New School to House National Commission for Quality Long-Term Care

Pace Selected as Executive Director

NEW YORK - The New School has been selected to administer the National Commission for Quality Long-Term Care. Created in October 2004, the Commission is charged with evaluating the current quality of long-term care, identifying factors that influence the ability to improve quality of this care, and tracking improvement in the years ahead.  The Commission is co-chaired by former Senator Bob Kerrey and former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich.  Governor Haley Barbour of Mississippi and Governor Phil Bredesen of Tennessee have also been appointed as commissioners.

To guide the commissioners in their work, Doug Pace has been appointed executive director of the Commission.  Pace, who most recently worked for the American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging, is a licensed nursing home administrator who has more than ten years association experience working on long-term care issues at both the state and national levels, including the Assisted Living Workgroup and the Center for Excellence in Assisted Living. 

“The commissioners, co-chairman Gingrich and I want to move quickly to explore the issues and make recommendations about national efforts that should lead to sustainable quality improvement,” said New School President Bob Kerrey. “The New School is honored to be selected to manage this important task and we are grateful that Doug Pace, an experienced and talented long-term care professional, has agreed to work with us on this initiative.”

About the Commission

The Commission’s goals include:

About The New School

The New School was founded in 1919 as the New School for Social Research by a group of distinguished independent-minded scholars including historian Charles Beard, economists Thorstein Veblen and James Harvey Robinson, and philosopher John Dewey.  Today, The New School, led by President Bob Kerrey, is a legendary, progressive university comprising eight schools bound by a common, unusual intent: to prepare and inspire its 9,300 undergraduate and graduate students to bring actual, positive change to the world.