Search

Site map

Sections:
Home Page

Gifts & Grants

Fund Raising

Managing Nonprofit Groups

Technology

Philanthropy Today

Jobs

Features:
Guide to Grants

The Nonprofit Handbook

Facts & Figures

Events

Deadlines

The Chronicle in Print:
Current Issue

Back Issues

Sponsored Information
Products & Services:
Directory of Services

Guide to Managing Nonprofits

Continuing-Education Guide

Fund-Raising Services Guide

Technology Guide

Customer Service:
About The Chronicle

How to Contact Us

How to Subscribe

How to Register

Manage Your Account

How to Advertise

Press Inquiries

Feedback

Privacy Policy

User Agreement

Help


The Chronicle of Philanthropy
News Updates

February 02, 2009

Rep. John Lewis Is New Co-Chair of Philanthropy Caucus

Rep. John Lewis, Democrat of Georgia, has agreed to serve as the new co-chair of the Congressional Philanthropy Caucus, his office confirms. Mr. Lewis succeeds Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones, Democrat of Ohio, who died last August of a brain hemorrhage.

The Council on Foundations, which helped to set up the caucus in 2007, says it is now working with Mr. Lewis to find a Republican co-chair to replace Robin Hayes of North Carolina, who lost a reelection bid last November.

The council proposed the body, which now has 36 members, as a way to raise awareness in Congress of issues and legislation affecting foundations.

Two U.S. senators—Charles Schumer, Democrat of New York, and Richard Burr, Republican of North Carolina—also set up a Senate Philanthropy Caucus last summer and invited colleagues by letter to join the group to “support the long tradition of good works by the philanthropic and nonprofit sectors.” That body now has five members. An aide to Senator Schumer said the co-chairs plan to send another letter seeking more members once the Senate passes the economic-stimulus package.

In addition to heading the philanthropy caucus, Mr. Lewis is chairman of the Oversight Subcommittee of the House Ways and Means Committee—the panel that oversees the tax laws that govern foundations and charities.

Before joining Congress in 1986, he was a noted civil-rights leader and voter-registration activist. Mr. Lewis headed Action, the federal volunteer agency, during the Carter administration.

Suzanne Perry

Commenting is closed for this article.




Copyright © 2009 The Chronicle of Philanthropy