MediaAppleseed in the News
Appleseed in the News

Kansas Rejects Politicizing Supreme Court Nominations
Kansas 2/24/2006
Kansans For Simple Justice, a nonpartisan coalition that includes the Kansas League of Women Voters, the Kansas Bar Association, the Kansas Appleseed Foundation and others, led the effort to block the tampering. The coalition believes that returning to the politically manipulated system that existed before 1958 would be a disaster. They argued, in short, "if it ain't broke, don't fix it."
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Law firm DLA Piper lawyer receives Florida pro bono service award
District of Columbia 2/22/2006
Richardson has been active in several pro bono causes throughout his career. He made significant contributions to the study and report produced by DLA Piper and the D.C. Appleseed Foundation that aimed to reduce the number and costs of disputes between parents and special education students and the District of Columbia Public Schools, so that funds could be redirected to classroom services. For more than two years, on a pro bono basis, he worked to help a D.C, couple obtain guardianship of their three nieces, who had been abused by their mother.
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Women's Commission awards luncheon March 10
Nebraska 2/15/2006
The Lincoln-Lancaster County Women’s Commission is hosting an awards luncheon in recognition of the 30th anniversary of International Women’s Day. Milo Mumgaard, executive director for the Nebraska Appleseed Center for Law in the Public Interest (Erasmus Correll Award);
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New Partnerships Created To Assist Hurricane Victims;
National Appleseed 2/13/2006
A lend-a-lawyer program unveiled by Texas Appleseed and the Texas Equal Access to Justice Foundation (TEAJF) in January will help legal aid programs provide those services to hurricane victims. A new fellow at Texas Appleseed will be responsible for coordinating the lend-a-lawyer program.
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Council approves LES rate hike, increase in fees
Nebraska 2/6/2006
Despite pleas from human services agencies and others not to burden the poor with late charges and other fees, the Lincoln City Council on Monday passed a rate package to help the Lincoln Electric System pay for more than $9 million in unexpected power costs
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Cycle Of Poverty
Nebraska 2/5/2006
People wonder if Nebraska welfare system is self-defeating
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Bill would reverse child care cuts
Nebraska 2/5/2006
When Nebraska's tax receipts declined at the beginning of the decade, families that relied on state help to pay for child care took a hit. Now that tax revenue has turned around, State Sen. DiAnna Schimek of Lincoln is pushing a bill that would reverse the cuts in child care subsidies made through a budget veto in 2002. Other parents have turned down pay raises and promotions that would put them over the 120 percent mark, said Becky Gould of the Nebraska Appleseed Center for Law in the Public Interest.
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Lawmakers target 'family cap' Eliminating the welfare provision is one of two proposals being considered to restore aid to low-income Nebraskans.
Nebraska 2/5/2006
State Sen. John Synowiecki of Omaha has 760 arguments against a state policy capping benefits for families that have more children after going on welfare. That's the number of children who would be directly helped, he says, by his proposal to eliminate the state's 12-year-old "family cap" policy. Still, the possibility that economic pressure could encourage abortion was one reason, Synowiecki said, that he agreed to introduce the bill when the Nebraska Appleseed Center for Law in the Public Interest proposed it to him.
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Rally urges changes in immigration laws Fighting restrictive proposals now in Congress will be a "long haul," an advocate says.
Nebraska 2/4/2006
A candlelit march kicked off an Omaha rally in which about 200 people were urged Thursday night to work for legal changes favorable to immigrants. "It's going to be a long haul," Gerschutz said at the event, which was co-sponsored by Nebraska Appleseed, a Lincolnbased group that focuses on public policy related to low-income self-sufficiency.
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Medicaid reforms taking shape amid criticism
National Appleseed 2/3/2006
Governor Mark Sanford says change is on the way for those on Medicaid. But there are more questions about efforts to reform the program and cut state spending. Sue Berkowitz of the Appleseed Legal Center says, "By just making changes to the Medicaid program, that's not going to solve the other problems we have with 850,000 people who can't access affordable health care."
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