REGARDING IMPORTANCE OF FATHERS IN RAISING
AND DEVELOPMENT OF THEIR CHILDREN
(House of Representatives - June 09, 1998)
H. Res. 417
Whereas studies reveal that even in high-crime, inner-city
neighborhoods, well over 90 percent of
children from safe, stable, two-parent homes do not become
delinquents;
Whereas researchers have linked father presence with improved
fetal and infant development, and
father-child interaction has been shown to promote a child's
physical well-being, perceptual
abilities, and competency for relatedness with other persons,
even at a young age;
Whereas premature infants whose fathers spend ample time
playing with them have better cognitive
outcomes, and children who have higher than average self-esteem
and lower than average
depression report having a close relationship with their
father;
Whereas both boys and girls demonstrate a greater ability
to take initiative and evidence
self-control when they are reared with fathers who are
actively involved in their upbringing;
Whereas, although mothers often work tremendously hard
to rear their children in a nurturing
environment, a mother can benefit from the positive support
of the father of her children;
Whereas, according to a 1996 Gallup Poll, 79.1 percent
of Americans believe the most significant
family or social problem facing America is the physical
absence of the father from the home and the
resulting lack of involvement of fathers in the rearing
and development of their children;
Whereas, according to the Bureau of the Census, in 1994,
19,500,000 children in the United
States (nearly one-fourth of all children in the United
States) lived in families in which the father was
absent;
Whereas, according to a 1996 Gallup Poll, 90.9 percent
of Americans believe it is important for
children to live in a home with both their mother and
their father';
Whereas it is estimated that half of all United States
children born today will spend at least half their
childhood in a family in which a father figure is absent;
Whereas estimates of the likelihood that marriages will
end in divorce range from 40 percent to 50
percent, and approximately three out of every five divorcing
couples have at least one child;
Whereas almost half of all 11- through 16-year-old children
who live in mother-headed homes
have not seen their father in the last twelve months;
Whereas the likelihood that a young male will engage in
criminal activity doubles if he is reared
without a father and triples if he lives in a neighborhood
with a high concentration of single-parent
families;
Whereas children of single-parents are less likely to complete
high school and more likely to have
low earnings and low employment stability as adults than
children reared in two-parent families;
Whereas a 1990 Los Angeles Times poll found that 57 percent
of all fathers and 55 percent of all
mothers feel guilty about not spending enough time with
their children;
Whereas almost 20 percent of 6th through 12th graders report
that they have not had a good
conversation lasting for at least 10 minutes with at least
one of their parents in more than a month;
Whereas, according to a Gallup poll, over 50 percent of
all adults agreed that fathers today spend
less time with their children than their fathers spent
with them;
Whereas President Clinton has stated that `the single biggest
social problem in our society may be
the growing absence of fathers from their children's homes
because it contributes to so many other
social problems' and that 'the real source of the [welfare]
problem is the inordinate number of out
of wedlock births in this country';
Whereas the Congressional Task Force on Fatherhood Promotion
and the Senate Task Force on
Fatherhood Promotion were both formed in 1997, and the
Governors Fatherhood Task Force was
formed in February 1998;
Whereas the Congressional Task Force on Fatherhood Promotion
is exploring the social changes
that are required to ensure that every child is reared
with a father who is committed to be actively
involved in the rearing and development of his children;
Whereas the 36 members of the Congressional Task Force
on Fatherhood Promotion are
promoting fatherhood in their congressional districts;
Whereas the National Fatherhood Initiative is holding a
National Summit on Fatherhood in
Washington, D.C., with the purpose of mobilizing a response
to father absence in several of the
most powerful sectors of society, including public policy,
public and private social services,
education, religion, entertainment, the media, and the
civic community;
Whereas both Republican and Democrat leaders of the House
of Representatives and the Senate
will be participating in this event; and
Whereas the promotion of fatherhood is a bipartisan issue: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the House of Representatives--
(1) recognizes that the creation of a better America depends
in large part on the active involvement
of fathers in the rearing and development of their children;
(2) urges each father in America to accept his full share
of responsibility for the lives of his children,
to be actively involved in rearing his children, and to
encourage the academic, moral, and spiritual
development of his children and urges the States to aggressively
prosecute those fathers who fail to
fulfill their legal responsibility to pay child support;
(3) encourages each father to devote time, energy, and
resources to his children, recognizing that
children need not only material support, but more importantly
a secure, affectionate, family
environment; and
(4) expresses its support for a national summit on fatherhood.
Center for Children's Justice