision and now servicewomen and military dependents have health insurance coverage for abortion in cases of rape and incest. Advocated for the Peace Corps Equity Act of 2013 — a bill that clarifies that Peace Corps volunteers and trainees who survive rape or incest, or whose lives would be endangered by continuing a pregnancy, have coverage for abortion services. The provisions of the national partnership for women & families ææ bill were approved by the Senate Appropriations Committee as part of a larger bill; we will now work to get the provisions included in the final budget negotiations. ææ Helped block the King Amendment, which would have prohibited funding for federal health information technology from going to clinics that provided medication abortion using telemedicine. Our health IT expertise was featured in a briefing for congressional staff on the harm this bill would have caused. ææ Increased visibility of reproductive health issues at both the national and state levels. We launched Repro Health Watch, a website and bimonthly email that goes to more than 80,000 readers, developed in response to the significant increase in attacks on women’s health in the states. 19 ENHANCING QUALITY MATERNITY CARE The United States spends much more on maternity care than any other country but does not achieve better health outcomes. A baby born in the United States is more than twice as likely to die before his or her first birthday than an infant born in Greece or Spain. Our maternal mortality rate has increased since 1990 while global rates, even in developing countries, plummeted. In particular, the disparities in outcomes for African-American women are especially stark. These disparities hold true no matter the level of education attainment. The National Partnership’s emphasis on maternity care is closely linked to our reproductive health work. It allows us to focus on the unique health care needs of women throughout their life cycle: sexuality education, contraception, access to family planning and abortion services, preconception, prenatal, perinatal, and postnatal care. And it has found synergy with our broader portfolio of work related to women in the workplace — advocating for access to paid leave; paid sick days for prenatal visits; access to family leave for post-natal recovery and bonding; and the right to pump breast milk at work. OUR IMPACT ææ Fought successfully to secure language in a regulation implementing the Affordable Care Act (ACA) that ensures maternity coverage for non-spouse dependents. ææ Appointed to an expert panel that advises the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on ways to use the Medicaid program to improve maternal and child health care. In this role we advocated for better access and patient education around family planning and for initiatives to reduce premature birth. ææ Published The California Pregnant and Parenting Youth Guide, a resource to educate teens about reproductive health and their legal rights that generated significant media attention and helped thousands of young women in California. We researched and wrote the guide and launched a companion website (http://www.pregnantyouth. info/) in September 2012. Both the English and Spanish versions of the guide have been downloaded nearly 3,500 times, and at its height, the site averaged 10,000 unique visitors per month. In January 2013, we promoted mobile-friendly sites and launched a website blog that discusses news and issues impacting pregnant and parenting minors. The guide has been mentioned by more than 350 media outlets since its launch. ææ Served on the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality committee that recommended to U.S. Department of Health and Human Services an initial “core” set of 26 measures that states are encouraged to use in evaluating the care provided to adult Medicaid beneficiaries. Through our influence, we secured support for the inclusion of a measure that discourages non-medically induced deliveries prior to 39 weeks gestation. The measure has now been adopted by many hospitals and purchasers across the country, resulting in major reductions in these early elective deliveries and the need for neonatal intensive care unit stays. A baby born in the United States is more than twice as likely to die before his or her first birthday than an infant born in Greece or Spain. national partnership for women & families Health Care programs 20 Improving Health Care Delivery Our health care system rewards a high volume of services rather than high quality care. The National Partnership strives to improve the way health care is delivered by ensuring that our system provides safe, high quality, affordable care that is patient- and family-centered. 21 ENGAGING PATIENTS, FAMILIES AND CONSUMERS patient- and family-centered, so providers listen to, respect, inform, and involve patients and family caregivers in decisions about their care. Every day, in communities across the country, women and families cope with extraordinary pressures from a health care system that does not meet their needs. And women, often the family caregivers, struggle to navigate a system that discourages them from meaningfully participating in their own care or in the care of others, provides incomplete or inaccurate information that makes it difficult to make informed decisions, and often does not respect their choices. Patients and their family members have unique insights and experiences that are critical to transforming health care. They must be heard. Through the Campaign for Better Care (CBC), a coalition of more than 80 consumer organizations led by the National Partnership, patients’ voices are amplified. We leverage this broadbased coalition as a powerful force to keep patient and family priorities a top priority for policymakers. The Affordable Care Act (ACA) is the greatest advance for women’s health in a generation and it provides unprecedented opportunity to change our health care system so that it meets the needs of women and families. The National Partnership is working closely with the administration to ensure that reform is implemented in ways that not only improve health care quality but also make care OUR IMPACT ææ Achieved unprecedented requirements for patient-centered criteria in the evaluation of new federal models of health care delivery and successfully advocated for the involvement of patients, families and consumer advocates in their management. ææ Provided technical assistance to 500 participating physician practices that span seven states and developed a national curriculum on how physicians can effectively engage patients and families in improving their practices. ææ Nationally recognized for our health care leadership role as a leading consumer voice and viewed as thought leaders on patient, family and consumer engagement in the redesign of our health care delivery system. We published numerous columns, articles and blog posts on the need for consumer engagement and patient- and family-centered care. “After 60 years, this is the first time someone has asked me my opinion as a patient.” A patient advisor working with his doctor’s practice in Humboldt County, CA Health Care programs 22 ENSURING BETTER HEALTH CARE QUALITY “This is the first time we’ve engaged patients and families in a real way in anything we’ve done, and it feels really good.” national partnership for women & families — A Chief Nursing Officer in a Critical Access Hospital in Griffin, Ga In too many cases, the way we pay for care perversely rewards the very things that undermine quality and drive up health care costs. As a result, millions of women do not get care they need, or worse, get care that actually makes them sicker. Today, fully one-third of our health care spending — nearly $70 billion — is wasted on payments for medical mistakes and poor quality care. We have a system that rewards doctors for the volume of care they deliver, rather than paying based on performance and patients’ health outcomes. More than 100,000 Americans die in hospitals each year as a result of preventable medical errors. Often as the primary health care decision makers for their families, women need access to information about the quality of hospitals, physicians and treatments so that they can make the best choices for themselves and their families. For that reason, the National Partnership is working to advance a system in which health care providers, and the system as a whole, are held accountable for the value of the care that is delivered. This requires advocating for meaningful measures of performance — clinical and patient reported outcomes, coordination of care across the health system, affordability, and patient experience. In support of this work, the National Partnership co-leads, with the Pacific Business Group on Health, the Consumer-Purchaser Alliance (C-P Alliance) (formerly the ConsumerDisclosure Project). This collaboration of leading consumer, employer and labor groups is working together to promote the use of performance measurement in health care. OUR IMPACT ææ Collaborated with the National Quality Forum, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, and private sector health plans to identify and promote a core set of measures that, when used by both the public and private sectors, will provide a strong signal to consumers about where to receive the highest value care. ææ Successfully advocated for high standards on what quality and cost information is made available to consumers as part of the state and federal health care marketplaces, including data on patients’ experiences with their health plans. ææ Participated in the Choosing Wisely Campaign, an effort to engage consumers and physicians in identifying and reducing overused medical procedures. The campaign has produced extensive resources on a broad range of conditions and procedures to support consumers and providers in having critical conversations about what health services patients need. ææ 23 ADVANCING HEALTH INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY Consumers today can access almost anything with the click of a mouse, but our health care system is woefully behind the digital revolution. Effective use of health information technology (health IT) is essential to making health care better and more affordable for women and families. Women have the most to gain from implementation of health IT. On average, women use more health care services than men, and are often the primary caregivers and chief care coordinators for their families — frequently caring for their children and husbands at the same time they care for their aging parents, in addition to caring for themselves. The National Partnership is the driving force behind making sure health IT works for women and families, in addition to health care providers. We hold seats on influential national policy bodies that are governing and shaping national health IT implementation. We also organize other consumer voices to amplify our common agenda through the Consumer Partnership for eHealth (CPeH), a coalition of more than 50 consumer, patient and labor organizations working to advance private and secure health IT in ways that measurably improve the lives of individuals and their families. OUR IMPACT ææ Testified three times since 2010 before the U.S. House of Representatives on how innovation in health IT benefits patients — solidifying the National Partnership as the “go to” consumer/patient expert in health IT. ææ Commissioned a national public opinion survey to solicit consumer views on health IT and used the results to inform public policies. Released in 2012, this unprecedented consumer survey amplified consumers’ voices and informed health IT policy priorities. Strategically engaged the consumer community to advance patient- and family-centered health IT policies. ææ We have had significant impact educating and organizing the consumer community to understand why health IT is important and prompting action. Working with our consumer partners, we released an Action Plan with detailed recommendations for how to leverage health IT to enhance health equity in vulnerable communities. I am the sole caregiver to Lorelai and a member of Betty’s care team. I have been in the caretaking role [for] both…for about five years… Lorelai and Betty have similar health histories. Both have chronic conditions and take a variety of medications on a specific schedule. And most importantly, neither is able to speak for herself and represent herself during encounters with the health care system. Three years ago, I took Lorelai to a new primary care provider, who was great. What really amazed me though, was the online patient portal that the office provided. The portal was private and secure and would help me manage Lorelai’s health by allowing me to view and download her health records, request an appointment, refill her prescriptions, and access both her medication schedule and vaccination history. What’s more, I could edit any incorrect information, upload a picture of Lorelai so the staff could recognize her and correctly identify her, and email myself medication reminders. Now let’s compare Betty’s situation at that same point in time. Though Betty sees a variety of health care providers, three years ago, none of them had online patient portals. I can’t tell you how many times we argued with her doctors because her prescriptions were sent incorrectly or weren’t ready when she needed them. When Betty got hit by a car and broke her leg, the ER didn’t notify her primary care provider — we did. And when Betty needed to travel internationally and wanted to bring a copy of her medical records, her doctors resisted and took so long to comply that we had to pick up the records on our way to the airport. Now here’s the kicker: Betty is my grandmother. Lorelai is my cat. Elina Alterman, Health Information Technology Policy and Outreach Coordinator at the National Partnership Health Care programs 24 Millions of Americans lack health insurance coverage. Those who have it often find it to be expensive and without coverage for essential services. Our broken health care system places a particular burden on women, who most often are the health care decision makers in their families and the ones providing and coordinating care for their spouses, children and aging parents. The National Partnership is a leading consumer voice in reforming the health care marketplace so that women and families can secure affordable health care coverage and access high quality care. We strive to eliminate discrimination and disparities and to make sure care addresses the essential needs of women and the most vulnerable people in our society. national partnership for women & families Improving Access to Care 25 IMPROVING AMERICA’S HEALTH CARE MARKETPLACE For too long, women have struggled to access affordable coverage and essential health services. They’ve been denied coverage and charged more just because they are women. That’s why the Affordable Care Act (ACA) is the greatest advance for women’s health in a generation. The ACA has the potential to improve access to affordable health insurance coverage, expand benefits and improve the quality of care — all priorities for women. The law is moving us closer to the day when essential health services are covered for all women, prevention is a priority, and care is coordinated so family caregivers aren’t forced to shoulder unmanageable burdens. The National Partnership is committed to helping women and families realize the promise of the ACA and has become a leading consumer voice on ACA market reform issues. We played a critical role in shaping the historic health care reform law and had a central role in securing several provisions to combat discrimination in pricing — a historic advance. Now the National Partnership is working with partners to ensure that these provisions are implemented in ways that will benefit women and families. OUR IMPACT ææ Women and consumers won a tremendous victory when the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the ACA in June of 2012. The National Partnership joined amicus briefs opposing challenges to the ACA, arguing that it makes important advances in women’s health care, prohibits discrimination and removes obstacles to access to care. Led the Insurance Market Reform Coalition, a consumer coalition that serves as the “go-to” consumer voice on ACA market reform issues for key public officials and industry representatives. ææ Advanced regulations that promote fair treatment of women and protect women’s health as part of the ACA. In early 2012 we, along with partner organizations, asked Congress to reject a measure that would erode the integrity of the medical loss ratio, an important protection that ensures consumers get more coverage for their premium dollars; our efforts were successful and the measure was not even brought up for a vote. ææ Helped shape a number of critical provisions in the ACA — including employer wellness programs, Essential Health Benefits (EHBs), Medicaid, multi-state plans and guidance for state and federal insurance exchanges — so the unique needs of women and families will be met. ææ ææ Developed a toolkit with fact sheets and sample materials to help members of Congress communicate with female constituents about open enrollment and the benefits offered by the ACA. We supported open enrollment with emails to activists and a video and created a series of Facebook shareable images to answer commonly asked questions about the ACA. To date, the images have been shared more than 1,500 times. “Now that the Supreme Court has ruled, it’s time to join together do what is needed to make the promise of reform a reality for every American. The time for politics has passed. The time for progress is now.” Debra L. Ness, President National Partnership June 28, 2012 national partnership for women & families ANNUAL LUNCHEON HIGHLIGHTS 26 Celebrating Our Victories at the Annual Luncheon The National Partnership for Women & Families hosts an Annual Luncheon to honor outstanding individuals who have helped to advance the role of women in our society. We gather at the Washington Hilton each year for this time-honored event that brings together business leaders, government officials, women’s and civil rights advocates, allies, journalists, and generous supporters dedicated to making life better for women and families. We honor trailblazers, recognize accomplishments, and look to future challenges. The event provides an opportunity for allies to rally around our program priorities, and to raise funds in support of our ongoing work. We have been honored in recent years to be able to recognize the achievements of extraordinary leaders who are true champions for women and for the issues at the core of the National Partnership’s mission: access to quality, affordable health care; family friendly policies; equality in the workplace and in society; and economic security for all. “And today as you stop, and take a breath, and look back for a moment at all that you have accomplished, you will see that over the last four decades you have made such an amazing imprint on nearly every single one of this nation’s major policy achievements for women and families. And that is something to be proud of.” — First Lady Michelle Obama National Partnership Annual Luncheon June 9, 2011 “Nobody does it alone. Nobody should want to do it alone. The collaboration, the excitement, the adventure, the fun of working with the National Partnership, working with so many of you represented here, has been a great joy to me ... So let us not grow weary in doing what we believe is right and smart here at home and around the world for women and families.” — Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton National Partnership Annual Luncheon June 21, 2012 27 Rep. Gwen Moore “The three extraordinary members of Congress we honor are standing strong against opponents who want to take away our access to reproductive health care, eviscerate anti-discrimination programs, and reverse the progress on humane, reasonable workplace leave policies. We are fortunate to have powerful women in the House of Representatives who are standing up to those who want to take our country backward. Working hand-in-hand with these visionary leaders, we will stop opponents in their tracks and instead build the kind of future we need and deserve.” Rep. Tammy Duckworth Rep. Rosa DeLauro — Debra L. Ness President, National Partnership for Women & Families Annual Luncheon honoring Congresswomen Rosa DeLauro (D-CT), Tammy Duckworth (D-IL) and Gwen Moore (D-WI) June 14, 2013 our supporters 28 Thanks to Our Supporters national partnership for women & families Through the generosity of so many committed individuals and organizations, the National Partnership is a powerful voice standing up for America’s women and families — ensuring that every woman has an opportunity to participate fully in society and that every individual and family can thrive. We gratefully acknowledge all our supporters for their loyal commitment and contributions to our work, and we look forward to working together to continue to improve the lives of women and their families. 29 The following lists the National Partnership’s supporters over the last two fiscal years ending March 31, 2013. Ethel Klein and Edward Krugman Deborah M. Sale Judith and Elliott Lichtman Vicki and Roger Sant Ellen R. Malcolm Laura Scheuer Visionary Partners Judith F. Mazo Marc M. Seltzer M. Quinn Delaney Paulette J. Meyer and David A. Friedman Marlene Share Linda D. Fienberg and Jeffrey D. Bauman Debra L. Ness and Sydney E. Martin Jeffrey Z. Slavin Ellen M. Poss Sharis Pozen Cathrine S. Steck Wendy-Sue Rosen and Tom Freeman Mary Ann Stein Betty and Jack Schafer Peggy and James Tranovich Roselyne C. Swig Marcy Wilder and Aurie Hall Patricia Dinner Capital Partners Executive Partners Isabel P. Dunst Nancy Adler and Arnold Milstein Susan Adelman and Claudio Llanos Elizabeth M. Ehrenfeld Cindy Aron Madeleine and David Arnow Sally Gottesman Katherine and David Bradley Jane C. Bergner Pamela H. Grissom Gladys G. Cofrin Linda A. Bergthold R. May Lee Barbara B. Creed Nancy L. Buc Nina B. Matis Dobkin Family Foundation Annie Burns Shari Lawrence Pfleeger and Charles P. Pfleeger Gina Harman Candace M. Carroll and Leonard B. Simon Barbara J. Hart Laurie B. Davis and Joseph M. Sellers Joe Higdon and Ellen Sudow Fund Susan Esserman and Andrew Marks Wendy L. Kahn and Susan K. Stern Frances E. Goldman Trustees Irene R. Kaplan Sandra and Barry Goldstein Anonymous Kim Koopersmith Nikki Heidepriem Ranny Cooper Linda Lipsett and Jules Bernstein Catherine and James Koshland Susan and Michael Gelman Ann S. Moore Judy and Peter Kovler Jamie S. Gorelick and Richard E. Waldhorn Frances R. Olivieri and Lowell D. Johnston Rachel S. Kronowitz Scottie Held Ruth and Stephen Pollak Suzanne Lerner M. Suzanne and Lawrence E. Hess Richard P. Rome Mimi Mager Lynne and Joseph Horning Cristine Russell and Ben Heineman Melanie and Larry Nussdorf Leadership Partners Anonymous Anne K. Bingaman Jodi J. Schwartz Jamie Rosenthal Wolf our supporters 30 Pauline A. Schneider Sara Ann Determan Janet McDavid Ronnie Scott Linda Eggbeer Ilse Melamid The Honorable Donna E. Shalala Sandy Fortier Lissa Muscatine Tracy Spicer Stephenie Foster Nicole Mutchnik Anne D. Taft Mary and Daniel Frantz Michelle Owens Helen R. Trilling Buff Brazy Given Victoria J. Perkins Judith C. Glass Stacy D. Phillips Jean Gleason Stromberg Barbara A. Pollack Cindi and Rick Gould Marjorie Randolph Gail M. Harmon Patricia Dodds Rich Joan Hunt Phyllis C. Richman Antonia B. Ianniello Michelle Rosen Ruth Jaeger and Al Kramer Ann Rosewater Marion S. Kaplan Chris Sale Kasdan Family Foundation Bettylu and Paul Saltzman Karen Kasner Rosel H. Schewel Lynn Rosenberg Kidd Ellen Schneider Ann and Peter Kolker Sara Lee Schupf William E. Kramer Judith A. Scott Jane Lang and Paul Sprenger Geraldine Shapiro Laura and Gary Lauder Mary Jo Shartsis Marta Jo Lawrence Linda and Stanley Sher Barbara Lee Linda Singer and Michael Lewis Ruth D. Levine Marcia Smolens Ann F. Lewis Susan P. Thomases Susan M. Liss Michele Trincellita Carol A. Mager Marna S. Tucker Lady Va Maughan Melissa and Neal Tully Roslyn A. Mazer Yoma Ullman Presidential Partners Anonymous Eleanor D. Acheson Ronnie Cohen Agress Linda Auerbach Allderdice Ann and David Allen Katie Amira Rita M. Bank Linda and Lawrence Becker Lucy Wilson Benson Ali Kincaid Bergthold and Eric Bergthold Robert Berenson Caryl S. Bernstein national partnership for women & families Brooksley Born and Alex Bennett Ellen J. Chesler Bonnie and Louis Cohen Elizabeth Colton Josephine C. Conlon Carolyn F. Corwin Elizabeth Culbreth and John Vanderstar Pamela Daley Stephanie Davis Corinna and Adrian Dragulescu 31 Cathy Unger Gina and Ronald Glantz Rabbi Mindy A. Portnoy Jean Veta and Mary Ann Dutton Gail Gorlitz Gwendolyn Prothro Virginia G. Watkin Ann Greiner Laura Quigg Margery Waxman Beth Grupp Harriet and Bruce Rabb Deborah and Marcus Wilkes Florence and Peter D. Hart Marily H. Rhudy Wendy C. Wolf Michalann Harthill Susan S. Richardson Nancy Zirkin Mary E. Hartnett and Richard Norland Judith Riggs Robin J. Hickey Kristy W. Rudel Elizabeth Hirsch Debra Schiff Joanne M. Howes Mitchell Schwartz Florence Isbell Ricki Seidman Christopher C. Jennings Daniel M. Singer Beverley Johnson Jamienne Studley and Gary Smith Krystal Johnson Jennie Thompson and Robert Levy Victoria A. Judson Carol Tucker-Foreman Patricia King and Roger Wilkins Carol E. Tully Alice Kipel Marion L. Usher Celinda Lake Ellen Vargyas Donna Lenhoff and Michael F. Jacobson Kathryn Kahler Vose Margaret Rood Lenzer Penny Wakefield Emily Hess Levine Judith Walter Felice J. Levine Jon Weintraub Robin S. Lofquist Sally Wells Marcena W. Love Denise Williams Mira Nan Marshall Karen Hastie Williams Jeanne-Marie A. Miller Margaret M. Willingham Dalinda and Antonio Ness Robert B. Willumstad Frank G. Opelka Susan N. Wilson Mary S. Pence Peg Yorkin Sustaining Partners Karen Adler Elena A. Alverez Cecily Baskir Amie Batson and Orin Levine Nancy Bleeker Terry O. Brackett Diane and Lyle Brenneman Carol Brook Phyllis C. Borzi Julia Penny Clark Kathleen W. Collins Elizabeth B. Conant and Camille Cox Lynne Cook and Jillian Michel Maureen Cotter Samantha Cranko Jacqueline L. Ebert Lois England Holly Fechner and Kevin Mills Nancy M. Folger Tanya George and Norman Rosenberg Adrienne Germain our supporters 32 Corporations Deutsche Bank Lipman Hearne Abbott Dewey Square Group Mager & Associates Advanced Medical Technology Association (AdvaMed) Ernst & Young LLP Marwood Group Fabiani & Company Mastercard International Fallon Worldwide McLarty Associates Fonteva, Inc. MediaCom Avenue Solutions Fording Brook Associates Merck B & D Consulting General Electric Company Morgan Stanley Bank of America Merrill Lynch Goldman Sachs MSL Washington, DC Barclays Google NVG, LLC BD Grossman Solutions LLC OMNIPLEX World Services Corporation Blue Cross Blue Shield Association GYMR, Public Relations Pacific Gas & Electric Company Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts HBO Pediatrix Medical Group Blueprint Interactive Health Dialog PEPCO Blue Star Strategies, LLC Health Policy Source, Inc. Pfizer Inc BNY Mellon Cash Investment Strategies, The Drefus Corporation HLP Associates, Inc. PNC Bank Hologic Inc. PoliTemps Inc. The Boston Consulting Group Impact Communications Porter Novelli Cavarocchi-Ruscio-Dennis Associates, LLC Intel Corporation Premier Healthcare Alliance Cigna Jennings Policy Strategies PR Solutions, Inc. Citi Johnson & Johnson PWC Clinovations J.P. Morgan PWR The Clorox Company J Street Group, LLC QIAGEN Coca-Cola Company RLM Finsbury Conceptus Kaiser Permanente: The Permanente Federation CONVIO Kampack, Inc. Corning Incorporated Kekst and Company Inc. Credit Suisse Keller Benefit Services CVS Caremark Ketchum, Inc. American Express national partnership for women & families The AmeriHealth Caritas Family of Companies sanofi-aventis The Segal Company Siemens Corporation SKDKnickerbocker SS+K 33 Surescripts, LLC The Morningstar Foundation DLA Piper The Travelers Companies, Inc. Open Society Foundations Drinker Biddle & Reath, LLP UnitedHeath Group Public Welfare Foundation Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP U-Systems Rockefeller Family Fund Greenberg Traurig, LLP Viacom Music and Logo Group Rockefeller Foundation Groom Law Group, Chartered Walgreens The Rosenthal Family Foundation Hogan Lovells The Walker Marchant Group The Sandford and Doris Slavin Foundation James & Hoffman, P.C. The Weather Channel Companies The Shifra Philanthropic Fund of the Jewish Community Foundation of Greater Kansas City Jenner & Block Yurman Design, Inc. Foundations The Sidley Austin Foundation Anonymous Alfred P. Sloan Foundation The Atlantic Philanthropies The Summit Fund of Washington Arronson Foundation WebMD Health Foundation Borrego Foundation The Westport Fund The California Endowment California HealthCare Foundation The Annie E. Casey Foundation Citi Foundation Robert Sterling Clark Foundation Community Foundation for Southern Arizona Marjorie Cook Foundation Ford Foundation William and Flora Hewlett Foundation Informed Medical Decisions Foundation Robert Wood Johnson Foundation John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Markle Foundation The Moriah Fund Kelley Drye King & Spalding LLP Latham & Watkins Lichtman & Elliot, P.C. Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP Patton Boggs LLP Paul Hastings LLP Law Firms Ain & Bank, P.C. Allen & Overy LLP Arnold & Porter LLP Alston & Bird Health Care Public Policy Practice Perkins Coie LLP Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP Richards, Layton & Finger Shearman & Sterling LLP Sidley Austin LLP Bingham McCutchen LLP Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP Brown Rudnick LLP Steptoe & Johnson LLP Caplin & Drysdale Venable Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton, LLP Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP Cohen, Milstein, Sellers & Toll PLLC White & Case LLP Covington & Burling, LLP Wiley Rein Women’s Forum Cozen O’Connor Williams & Connolly LLP Crowell & Moring WilmerHale Dickstein Shapiro LLP Zuckerman Spaeder LLP our supporters 34 Organizations and Unions EMILY’s List AARP Federation of American Hospitals AFL-CIO AFSCME Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society Alliance for Justice Human Rights Campaign SNP Alliance Alliance of Community Health Plans Institute for Patient- and Family-Centered Care United Auto Workers American Academy of Family Physicians American Association for Justice American Board of Internal Medicine International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers American Board of Medical Specialties International Brotherhood of Boilermakers American College of Nurses Midwives The Joint Commission American College of Physicians Legacy American Federation of Government Employees NARAL Pro-Choice America American Federation of Teachers National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems American Heart Association National Association of Social Workers American Hospital Association National Business Coalition on Health American Medical Association The National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy American Physical Therapy Association American Psychological Association American Rights at Work national partnership for women & families Institute for Women’s Policy Research America’s Health Insurance Plans Association for Community Affiliated Plans Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids Center for Democracy & Technology Childbirth Connection Communications Workers of America National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship National Committee for Quality Assurance National Family Planning & Reproductive Health Association National Health Law Program National Physicians Alliance National Quality Forum National Women’s Law Center Compassion & Choice Pharmaceutical Care Management Association Direct Selling Education Fund PhRMA Planned Parenthood Federation of America School Biz Match, Inc. Service Employees International Union UFCW Local 400 United Food & Commercial Workers International Union United Mine Workers of America Volunteers of America Women Employed 35 National Partnership Endowment Supporters – Securing Our Future All of us at the National Partnership are tremendously grateful to the Ford Foundation and the following supporters who made generous gifts to our Endowment Campaign. Through this significant support the National Partnership will continue standing up for women and families for many years to come. Nancy Adler and Arnold Milstein Vincent Kerr Pauline A. Schneider Ann and David Allen Catherine and James Koshland Jodi Schwartz Anonymous R. May Lee Judith A. Scott Lotte Bailyn Judith and Elliott Lichtman Ronnie Scott Beech Street Foundation Mimi Mager Sally Susman Linda Bergthold Ellen R. Malcolm Roselyne C. Swig Anne K. Bingaman Nina B. Matis Trellis Fund Mary C. Blake Paulette J. Meyer and David A. Friedman Kay Kahler Vose Nancy L. Buc Cheryl D. Mills Wyeth (now a part of Pfizer Inc) Citi Foundation Karen Montag Josephine C. Conlon The Moriah Fund Ranny Cooper Debra L. Ness and Sydney E. Martin M. Quinn Delaney Pfizer Inc Patricia Dinner Shari Lawrence Pfleeger and Charles P. Pfleeger Elizabeth Ehrenfeld Ford Foundation Sandra and Barry Goldstein Sally Gottesman Pamela H. Grissom Linda W. Gruber Nikki Heidepriem M. Suzanne and Lawrence E. Hess Katherine Jacobson Poss Family Foundation Wendy-Sue Rosen and Tom Freeman Sheli and Burt Rosenberg The Rosenthal Family Foundation Cristine Russell and Benjamin Heineman Chris Sale Betty R. Schafer Schering-Plough Foundation (now a part of Merck & Co., Inc.) national partnership for women & families FINANCIAL REPORTS 36 FINANCIAL REPORTS 37 Statement of Financial Position 2013 2012 (as of 03/31/13) (as of 03/31/12) 3,378,268 16,021,989 3,145,171 29,076 200,652 526,340 64,244 23,365,740 3,975,023 14,432,234 3,193,640 35,033 187,408 276,422 64,244 22,164,004 88,260 559,304 77,000 590,356 6,938 1,321,858 148,083 523,179 106,150 292,383 6,938 1,076,733 Unrestricted Temporarily restricted Permanently restricted Total net assets 2,878,293 4,960,402 14,205,187 22,043,882 1,911,094 4,871,921 14,304,257 21,087,272 TOTAL LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETS 23,365,740 22,164,004 ASSETS Cash and cash equivalents Investments Grants and pledges receivable Accounts receivable Prepaid expenses Furniture, equipment and leasehold improvements, net Security deposit Total Assets LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETS Accounts payable and accrued liabilities Accrued salaries and related benefits Deferred revenue Deferred rent Deposits Total Liabilities Net Assets FINANCIAL REPORTS 38 Statement of Activities and Changes in Net Assets For the Year Ended March 31, 2013 Unrestricted Temporarily Restricted Permanently Restricted Total Grants Contributions Interest and investment income 16,560 582,389 255,330 4,970,248 416,204 - 930 - 4,986,808 999,523 255,330 Special event, net of direct expenses ($267,743) 827,756 - - 827,756 121,857 5,297,971 7,101,863 (5,297,971) 88,481 930 121,857 7,191,274 Program services Health care policy Work and family Advocacy Communications Outreach & Public Education Total Supporting Services 4,397,600 1,405,452 81,533 145,335 33,772 6,063,692 - - 4,397,600 1,405,452 81,533 145,335 33,772 6,063,692 Supporting services General and administrative Resource development Total Supporting Services 261,122 1,099,335 1,360,457 - - 261,122 1,099,335 1,360,457 Total expenses 7,424,149 - - 7,424,149 Change in net assets before Other Items (322,286) 88,481 930 (232,875) Other Item Unrealized Gain/(Loss) on Investment Provision for uncollected pledge 1,289,485 - - (100,000) 1,289,485 (100,000) 967,199 88,481 (99,070) 956,610 Net assets at March 31, 2012 1,911,094 4,871,921 14,304,257 21,087,272 Net assets at March 31, 2013 2,878,293 4,960,402 14,205,187 22,043,882 Support and Revenue Other income Net assets released from restrictions: Total support and revenue national partnership for women & families Expenses Change in Net Assets 39 Statement of Activities and Changes in Net Assets For the Year Ended March 31, 2012 Unrestricted Temporarily Restricted Permanently Restricted Total 387,367 247,508 588,636 118,542 6,381,024 7,723,077 4,292,202 166,586 (6,381,024) (1,922,236) 4,288 4,288 4,292,202 558,241 247,508 588,636 118,542 5,805,129 5,008,103 1,347,080 106,727 157,732 89,251 6,708,893 - - 5,008,103 1,347,080 106,727 157,732 89,251 6,708,893 Supporting services General and administrative Resource development 232,289 820,012 - - 232,289 820,012 Total Supporting Services 1,052,301 - - 1,052,301 7,761,194 - - 7,761,194 Change in net assets before Other Items (38,117) (1,922,236) 4,288 (1,956,065) Other Item Unrealized Gain/(Loss) on Investment 276,077 - - 276,077 Change in Net Assets 237,960 (1,922,236) 4,288 (1,679,988) Net assets at March 31, 2012 1,673,134 6,794,157 14,299,969 22,767,260 Net assets at March 31, 2013 1,911,094 4,871,921 14,304,257 21,087,272 Support and Revenue Grants Contributions Interest and investment income Special event, net of direct expenses ($267,743) Other income Net assets released from restrictions: Total support and revenue Expenses Program services Health care policy Work and family Advocacy Communications Outreach & Public Education Total Program Services Total expenses board of directors and staff 40 National Partnership for Women & Families Board of Directors Ellen R. Malcolm, Chair EMILY’s List Washington, DC Jeannie Kedas MTVN Music / Logo / Films Group New York, NY Clara Shin Covington & Burling San Francisco, CA Pauline A. Schneider, Vice Chair Ballard Spahr LLP Washington, DC Vincent Kerr, MD Care Solutions, UnitedHealth Group Hartford, CT Sally Susman** Pfizer, Inc New York, NY Nikki Heidepriem, Secretary Heidepriem & Associates Washington, DC R. May Lee New York University New York, NY Kay Kahler Vose Yellow Brick Road New York, NY Chris Sale, Treasurer Global Communities (formerly CHF International) Washington, DC Judith L. Lichtman National Partnership for Women & Families Washington, DC Marcy Wilder Hogan Lovells LLC Washington, DC national partnership for women & families Debra L. Ness, President National Partnership for Women & Families Washington, DC Nina Matis iStar Financial New York, NY Linda A. Bergthold** Independent Consultant Santa Cruz, CA Arnold Milstein, MD, MPH Clinical Excellence Research Center, Stanford University San Francisco, CA Ranny Cooper Weber Shandwick Public Affairs Washington, DC Sharis Pozen Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom LLP Washington, DC Jennifer Duck** Pfizer, Inc Washington, DC Sheli Rosenberg** Chicago, IL Linda D. Fienberg Dispute Resolution, FINRA Washington, DC Helena Foulkes CVS Caremark Woonsocket, RI Philippa Scarlett Kirkland & Ellis LLP Washington, DC Judith Scott SEIU Washington, DC * Affiliations are current at the time that the board member served on the National Partnership Board and are listed for identification purposes only. ** Board tenure ended during the period covered by this annual report. National Partnership for Women & Families Staff Debra L. Ness, President Ali Kincaid Bergthold, Vice President Judith L. Lichtman, Senior Advisor Sadie Kliner, Senior Work and Family Communications Manager Eleanor Allen, Grants Manager and Development Writer Tanya Alteras, Deputy Director, Consumer-Purchaser Disclosure Project Elina Alterman, Health Information Technology Policy and Outreach Coordinator Tucker Ball, Director of New Media Alyssa Beauchamp, Executive Assistant Christine Bechtel, Advisor Lauren Birchfield Kennedy, Senior Health Policy Counsel Christine Broderick, Health Policy Advisor, Campaign for Better Care Jacqueline Conn, Development Associate Sarah Crawford, Director of Workplace Fairness Corinna Dragulescu, Director of Finance Andrea Friedman, Director of Reproductive Health Programs Lynne Phoenix, Executive Assistant Travis Hunter, Director of Administration and Information Technology Emma Kopleff, Senior Policy Advisor, Consumer-Purchaser Disclosure Project Lindsay Lang, Senior Health Care Quality Improvement Specialist Helen Luryi, Work and Family Policy Associate Mark Savage, Director, Health Information Technology Policy and Programs Ashley Schapitl, Health Communications Manager Vicki Shabo, Director of Work and Family Programs Courtney Shahan Roman, Outreach Manager, Campaign for Better Care Kirsten Sloan, Vice President Rachel Lyons, Work and Family Government Affairs Manager Sara Sloyer, Work/ Family and Fairness Program Assistant Erin Mackay, Associate Director, Health Information Technology Programs Jennifer Sweeney, Director, Consumer Engagement and Community Outreach Raquel Meng, Executive Assistant to the President Kalahn Taylor-Clark, Director of Health Policy Lauren Murray, Deputy Director, Consumer Engagement and Community Outreach Ginna Van Schoick, Director of Major Gifts Lee Partridge, Senior Health Policy Advisor Karen Pesapane, Senior Development Associate Zack Schwartz, Office Manager Beccah Watson, Policy Counsel/Women’s Law and Public Policy Fellow Debbie Wilkes, Chief of Staff Tenley Peterson, Senior New Media Manager Lien Phan, Accountant Hannah Rimar, Health Program Assistant Cindy Romero, Communications Assistant Melissa Safford, Reproductive Health Policy Advocate * Staff as of July 31, 2013 1875 Connecticut Avenue, NW | Suite 650 | Washington, DC 20009 202.986.2600 | www.NationalPartnership.org