[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 68 (Wednesday, May 15, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H2609-H2610]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE PARTNERSHIPS FOR ACHIEVING STUDENT SUCCESS ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Chu) for 5 minutes.
Ms. CHU. Last month, Galway Central School District in New York
considered outsourcing the roles of their school psychologist and
social worker. After all, budgets are tight, and what harm could come
from this?
Andrew Huzsar, the district psychologist, and Christine Bornt, the
school social worker, had already faced an uphill battle helping their
students. Although the district has only 900 children in attendance,
Galway is geographically one of the largest school districts in New
York State. And as the only school psychologist and social worker,
Andrew and Christine struggled to meet the needs of their students,
facing more than double the recommended ratio of students to mental
health professionals across the district.
An onslaught of letters and testimony soon flooded the Board of
Education, as students, parents, and teachers, alike, protested on
Andrew and Christine's behalf. The board soon relented to the public
outrage, perhaps thanks to a very moving letter of support that Andrew
received. This letter was from a young student explaining that he would
not be alive today if it had not been for Andrew intervening in his
life. This student was not someone Andrew saw regularly. They met only
three times the previous school year.
Mental health counseling is a critical component for student success.
Just three meetings were enough to save this student's life.
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As a clinical psychologist, I know that there is no budget cut more
shortsighted than one that stands between mental health resources and
those who desperately need them. For a student, that access may be the
difference between a productive day in class and an act of aggression
against themselves or their peers. In the case of Andrew and that
student, it made the difference between life and death.
That's why last week I introduced the Partnerships for Achieving
Student Success, or PASS, Act. It does more than ever before to help
our Nation's neediest schools ensure that our children have access to
the appropriate mental health and student service professionals on
campus. It creates a Federal grant program to help low-income school
districts recruit, employ, and retain school counselors, school social
workers, school psychologists, and other psychologists qualified to
work in K-12 schools.
Galway School District ultimately kept their mental health
professionals, but not every school district has the capacity to do so.
By expanding the number of school mental health professionals in low-
income, high-need schools, we can effect positive change in the lives
of students who need it most. That's why the PASS Act already has the
support of the American Psychological Association, National Association
of School Psychologists, American School Counselor Association, and the
School Social Work Association of America.
And it is why I take to the floor today to encourage my colleagues to
support this bill and improve the academic and life success for
students across this country. Together, we can make sure that the
Andrews of this world are there when their students need them.
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