Social Responsibility Section

Section goals include the promotion of social responsibility for civil and human rights and the values of justice, peace, and the public interest within the science, profession, education, and training of psychology; the recognition of exemplary achievements of social responsibility in the field; and the maintenance within IPA of a focus and forum in which the relevance of social responsibility for all areas of psychological endeavor can be advanced.

Download the IPA’s Social Responsibilities Statement

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Letter from the Chairs

Our profession must accept the social responsibility to actively engage in advocacy for social justice in the pursuit of fostering mental health and well-being for all human beings. Psychology, as a discipline, is uniquely positioned to contribute to the dismantling of systemic inequalities that negatively impact the mental health of individuals and communities.

Our role extends beyond the confines of therapeutic sessions; we are advocates for the marginalized, catalysts for change, and champions of inclusivity. Research consistently demonstrates the profound impact of socioeconomic disparities, discrimination, and prejudice on emotional well-being. As stewards promoting the well-being of society, we must use our expertise to highlight these issues and work towards their resolution.

Advocating for social justice aligns with the ethical principles of our profession, emphasizing the importance of respect for dignity and promoting the welfare of individuals. By actively engaging in conversations, research, and interventions that address social injustices, we contribute to the broader narrative of building a psychologically healthier world.

Let us unite in our commitment to understand the complexities of the human psyche and advocate for a more just and equitable society. Through our collective efforts, we can inspire positive change, fostering mental well-being for generations.

The Illinois Psychological Association Social Responsibility Section encourages sustained and deepening “ARC”, Awareness building; Relationship equality, and Commitment to real sustained change in deconstructing systemic oppression and constructing social justice. 

What follows is our most updated listing of resources for deconstructing implicit biases and unpacking privilege to move into a stance of social responsibility. This resource guide focuses on broadening and deepening awareness of the ongoing systemic oppression affecting many groups across the country.

We recommend the 23-minute VIDEO entitled "Deconstructing White Privilege with Dr. Robin DiAngelo" where she illustrates the pillars that prop-up White Privilege and White Fragility.  This is a good summary of her best-seller, White Fragility: Why It’s So Hard for White People to Talk About Racism (2018). To us one of her important contributions is to diminish the progress-stopping power of guilt and shame in telling what the dominate White Culture did and what systems evolved.  The systems need focus and change. White people can be BOTH Proud of building a great country, government, economy, etc. AND be truthful about mistakes which still endure BUT can be corrected. Unhealthy guilt stops progress, a dose appropriate mix of pride and guilt is a great target for constructive accurate diagnosis and healing. 

“Responsible” does mean taking action for mistakes of commission and omission. Getting to Responsible rather than shame and guilt leads to action for improvement. Being responsible is a good way to live and grow in general, not just with Racism.

Dr. Robin DiAngelo has written a short update book to White Fragility in 2021, Nice Racism: How Progressive White People Perpetuate Racial Harm. This book carefully illuminates the more subtle forms of racism that other white people do not identify as explicit racism. She picks up after the quote from Martin Luther King Jr. in his 1963 Letter From a Birmingham Jail:

*NOTE the 1963 language & PLEASE DO substitute the word “equity” for the work “freedom” because some laws have changed since 1962 but not living reality.

I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro’s great stumbling block in his stride toward freedom is not the White Citizen’s Councilor or the Ku Klux Klanner, but the white moderate who is more devoted to “order” than to justice; who prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension to a positive peace which is the presence of justice; who constantly says: “I agree with you in the goal you seek but I cannot agree with your methods of direct action”; who paternalistically believes he can set the timetable for another man’s  freedom …. Shallow understanding from people of good will is more frustrating than absolute misunderstanding from people of ill will. Lukewarm acceptance is much more bewildering than outright rejection.

Several Workbooks focused on helping Privileged Americans increase their awareness of systemic racism have come to our attention.  The idea is that Systemic Racism is so pervasive that it is difficult to see until you are able to take perspective, it just seems to be the way US Culture rolls. We highlight some of those books here: 

Ijeoma Oluo’s illustrative autobiographical book, “So You Want to Talk about Race” (2019)

For me, Bruce Johnson Bonecutter, I recommend Ijeoma Oluo’s illustrative autobiographical book, “So you want to talk about race”, 2019 if you wish a well written biographical walk through key anti-racist topics. Ijeoma tells a real-life story extremely well using her experiences and considerable skill.  She is a great story-teller and this book engaged me heart, mind and soul.  Oh, she does occasionally use emotional language.  The Chapter headings are:

- Preface

     - introduction: So you want to talk about race?

     - one: Is it really about race?

     - two: What is racism?

     - three: What if I talk about race wrong?

     - four: Why am I always being told to “check my privilege”?

     - five: What is intersectionality and why do I need it?

     - six: Is police brutality really about race?

     - seven: How can I talk about affirmative action?

     - eight: What is the school to prison pipe-line?

     - nine: Why can’t I say the “N” word?

     - ten: What is cultural appropriation?

     - eleven: Why can’t I touch your hair?

     - twelve: What are micro-aggressions?

     - thirteen: Why are our students so angry?

     - fourteen: What is the model minority myth?

     - fifteen: But what if I hate Al Sharpton?

     - sixteen: I just got called a racist, what do I do now?

     - seventeen: Talking is great, but what else can I do?

- Acknowledgements

- Notes

- A Discussion Guide

Layla F. Saad's workbook "Me and White Supremacy: Combat Racism, Change the World, and Become a Good Ancestor

Also for me, Bruce Johnson Bonecutter, one difficult step in being more aware of how White Privilege and Racism permeates my mind, body, soul, and environment was to do the hard and at times hidden prejudice uncovering work of reading, journaling, discussing it with my book group Layla F. Saad's workbook (29 readings and journaling exercises), " me and white supremacy: Combat Racism, Change the World, and Become a Good Ancestor" (2020).  This Workbook is more like an exercise akin to physical fitness “boot-camp”. The Contents list may help readers take a look at this workbook for themselves and their support/book-group:

Me and White Supremacy: Combat Racism, Change the World, and Become a Good Ancestor

Contents:

FORWARD by Robin DiAngelo

PART I: Welcome to the WORK

A Little about Me

What is White Supremacy?

Who is This WORK for?

What You Will Need to Do This Work

How to Use This Book

Self-Care, Support, and Sustainability

PART II: The WORK

Week 1: The Basics

Week 2: Anti-Blackness, Racial Stereotypes, and Cultural Appropriation

Week 3: Allyship

Week 4: Power, Relationships, and Commitments

Now What? Continuing the WORK after Day 28

APPENDIX:  Working in Groups: Me and White Supremacy - Book Circles

RESOURCES

Glossary

Further Learning

NOTE: each of the "Weeks" has 7 readings and journal exercises, such as Week 1, day 3 "You and Tone Policing" or Week 2 day 9 "You and Anti-Blackness Against Black Women"; day 10 "You and Anti-Blackness Against Black Men"; day 11, "You and Anti-Blackness Against Black Children" and samples from Week 3: day 18 "You and White Saviorism", day 19, "You and Optical Allyship"; Week 4 samples: day 23 "You and White Leaders"; day 24, "You and Your Friends", day 27, "You and Losing Privilege".

Both books are challenging and may be uncomfortable for privileged, especially White privileged people to read, but the goal is step-wise awareness and the deconstructing of all forms of racism, which is so needed in achieving the dream of “liberty and justice for all”.

If a business and economic research based analysis of the need for both White and BIPOC to find a way to more fully establish equity, then Heather McGhee’s The Sum of Us: What Racism Costs Everyone and How We Can Prosper Together" is my recommendation. In addition to the YouTube Talks by/with Heather McGhee that help get our heads around the history, economics and people-stories from her structured interview-research illustrated sections in " The Sum of Us: What Racism Costs Everyone and How We Can Prosper Together" (2021) (289 pages plus lengthy documentation appendices).  There is also a very succinct and simple-not-stupid "Study Guide to "The Sum of Us" (published by "Super Summary") written by Heather McGhee (2021) - only 73 Pages.  Heather really wants people to understand what has happened and how we really can do much better! That should inspire all of us to honor the original motto of the USA: "E. Pluribus Unum" - “Out of Many People One”.

The Sum of Us Table of Contents gives you a sense of the structure: 

Introduction

Chapter   1: An Old Story: The Zero-Sum Hierarchy

Chapter   2: Racism Drained the Pool

Chapter   3: Going Without

Chapter   4: Ignoring the Canary

Chapter   5: No One fights Alone

Chapter   6: Never a Real Democracy

Chapter   7: Living Apart

Chapter   8: The Same Sky

Chapter   9: The Hidden Wound

Chapter 10: The Solidarity Dividend

Acknowledgements

Notes

List of Interviews

Index

As an additional choice, Dr. Eddie Moore, Jr., Director of the Privilege Institute and of The National White Privilege Conference, created a 21-Day Racial Equity Habit Building Challenge designed to address issues of power, privilege, supremacy, oppression and equity.  Drs. Bonecutter and Houston recommend this program for those who might prefer an online, mixed media presentation that includes podcasts and videos in addition to readings and journaling activities. Dr. Moore offers a plethora of resources, which are well organized and easily accessed by provided links to online documents and a tracking component for self-monitoring. The 21-Day Racial Equity Habit Building Challenge may be used in the 21-day format, in sections for focused exploration, or for organization/community group application. 

About the 21-Day Racial Equity Habit Building Challenge- 

For 21 days, you do one action to further your understanding of White privilege and White supremacy in ways that are adaptable to all forms of social justice.

Categories:

- Read

- Listen

- Watch

- Notice

- Connect

- Engage

- Act

- Reflect

- Stay Inspired

- Tracking Chart

*Note: each category contains numerous resources to choose from each with a summary of its contents.

Recommended Resources – includes articles, books, TED talks, films, videos, blogs, podcasts, websites, conferences and assessments (i.e. Anti-Defamation League’s Anti-Bias Behavior and Harvard University’s Project Implicit Test).

21-Day Community Adapters- examples of how communities are adapting the challenge to address their social justice needs.

For me, Holly O. Houston, Ph.D., it is vitally important that my non-BIPOC colleagues recognize the importance of an enduring effort in dismantling racism at its core - first inside of us (yes, as a woman of color, I include myself as all of us in American society have been exposed to the explicit and implicit impact of white supremacy) and then applied to practice, policy, and institutions. Too often, after the publicity and social momentum of racial equity wanes, so does individual effort. We must take advantage of the current anti-racism energy and be prepared to continue to nourish it. The aforementioned resources and the ones below provide information to facilitate and nurture the on-going, life-long process of deconstructing systemic racism and constructing racial justice. A sustained and deepening “ARC”, Awareness building; Relationship equality and Commitment to anti-racism, requires a dedication to education, deep self-reflection and integrated application. 

If hearing from an original-nation historian and immigrant historian about how the “Doctrine of Discovery” greatly increased the creating a Caste System with Europeans on top, then, since, you cannot discover lands already inhabited, injustice has plagued American society for centuries. And we cannot move toward being a more just nation without understanding the root causes that have shaped our culture and institutions. In a blend of history, theology, and cultural commentary, Mark Charles and Soong-Chan Rah reveal the far-reaching, and enduring effects of the "Unsettling Truths: The Ongoing, Dehumanizing Legacy of the Doctrine of Discovery." They highlight how in the fifteenth century, official church edicts gave Christian-European explorers the right to claim territories they "discovered." This was institutionalized as an implicit national framework that justifies American triumphalism, white supremacy, and ongoing injustices. The result is that the dominant culture idealizes a history of discovery, opportunity, expansion, and equality, while minority communities have been traumatized by colonization, slavery, segregation, and dehumanization. Healing begins when deeply entrenched beliefs are unsettled. Charles and Rah aim to recover a common memory and shared understanding of where we have been and where we are going. As other nations have instituted truth and reconciliation commissions, so do the authors call our nation and churches to a truth-telling that will expose past injustices and open the door to conciliation and true community.

The history and interconnections between the Hindu Caste System, the German Nazi Caste System and USA Race/Caste System are analyzed with lessons to learn in deconstructing Caste Systems while building equity for all in Isabel Wilkerson’s 2020 best-seller, “Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents”. The seven parts of this book are:

Part One: Toxins in the Permafrost and Heat Rising All Around (thawing out historical practices to see their ongoing effects)

Part Two: The Arbitrary Construction of Human Division

Part Three: The Eight Pillars of Caste

Part Four: The Tentacles of Caste

Part Five: The Consequences of Caste

Part Six: Backlash

Part Seven: Awakening

The Social Responsibility Section has included many books below on various topics of social justice and responsibility. Choose the one that may suit your style and fit with your established support/discussion group.  Of course, you could read and process the discussion guides to each of these books!

 

Books, Websites, and other Resources for Further Learning and Growth

Books:

 

Holiday Books for Children:

Volunteering and Resources:

  • APA’s Apology and Addressing Racism Page
    • “On October 29, 2021, the APA Council of Representatives passed three resolutions which include acknowledging and apologizing for APA’s role in promoting and perpetuating racism and racial discrimination in the U.S.; the role of psychology and APA in dismantling systemic racism in the U.S.; and advancing health equity in psychology.”

 

  • Be a Super Ally with the 5 D’s:  Empowering Children Against Hate/Bullying
    • Hollaback! has joined forces with Asian Americans Advancing Justice| AAJC and Woori Show, an online educational video series for children that celebrates the Korean-American experience, to create effective and thoughtful materials to educate young audiences about the importance of being an ally when witnessing bullying or racism.

 

  • Community Mental Health Journal
    • Community Mental Health Journal is devoted to the evaluation and improvement of public sector mental health services for people affected by severe mental disorders, serious emotional disturbances and/or addictions.

 

 

    1. First thing you must do is Calculate Your Carbon Footprint
    2. People, especially those who can afford it, can use hybrid cars
    3. Eat low on the food chain
    4. Use air conditioning and use less heat
    5. Reduce, recycle, and reuse
    6. Buy energy-efficient products
    7. Drive smart and less
    8. Take care of your car
    9. Avoid air travel as much as possible
    10. Plant a tree
    11. Grow on your own
    12. Water should be used sparingly
    13. Use less hot water
    14. Avoid products with excessive packaging 
    15. Buy green electricity
    16. More teleconference and telecommunication
    17. One can replace the light bulbs
    18. Dry the clothes by hanging them on the line
    19. People can use non-toxic household products 
    20. Often use the “off” switch
    21. Choose organic foods that are in season and go local 
    22. Don’t buy fast fashion
    23. Buy less stuff!
    24. People should learn to conserve
    25. Vote thoughtfully

 

Articles from SRS-IPA Archives 2021-2022

ARTICLES FROM SRS-IPA ARCHIVES
Article Title Article Author Date of Article Description of Article
The Gospel Belongs to the ‘Heathen,’ Not White Saviors Yanan Rahim Melo 10/12/2022 Kathryn Gin Lum’s Heathen: Religion and Race in American History evoked feelings of a past that continues to haunt me. I grew up in the “mission field” of the southern Philippines, surrounded by white Americans who dedicated their lives to missions and charity work.
Opinion: Who is at fault for America’s soaring gun violence? Experts weigh in CNN 10/13/2022 Concerns about violent crime and guns remain top of mind for American voters, polls show time and again. These issues certainly stick with Kathy Pisabaj, of Chicago, who was 19 in 2018 when she was shot by a stranger and nearly died.
It’s one of the most radical and prophetic speeches in American history. And hardly anyone knows about it John Blake, CNN 10/11/2022 When people talk today about Frederick Douglass’ speaking prowess, they often cite his defiant “What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?” address. But he gave another speech that deserves wider recognition because Douglass spoke with uncanny precision about the kind of debates we’re having now about race, immigration, and what makes America exceptional.
Can Christianity and Indigenous Worldviews Ever Be Reconciled? Patty Krawec October 2022 We all moved. We moved across oceans and land. But there is a profound difference between moving and being moved. Between being welcomed and being used.
Indigenous Peoples' Day – October 10, 2022 National Today continuously updated Indigenous Peoples’ Day is celebrated on the second Monday of October, on October 10 this year, to honor the cultures and histories of the Native American people. The day is centered around reflecting on their tribal roots and the tragic stories that hurt but strengthened their communities.
United Methodists’ Native American International Caucus Calls for End to Columbus Day Emily McFarlan Miller, RNS 10/5/2022 The Native American International Caucus, which advocates for Native Americans both inside and outside of the United Methodist Church, is calling on lawmakers to get rid of Columbus Day. To replace the federal holiday, which this year falls on Oct. 10, the caucus is asking Congress to approve several bills formalizing Indigenous Peoples Day as a legal public holiday, according to a statement from the caucus posted on it website Tuesday (Oct. 4).
Disability: Part of the Equity Equation US Department of Labor continuously updated Observed annually in October, National Disability Employment Awareness Month (NDEAM) celebrates the contributions of America’s workers with disabilities past and present and showcases supportive, inclusive employment policies and practices.
What Is Yom Kippur? Chabad-Lubavitch Media Center continuously updated Yom Kippur is the holiest day of the year, when we are closest to G‑d and to the essence of our souls. Yom Kippur means “Day of Atonement,” as the verse states, “For on this day He will forgive you, to purify you, that you be cleansed from all your sins before G‑d.”1
U.S. Congress reaches a milestone in Indigenous representation Jaclyn Diaz 9/20/2022 Rep. Mary Peltola's election to the U.S. House of Representatives made history in several ways. With her recent swearing-in, it became official for the first time in more than 230 years: A Native American, an Alaska Native and a Native Hawaiian are all members of the House — fully representing the United States' Indigenous people for the first time, according to Rep. Kaiali'i Kahele of Hawaii. Now, there are six Indigenous Americans who are representatives in the House.
About National Hispanic Heritage Month 9/15/2022 Each year, Americans observe National Hispanic Heritage Month from September 15 to October 15, by celebrating the histories, cultures and contributions of American citizens whose ancestors came from Spain, Mexico, the Caribbean and Central and South America.
What Does ‘White Christian Nationalism’ Even Mean, Anyway? Mitchell Atencio 9/8/2022 After the Jan. 6 insurrection, many wanted to understand how signs declaring “Jesus Saves” mixed with gallows and chants of “hang Mike Pence!” The answer, according to some sociologists and political analysts, was Christian nationalism.
UN Report: US fails to implement terms of treaty on eliminating racial discrimination Southern Poverty Law Center 9/9/2022 A United Nations committee that is reviewing U.S. compliance with an international treaty on racial discrimination has issued findings that should be seen as a serious rebuke and wakeup call for the Biden administration.
There are barely any Muslims on popular TV series, a new study says Anastasia Tsioulcas 9/7/2022 Muslims make up 25% of the global population and Islam is the fastest-growing religion in the world — but Muslims only comprise 1% of characters shown on popular televisions series in the U.S., the U.K., Australia and New Zealand.
Sunday Musings: A Pro-Choice God Diana Butler Bass 9/4/2022 Today’s lectionary texts include four interesting passages. Usually Sunday Musings explores only one text. But today I want to draw one theme — choice — from the four readings.
‘Rings of Power’ Is a Tolkien Tale of the Corruption of Goodness JR. Forasteros 9/2/2022 The corruption of goodness is not an unfamiliar theme in The Lord of the Rings. Young Galadriel’s plight introduces what may be the first season’s central concern: How do we recognize evil in the world?
A Summer of Climate Disasters German Lopez 9/7/2022 Heat waves in the U.S., wildfires in Europe, floods in Asia: This summer has shown how the climate crisis has made extreme weather a part of everyday life.
Online search algorithms reflect – and perpetuate – gender bias Emily Reynolds 8/25/2022 The problem of bias in artificial intelligence (AI) is of growing concern. Algorithms have, for example, wrongly classified the faces of Black women when detecting gender; wrongly predicted that a Black defendant will reoffend twice as often as wrongly predicting that a White defendant will reoffend; and shown far more men than women on Google image searches for the term “CEO”. This last study even found that biased image searches can actually shape people’s beliefs about the number of men and women who hold particular occupations.
Bringing the Culture War to the Pulpit Brian Kaylor and Beau Underwood 8/30/2022 I believe that the Bible and the Constitution do not have to contradict so long as the Constitution is seen as being breathed out of the words of the Bible by our founding fathers. And the only way that the Bible and the Constitution would ever contradict is when we interpret the Constitution through the current cultural lens of compromise, capitulation, and buckle to the sins and sexual wickedness of the people. Yes, you’ve walked into one of those churches
Enforce the Gun Laws We Already Have Kevin D. Williamson 6/6/2022 This article emphasizes the case for actually funding and enforcing the gun laws we currently have
Cook County juvenile jail is locking kids, teens in their cells for most of the day, scathing review finds Jonah Newman 8/24/2022 In a scathing report, a group of juvenile justice experts says the Cook County Juvenile Temporary Detention Center — a five-story fortress on the West Side with courtrooms and a public school that houses as many as 175 youths — should be permanently shut down and replaced with smaller, community-based facilities focused on rehabilitation.
AP-NORC poll: Most in US say they want stricter gun laws Sara Burnett 8/22/2022 Most U.S. adults want to see gun laws made stricter and think gun violence is increasing nationwide, according to a new poll that finds broad public support for a variety of gun restrictions, including many that are supported by majorities of Republicans and gun owners.
Why do right-wing NRA pro-gun 'conservatives" believe they should be able to "Open Carry" their guns in public, thus making themselves self-appointed police with authority over the rest of Americans? The way Kyle Rittenhouse did at a BLM protest? William Connell Cawthorn, Jr. 08/11/2022 Why was Kyle Rittenhouse acquitted? Because the jury ruled his actions were justifiable self-defense, based on the evidence presented and Wisconsin state law. Even one of the witnesses for the prosecution confirmed Rittenhouse’s account of the incident.
Hundreds of Jan. 6 Cases Ian Prasad Philbrick 08/21/2022 Nineteen months after the Jan. 6 attack, hundreds of criminal cases that stem from it are playing out in court. They have been getting less attention than the Justice Department’s scrutiny of Donald Trump, but my colleague Alan Feuer has spent hours and hours watching these trials. This morning, he offers you a glimpse of them.
How to talk about disability sensitively and avoid ableist tropes Shruti Rajkumar 8/8/2022 Disability can be difficult to talk about sensitively because of how embedded ableism is in our language, biases and perceptions of disability. Conversations about disability are slowly increasing, especially when it comes to ableist language and how disabled people are represented in the media.
What the Curious History of 'Judeo-Christian’ can Teach us about Defeating White Christian Nationalism Today Eboo Patel and Robert P. Jones 7/20/2022 The hearings conducted by the House Select Committee to investigate the January 6th attack on the U.S. Capitol have highlighted the powerful role that white Christian nationalism played in the attack on the Capitol. The Congressional Committee featured Trump ally Roger Stone firing up a crowd of pro-Trump protestors the day before the insurrection with this statement: “This is nothing less than an epic struggle for the future of our country. Between dark and light. Between the godly and the godless, between good and evil, and we will win this fight or America will step off into years of darkness.”
Everyday Violence German Lopez and Ashley Wu 7/8/2022 These everyday killings received far less attention than the mass murder at the parade. But they are the standard for American gun violence: More than 95 percent of gun homicides this year have been shootings with one to three victims.
7 persistent claims about abortion, fact-checked Jaclyn Diaz, Koko Nakajima, and Ben Underwood 6/24/2022 Since the Supreme Court's 1973 Roe v. Wade decision ruled that women have a constitutional right to end their pregnancies, proponents and opponents of abortion rights have worked to own the conversation over the issue.
30 Great LGBTQIA+ Books for Kids and Teens Denise Schipani 6/1/2022 There was a time when LGBTQIA+ parents and children had a hard time finding their family’s faces and feelings in the pages of children’s and young adult books. No more. Ever since Heather Has Two Mommies appeared on shelves in 1989, more books, geared to everyone from the youngest tots to questioning tweens and teens (not to mention to their parents), are filling the gap and helping families grow in understanding.
Pride Month: How It Started and How to Celebrate Mona Khalifeh 6/1/2022 Taking place every June, Pride Month celebrates the self-affirmation, dignity, equality and increased visibility of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people. The month-long celebration was given the name "Pride" to encourage those feelings as the community comes together to celebrate and bolster LGBTQ+ rights movements. As people rally together, ET has put together a guide to all things Pride, including a brief history, how to celebrate and support.
Know Your Rights - Reproductive Health Care for Youth in Illinois ACLU continuously updated If you are under 18 you have the right to make many decisions about your own reproductive health in Illinois. Find more information and resources below.
We look at why economic inequality began soaring in the U.S. four decades ago. David Leonhardt 6/5/2022 a brief and clear presentation on why working and middle-class families in the USA are so drained from increased work-hours as a result of non-livable wages in full-time work that they cannot spend energy and time with their children and community
LGBTQ+ PEOPLE & ROE V. WADE Human Rights Campaign 6/10/2022 Women, transgender men, and nonbinary people are under attack right now
HRC Explains Gender-Affirming Care Human Rights Campaign [youtube video] What is gender-affirming care? We break down what it is, what it’s not and why it’s life-saving.
The Juneteenth flag features 3 important symbols. Here's what they mean, according to the flag's creator. Marielle Descalsota 6/19/2022 The Juneteenth flag — a banner with a bursting star — is being flown across the US on June 19, a celebration to commemorate Black emancipation and the freeing of 250,000 enslaved people in Texas.
https://www.insider.com/juneteenth-flag-symbols-meaning-colors-star-outline-explained-2022-6 Hannah Bowman 6/6/2022 The shooting at a Fourth of July parade in Highland Park, Ill., as well as mass shootings earlier this summer in Buffalo, N.Y., and Uvalde, Texas, raise questions about how Christians should respond to gun violence. For many people, including Christians, the answer is legislation — the hope of getting Congress to pass laws that would restrict ownership of guns.
On gun violence, the United States is an outlier Heathline 5/31/2022 Among 64 high-income countries and territories, the United States stands out for its high levels of gun violence. The US ranks eighth out of 64 for homicides by firearm (age-adjusted).
22 Books to Read During AAPI Heritage Month, Recommended by AAPI Writers Sanibel Chai 5/11/2022 To celebrate Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, we asked AAPI writers to share the books (some of them award-winning) that have moved, inspired, and astonished them.
Poll: Black Americans fear more racist attacks after Buffalo shooting Silvia Foster-Frau 5/21/2022 Two years after George Floyd’s murder, nearly 8 in 10 Black Americans say there has been little or no improvement in how police treat Black people, according to a Washington Post-Ipsos poll
About That Bible Verse You See on Anti-Abortion Signs Katherine Pater 5/24/2022 Earlier this year, I preached on Jeremiah 1:5: “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, and before you were born I consecrated you; I appointed you a prophet to the nations.” Anti-abortion protestors, including Christians, have long offered this verse as part of their “pro-life” arguments: they tweet it, use it as a proof text, and use it to sell mugs and T-shirts.
What is and isn’t allowed by Illinois’ gun laws Patrick Smith, Courtney Kueppers 5/25/2022 Illinois has some of the strictest gun laws in the country. Buyers here are required to undergo a background check and get a permit in order to purchase firearms.
Prejudice among Trump supporters increased after he became president Emily Reynolds 4/29/2022 Whether or not Donald Trump’s presidency actively increased prejudice or simply emboldened those who already held bigoted views was frequently debated during his term. A new study looks more closely at prejudicial attitudes during the presidency, exploring the views of over 10,000 American citizens.
Not even water? And other things not to say to your Muslim friends during Ramadan Eda Uzunlar 4/28/2022 For about 2 billion Muslims around the world – a quarter of humanity – it's Ramadan, the holiest month in the Islamic calendar. There are about 3.45 million Muslims in the United States, and that number continues to climb. But if you're not Muslim, you might still not know exactly what to say (and not say) to Muslim friends, co-workers and colleagues during the month, whether they're fasting or not. Here are a few tips from Muslims across the United States collected over the course of Ramadan!
Cases of antisemitic hate reach historic levels across U.S., Illinois, new report finds Tom Schuba 4/26/2022 Cases of antisemitic hate rose to historic levels last year both in Illinois and across the country, according to an audit released Tuesday by the Anti-Defamation League.
Take Action Against Climate Change With These Tools and Resources Heather Higinbotham Davies 4/21/2022 These apps and online spaces can help you manage your eco-anxiety—and take steps to tread more lightly on the planet.
A glimpse inside mental health crisis response teams as Chicago creates versions without cops Chip Mitchell 4/6/2022 This is an article on the status of the developing teams of Paramedic-Social Worker-Police Officer that will respond to some 911/Crisis Calls. I am hopeful that these pilot studies will go well and inform how we need to adjust crisis response in a way that assists the community and the Police (and all first responders).
A Tale of Two Churches: One Fasting 'Whiteness' for Lent, the Other Making up for an Unintended KKK Connection Steve Warren Share via facebook Share via twitter Share via email 4/6/2022 Two churches are pursuing racial equality and justice in very different ways. Critics say one of the churches is woke-fasting everything white. The other is taking a proactive approach to make restitution.
How to say ‘Happy Ramadan’ in Arabic: Meaning of Ramadan Mubarak and Ramadan Kareem greetings explained David Hughes 4/2/2022 After two years in which celebrations were severely hampered by Covid-19, the more social aspects of Ramadan can return this time around. This means that communities will once more get the chance to break their fast and pray together.
Today is International Transgender Day of Visibility. Here's what you should know Sam Romano, CNN 3/31/2022 Today, transgender and nonbinary people around the world will recognize International Transgender Day of Visibility. With transgender visibility in the US at an all-time high in politics, media and sports, today is a day for allies and advocates to show up and show support. Here's what you should know.
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Women’s Issues Section

Colleagues,

You may be interested in this statement about the Science Behind Why Women May Not Report Sexual Assault, from APA Dr. President Jessica Henderson Daniel, September 24, 2018.



The mission of the Women’s Issues Section is to promote: (1) the professional interests of women psychologists in IPA, (2) the psychological happiness and well-being of female patients/clients through psychological services, and (3) the psychological happiness and well-being of women in the broader community. We support and empower women to own their own reflective minds, experience stable self-worth, and use their voices. We uphold the broad ranging inclusive ideals related to gender equality in the first, second, third, and fourth waves of feminism, and the lens of multicultural diversity of womanism.

Our mission is pursued through a variety of activities, including but not limited to:

  • Connecting women in the section and IPA, and identifying and addressing issues affecting them
  • Hosting presentations and discussions of broader women’s issues in the community
  • Offering continuing education activities on psychotherapy, psychological services, scholarship, and research
  • Working in liaison with other local and national women’s associations and organizations
  • Proactively advocating for women’s issues as they relate to psychology

Our mission is also pursued through our commitment to certain core values:

  • Inclusion and pluralism in clinical practice, psychotherapeutic orientation, ideas, perspectives, scholarship, training, and research (i.e., including non-reductionism, post-positivism)
  • Respectful, constructive, ethical, caring, relationships in clinical practice, psychotherapy, training, ongoing professional development, and professional collegial relations
  • Diversity and inclusion in race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, and gender identity

Message from the Chair 

Women need psychologists who are in the know about issues of critical importance. Economic equality, safe workplace laws, sexual safety, reproductive rights, child rearing, childcare, work/life balance, the list can go on. 

Welcome! One of the best ways to strengthen women’s voices and helping meet their needs is through joining the Women’s Issues Section of IPA.

What will your membership afford you?

  • Interviews with psychologists, policy makers, researchers and others who will help deepen our understanding of how to best serve women.  Since women birth everyone, we are helping serve everyone.
  • Community with other psychologists curious about and caring for women.
  • A forum in which to exchange valuable information: Articles, studies, chapters, TED Talks and the like.

Who Can Join? Anyone interested in furthering the interests of women, regardless of gender/gender identity are invited to join the Women’s Issues Section. Membership in IPA is required. To join, contact: Marsha Karey, IPA Executive Director at 312-372-7610 x201 or mkarey@illinoispsychology.org I look forward to getting to know you, and to all that we can accomplish together.

I hope you will join us!

Be well!

 

 

Mom’s Hierarchy of Needs by Leslie Forde

GUIDELINES FOR REPRESENTING IPA

It is both legitimate and necessary for elected officers, appointees and committee chairs of the Illinois Psychological Association and its divisions to have authority to act as representatives of IPA in their contacts with members and other psychologists, legislators and other officials, the media and the general public. It is the responsibility of the Council to ensure that such representation is accurate, appropriate, consistent with the IPA Mission and consistent with other efforts to implement the Mission. The following guidelines are intended to meet these needs.

USE OF IPA LETTERHEAD AND OTHER PRINTED MATERIALS
Since any individual using letterhead, forms or other printed materials of IPA, its committees or sections has the "apparent authority" of IPA, it becomes the responsibility of the Council to exercise careful control over production and use of official printed materials. Officers, appointees and chairs of all IPA committees, as duly appointed or elected representatives of IPA, shall have access to appropriate materials for the purpose of conducting routine business of their elected or appointed roles. These materials must be requested from the Executive Director. Officers, appointees and chairs of the IPA and its committees and sections are not authorized to develop, produce or use printed materials that are not the official IPA versions of those materials. Copies of all correspondence shall be filed in the IPA Office. Definition and delineation of "routine business" shall be the responsibility of the Council. In general, electronic communications such as website and e-mail shall be subject to the same standards as those described here.

USE OF ELECTED/APPOINTED TITLE
Identification of oneself as an officer, appointee or committee chair of IPA or one of its divisions (whether orally or in written form, on personal or official letterhead, or through electronic means [e.g., website or e-mail]) may be construed to mean that one possesses authority to speak on behalf of IPA. An individual’s authority to represent IPA officers and appointees shall not extend beyond his or her role as defined by the Council.

IN GENERAL: GOING PUBLIC
Individuals acting on behalf of IPA or its divisions must consider that his or her activities occur within the broad context of Illinois Psychology’s legislative and other advocacy efforts, in relation to which there may be critical strategic concerns. Individuals acting on behalf of IPA or its divisions should also be aware that his or her actions may have potential for conflict of interest, restraint of trade or other questions which may yield legal complications. Thus, officers, appointees, committee chairs and members are required to seek advice and consent of the Council prior to "going public" in any manner. Correspondence and announcements intended for public distribution (e.g., testimony, letters to the editor, press releases, public service announcements) shall be reviewed and cleared by the Council and/or their designee prior to release. This shall be done whether dissemination is to be in written form or in oral presentation, using electronic media or some other means.

To facilitate implementation of these guidelines, the Council has established a requirement for documentation that Association members holding key positions have been informed of the guidelines and agree to adhere to them. Please sign this statement and return a copy to our office. If you have any questions, please contact the Executive Director immediately (312-372-7610). Thank you for your cooperation.

————————————————————-

Agreement to Adhere to Guidelines for Representing IPA

My signature below confirms that I have read and agree to follow the Guidelines for Representing IPA for as long as I continue to hold a key elected or appointed position within the Association. I also understand that, when leading a group effort, I am responsible for informing committee members and/or other appropriate individuals about the guidelines.

SIGNED:

DATE:

Antitrust Issues in Psychology

Networks, Unions, and Associations

Like competitors in any other profession or industry, psychologists must understand basic antitrust principles in order to avoid unnecessary legal exposure. Antitrust awareness is particularly important for psychologists who participate in, or are interested in joining, managed care contracting networks, provider “unions,” or professional associations with their competitors. While these organizations can provide valuable benefits to their members, they also can create significant antitrust risks if operated inappropriately. This article briefly outlines potential antitrust risks in each of these organizations, and provides some basic guidelines for minimizing those risks.

Antitrust Overview
The purpose of the antitrust laws is to protect free and open competition for the benefit of consumers. Competition ensures that consumers will have access to high quality, competitively priced goods and services. In order to protect these benefits, Section 1 of the Sherman Act (the principal federal antitrust statute) prohibits all agreements that unreasonably “restrain” competition. Certain types of agreements are so inherently unreasonable that they are always condemned as “per se” illegal. These per se offenses include agreements among competitors to coordinate or “fix” their prices, to divide “markets” between themselves, and, in some situations, to refuse to deal with their customers (“group boycotts”). Two independent psychology practices must not, for example, agree on the rates they will charge for office visits, the communities or customers they will serve, or the payors with whom they will contract.

The federal antitrust agencies have actively challenged such per se illegal conduct by health care providers and other professionals. The Department of Justice (“DOJ”), for example, recently filed criminal charges against a local society of Texas optometrists who had allegedly met and agreed upon the fees that they would charge for eye examinations. The optometrists pled guilty, and agreed to pay a fine of $75,000. The Federal Trade Commission (“FTC”) similarly filed a civil action against an association of trial lawyers who had boycotted the District of Columbia court system in order to obtain an increase in the fees paid in court-appointed cases. The Supreme Court held that this group boycott was per se illegal under Section 1 of the Sherman Act.

Agreements that are not “per se” illegal may still be unlawful if, on balance, their anticompetitive effects outweigh their procompetitive benefits. This balancing test is known as the “rule of reason.” An agreement between two psychology and psychiatric groups to merge into a single practice, for example, would be analyzed under the rule of reason. If the merged practice included such a large share of the communities’ mental health professionals that it could raise prices above competitive levels, it is possible that the anticompetitive effects from this “market power” might outweigh any efficiencies from the merger. Short of full mergers, agreements to enter into joint ventures raise similar issues under the rule of reason. When mergers or joint ventures consolidate all or nearly all of the mental health professionals in a market, antitrust exposure may also result under Section 2 of the Sherman Act, which prohibits monopolization, attempted monopolization, and conspiracies to monopolize.

Certain types of activities among health care providers (and among competitors generally) are immune from antitrust liability. The Supreme Court has recognized, for example, that petitioning or lobbying the legislature and executive branch to take potentially anticompetitive actions will not generally result in antitrust exposure. Similarly, legitimate attempts to obtain relief through administrative agencies or courts are also generally protected. This protection does not apply, however, when the petitioning activity is simply a sham or when the petitioners engage in illegal activity as a means of obtaining government relief (like the lawyers who boycotted the District of Columbia to obtain higher fees).

The penalties for violating the federal antitrust laws are quite serious. Violation of the Sherman Act is a felony punishable by imprisonment for up to three years, fines of up to $350,000 for individuals, and fines of up to $10 million for corporations. The FTC and DOJ share responsibility for enforcing the federal antitrust laws. Private parties injured by antitrust violations can also file civil actions seeking treble damages and attorneys fees and costs.

Guidelines for Provider Networks
Psychologists and other health care providers can collaborate in certain types of “provider networks” without significant antitrust risks, so long as the networks are structured and operated carefully. Provider networks are joint ventures formed by otherwise independent providers. The networks are generally designed to market the providers’ services to payors, and to enter into payor contracts on behalf of those providers. The network is typically owned by the participating providers, and can take any number of organizational forms (such as a limited liability company, a not-for-profit corporation, or a for-profit corporation). For example, independent psychologists, psychiatrists, and clinical social workers might form a limited liability company network to offer mental health services to managed care payors. The providers would continue to operate independent practices, but would agree to participate in certain types of contracts that the network is able to obtain.

Price Setting and Contracting Issues.
Regardless of organizational form, the price-setting activities of networks raise some of the most significant antitrust risks. Only in limited circumstances can networks legitimately negotiate contract rates with managed care companies, employers, and other payors. Specifically, price negotiation is permissible only when the payor contract creates substantial financial risk-sharing or “clinical integration” among the competing providers in the network. When a particular contract does not involve financial risk-sharing or clinical integration, any attempts by networks to negotiate fees for participating psychologists and providers would create significant price-fixing exposure.

In recent health care policy statements, the FTC and DOJ describe a number of types of contracts that create the necessary financial risk-sharing. For example, when a psychology network receives a fixed capitated fee for each enrollee regardless of the actual services provided, the network’s psychologists share in the financial risk that the cost of those services will exceed the capitated amounts. This shared risk results in common incentives to control utilization and provide care in a cost-effective manner. Similar risk-sharing exists when the network is paid a fixed percentage of the payor’s premium for all required mental health services, or when the psychologists’ fees are subject to substantial withholds, penalties, or bonuses based upon their ability to meet utilization or cost-containment goals as a group. Likewise, substantial risk-sharing can result from the payment of “global case rates” for a complex course of treatment requiring coordination and management of varying services from providers in multiple disciplines (e.g., psychologists, psychiatrists, and hospitals). Each of these arrangements creates a shared financial incentive among providers to furnish care in an efficient manner. As a result, the FTC and DOJ will not view the network simply as a mechanism for entering into anticompetitive price-fixing agreements. Psychology networks are therefore free, for example, to negotiate with payors about the level of capitated, percentage-of-premium, or global case rates that they are willing to accept.

Arrangements involving “clinical integration” can also result in efficiencies, and can similarly permit networks to negotiate price terms with payors. For example, a network that invests significant capital in computer systems and personnel to monitor overall utilization, quality, and cost-effectiveness of participating psychologists, and that disciplines and excludes psychologists who fail to meet these goals, may be considered clinically integrated. In contrast, a network that simply creates a utilization review committee, but does not actively monitor, educate, or discipline its psychologists, would not be considered clinically integrated. Unfortunately, the agencies do not provide much guidance about networks falling between these two extremes. As a result, networks should be very cautious in relying upon clinical integration alone to justify price negotiations with payors.

Without financial risk-sharing or clinical integration (for example, when a contract reimburses psychologists using a simple fee schedule), networks must not negotiate fees on behalf of their participating psychologists and providers. Such collective negotiations would be considered per se illegal price-fixing. The mere fact that the providers have created a new corporation or limited liability company to perform the negotiations does not insulate them from this price-fixing liability. In fact, the FTC and DOJ have been very active in challenging physician networks and physician-hospital organizations that have attempted to negotiate fee-for-service rates. Most recently, the FTC challenged the activities of a Colorado physician network that allegedly negotiated non-risk fees for its participating physicians. Only in very limited circumstances – for example, where the substantial majority of a network’s business involves risk-sharing – might a network avoid price-fixing exposure for negotiating fee-for-service rates.

However, networks can facilitate non-risk contracting using a mechanism commonly known as the “messenger model.” Under this model, an independent third-party or network employee would act as a “messenger” between payors and individual network psychologists. The messenger would simply transmit payor offers to participating psychologists for their individual consideration, and relay the psychologists’ responses back to the payor. The messenger would not negotiate rates or attempt to coordinate the psychologists’ responses. One variation of the messenger model allows individual psychologists to commit in advance to any payor offers that exceed predetermined fee schedules set independently by the psychologists. Because these models can create significant risks if not implemented correctly, networks should seek antitrust counsel before dealing with payors.

Network “Overinclusion” Issues.
In addition to raising price-fixing issues, networks can also raise market-specific issues if they include too large a panel of providers. When such "overinclusion" occurs, the antitrust concern is that an insufficient number of providers will be available to form competing networks or contract with competing managed care plans. Overinclusive networks may therefore be able to exercise “market” or “monopoly power,” and raise prices above competitive levels.

The FTC and DOJ have issued guidance in two “safety zones” created for “physician network joint ventures.” Although the safety zones are technically limited to physician networks, the safety-zone standards nevertheless provide useful guidelines for networks involving psychologists and other providers. Absent extraordinary circumstances, the enforcement agencies explain that they will not challenge a “non-exclusive” network in which the physicians (i) share substantial financial risk, and (ii) constitute no more than 30% of any given specialty in the relevant market. Similarly, they will not challenge an “exclusive” risk-sharing network with 20% or less of the physicians in each specialty. The agencies are more concerned about overinclusion in “exclusive” networks because they restrict the ability of participants to join other networks or contract directly with payors, and therefore are more likely to have anticompetitive effects.

Physician networks that fall outside of the safety zones are not necessarily unlawful under the antitrust laws, and will be examined by the FTC and DOJ on a case-by-case basis. Where the physicians are sufficiently integrated, these enforcement agencies have looked at the likely competitive effects of such networks, and have concluded that many non-exclusive networks exceeding the thresholds were nevertheless unlikely to pose antitrust problems. For example, the FTC staff concluded that a physician network with approximately 45% of the obstetricians and 50% of the pediatricians in the relevant market did not raise concerns where the network was non-exclusive, and where competing networks already existed. In contrast, DOJ rejected a proposed network accounting for 50% to 77% of the pediatricians in several New Jersey communities where payor objections and network contract provisions suggested that the network would likely be able to exercise market power.

When applying these principles to psychologists, the calculation of market shares would be somewhat different, because psychologists compete not only with other psychologists, but also with other types of mental health professionals (such as psychiatrists and possibly clinical social workers). In order to determine whether a network includes more than 20% or 30% of area providers, it would be appropriate to include other mental health providers who are viewed by payors and patients as substitutes for psychologists. Thus, even a network with 50% of the market’s psychologists might not pose competitive concerns if the network’s overall percentage of mental health professionals were less significant. Again, these antitrust risks depend upon the specific nature of competition in the relevant market, and must be reviewed on a case-by-case basis.

Do Unions Provide Antitrust Protection?
In recent years, health care professionals have become increasingly interested in joining unions. Under certain circumstances, the collective bargaining activities of unions on behalf of their members are exempt from the antitrust laws. However, this “labor exemption” applies only when employees are using a union to bargain with their employer. As a result, independent psychologists and psychology practices could not use a union to negotiate provider contracts with a health plan. A Regional Director of the National Labor Relations Board, for example, recently refused to certify a New Jersey union as the exclusive bargaining agent for independent physicians in contract negotiations with an HMO. The union had argued that the physicians should be considered HMO “employees,” as a practical matter, because of the significant control exercised by the HMO. The Director rejected these arguments, however, and concluded that the physicians were simply independent contractors not covered by the labor laws.

Collective action by independent psychologists through a “union” is therefore no different than collective action through a provider network. Absent financial risk-sharing or clinical integration among the psychologists, union negotiation of the psychologists’ fees would be per se illegal, just as it would be in the context of provider networks. Last year, for example, the FTC challenged a “strike” called by the College of Physicians-Surgeons of Puerto Rico to demand pricing changes under the Puerto Rican government’s indigent care plan. Under the settlement agreement, the physicians agreed to pay $300,000 in restitution and agreed not to engage in any future group boycotts or collective price negotiations. The FTC is also presently investigating the activities of the Florida-based Federation of Physicians and Dentists, which claims to be engaging in “messenger model” contracting on behalf of its independent physician members.

What Can Associations Do?
Like provider networks and “unions,” professional associations are organizations of otherwise competing providers that should not be used as a means of setting prices or boycotting health plans. These activities create significant antitrust exposure. Nevertheless, national, state, and local associations can engage in a number of valuable collective activities without substantial antitrust risks. For example, associations can represent psychologists’ interests before legislatures, government regulatory agencies, and courts. These government advocacy activities are generally immune from antitrust scrutiny. As the Puerto Rico case demonstrates, however, the protection is not available when the government is simply acting as a purchaser of health care services, and the association uses an illegal boycott as a means of demanding more favorable pricing.

Associations can also provide various types of information to health plans and other purchasers. In one “safety zone,” the FTC and DOJ explain that they will not challenge the collective provision of medical information to purchasers, absent extraordinary circumstances. Associations can collect outcomes data related to a particular procedure that the members believe should be covered, and provide that data to a purchaser. The association can also discuss the scientific merit of that data with the purchasers. Similarly, an association can develop suggested practice parameters for particular types of clinical cases. The Agencies recognize that such information exchanges can ultimately increase quality and efficiency.

Nevertheless, associations will be exposed to substantial antitrust risks if they attempt to coerce a purchaser’s decision-making or threaten a boycott of a purchaser that does not follow the associations’ recommendations. In one Supreme Court case, for example, a federation of dentists refused to provide payors with x-rays used in making utilization and coverage decisions. The Court agreed with the FTC’s allegations that the agreement was an illegal group boycott, and rejected the dentists’ argument that quality of care concerns justified their actions. In reviewing association activities generally, it is also important to recognize that antitrust exposure can result not only from explicit agreements, but also from unspoken agreements and parallel conduct among their members.

* * * * *

In general, psychology networks and associations are capable of providing significant procompetitive benefits, and their related antitrust risks are manageable. Because the consequences of improper formation and operation can be so significant, however, it is imperative that the participants in these organizations understand the relevant antitrust issues and conduct themselves accordingly.

Illinois Psychological Association

Governance—Staff Interactions
Principles and Guidance.

Equal Employment Opportunity
The Illinois Psychological Association (IPA) provides equal employment opportunities to all employees and applicants for employment without regard to race, color, religion, national origin, gender, age, sexual orientation, marital status, number of dependent children or the ages of the children, physical or mental disability (visible or nonvisible), or any other basis on which discrimination is prohibited by federal, state, or local law. This policy applies to recruiting, hiring, training, promotion, and all terms, conditions, and privileges of employment.

Sexual Harassment
IPA in its effort to maintain a safe, fair, humane, and respectful working environment for all employees sets forth its policy regarding sexual harassment. The principles and practices described in this policy apply equally to harassment due to race, color, religion, national origin, age, disability, sexual orientation, or any of the other characteristics enumerated in the
Equal Employment Opportunity statement above. IPA deplores such conduct and will not tolerate any acts that violate this policy. IPA employees, agents and supervisory staff are prohibited from harassing other IPA employees on the basis of the enumerated characteristics.

General Principle I
Staff and members are professional; all interactions should be on a professional-to-professional basis.

Guidance
1. Harassment or intimidation of any nature is not tolerated. Civility, courtesy, and mutual respect in all interactions are expected.

2. Relationships among professionals require equality. Requests made of one party should stand the test of reciprocity.

3. Over time relationships can often become more personal. It is important that mutual respect continue to be part of the ongoing relationship.

General Principle II
Staff’s primary responsibility is to facilitate the work of the group; requests from board or committee members should relate to the goals of the group.

Guidance
1. Staff are responsible for providing support for the board or a committee. This includes, but is not limited to, making meeting arrangements, developing agenda items, working with chairs to facilitate meetings, acting as resources at the meeting, and carrying out and managing complex and extensive activities subsequent to the meetings.

2. Requests from members to staff that go beyond staff responsibility such as personal favors (i.e., picking member up at the airport, making reservations for personal activities, etc.) are not appropriate, and generally will not be honored.

3. A member with a disability may request special assistance or specific accommodation that may initially appear personal in nature, i.e., holding a door open, carrying meeting materials for a person with a disability, or reading written material for a person who is blind or visually impaired. Such accommodations may allow the member with a disability to carry out functions or tasks consistent with the purpose of the meeting and may aid in that person’s interaction or participating in the meeting.

There are some requests that are personal in nature, i.e., a member asking for staff to pick up dry cleaning or arrange for tours of a popular local museum. Staff should always have a personal level of comfort when providing a requested service or accommodation. Requests may be denied if determined personally inappropriate or clarified as inappropriate by senior staff. It is not the responsibility of the staff person to anticipate any person accommodations or requests.

General Principle III
In meetings after regular working hours and in social situations, staff are still performing work-related duties.

Guidance
1. Social functions and/or meetings outside regular working hours or outside regular meeting locations are characterized by more informal and sometimes personal interactions. It is important to remember that in these situations, staff and members are expected to remain professional and courteous.

2. Staff and members can view social situations differently. Members may find these settings a time to relax and to enjoy the company of others. For staff, these events are part of their professional obligations. It is important to recognize that individuals may experience these situations in different ways.

General Principle IV
All staff ultimately report to the Executive Director of IPA and receive work instruction from their supervisor.

Guidance
1. Members should recognize that work priorities for staff are set by the staff’s supervisor. It is not appropriate for members to give work direction to staff, except in cases in which the chair directs implementation of decisions made by the board or committee. If members make an unusual and unreasonable request of staff, it is appropriate for the staff to notify their supervisor of the request.

2. If a project requires unusual resources from a specific staff person, the chair may contact the Executive Director to request that priorities be re-assigned, if possible.

3. Some staff may be asked to leave during executive sessions of the board or committee, however all staff may not be excluded without prior approval of the Executive Director or his/her designate, and without a member of the Executive Committee being present during the executive session.

Illinois Psychological Association Travel Expense Reimbursement Policy

Guidelines
Airfare is reimbursed at Supersaver rate.

Transportation to and from the airport is reimbursed.

Hotel rate is reimbursed at no more than the American Psychological Association rate or equivalent "corporate" rate and limited to the duration of the event. If extra nights are required, either prior or subsequent to the meeting, approval of the IPA Executive Director and Treasurer must be obtained no fewer than 30 days prior to the meeting.

Transportation to meetings via automobile is reimbursed at the current IRS rate.

Parking is reimbursed up to $22 per 24 hour period.

Non-function meals are reimbursable up to $25 per day. Reimbursement does not include alcoholic beverages.

Telephone charges are reimbursed for IPA related business only.

Appropriate and reasonable gratuities will be reimbursed.

Any voluntary assumption of expenses is welcome.

Procedures
1. Forty-five (45) days prior to the meeting, the IPA volunteer and Executive Director will come to an agreement regarding payment of expenses.

2. All requests for reservations (air and hotel) must be cleared by the IPA office no less than 14 days in advance. The IPA staff will attempt to assist in the making of these reservations.

3. Reimbursement will not be made without a receipt.

How a Bill Becomes a Law

State: ILLINOIS GENERAL ASSEMBLY
Comprised of 59 Legislative Districts
59 Senators (31 Republicans, 28 Democrats)
118 Representatives (58 Republicans, 60 Democrats)

The Legislative Process: Bill Drafting
Only legislators may introduce bills and amendments to bills. Bills often result from the
concerns of constituents (Illinois citizens).

There are three types of bills:

1. Revisory Bills – Makes technical changes in the form or in the wording.

2. Appropriation Bills – A bill which provides money for the operating expenses of a state agency including their staff and programs, or start a law that provides money for new programs such as Family Support.

3. Substantive Bills – Makes major changes in existing laws or creates new laws.

1st READING — Every bill that is introduced by a legislator must first be read by its title in the house it began in. A bill is then given a number and is then assigned to a standing Committee. Generally, Committees are specialized by subject or topic area. For example, elementary and secondary education, insurance, human services, and mental health.

Once a bill is assigned to a committee, it is on the committee’s calendar. The committee sets deadlines which they must follow. If a legislator wants to help a bill it is up to them when the bill will be read. The committee’s have certain times which they meet each day.

If a legislator wants a bill read at a specific meeting, he/she needs to tell the chairman, so that the bill can be put on the schedule.

The chairman will call the bill and the legislator can bring in information and witnesses to help get the bill passed. People who oppose the bill also have a chance to speak now. If you wish to speak you must fill out a "witness slip" indicating if you are for or against the bill. During the reading of a bill is when each of you as a constituent has a chance to affect legislation. This is also the first time that a bill can be amended.

Amendments are ways in which to change a bill. Often the sponsor of the bill will suggest an amendment. Working on bills and amendments is a major part of the legislative process.

After everyone has had a change to speak for or against the bill, and any amendments are accepted into the bill, then the Committee has to take action on the bill.

They have three choices: Do Pass, Do Pass as Amended, or Do Not Pass

A bill may be killed in a couple of ways: one is if the sponsor doesn’t ask for the bill to be read, then it dies at the deadline for reporting of bills from committee. If the bill is just "held" it never goes anywhere, or it may be put aside to be studied later. The bill has now gone through committee and passed on a "Do Pass" or "Do Pass as Amended" motion. Now it goes on….

Second Reading which is considered on both the floor of the House of Representatives and the Senate. Each chamber or house gives a bill three readings. The first comes right after the introduction. The second comes after a "do-pass" recommendation from a committee. The bill is then put on a second-reading calendar of the House or Senate.
Second reading is the amendment stage, where changes can be made, and this is the only time when changes can occur. On a typical day, the legislators have many bills on their second reading calendar.

The presiding officer reads through the bills and if the legislator who sponsored the bill is there, then the other legislators discuss sit and may make changes to it. However, if the sponsor is not there, the bill is not discussed but still stays on the calendar for second reading.

In the House the clerk has to record the amendments, get them printed and each member must have a copy of the bill before they can discuss the amendments.

In the Senate, the amendments don’t have to be printed unless five or more Senators ask for them to be printed. Committee amendments added in the Senate must be adopted on the floor.

In the House, an amendment adopted in Committee, can be changed or taken off the bill during second reading.

Often the original sponsor of the bill will want to make small changes in it, and in this case the other legislators agree to do so by voicing their opinions. If the sponsor wants to make a big change in the bill, then he explains it to the others, and asks for their support. Often the others won’t be in favor of the change and will ask questions about it.

In order to adopt an amendment, a majority of the legislators must be present and votes "yes". If they aren’t sure if the amendment passed or not, then they will take a vote on an electronic voting machine. Each time they do this it is recorded in the journals of each house.

After they have gone through all of the amendments, the bill is considered to have been read for the second time. Now the bill goes on to what is called the "Third Reading".
Third Reading is only for voting on whether or not to pass a bill; amendments cannot be added at this time. The third reading must take place at least one legislative day after the second reading.

The sponsor of the bill explains why the bill should be passed and then the other legislators discuss it. Sometimes they debate over it for a very long time, and other times they discuss it very quickly or not at all. It takes 60 yes votes in the House and 30 yes votes in the Senate to pass a bill.

If a bill passes, then it must go through the entire process again in the Second House. If no changes or amendments are made in the Second House, then it goes to the Governor for approval. If he has no problems with it, then he signs it and it becomes a law.

The Governor
The Governor has 60 days to consider every bill passed. If he wants the bill to become a law he then signs it or he vetoes it. If he does nothing with the bill, it automatically becomes law after 60 days. A vetoed bill is returned to the house where it was originally started — it has 15 days to be passed and it must do so by 3/5ths margin (71 House; 36 Senate).

There are four kinds of vetoes:
1. Item Veto — When the Governor wants to eliminate part of a bill, but might not want to eliminate all of it, he/she will only veto the parts which they do not want it a particular bill.

2. Reduction Veto – This is an section which the Governor may take to reduce a specific budget item.

3. Amendatory Veto — If the Governor wishes, he/she can change a part of a bill, and still pass the rest of it.

4. Total Veto – If the Governor wishes, she/he can reject a bill completely, and by doing this no part of the bill is passed.

Legislative Activity and Alerts

Contact(s):
Gregory Sarlo, PsyD, Co-Chair

Kristina Pecora, PsyD, Co-Chair

The IPA is very active in the legislative process at both the state and federal level. As an organization, the IPA takes stands in support of, and opposition to, bills. It also introduces bills to the state legislature. IPA members, interested psychologists, and consumers are encouraged to play a role in the legislative process and this section of the website provides them with the tools needed to engage in this process.

I. Description:
The Legislative Committee is charged with the following responsibilities:
1) Monitoring, developing, and promoting legislation at state and federal levels, which has relevance to the interest and practice of psychology,

2) Developing and maintaining relationships with legislators and legislative committees having an interest in the mental health and well-being of the citizens of Illinois.

3) Recommending to IPA Council legislative actions to be taken in the interest of the profession and the public.

II.Meetings:
Generally, the 3rd Friday of the month at 2:00 PM at the IPA office (or virtually via Zoom).

III.Continuing Education Events:
The IPA-LC generally presents a formal workshop at the IPA Annual Convention in November. This event typically runs 1 ½ hours affording participants 1.5 CEs.

VII. Grassroots Efforts:
The IPA-LC mentors and encourages psychologists willing to forge relationships and liaisons with their legislators to advance the science and practice of psychology and to serve others for the public good.