About Terry Brooks

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So far Terry Brooks has created 169 blog entries.

We Need a Two-Generation Approach to End Poverty

Yesterday, we joined the Annie E. Casey Foundation in releasing a new KIDS COUNT® policy report Creating Opportunity for Families:  A Two-Generation Approach. The report focuses on America’s 10 million low-income families with young children living below 200 percent of the federal poverty level. The report makes the case that a child’s success is tied to the family’s stability and well-being. The impact of poverty on children’s healthy development, educational attainment, future employment prospects, and financial security has [...]

By |2014-11-13T09:46:27-05:00November 13th, 2014|Blog, Child Welfare & Safety, Economic Security, Education, Health, Kids Count|

Statement in response to the Judiciary Committee Hearing on Extending Protective Orders for Victims of Dating Violence, Sexual Assault and Stalking

Today’s Interim Joint Judiciary Committee hearing on offering protective orders to additional victims represents an important step forward in ensuring Kentucky children are in a safe environment as they grow and develop. Currently, Kentucky statute only allows protective orders for those who have been married, lived with, or had a child with the offender. This leaves many people, including many teens, without one of the most effective forms of protection from being exposed to or [...]

By |2014-11-07T12:03:06-05:00November 7th, 2014|News Room|

Congress and KCHIP

This post originally appeared as an Op-Ed in The Courier Journal. You can view it online here. As the November election nears, effective, bipartisan action in Congress can sometimes feel like a lofty and unattainable ideal. Political ads remind us several times a day of the divide amongst political parties. Yet, we have a strong example of a bipartisan policy that has been effective at delivering quality health insurance to children in the way states [...]

By |2014-10-20T10:59:42-04:00October 20th, 2014|Blog, Economic Security, Health|

Fighting Child Poverty

This post originally appeared as an Op-Ed in The Courier Journal. You can view it online here.  The Sept. 8 Time magazine cover tag line read, "The Answers Issue: Everything You Need to Know," and the contents delivered. In fact, it devoted 51 pages to answering questions that ranged from "When did yawning begin?" to "How many people are required to authorize a U.S. nuclear attack?" Time answered those and dozens of other questions with certitude. [...]

By |2014-09-30T07:44:19-04:00September 30th, 2014|Blog, Economic Security, Kids Count|

Kentucky Child Poverty May Remain High, but Policy Changes Are Boosting Health Coverage

Today, new data released by the U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey confirms that child poverty remains high in Kentucky. Because of larger sample sizes and different methodology, this data is stronger than the Current Population Survey supplemental data released on Tuesday. The American Community Survey data released today revealed that in 2013, 25.3 percent of Kentucky children lived in poverty, compared to 22.2 percent nationwide. This put Kentucky at 40th in the nation for child poverty out of all 50 states and the [...]

By |2014-09-18T13:16:38-04:00September 18th, 2014|Blog, Economic Security, Health, Kids Count|

KIDS COUNT 25 Years Ago and Today: Part 5 – The Barrier of Poverty

I have invited you to travel with me for over a month in exploring the 2014 National KIDS COUNT Data Book as it pertains to Kentucky.  We have talked about the stellar progress in health; the mixed bag of results we find in education; and, the changing dynamics of family life as seen in the “family and community” domain.  In today’s blog, we probe economic well-being which is a deep, overarching, and stubbornly persistent barrier [...]

KIDS COUNT 25 Years Ago and Today: Part 4 – The Changing Kentucky Family

Today’s television programming seemingly brims over with a million options -- reality shows, partisan cable news, and food shows (And, yes, there are thankfully fifteen ESPN channels!).  When I was growing up a million years ago, television programming was different to be sure.  Three channels.  Black and white. And the show options were “cowboys and Indians,” “Ed Sullivan” shielding America from Elvis’ dance moves and introducing us to the “lads from Liverpool,” and shows featuring [...]

KIDS COUNT 25 Years Ago and Today: Part 3 – Success in Health

As referenced in my blog two weeks ago, I am inviting you to walk through the 2014 National KIDS COUNT Data Book, that was released on July 22nd, on an arena by arena basis over the next few weeks.  The 2014 edition of “the nation’s report on kids” is especially fascinating to me as it is the silver anniversary.  This gives us the opportunity to ask, “How are Kentucky kids faring compared to a quarter century ago?”  This week the focus is on health and by any measure, Kentuckians [...]

KIDS COUNT 25 Years Ago and Today: Part 2 – A Look at Education

Comedy just may be as much about science as art.  For instance, very specific humor genre have been designed.  “Innovate Me” talks about the comedy genres of puns, tongue twisters, bumper sticker jokes, and professional jokes.  In addition, some genres carry sub-genres; as an example, the genre of good news/bad jokes has sub-genres like “pastor jokes.”  You know: Good News: The Women's Guild voted to send you a get-well card. Bad News: The vote passed by 31-30. Good News: The Elder Board accepted your job description the way [...]

By |2014-07-31T10:29:13-04:00July 31st, 2014|Blog, Education, Kids Count|

You’re Shouting So Loudly, I Can’t Hear You!

As you are discussing an issue or idea with another, have you ever felt like shouting this headline about shouting?  In today’s political environment, the litany of subjects which invariably yield to more heat than light is far too long.  We could begin the list with the Affordable Care Act, the minimum wage and right to work legislation, casinos, climate change, the list goes on for issues that seemingly induce incivility? Despite bi-partisan support for public charter schools at the national [...]

By |2014-07-29T15:36:09-04:00July 29th, 2014|Blog, Education|
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