Public Policy & NGOs
Here's a look at documents from public policy and non-governmental organizations
Featured Stories
World Vision Eswatini and Mbabane Municipal Council Forge Strategic Partnership to Address Urban Vulnerability
MONROVIA, California, April 25 -- World Vision International issued the following news release on April 24, 2026:
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World Vision Eswatini and Mbabane Municipal Council Forge Strategic Partnership to Address Urban Vulnerability
World Vision Eswatini and the Municipal Council of Mbabane today signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), formalising a strategic partnership aimed at improving the wellbeing of vulnerable children, families, and youth living in the City of Mbabane.
Speaking during the signing ceremony held at the Municipal Council offices, World Vision Eswatini National Director
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MONROVIA, California, April 25 -- World Vision International issued the following news release on April 24, 2026:
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World Vision Eswatini and Mbabane Municipal Council Forge Strategic Partnership to Address Urban Vulnerability
World Vision Eswatini and the Municipal Council of Mbabane today signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), formalising a strategic partnership aimed at improving the wellbeing of vulnerable children, families, and youth living in the City of Mbabane.
Speaking during the signing ceremony held at the Municipal Council offices, World Vision Eswatini National DirectorAmos Zaindi described the agreement as a shared commitment to creating meaningful and lasting change in urban communities.
"This MOU represents a common vision and renewed determination to work together for the wellbeing of the most vulnerable children, families, and communities within Mbabane," said Zaindi, noting that the organisation's 2026-2030 strategy prioritises reducing hunger and malnutrition and ending violence against children, particularly in urban contexts where poverty is increasingly concentrated.
The partnership provides a structured framework for collaboration in priority areas including poverty reduction, child protection, support to orphaned and vulnerable children, skills development for out of school youth, and assistance to indigent households. It also places strong emphasis on coordinated planning, accountability, safeguarding, and joint resource mobilisation initiatives such as innovative fundraising activities.
Welcoming the partnership, Municipal Council of Mbabane Chief Executive Officer, Gciniwe Fakudze, highlighted the often overlooked realities of urban poverty.
"We are constantly having to convince people that urban poverty is real," she said. "In Mbabane's informal settlements, people may look well dressed and presentable, but behind that dignity are serious struggles - unemployed youth, elderly grandmothers who cannot afford urban living, child headed households, orphans, and other vulnerable groups."
Fakudze added that vulnerability in urban spaces can be particularly complex due to weakened social safety nets.
"In cities, it is not easy to turn to your neighbour for support. That is why this partnership is so important. We are grateful to partner with World Vision--an organisation that does not only talk, but delivers practical programmes that respond to these realities. The complementary nature of this partnership is exciting, and we assure you that we will move with speed."
On behalf of the World Vision Eswatini Board, Chairperson of the National Resource, Ministry and Strategy Committee Nelisiwe De Sousa, representing the Board Chairperson, commended the shared commitment demonstrated through the MOU.
"This partnership affirms our collective resolve to improve the lives of vulnerable children, poverty stricken families and youth through coordinated action and responsible resource mobilisation," she said.
Both institutions expressed confidence that the success of the MOU will be measured not by signatures, but by tangible improvements in the lives of Mbabane's most vulnerable communities over the coming years.
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Original text here: https://www.wvi.org/newsroom/eswatini/world-vision-eswatini-and-mbabane-municipal-council-forge-strategic-partnership
[Category: Sociological]
Victory for Goats - Macy's, Bloomingdales, and TJX Ditch Mohair After PETA Push
NORFOLK, Virginia, April 25 -- People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals issued the following news release:
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Victory for Goats! Macy's, Bloomingdales, and TJX Ditch Mohair After PETA Push
After learning from PETA that terrified goats are beaten and left with bleeding wounds in the mohair industry, TJX--the parent company of TJ Maxx, Marshalls, HomeGoods, and more--has banned mohair and Macy's Inc.--which owns Bloomingdale's--has no plans to sell it in the collections of any of its private labels, including I.N.C, Bar III, Charter Club, and Alfani. In thanks, PETA is sending the companies
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NORFOLK, Virginia, April 25 -- People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals issued the following news release:
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Victory for Goats! Macy's, Bloomingdales, and TJX Ditch Mohair After PETA Push
After learning from PETA that terrified goats are beaten and left with bleeding wounds in the mohair industry, TJX--the parent company of TJ Maxx, Marshalls, HomeGoods, and more--has banned mohair and Macy's Inc.--which owns Bloomingdale's--has no plans to sell it in the collections of any of its private labels, including I.N.C, Bar III, Charter Club, and Alfani. In thanks, PETA is sending the companiesdelicious goat-shaped vegan chocolates.
The move comes after PETA shared with the companies a damning new video expose into mohair operations in Lesotho and South Africa--which took place at several facilities certified by the misleadingly named "Responsible Mohair Standard"--showing the bodies of several dead goats, including a baby goat, discarded in a heap, and workers violently striking goats with brooms and poles and shearing the animals so roughly that some were left wounded and bleeding.
"Behind every mohair sweater is a terrified goat who was pinned to the floor and sliced to ribbons for their coat," says PETA President Tracy Reiman. "PETA is calling on retailers everywhere to follow the compassionate lead of Macy's Inc. and TJX and ban mohair."
PETA notes that mother goats form strong bonds with their babies and that both mother and baby recognise each other's distinct calls--or "bleats"--shortly after birth. In the mohair industry, goat kids are shorn starting as early as four months old. PETA's undercover investigation documented goat kids screaming in pain and fear as they were shorn for the first time. As soon as their hair quality declines or they're deemed no longer useful, their throats are cut and the goats are killed--well short of their natural 10-year life expectancy.
Macy's Inc. and TJX join a growing number of companies and brands--including Zara, Gap, Banana Republic, ASOS, UNIQLO, Ralph Lauren, and Express--that have banned mohair after hearing from PETA. PETA is calling on H&M to follow suit and reinstate the mohair ban it abandoned in 2020--despite previously professing to ban it "permanently."
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PETA--whose motto reads, in part, that "animals are not ours to wear"--points out that Every Animal Is Someone and offers free Empathy Kits for people who need a lesson in kindness. For more information, please visit PETA.org or follow PETA on X, Facebook, or Instagram.
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Original text here: https://www.peta.org/media/news-releases/victory-for-goats-macys-bloomingdales-and-tjx-ditch-mohair-after-peta-push/
[Category: Animals]
Nearly 600 Patients Served During Two-Day Medical Mission in Bacolod
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, April 25 -- The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints issued the following news release:
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Nearly 600 Patients Served During Two-Day Medical Mission in Bacolod
A two-day screening mission covering eye conditions, cleft lip and palate, clubfoot, and limb loss brought free medical services to hundreds of Bacolod City residents, with surgical follow-through scheduled for May.
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Hundreds of residents from Bacolod City and surrounding communities received free medical screenings during a two-day humanitarian mission organized by the Mabuhay Deseret Foundation, a
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SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, April 25 -- The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints issued the following news release:
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Nearly 600 Patients Served During Two-Day Medical Mission in Bacolod
A two-day screening mission covering eye conditions, cleft lip and palate, clubfoot, and limb loss brought free medical services to hundreds of Bacolod City residents, with surgical follow-through scheduled for May.
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Hundreds of residents from Bacolod City and surrounding communities received free medical screenings during a two-day humanitarian mission organized by the Mabuhay Deseret Foundation, anon-government organization dedicated to humanitarian and medical service. The mission, held on April 22 and 23, 2026, served nearly 600 patients across two locations and marked the first phase of a larger two-part program that will culminate in a surgical mission next month.
The event was held during the ongoing public open house of the Bacolod Philippines Temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, drawing attention to the Church's presence in the region and its long-standing commitment to community service regardless of faith or background.
Screenings Across Four Medical Conditions
The mission screened patients for four categories of medical need: eye conditions, cleft lip and palate, clubfoot and limb loss. Patients who qualify based on their screening results may receive free reading or prescription eyeglasses, cataract surgery, corrective surgery for cleft conditions, prosthetic limbs or treatment for clubfoot, at no cost to them or their families.
The mission was conducted across two venues. The first day was held at the Church meetinghouse in Talisay City on April 22, and the second at the Galo Meetinghouse in Bacolod City on April 23.
Janis Redulla, Visayas screener for the Mabuhay Deseret Foundation, led the mission's medical operations. Martha Grace Trias, a humanitarian senior service missionary, coordinated logistics and operations across the three participating stakes: the Bacolod Stake, Bacolod North Stake and Bacolod South Stake. Optometrist Dr. Anita Villarta provided clinical expertise for the eye screening component.
Stake Presidents Joaquin Montero, Marc Barredo and Antonio Jayme were present throughout the mission, joined by Elder and Sister Ashby of the Philippines Bacolod Mission, as well as member volunteers and clinical professionals who gave their time and skills to serve the community. Representatives from the Bacolod City Department of Social Welfare and Development also assisted during the screenings, reflecting the collaborative spirit that made the mission possible.
A Surgical Phase to Follow
The second phase of the mission, a dedicated surgical mission, is scheduled to begin on May 25, 2026. In partnership with the Corazon Locsin Montelibano Memorial Regional Hospital, cataract patients who were identified during the April screenings will receive surgical care at the regional hospital. Post-operative medicines will be provided by the Mabuhay Deseret Foundation, ensuring that patients receive not only the procedure but the support they need in the days that follow.
Service That Reflects a Larger Mission
The timing of the medical mission, held during the historic Bacolod Philippines Temple open house, gave the work an added dimension. Many of the patients and their families were able to visit the temple open house, which runs from April 16 to May 2, 2026, offering an opportunity to learn about the Church of Jesus Christ and the values that motivate its members' service efforts. Friends of other faiths who came for a medical screening left with more than a referral card.
"This is what we are here to do," said one of the volunteers. "To serve and to let people feel that they are not forgotten."
For the nearly 600 individuals who passed through the screening queues across two days, that message came through clearly. Many had traveled from neighboring communities, bringing elderly parents or young children whose conditions had gone unaddressed for years due to the cost of medical care. For them, the mission was not simply a health program. It was, in the words of those who organized it, a reason to hope.
The Mabuhay Deseret Foundation continues to conduct medical screening and surgical missions across the Visayas region in collaboration with local government agencies, health professionals and member volunteers of the Church of Jesus Christ.
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Editor's Note: The Bacolod Philippines Temple public open house runs from April 16 to May 2, 2026, excluding Sundays. Admission is free and open to people of all faiths. The Mabuhay Deseret Foundation is a non-government organization, providing humanitarian and medical services to communities across the Philippines.
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Original text here: https://news-ph.churchofjesuschrist.org/article/nearly-600-patients-served-as-mabuhay-deseret-foundation-holds-medical-mission-in-bacolod-during-temple-open-house
[Category: Religion]
Indiana Workers' Compensation Conference to Feature the Latest Updates
INDIANAPOLIS, Indiana, April 25 -- The Indiana Chamber of Commerce issued the following news release:
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Indiana Workers' Compensation Conference to Feature the Latest Updates
Understanding and complying with workers' compensation laws is imperative for businesses to keep employees safe and improve workers' comp programs. An upcoming Indiana Chamber of Commerce event, the 2026 Indiana Workers' Compensation Conference, will help companies navigate claims and audit their current program.
The conference - presented by attorneys at Kightlinger & Gray LLP - takes place May 5 at the Ritz Charles
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INDIANAPOLIS, Indiana, April 25 -- The Indiana Chamber of Commerce issued the following news release:
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Indiana Workers' Compensation Conference to Feature the Latest Updates
Understanding and complying with workers' compensation laws is imperative for businesses to keep employees safe and improve workers' comp programs. An upcoming Indiana Chamber of Commerce event, the 2026 Indiana Workers' Compensation Conference, will help companies navigate claims and audit their current program.
The conference - presented by attorneys at Kightlinger & Gray LLP - takes place May 5 at the Ritz Charlesin Carmel, with a virtual attendance option available. Sessions include navigating real-life fact patterns in workers' compensation; prevention of hand, wrist and arm injuries; an employment law lightning round; overview of mental health injuries; and demystifying the Indiana Independent Medical Examination (IME) process.
"Between medical expenses, wages and the challenges of reduced productivity, the average cost of a work-related injury is roughly $40,000," says Jennifer George, Indiana Chamber vice president of business education and events. "Employers that prioritize safety are not only doing the right thing ethically, but they can also help their business' bottom line."
Additional topics will include best practices, real-life scenarios that occur during an employee's workers' compensation claim (and how to address them in accordance with the Indiana Workers' Compensation Act) as well as the complexities of upper-extremity injuries including causation, prevention and treatment.
Registration costs $449 for Indiana Chamber members or $549 for non-members. Companies sending two or more attendees can receive a 20% discount at checkout by using the promo code GROUP20.
The HR Series sponsor is the Institute for Workforce Excellence. Genesis Comp Concussion is the gold sponsor. Silver sponsors are Charles Taylor, Direct PT/DX, Hanger Clinic, OrthoIndy, Pressio Medical and WellNow Urgent Care.
View the agenda or register to attend in person or virtually at www.indianachamber.com/conferences.
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The Indiana Chamber partners with 25,000 members and investors - representing over four million Hoosiers - to achieve the mission of "cultivating a world-class environment which provides economic opportunity and prosperity."
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Original text here: https://www.indianachamber.com/indiana-workers-compensation-conference-to-feature-the-latest-updates/
[Category: Business]
Environmental Defense Fund: North Carolina Utilities Commission Order Delaying Low-cost Solar is 'Insult to Injury' as Customer Bills Soar and Duke Energy Rate Hikes Loom
NEW YORK, April 25 -- The Environmental Defense Fund posted the following news release on April 24, 2026:
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NC Utilities Commission order delaying low-cost solar is 'insult to injury' as customer bills soar and Duke Energy rate hikes loom
RALEIGH, N.C. -- On April 23, the North Carolina Utilities Commission issued an order delaying the 2026 solar and solar-plus-storage procurement process until after they issue an order on the 2026 Carbon Plan/Integrated Resources Plan, which should occur by end of year.
"More than ever, North Carolina households need cheap power, and competitively procured
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NEW YORK, April 25 -- The Environmental Defense Fund posted the following news release on April 24, 2026:
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NC Utilities Commission order delaying low-cost solar is 'insult to injury' as customer bills soar and Duke Energy rate hikes loom
RALEIGH, N.C. -- On April 23, the North Carolina Utilities Commission issued an order delaying the 2026 solar and solar-plus-storage procurement process until after they issue an order on the 2026 Carbon Plan/Integrated Resources Plan, which should occur by end of year.
"More than ever, North Carolina households need cheap power, and competitively procuredutility-scale solar is the cheapest and fastest way to bring new electricity online," said Will Scott, North Carolina Policy Director at Environmental Defense Fund. "Delaying new solar procurements will only hurt households and the businesses that rely on North Carolina's pro-business environment when making investments in the state."
Analysis of Duke Energy filings shows that over the last four years, competitively procured clean energy has been 30% cheaper than energy from natural gas on average in North Carolina.
Graph showing that, since 2021, electricity from clean energy has cost $13.76/MWh, or 29.7%, less on average than electricity from natural gas. Competitively procured clean energy costs are highly stable with an average annual change of $0.37/MWh, while natural gas costs have changed by an annual average of $5.37/MWh during the four-year period.
Since 2021, electricity from clean energy has cost $13.76/MWh, or 29.7%, less on average than electricity from natural gas. Competitively procured clean energy costs are highly stable with an average annual change of $0.37/MWh, while natural gas costs have changed by an annual average of $5.37/MWh during the four-year period.
Reducing dependence on gas is critical for stabilizing bills, especially as the U.S. Energy Information Administration projects natural gas prices are on track to climb. Analysts project that prices in 2026 will average 16% higher than in 2025, primarily due to gas exports.
And Duke Energy's continued reliance on natural gas is a big part of the problem. Analysis shows that natural gas price spikes are responsible for up to 67% of recent customer rate hikes. Yet Duke is doubling down on gas plants, tethering households to a fuel that is price-volatile, increasingly expensive and entirely outside customers' control.
"We agree that Duke Energy cannot unilaterally decrease solar procurement targets ordered by the Commission," Scott added. "But at a time of rising bills, North Carolina needs to maximize, not delay, affordable energy solutions like solar and batteries."
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With more than 3 million members, Environmental Defense Fund creates transformational solutions to the most serious environmental problems. To do so, EDF links science, economics, law, and innovative private-sector partnerships to turn solutions into action. edf.org
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Original text here: https://www.edf.org/media/nc-utilities-commission-order-delaying-low-cost-solar-insult-injury-customer-bills-soar-and
[Category: Environment]
Americans for Tax Reform: Colorado's Proposed 5% Tax on Video Game Purchases: Taxing Fun Is Apparently How We Fix Mental Health
WASHINGTON, April 25 -- Americans for Tax Reform posted the following commentary by Blake Reed:
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Colorado's Proposed 5% Tax on Video Game Purchases: Taxing Fun Is Apparently How We Fix Mental Health
Colorado lawmakers have come up with what they surely consider a clever idea: addressing youth mental health by making the things kids actually enjoy a little more expensive. House Bill 26-1418, the "Online Add-on Transaction Fee Youth Service Enterprise" bill, would slap a 5% fee on microtransactions in online games -- those irresistible skins, battle passes, loot boxes, and virtual currency
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WASHINGTON, April 25 -- Americans for Tax Reform posted the following commentary by Blake Reed:
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Colorado's Proposed 5% Tax on Video Game Purchases: Taxing Fun Is Apparently How We Fix Mental Health
Colorado lawmakers have come up with what they surely consider a clever idea: addressing youth mental health by making the things kids actually enjoy a little more expensive. House Bill 26-1418, the "Online Add-on Transaction Fee Youth Service Enterprise" bill, would slap a 5% fee on microtransactions in online games -- those irresistible skins, battle passes, loot boxes, and virtual currencypurchases that millions of Colorado kids make every week.
The money would feed a brand-new bureaucratic creation inside the state's Behavioral Health Administration (BHA), funding peer navigators, crisis teams, and expanded mental health services. Proponents frame it as a painless, targeted way to raise tens of millions without touching broad-based taxes. After all, who could possibly object to taxing digital swords and emotes to help kids feel better?
Youth mental health struggles are fueled in no small part by excessive screen time, addictive game design, and the very platforms this bill targets. So the solution is to tax the addictive activity itself and call it compassion. It's the governmental equivalent of handing someone a pack of cigarettes and then charging them extra to fund their future rehab.
What starts as a modest 5% "add-on transaction fee" carries a convenient escape hatch: beginning in late 2027, the new enterprise can adjust the rate upward as needed. Today it's just a friendly contribution to mental wellness. Tomorrow, when the bureaucracy needs more funding, that in-game cosmetic might cost a bit more than parents expected. And naturally, compliance costs for platforms will find their way into higher prices overall, because businesses rarely eat new government mandates for free.
Colorado families are already dealing with high housing costs, rising taxes, and everyday inflation. Now they'll get to explain to their kids why that $10 in microtransactions suddenly feels like $10.50 -- all so the state can claim it's doing something about the very problems screen-heavy lifestyles help create. It's classic government creativity: identify a popular activity, declare it problematic, then tax it to fund programs that rarely solve the underlying issues.
Lawmakers should ask themselves a simpler question. If the goal is genuinely better mental health for young people, is a new selective tax on digital entertainment the smartest tool available? Or is it just another easy revenue grab dressed up in therapeutic language?
HB26-1418 is still moving through the legislative process. As it does, Coloradans might want to consider whether turning pixels into a piggy bank truly serves kids -- or simply shifts more burden onto the families raising them. Because in the end, taxing fun will not make anyone happier!
To read the full text of House Bill 26-1418, click here (https://leg.colorado.gov/bills/HB26-1418).
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Original text here: https://atr.org/colorados-proposed-5-tax-on-video-game-purchases-taxing-fun-is-apparently-how-we-fix-mental-health/
[Category: Political]
40 Senators Support Seniors by Signing Letter Encouraging Doubling of Funding for the Older Americans Act in FY2027
ARLINGTON, Virginia, April 25 -- Meals On Wheels America issued the following news on April 24, 2026:
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40 Senators Support Seniors by Signing Letter Encouraging Doubling of Funding for the Older Americans Act in FY2027
Meals on Wheels America President and CEO Ellie Hollander today issued the following statement in response to a Dear Colleague letter championed by Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) urging the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services and Education to increase funding for the Older Americans Act in FY27:
Meals on Wheels America commends the 40 senators
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ARLINGTON, Virginia, April 25 -- Meals On Wheels America issued the following news on April 24, 2026:
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40 Senators Support Seniors by Signing Letter Encouraging Doubling of Funding for the Older Americans Act in FY2027
Meals on Wheels America President and CEO Ellie Hollander today issued the following statement in response to a Dear Colleague letter championed by Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) urging the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services and Education to increase funding for the Older Americans Act in FY27:
Meals on Wheels America commends the 40 senatorswho sent a letter to the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services and Education leadership urging that programs authorized under the Older Americans Act (OAA) receive $4.7 billion in federal funding in Fiscal Year 2027 (FY27). This letter, led by Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT), Ranking Member of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP), encourages Senate leadership to acknowledge the significant need among vulnerable seniors, which current funding levels fail to meet, and act accordingly to bolster senior health and nutrition services. For more than six decades, the OAA has served as the only national framework that comprehensively addresses the social services needs of older adults in the community, enabling them to age with health and dignity. We thank our Senate champions for signing this letter and calling for increased investment in the life-saving programs funded through this critical legislation.
In FY26, vulnerable seniors were sidelined yet again, with OAA Nutrition Program funding remaining flat at $1.059 billion -- falling far short of what's required to meet the real need among our aging neighbors. With an estimated 2.5 million low-income, food insecure older adults not receiving senior nutrition services, current funding levels would have to more than double to reach all in need. As the senior population grows and costs continue to rise, flat funding represents a cut due to reduced spending power, and these ongoing funding shortfalls only exacerbate the spiraling problem of unmet need.
The requested funding proposed in this letter would bolster programs funded under the OAA, allowing senior-focused programs like Meals on Wheels to effectively meet the ever-increasing demand seen in communities across the country. Most Meals on Wheels providers rely on federal funding, and for more than 60% of providers, that funding represents half or more of their total budget. Without the necessary federal funding, providers are forced to bridge the ever-growing gap in other ways, such as reducing services, adding seniors to a waitlist or turning some seniors facing hunger and isolation away altogether.
We are appreciative of the senators' acknowledgment of the critical need for these services, especially as demand continues to skyrocket. Meals on Wheels America is committed to working with Congress throughout the remainder of the FY27 appropriations process and beyond to secure the funding necessary to strengthen all programs under the OAA and ensure that all older Americans are able to lead nourished, healthy, connected and independent lives.
With FY27 appropriations negotiations underway, it is imperative that the administration and Congress prioritize the significant unmet needs of America's growing senior population and End the Wait(R) for Meals on Wheels services. To learn more about what Meals on Wheels America is urging Congress to do during FY27 appropriations -- and to fight for the seniors in your community -- head to https://www.mealsonwheelsamerica.org/email-congress.
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ABOUT MEALS ON WHEELS AMERICA Meals on Wheels America is the leadership organization supporting the more than 5,000 community-based programs across the country that are dedicated to addressing senior hunger and isolation. Powered by a trusted volunteer workforce, this network delivers a comprehensive solution that begins with a meal and is proven to enable independence and well-being through the additional benefits of tailored nutrition, social connection, safety and much more. By providing funding, programming, education, research and advocacy, Meals on Wheels America empowers its local member programs to strengthen their communities, one senior at a time. For more information, or to find a Meals on Wheels provider near you, visit www.mealsonwheelsamerica.org.
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INFODOC: https://www.mealsonwheelsamerica.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/FINALIZED_FY27-OAA-DCL.pdf
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Original text here: https://www.mealsonwheelsamerica.org/news/40-senators-support-seniors-by-signing-letter-encouraging-doubling-of-funding-for-the-older-americans-act-in-fy2027/
[Category: Sociological]