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Clinical Nursing Simulation S.447 (Stavisky)/A.3076 (Lupardo)

New York is currently facing a nurse workforce shortage and is projected to face a nurse workforce shortage of more than 39,000 by 2030. Read More »

Protecting Access to Gender Affirming Care A.6046B (Bronson)/ S.2475B (Hoylman)

Access to gender affirming care is essential to the mental health and overall well-being of young people. This legislation will protect young people’s access to gender affirming care in New York. Read More »

Working Families Tax Credit S.277A (Gounardes)/A.4022A (Hevesi)

Working family refundable tax credits are one important means of building family economic security and independence and pulling families and children out of poverty. Read More »

2024 MOS_DentalTherapy.pdf

By licensing and providing reimbursement for dental therapy, NY can expand access to preventive dental services and address the increasing demand for dental services. Read More »

Add Dentists to DANY S.4334 (Sepulveda)/A.1454 (Aubry)

Expanding the Doctors Across New York (DANY) program to include dentists will incentivize dentists to practice in underserved areas and thereby advance DANY’s goals of ensuring patients in underserved areas have more equitable access to dental services. Read More »

Updated BCP Worksheets

Updated BCP Worksheets coming soon! Read More »

Telehealth Part OO Fact Sheet

Urgent Telehealth Fix Needed for Community Health Centers Read More »

Rate Reform Fact Sheet

Urgent Rate Reform Needed for Community Health Centers Read More »

The U.S. experiment in social medicine

This book represents the first political history of the federal government's only experiment in social medicine. Alice Sardell examines the Neighborhood, or Community Health Center Program (NHC/CHC) from its origins in 1965 as part of Lyndon Johnson's War on Poverty campaign up until 1986. Read More »

The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America

Widely heralded as a “masterful” (Washington Post) and “essential” (Slate) history of the modern American metropolis, Richard Rothstein’s The Color of Law offers “the most forceful argument ever published on how federal, state, and local governments gave rise to and reinforced neighborh Read More »