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Health Science Center exhibit spotlights Sen. Rockefeller and Children’s Health Insurance Program

The exhibition, “A Healthy Start: The Children’s Health Insurance Program,” will be on display at the Health Sciences Center through October 20.

The exhibition, which recognizes the 20th anniversary of the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), draws on Senator Jay Rockefeller’s congressional archives to explore the history of CHIP, his work to navigate the conflicts and compromises in Congress that brought it to fruition, and the real effects of policy on individuals.

On August 5, 1997, President Bill Clinton signed CHIP into law, extending health coverage to millions of uninsured children with the largest federal investment in children’s health since the creation of Medicaid in 1965. Senator Rockefeller was instrumental in creating CHIP and in forming a bipartisan coalition in Congress that backed the expansion of children’s health care. On September 30, 2017, Congress missed the deadline to reauthorize CHIP.  

During his 30-year Senate career (1985-2015), Rockefeller became known as a leader for health care reform; an advocate for improving the lives of children and working families; and a supporter of the nation’s soldiers, veterans, and senior citizens. He served as chair of the Committee on Veterans Affairs; the Select Committee on Intelligence; the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation; and the Committee on Finance Subcommittee on Medicare and Long-term Care. He also served as vice-chair of the Select Committee on Intelligence.

The exhibition is sponsored by WVU Libraries, the West Virginia & Regional History Center, and the WVU John D. Rockefeller IV School of Policy and Politics. In November 2014, Senator Rockefeller designated WVU Libraries as the permanent home of the John D. Rockefeller IV Senatorial Archives, and WVU dedicated the John D. Rockefeller IV Gallery in the Downtown Campus Library in honor of the Democratic senator’s nearly 50 years of public service to the citizens of West Virginia. At the same time, he announced the naming of the John D. Rockefeller IV School of Policy and Politics at WVU, the only multi-disciplinary, degree-granting policy school linked to a robust political archives collection in the country.