Washington, DC | December 10–11, 2025
PWSA | USA recently participated in the EveryLife Foundation for Rare Diseases’ Community Congress end-of-year convening in Washington, DC. This two-day gathering brought together rare disease advocates, policy experts, and community leaders to reflect on state-level legislative progress in 2025, assess emerging challenges, and begin shaping a coordinated strategy for 2026.
Building Connections Across the Rare Disease Community
The convening began on Wednesday, December 10, with the Community Congress Networking Happy Hour at the Rare Hub Workspace. This informal setting provided an opportunity for advocates and partners from across the rare disease ecosystem to reconnect, build new relationships, and exchange insights on shared priorities. For PWSA | USA, these conversations are essential to strengthening cross-disease collaboration and ensuring that the needs of individuals and families living with Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) remain part of broader policy discussions.
2025 Community Congress Annual Meeting
Thursday, December 11, 2025 | National Press Club
The Community Congress Annual Meeting reinforced the power of collective advocacy and highlighted both the progress made in 2025 and the urgency of the work ahead.
RDLA State Advocacy Session: Key Policy Themes
As part of the meeting, PWSA | USA participated in a Rare Disease Legislative Advocates (RDLA) state advocacy session focused on recent legislative developments and future priorities. Presentations included:
- Looking Back at 2025 and Ahead Toward 2026
Erin Fitzpatrick, Stateside Associates
An overview of state-level legislative trends impacting rare disease communities, including areas of momentum and states to watch in the coming year. - Medicaid Cuts and What H.R.1 Means for the Rare Disease Community
Jamie Sullivan, EveryLife Foundation for Rare Diseases
A sobering analysis of proposed Medicaid cuts and the implications of H.R.1, underscoring the potential risks to access, continuity of care, and long-term supports for people living with rare diseases, including PWS. - Medical Debt Legislation at the State Level
Lauren Edwards, Blood Cancers United
A discussion of state-based efforts to address medical debt and the disproportionate burden faced by rare disease families. - Biomarker Legislation at the State Level
Hillary Gee Goeckner, American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network
An update on emerging biomarker legislation and its importance for timely diagnosis, treatment access, and innovation across disease areas.
Elevating Access and Reimbursement Issues Through Roundtable Discussion
PWSA | USA also played an active leadership role by facilitating a roundtable discussion focused on access and reimbursement challenges. The conversation explored:
- *Trends in access experienced by rare disease communities, including payer type differences, formulary restrictions, and utilization management barriers.
- *Whether and how organizations have historically engaged in access and reimbursement policy.
- *Strategies needed to protect access amid growing payer resistance to FDA approval decisions.
- *Resources and information required to strengthen advocacy engagement at the organizational level
As in prior years, facilitators served primarily as guides, allowing for organic and candid dialogue. Participants shared lived experiences, identified common challenges, and proposed concrete strategies to safeguard access to approved therapies and necessary supports. Notes from these discussions were collected by EveryLife staff and will inform Community Congress advocacy priorities in the year ahead.
From Reflection to Action: A Call to Reorganize for 2026
While the Community Congress highlighted meaningful progress in 2025, it also underscored the challenges that remain. Notably, the PPRV legislation did not advance in the Senate this week—an outcome that reinforces the need for renewed coordination, broader engagement, and sustained pressure in 2026.
For the PWS community, this moment is a clear call to action. Protecting Medicaid, addressing access barriers, advancing newborn screening and biomarker policies, and ensuring that rare disease voices are heard at the state and federal levels will require a reorganized and energized advocacy effort.
Our Call to Action
As we look toward 2026, PWSA | USA encourages:
- Advocates and families to stay engaged, share their stories, and participate in state and national advocacy opportunities
- Partners and policymakers to work collaboratively to protect access to care and support innovation
- The broader rare disease community to recommit to coordinated action—learning from setbacks, refining strategies, and returning stronger.
A Message to the PWS Community:
“Advocacy is rarely a straight line. There are moments of progress, moments of pause, and moments—like this one—that call on us to reorganize and recommit. The PPRV setback is disappointing, but it does not diminish the urgency of our mission or the strength of our community. In 2026, we will take what we’ve learned, strengthen our partnerships, and continue showing up—because access, equity, and dignity for people living with PWS are always worth fighting for.”
Dorothea Lantz, Director of Community Engagement, PWSA | USA
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Perry A. Zirkel has written more than 1,500 publications on various aspects of school law, with an emphasis on legal issues in special education. He writes a regular column for NAESP’s Principal magazine and NASP’s Communiqué newsletter, and he did so previously for Phi Delta Kappan and Teaching Exceptional Children.
Jennifer Bolander has been serving as a Special Education Specialist for PWSA (USA) since October of 2015. She is a graduate of John Carroll University and lives in Ohio with her husband Brad and daughters Kate (17), and Sophia (13) who was born with PWS.
Dr. Amy McTighe is the PWS Program Manager and Inpatient Teacher at the Center for Prader-Willi Syndrome at the Children’s Institute of Pittsburgh. She graduated from Duquesne University receiving her Bachelor’s and Master’s degree in Education with a focus on elementary education, special education, and language arts.
Evan has worked with the Prader-Willi Syndrome Association (USA) since 2007 primarily as a Crisis Intervention and Family Support Counselor. Evans works with parents and schools to foster strong collaborative relationships and appropriate educational environments for students with PWS.
Staci Zimmerman works for Prader-Willi Syndrome Association of Colorado as an Individualized Education Program (IEP) consultant. Staci collaborates with the PWS multi-disciplinary clinic at the Children’s Hospital in Denver supporting families and school districts around the United States with their child’s Individual Educational Plan.
Founded in 2001, SDLC is a non-profit legal services organization dedicated to protecting and advancing the legal rights of people with disabilities throughout the South. It partners with the Southern Poverty Law Center, Protection and Advocacy (P&A) programs, Legal Services Corporations (LSC) and disability organizations on major, systemic disability rights issues involving the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), and the federal Medicaid Act. Recently in November 2014, Jim retired.