Val J. Halamandaris
Val J. Halamandaris has been called “the leader of the Last Great Civil Rights Movement,” because he has devoted more than 50 years to fighting for the rights of aged, infirm, disabled and dying Americans. In 20 years as counsel to the Senate and House Committees on Aging and 30 years as President of the National Association for Home Care & Hospice, he has sought to prepare the nation for the graying of the 78 million baby boom generation. He has worked to allow Americans of all ages to remain in their own homes with access to needed personal and professional care, fully exercising all of the freedoms guaranteed to them under the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.
Halamandaris’ dedication has garnered an astonishing range of legislative successes, accomplishments, honors, awards, and publications in the areas of:
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Long Term Care
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Hospice
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Health Care for all Americans
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Protecting Children
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Preventing Fraud and Abuse
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Civil Rights
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Philanthropy
Halamandaris asserts that America is struggling to create its policy with respect to vulnerable citizens. He has fought to persuade Members of Congress to adopt a policy of veneration toward elderly and disabled persons as did the ancient Greeks and Chinese, instead of the policy of neglect or euthanasia employed by other societies.
Echoing President John F. Kennedy, Halamandaris asserts that it is possible to predict the greatness and durability of every society by a common yardstick: the manner in which they care for their vulnerable populations. “What is at stake,” said President Kennedy, “is nothing less than the longevity of American democracy and how the U.S. will be judged through the prism of history.”
Halamandaris is well prepared for this challenge, as he is:
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An attorney who was Senior Counsel and Chief Investigator to two congressional committees on aging and who is one of the few attorneys admitted to the bar of the U.S. Supreme Court
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A best-selling author, a publisher and editor of books and magazines, including the much acclaimed CARING,of which he is the most prolific contributor
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An editor and producer of television documentaries including Suffer Not the Little Children
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A philanthropist who created the Frederick Douglass Museum and Caring Hall of Fame in Washington, D.C.
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The head of the Foundation for Hospice and Homecare and the Caring Institute, the latter at the direction of Mother Teresa
His achievements may be most simply and yet most adeptly summarized by President Bill Clinton, who said: “Val Halamandaris is a remarkable human being and one of the most exceptional people that I have ever known.”
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