All posts tagged overseas americans week

Overseas Americans Week

Overseas Americans Week (“OAW”) kicks off today. OAW is an annual program now in its eighth year that embodies the commitment of overseas Americans organizations to maintaining an ongoing dialogue with Congress and agencies on policy issues that directly affect the lives of US citizens abroad. There is a lot on the agenda, so please contact your members of Congress and ask them to engage.

The participating organizations:

AARO: Association of Americans Resident Overseas, founded 1973, based in Paris
ACA: American Citizens Abroad, founded 1978, based in Geneva
FAWCO: Federation of American Women’s Clubs Overseas Inc., founded 1931, worldwide network

For more information on Overseas Americans Week 2009, contact:

AARO: contact@aaro.org
ACA: info.aca@gmail.com
FAWCO: USLiaison@fawco.org

Changing the Narrative

The narrative about Americans abroad is too often that of the tax evader, criminal or general malcontent. Naturally, this is an inaccurate stereotype and, therefore, not a representative description of most of the +6 million Americans living, working and serving overseas.

So how do we change the narrative? What are your stories of Americans abroad: their patriotism, their example and their quiet diplomacy? Beyond Borders: Portraits of American Women from around the World is step in the right direction. It is a project celebrating American women living abroad who demonstrate “the positive side of the American spirit and culture.”

If you have a story to tell, let us know, or better yet, let your Senators and Representatives know. If you don’t know already, you can quickly find your Senators and your Representative at Congress.org. Alternatively, you can also find your Representative by visiting www.house.gov and typing in the zip code (in the top left corner of the page) of your last place of residence in the U.S., and your Senators by visiting www.senate.gov and selecting your last state of residence from the drop-down list at the top right of the page.

This is Overseas Americans Week

This is  Overseas Americans Week (“OAW”) – the annual lobbying visit to Washington by the Association of Americans Resident Overseas‘ (AARO), American Citizens Abroad (ACA), and the Federation of American Women’s Clubs Overseas (FAWCO). Stay up-to-date with the latest developments through AARO-OAW blog, “Mr. Coyne Goes to Washington“. Launched today and running only until Friday, April 18, the blog will provide an inside look at OAW.

OAW is good opportunity to write to the members of of your Congressional delegation and enumerate the issues that concern you. While you’re at it, ask your Senators and Representative to join the Americans Abroad Caucus.

Overseas Americans Week

Watching the latest round of presidential preference primaries has provide further illustration of the need for the estimated 4-10 million Americans abroad to register to vote and to actually vote in federal election primaries. If you haven’t register to vote in the 2008 presidential election yet, you can do so via the easy-to-use, elegant and secure Overseas Vote Foundation voter registration wizard.

Still, voting is just one of many issues before Congress that impacts the daily lives of Americans abroad. If you’d like to get involved in shaping the policies that shape our lives abroad, then support Overseas Americans Week (“OAW”).

OAW is an annual program run by an alliance of non-partisan American overseas organizations, including:

  • AARO: Association of Americans Resident Overseas
  • ACA: American Citizens Abroad
  • FAWCO: Federation of American Women’s Clubs Overseas

The goal of OAW is to maintain an ongoing dialog with Congress and the Executive branch and its principal activity is an annual “door-knocking” campaign in Washington, DC.

In 2007, OAW focused on the following issues:

  • Citizenship: Americans should enjoy the same right to transmit U.S. citizenship to children at birth.
  • Medicare: Americans eligible for Medicare benefits in the U.S. should be able to receive these or equivalent benefits while abroad.
  • Social Security: American who contribute to U.S. Social Security and receive Social Security pension abroad, should not be penalized under “windfall elimination provision” rules because they also receive a foreign pension. Americans overseas should be allowed to contribute to U.S. Social Security as do self-employed persons.
  • Taxation: U.S. citizens working overseas are subject to a tax liability in their country of residence and in the U.S., putting American business and citizens overseas at a competitive disadvantage. Congress should eliminate the cap on the foreign-earned income exclusion.
  • Voting Procedures: Procedures should be simplified for absentee registration and voting for Americans abroad. Timely ballot delivery and transparent vote counting procedures should be given priority.
  • Voting Rights: Sixteen states explicitly allow Americans reared abroad to exercise their constitutional right to vote in federal elections by registering to vote using the legal voting residence of their U.S. citizen parent(s). This right should be granted by all states.
  • Americans Abroad Caucus – Created on February 22, 2007 by Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney (D-NY) and Congressman Joe Wilson (R-SC) as a bi-partisan forum for discussion of issues affecting overseas Americans.

This year, OAW is the week of April 14, 2008.