Champions of Change

Engage and Connect

President Obama is committed to making this the most open and participatory administration in history. That begins with taking your questions and comments, inviting you to join online events with White House officials, and giving you a way to engage with your government on the issues that matter the most.

Thumbnail from a video where a boy and a man are sitting together.

Latest News

  • The Latino Factor

    I spent Labor Day with President Obama in Detroit. As we looked ahead to his big speech tonight and discussed his plan to put all Americans back to work, he said to me:

     “Hilda... as tough as things have been on Latino workers, I know our economic future depends upon them.”

    I couldn’t agree more. Over the next four decades, Latinos are projected to account for more than two-thirds of this country’s population growth. Yet the current Latino unemployment rate remains unacceptably high at 11.3 percent. The President and I agreed that Congress must act now to help the nearly one million Latinos who’ve been looking for a job for six months or more. 

    The President’s jobs plan includes tax cuts to help a quarter million Latino-owned businesses and 25 million Latino workers. It includes skills training and summer job opportunities for Latino youth. And it extends unemployment benefits that will provide a lifeline to more than 1.1 million Latinos pounding the pavement every day looking for jobs.

  • Guest Blog: For the Win

    Second grade was all about group projects. I clearly remember coloring my portion of the Native American totem pole for one of my many second grade assignments. I was hoping that both Nathan and Nadia (fellow classmates) would be in my group. They were, by far, the most talented in the class with a crayon.  Mrs. Olson was my second grade teacher. She was truly committed to putting us together in different groups to work on class projects.  The focus was to be less on the individual and more on a democratic process.

    I was seven years old, sitting in Mrs. Olson’s classroom coloring, when the planes hit the World Trade Center on the morning of Sept. 11, 2001. I have vague recollections and blurred memories of the events of Sept. 11, although I clearly remember feeling anxious and worried. My dad is in the Naval Reserves, and I thought he would be immediately deployed. Our family talked about the events and I was comforted by the stories of heroes and strangers that offered donations and support to New York City. My sister and I decided to have a lemonade stand to raise funds to send directly to the American Red Cross. Our total sales of $125 may not have made a tremendous impact, but it provided comfort for us to realize that as elementary school students, we could still contribute to the cause. Sept. 11, although a terrible tragedy, also demonstrated the remarkable kindness that exists and prevails in our world.

    To honor the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, I am planning a service project to unite our community and honor the memory of those who gave their lives. I wanted to organize a project where people of all ages and abilities could participate. I took the initiative to plan a park clean-up and one-mile family walk entitled, Serve to Remember. I relied heavily on Mrs. Olson’s group project training:  when planning a project there is a huge benefit to working as a team. It would be easier to tackle the publicity, marketing and organizing tasks if I could collaborate with other youth and organizations. Since I am not a huge fan of the telephone, I corresponded by email. I contacted local organizations, employers, schools and government officials to invite them to collaborate on the 9/11 service project. The response has been overwhelming from the local police department, schools, businesses and nonprofit organizations who are all excited to take part in our Sept. 11 event. All it takes is one idea, emails, a few meetings and a willingness to take the initiative to unite to organize and collaborate on a project. Thank you, Mrs. Olson for the group project training.

    What will you do in tribute this 9/11? Post your “I Will” statement at the 9/11 Facebook page.

    About Jacob: Jacob Bernstein, a 17 year old from St. Louis, Mo., is a member of the Youth Advisory Council at generationOn, the youth activation division of Points of Light Institute. Jacob is also an active leader of his school’s student government and a member of the Junior Advisory Board of the Danforth Science Center.  Jacob co-founded St. Louis Volunteens, a website that provides youth with volunteer resources.  The success of the website led him to create and organize the St. Louis Youth and Family Volunteer Fair, which is in its second year.To find more information about Jake’s 9/11 service project, you can contact him on twitter: http://twitter.com/#!/stlvolunteen

    If you have a story to share on our Young Americans blog, we’d love to hear it! Please send your submission here and we’ll get back to you.

    Jacob Berstein-Young Americans

  • Patient Centered Care: Equal Health Care Rights for All Americans

    While different patients may need different treatments, rights and privileges should be equal.  This week, we’re taking big steps forward to improve the health and well-being of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) patients and their loved ones. 

    Couples take a vow to be with each other in sickness and in health, and it is unfortunate that, in the past, some same-sex partners were denied the right to visit their loved ones in times of need. Hospital visits from loved ones are key to a patient’s recovery.  And patients should be able to focus on their recovery process without worrying about whether their loved one will be admitted to their hospital room.  With this in mind, we’ve released guidance for enforcing new rules that give all patients, including those with same-sex partners, the right to choose who can visit them in the hospital. The guidance also addresses the enforcement of other rules that govern the right of patients to choose who will help make medical decisions on their behalf should they become incapacitated. This is intended to make it easier for family members, including a same-sex domestic partner, to make informed care decisions for loved ones who have become incapacitated.

  • Join USCIS for an Online Chat to Discuss Citizenship Services on Club Digital

    En español.

    Mark your calendars for tomorrow, Sept. 7 at 3 PM EST/Noon PST as Mariela Melero, Chief of the USCIS Office of Public Engagement, discusses the resources available for citizenship services and how to avoid immigration services scams in Club Digital’s online chat. 

    Tomorrow’s chat is one in a series in which Administration officials will be engaging online readers on issues from education, to citizenship services, to health care in collaboration with Club Digital, a free bilingual Internet training course for the Hispanic community launched by ImpreMedia, one of the nation’s leading Hispanic media companies.

    Ms. Melero’s bilingual chat will focus on the newly launched Citizenship toolkit, walk participants through resources available through www.uscis.gov, and answer non case specific questions about the immigration process.

  • Leveraging National Resources to Reduce Suicide in the United States

    Ed. Note: Champions of Change is a weekly initiative to highlight Americans who are making an impact in their communities and helping our country rise to meet the many challenges of the 21st century.

    NIMH

    Suicide is a major public health problem that affects every sector of society. It is the third leading cause of death for youth ages 15-24. In the United States alone, more than 30,000 suicides occur every year—roughly twice the rate of homicides. Most suicides are thought to be associated with untreated mental illness, such as major depression.

    An important goal of the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) is to prevent suicide. But it takes communities dedicated to working together to address the complex problem of suicide and to translate research into practice. One way we help to facilitate this is by leveraging the resources, knowledge and experiences of a nationwide network of partner organizations dedicated to helping those with mental disorders. These partners—more than 80 at the national level and 55 partners in every state, Washington DC, and Puerto Rico—serve as the “eyes, ears and feet” of NIMH.  About half of these partners work actively to prevent suicide in their local communities, many of which are underserved rural areas. For example, the NIMH Outreach Partner in Montana used NIMH data to educate immigrants from India about depression and suicide prevention in the aftermath of two suicides among Asian American college students. Our Missouri and South Carolina partners have developed strong partnerships with faith-based organizations to train clergy in Hispanic and African American communities to recognize the symptoms of depression and warning signs for suicide. These churches are then able to link members in crisis to mental health services.

  • Helping Young People in Times of Crisis

    Ed. Note: Champions of Change is a weekly initiative to highlight Americans who are making an impact in their communities and helping our country rise to meet the many challenges of the 21st century.

    Each one of us deserves a chance to dream for the future, no matter who we love or how we express our gender. For thousands of young people across this country, whether they are lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or questioning (LGBTQ), they find themselves in situations of isolation, high anxiety and depression with nowhere to turn. They may fear rejection from their families, or have been bullied by their peers; they may have been kicked out of their home or rejected by their religious community, or they suffer from mental illness. For too many young people, the built-in safety nets of love, acceptance and caring do not exist; but for them, there is always “Trevor.”

    The Trevor Project is the leading national organization providing crisis intervention and suicide prevention services to LGBTQ young people, ages 13-24. Offering lifesaving programs and information, Trevor works every day to help make the future better for all LGBTQ youth.

  • Watch Department of the Interior's Message for Teens: It Gets Better

    Our colleagues at the Department of the Interior were so inspired by the videos they’ve seen in support of the It Gets Better campaign, that they produced our own. The video features Secretary Salazar and includes employees from across the Department, including the National Park Service, the U.S. Geological Survey and others, sharing their experiences growing up as LGBT youth and coping with bullying, and emphasizing the ways life has dramatically improved over time. DOI is helping to remind teenagers who face bullying that they are not alone — and it WILL get better.
     
    Please watch the video here and share it with your family and friends.

  • Guest Post: For the Win

    Dylan Mahalingam headshot

    Dylan Mahalingam is a Daily Point of Light Award winner and a member of the 2011 PARADE All-America High School Service Team

    In 2006, something that I had been wanting for what felt like forever finally happened. It was the year my family got a dog. After debating several names we settled on Nestlé. I had known that there would be changes when Nestlé joined our family, but there was one change that I never anticipated.

    Before we brought Nestlé home, I read tons of books. My family wanted to know how to take care of our new (and first!) puppy. These books told us that we should assert our role as master right from the start. It made perfect sense, until Nestlé actually came home with us. I found myself attending to Nestlé's every little need. I was filling and cleaning her food bowl, making sure she had clean water and taking her out on walks. I started thinking about other relationships in my life, and realized I’m always serving someone in my life. I also realized that is true of us all. Parents serve children and children serve parents, siblings, and friends. Heads of big corporations serve employees, teachers serve students and principals serve teachers and students. Presidents serve the entire country!

    The point I am trying to make is that it does not matter what our title is, what qualifications we possess, which country we are from, or how we view ourselves in comparison to others. Our position, no matter who we are or where we live, is and will always be one of service. In fact, as we get older and gather more experience and respect our capacity to serve and help others grows.