The following video is from the 2017 Congressional Black Caucus Foundation Annual Legislative Conference.
I used to go but it gets tiresome after a while when being constantly snubbed.
The term "Braintrust" was originally created as the Judiciary Braintrust, so it seems, oddly enough, that it was highjacked, in a tale I shall tell at a later time.
This "Braintrust" was spearheaded by Sheila Jackson Lee, who has quite the surreptitious background in dealing with child welfare fraud, which I tell at a later time, because I wish to savor the moment, very slowly, when I do tell the tale.
The focus of the "Braintrust" was about privatization of child welfare, where one of the speakers was from MENTOR, which is under investigation.
So, in essence, this Braintrust is allowing leaders of child welfare organizations that are currently being investigated for trafficking tiny humans, which includes multiple forms of frauds, to promulgate national child welfare policy, by promoting the failed model of the residual of the peculiar institution, for the sole purposes of making more money for stealin'.
CIVITAS Solutions: Human Trafficking Listed On NYSE
An Examination of Foster Care in the United States and the Use of Privatization by Beverly Tran on Scribd
These advocates for privatization, doing the bidding of their task masters, are regurgitating corrupt data, based upon a two year reporting delay, that is so incomplete, it does not include the trafficking of children.
These speakers have no qualms, whatsoever, in announcing that they are in Public Private Partnerships with their NGOs.
Theses brown paper bag test social policy platforms only further the reinforce the iron curtain of the fraudulent privatization of the child welfare system.
They never even whispered the words"
- child trafficking;
- fraud;
- rape;
- lab rats;
- campaign finance;
- pedophilia;
- poverty policies.
There are more than 3,000,000 children and youth in the U.S. child welfare system, that are reported.
The numbers of missing children should be twice that amount because selling chattel is the oldest form of survival, and there are no reliable data on alien immigrant children being trafficked, which is now through privatization.
Slavery never ended.
It was just renamed child welfare.
The Second Chance Reauthorization Act is nothing more than another Public Private Partnership complex financial fraud scam of more need for out-dated research, using broken down, raggedy-ass, exclusively marginalized, targeted population, qualitative variables, for the purposes of pumping more money into NGOs that will continue to keep these child welfare policy experts, "Dumb, Fat & Happy" so Sheila, and her rogue ass crew can maintain their freedom, for just a little bit longer.
"Fat, Dumb & Happy" and have no clue as to what the Emoluments Clause means to them.
Learn more: BEVERLY TRAN: "The Fat, Dumb & Happy Network": When Ghetto-Fab Goes Horribly Wrong In Unions http://beverlytran.blogspot.com/2018/03/the-fat-dumb-happy-network-when-ghetto.html#ixzz5JwyYNjMp
Stop Medicaid Fraud in Child Welfare
Increase Funding for the Second Chance Act (SCA)
Urge your Members of Congress, especially those serving on the House and Senate Appropriations Committees, to support increased funding for Second Chance Act programs in the annual appropriations process. The bipartisan Second Chance Act provides resources to states, local governments and nonprofit organizations to improve outcomes for people returning to communities from prisons, jails and juvenile facilities.
BACKGROUND:
Enacted in 2008, the Second Chance Act (P.L. 110-199) authorizes federal grants that assist states, counties and nonprofit organizations in developing and implementing programs to help formerly incarcerated individuals successfully reintegrate into the community after their release from correctional facilities. Administered through the Office of Justice Programs at the U.S. Department of Justice, Second Chance Act programs have helped numerous counties provide reentry services – like employment assistance, substance abuse and mental health treatment, housing, family-center programming and mentoring – to adults and juveniles returning to the community from prisons or jails.
Since its establishment in 2008, the Second Chance Act has funded more than 600 grants to state and local governments and nonprofit organizations, and more than a third of these grants have been awarded to counties. These investments in reentry programs have proven effective in helping individuals successfully reintegrate into their communities. Successful reintegration results in lower rates of recidivism, which improves public safety and provides significant savings to counties, who collectively spend $70 billion each year on criminal justice.
As Congress considers funding for a variety of federal programs and thousands of formerly incarcerated individuals return to their communities, the Second Chance Act should be prioritized in the annual appropriations process. Currently, the program is funded at $68 million under FY 2017 appropriations.
NACo supports an increase in funding for this pivotal program to at least the FY 2010 enacted level of $100 million in future annual appropriations processes. NACo members are encouraged to contact their members of Congress, and especially those on the House and Senate Appropriations Committees, to support this level of funding for the program in the FY 2018 appropriations process.
KEY TALKING POINTS:
- Counties spend more than $70 billion each year on criminal justice and more than $69 billion on health and human services.
- According to the U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, there are more than 11 million individuals admitted to jails each year. Of that number, only about four percent of jail admissions result in prison sentences – in other words, 96 percent of jail detainees and inmates return directly to the community from jail.
- The Second Chance Act improves the coordination of reentry services and policies at the state, local and tribal levels, and provides financial assistance for local programs that provide employment training, mentoring, substance abuse and mental health treatment and other family-centered services to formerly incarcerated individuals.
- Since 2009, more than one out of three Second Chance Act awards has gone to county governments. Of the nearly $300 million that has been awarded to state, local, tribal and nonprofit reentry programs under the Second Chance Act, $95 million has gone directly to county governments.
- The Second Chance Act is currently authorized and funded at $68 million under FY 2017 appropriations. Funding for the program should be increased to the FY 2010 level of $100 million in future appropriations bills.
Second Chance Reauthorization Act of 2017 by Beverly Tran on Scribd
Sheila was mean to my Sweetie. That is not a good thing, at all.
Office of Congressional Ethics Investigation of Representative Sheila Jackson Lee Review No 15-7713 Referra... by Beverly Tran on Scribd
Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©
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