Richard Wexler

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Richard Wexler is a noted child welfare advocate and executive director of the ,(NCCPR),[1][2][3][4] an organization seeking major change in America's child protection systems, favoring family preservation, opposing excessive and inappropriate interventions, critical of inadequate or inappropriate foster care and adoptions.[1][2][3] In Congressional testimony, Wexler has described the group as "a nonpartisan, nonprofit child advocacy organization."[1][5][6]

Politics[]

Though often critical of liberal policies in the child-protection industry, Wexler, in Congressional testimony, identified himself as a "liberal," noting the irony of his positions, which frequently put him at odds with liberals supporting, or working in, an interventionist child protection system. To establish his liberal credentials before endorsing a plan from the Bush administration, he testified in 2006:

I am a lifelong liberal Democrat, noncountercultural‑McGovernick, lapsed‑card‑carrying member of the ACLU. My [NCCJ] board members include a former director of Housing and Homelessness for the Child Welfare League of America and a former legal director of the Children's Defense Fund.[6]

Government testimony and evidence[]

Addressing child welfare issues since at least the early 1990s,[2][7][8] Wexler has testified repeatedly before Congress and state legislatures, advised the United States Senate Health Subcommittee on Children and Families, and submitted other testimony and evidence to Congress and state legislatures.[1][5][6][8]

Media background and coverage[]

Wexler's interest in the child welfare system originated in his 19-year work as a reporter for newspapers, public radio and public television.[3]

Wexler's writing about the child welfare system has appeared in The New York Times,[7] The Washington Post,[9] the Los Angeles Times,[10] the Chicago Tribune, and other major newspapers.

He has been interviewed by the New York Times,[11] The Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times,[2] the Los Angeles Daily News,[12] Time, the Associated Press, USA Today, CBS 60 Minutes, National Public Radio, CNN, ABC's Good Morning America, NBC Today, CBS This Morning, ABC World News Tonight, the CBS Evening News, and other media.[1][3][10][13][14]

Wexler is the author of the book Wounded Innocents: The Real Victims of the War Against Child Abuse (Prometheus Books, 1990, ISBN 0879756020).[1][8]

Education and academic career[]

His organization's website [1], and others, report that Wexler is a former journalist who graduated from Richmond College of the City University of New York (CUNY), and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, where he was awarded the school's highest honor, a Pulitzer Traveling Fellowship. It reports he is a former Assistant Professor of Communications of the Beaver Campus of Pennsylvania State University.[3]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Richard Wexler," bio note, (NCCPR), Alexandria, Virginia, USA
  2. ^ a b c d Banks, Sandy, "Helping Children by Fixing the System," October 10, 2000, Los Angeles Times
  3. ^ a b c d e "Richard Wexler," bio note, Journalism Center on Children & Families, Philip Merrill College of Journalism, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland.
  4. ^ NCCPR’s ‘Give ’em Hell’ Approach Aimed at Problems with Michigan Reform, Youth Today
  5. ^ a b Wexler, Richard, Submission for the record of Richard Wexler, Executive Director, National Coalition for Child Protection Reform for the Hearing of the of the Committee on Ways and Means, U.S. House of Representatives, July 12, 2011, Washington, D.c.
  6. ^ a b c Review Proposals to Improve Child Protective Services: Hearing Before the Subcommittee on Human Resources, Serial 109-73, Committee on Ways and Means, U.S. House of Representatives, One Hundred Ninth Congress , Second Session, May 23, 2006
  7. ^ a b Wexler, Richard, "Don't Be Overzealous In Child-Abuse Cases," April 28, 1991, New York Times
  8. ^ a b c "Senate Report 104-117 - Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act Amendments of 1995,"[permanent dead link] Committee Reports - 104th Congress (1995-1996), Washington, D.C., June 13, 1995
  9. ^ Wexler, Richard, Sacred cows in D.C.'s child services budget, (opinion essay) Dec. 24, 2010, Washington Post
  10. ^ a b Wexler, Richard, "L.A.'s beleaguered foster care kids," (opinion essay), Sept. 16, 2009, Los Angeles Times
  11. ^ Kaufman, Leslie, "Child Welfare Tightens Law on Removal," May 15, 2008, New York Times
  12. ^ Anderson, Troy, "'Panic' in foster-care system,", Sept. 04, 2009, Los Angeles Daily News
  13. ^ Panic in foster care; Recent tragedies could make the system more dangerous for children, Los Angeles Times
  14. ^ Child Welfare Tightens Law on Removal, New York Times

External links[]

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