The Daily Rundown — The Latest News Affecting Women & Girls in Our Region

Pink Ribbon Breast Cancer

In today’s rundown: Local women politicians commemorate Breast Cancer Awareness Month. | A look at food stamp recipients whose benefits barely last an entire month. | And one politician asks the federal government to bar food stamp recipients from being able to purchase one type of item.

— Today, D.C.’s Congressional representative Eleanor Holmes Norton will join the City Council’s three women members to commemorate Breast Cancer Awareness Month.  “D.C. has the highest breast cancer rate in the country, and also has the highest cancer death rate,” reports WAMU.

— Today, WTOP features a story about food stamp recipients who go on late night grocery runs so that they can purchase much-needed items as soon as the benefits go into their accounts at midnight.

–And New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg has requested federal permission to ban New Yorkers from using food stamps to buy sugary drinks like soda.  Some public health experts say that the ban could stigmatize people who use food stamps, reports The New York Times. The Agriculture Department denied a similar request from Minnesota in 2004.

The Daily Rundown — The Latest News Affecting Women & Girls in Our Region

In today’s rundown: Affordable, green housing may be coming to D.C.’s Ward 8. | The deadline for Virginia residents to register to vote is approaching. | And a profile of a single mother who struggles to raise her family on a middle class income.

— The region’s first affordable, green housing may be built in D.C.’s Ward 8, if a coalition of developers, community activists and financial institutions have their way.  They want to renovate Wheeler Terrace by creating LEED Gold certified healthy living spaces while retaining Section 8 affordability, reports WAMU.

— Virginia residents who want to vote in next month’s election have until October 12 to register or update voter information. Voters can register at Department of Motor Vehicle centers or their local registrar’s office.  They can check their voter status or find polling places at www.sbe.virginia.gov. For further information they can call 1-800-552-9745.

— As part of a series on the struggling middle class, NPR profiles a single mother who says that raising her family on a middle class income is a “juggling act.”

The Daily Rundown — The Latest News Affecting Women & Girls in Our Region

In today’s rundown: A look at the barriers to affordable, quality childcare. | And a chance for adults with “some college” to finish earning their degrees.

— For low-income, single mothers in our region, access to affordable, quality childcare can make it difficult for them to find better paying jobs.  ABC 7 News took a look at the barriers to affordable childcare.  The Women’s Foundation’s Jennifer Lockwood-Shabat and Grantee Partner Hopkins House were featured in the story:

— “Northern Virginia Community College will be part of a $15 million, nationwide initiative… to give adults the chance to complete degrees they started but did not finish,” according to The Washington Post. There are about 37 million people in the U.S. who have gone to college but have not finished earning degrees.

The Daily Rundown — The Latest News Affecting Women & Girls in Our Region

In today’s rundown: New census numbers give a clearer picture of what poverty looks like in the D.C. region and how the recession is impacting this area.  Plus, why two lawmakers have put a hold on a request for a national women’s history museum in the District.

— New census statistics show that three out of 10 children in the District lived in poverty last year, “with the number of poor African American children rising at a breathtaking rate,” according to The Washington Post. The number of children living in poverty also rose in the counties surrounding D.C.

— Those same numbers show that the recession has had a disparate impact on D.C., according to the DC Fiscal Policy Institute. DCFPI reports that poverty rates jumped especially sharply for children, black residents, and residents living east of the Anacostia River.

— According to Jezebel.com: “Senators Tom Coburn and Jim DeMint won’t let the Smithsonian lease space to a women’s history museum — because the ladies already have their quilting museums, and because someone told them the museum was going to be pro-abortion. Seriously.”

The Daily Rundown — The Latest News Affecting Women & Girls in Our Region

In today’s rundown: A Grantee Partner is profiled for its work with formerly incarcerated women. | A new effort is announced to help low-income women secure quality child care. | And the Meyer Foundation announces its Exponent Award winners.

— Our Place, DC, a Women’s Foundation Grantee Partner, is profiled by Washington Post columnist Petula Dvorak.  The column traces the difficulties women face as they reintegrate into the community after being incarcerated.  Our Place, DC helps to ease their transitions.

— The Women’s Economic Security Campaign (WESC) was featured on the Post‘s website for announcing its effort to urge the public and private sectors to help low-income women by helping them secure quality child care.  The Women’s Foundation is a member of WESC.

— The Meyer Foundation has announced the winners of its 2010 Exponent Awards which honor nonprofit leaders.  Among the five winners is Layli Miller-Muro, the executive director and co-founder of Tahirih Justice Center, a Women’s Foundation Grantee Partner.

The Daily Rundown — The Latest News Affecting Women & Girls in Our Region

In today’s rundown: The announcement of a new initiative to create jobs for thousands of women. | A local nonprofit is the victim of vandals. | Virginia is scheduled to execute the first woman in nearly a century tonight.

— As the Clinton Global Initiative wraps up in New York today, Women’s Funding Network will announce its commitment to fund $3 million in projects for job creation, placement and retention to improve the lives of thousands of women and girls and their families, while also contributing to the recovery of the U.S. economy.  The Women Moving Jobs program is being carried out in partnership with five women’s foundations, including Washington Area Women’s Foundation.

— Some of D.C. Central Kitchen’s vans were vandalized earlier this week and TBD.com reports that it appears the nonprofit was deliberately targeted. Nine vehicles were tagged with red spray paint and have been taken out of service.

— The first woman to be executed in Virginia since 1912 is scheduled to die by lethal injection tonight.  Teresa Lewis was sentenced to death for hiring two men to kill her husband and stepson in 2002.  There has been international opposition to her execution, including from the European Union and Iran.

The Daily Rundown — The Latest News Affecting Women & Girls in Our Region

In today’s rundown: Census Bureau data through a gender lens. | Low-income families benefit the least from federal programs designed to help Americans build wealth.

— The National Women’s Law Center has released a report analyzing detailed Census Bureau data.  Poverty Among Women and Families, 2000-2009: Great Recession Brings Highest Rate in 15 Years provides a gender analysis of the Census Bureau’s new report which provides little information broken out by gender.

— Low-income families benefit the least from federal tax breaks and programs designed to help Americans buy homes, save money, start businesses, pay for college and retire comfortably, says The Annie E. Casey Foundation.  A new report out today from the foundation found the highest earning taxpayers benefited the most from tax breaks and programs aimed at helping Americans build wealth.  Click here for details.

— Washington Women in Public Relations is accepting applications from local nonprofits serving women and girls for consideration as a pro bono client.  Click here for details. Applications are due October 15.

The Daily Rundown — The Latest News Affecting Women & Girls in Our Region

In today’s rundown: How women and men are expected to vote in the upcoming midterm elections.  Plus, star power is in town to push for a national women’s history museum.

— According to the National Bureau of Economic Research, the recession ended in June of 2009.  However, since then, the U.S. has lost more jobs than it added.  The New York Times reports that many measure of economic activity have improved, except for payrolls.

— With midterm elections coming up in November, a new poll shows that women are expected to vote very differently from men. The poll found that 36 percent of women said they’d vote Republican while 43 percent said they’d vote Democrat.  The numbers were nearly reversed for men.  The poll also suggested that men were more likely to vote in November because they report being angrier, while women were more likely to report feeling hopeless.

— Tonight actress Meryl Streep, Sen. Susan Collins and Rep. Carolyn Maloney will be at a fundraising dinner to support the creation of a National Women’s History Museum on the National Mall.  A vote on the museum, which would be at 12th & Independence, SW, is pending in the Senate.  Click here for details.

The Daily Rundown — The Latest News Affecting Women & Girls in Our Region

In today’s rundown: A push for a Senate bill that could help close the wage gap. | And a warmer, more dignified place for domestic violence victims, thanks to a volunteer with interior design experience.

In an op-ed in The Washington Post, Valerie Jarrett pushes for legislation that will help close the wage gap between men and women in the United States.  In her piece, Jarrett writes about the importance of ensuring that women earn equal pay, given the fact they are the sole or co-breadwinners in two-thirds of American households.

— A Michigan interior designer put his skills to use at a women’s shelter in Grand Rapids, volunteering to redesign the shelter to make it more comfortable and functional.  He said the improvements make it a warmer environment that offer dignity to women who, for the most part, are victims of domestic violence.

The Daily Rundown — The Latest News Affecting Women & Girls in Our Region

Happy Business WomanIn today’s rundown: Local companies make a list of the best companies for mothers to work in. | And a local athlete apologizes for comments he made about women reporters.

Working Mother Magazine has released its list of the best places for mothers to work and several local companies made the cut. According to NBC4, “companies that earn spots on the Working Mother 100 Best Companies list are more likely than others to offer telecommuting, formal mentoring, health insurance for part-timers, flextime, paid maternity leave, lactation rooms, on-site childcare, mental health consultations, elder-care resources, health screening and wellness programs.”

Local companies on the list include: Arnold & Porter, Covington & Burling, Fannie Mae, FINRA, National Education Association, Marriott International, Inc., Discovery Communications, Freddie Mac, and Capital One Financial Corporation.

— Washington Redskins running back Clinton Portis has apologized for comments he made while weighing in on the NFL’s investigation of the New York Jets’ treatment of television reporter Ines Sainz.  Some of the Jets players reportedly made catcalls at Sainz during a practice on Saturday.  Despite knowing nothing about the controversy, Portis talked about the incident during a weekly radio appearance on Tuesday.  The NFL called Portis’ comments inappropriate and offensive.  Click here for details about what Portis said.

Photo credit: via Creative Commons