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Tag: “healthcare system reform”

If The U.S. Chamber Had Their Way, Pennsylvanians Would Suffer

By Rafael Noboa Rivera on July 8, 2009 7:26 PM

When CEOs in Washington decide the agenda of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, they seem to forget all about real workers and business owners throughout America. For decades, they have fought legislation that would have a real impact on working families right here in Pennsylvania. With more than 530,000 Pennsylvanians out of work, now is the time to do everything we can to stand up to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce - and stand up for working families.

The U.S. Chamber opposed wage hikes that not only benefited hundreds of thousands of Pennsylvanians but also pump more than $132 million into the state economy. They opposed a children's health care that will not only cover 129,000 more children in Pennsylvania, but also will create nearly 8,500 jobs in the state. The U.S. Chamber doesn't speak for working families in Pennsylvania.

 

IMPACT OF MINIMUM WAGE HIKES ON PENNSYLVANIA:

 The U.S. Chamber "Has Consistently Opposed Increasing the Federal Minimum Wage." In July 2007, Marc Freedman, the labor law policy director at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, wrote, "The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has consistently opposed increasing the federal minimum wage." He added, "Increasing the minimum wage does not even help those it is intended to benefit." [Atlanta Journal-Constitution, 7/17/07]

 U.S. Chamber Official on Wage Hike: "We Have Taken The Hell No Attitude." "We have taken the 'hell, no' attitude," said the U.S. Chamber's Randel Johnson discussing a proposed minimum wage increase in 1999. "I don't care what the 20-second sound bites say. This move hurts lower-income, lower-skilled workers."[Akron Beacon Journal, 6/21/99]

 U.S. Chamber Official: "We Don't Think Government Ought to Be in the Business of Setting Wages." In 2002, U.S. Chamber spokesman Randy Johnson said, "We don't think the government ought to be in the business of setting wages." [Washington Times, 5/6/02]

 U.S. Chamber: "Wage Mandates Ignore the Principles of Free Market Economies." In an amicus brief filed with the Supreme Court of Louisiana, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce wrote, "Wage mandates ignore the principles of free market economies; they prevent businesses from making profits, growing and hiring more workers; and they base wages on what the worker wants instead of on the value of work performed." [The Pantagraph, 11/21/04]

 

2007 Minimum Wage Hike Could Pump $132.2 MILLION Into Pennsylvania's Economy. The average American works 1,916 hours every year. In 2007, 69,000 Pennsylvanians earned at or below the federal minimum wage. With an increase from $6.25 an hour to $7.25 an hour by July 2009, the 2007 wage increase passed by Congress could pump $132.2 million into Pennsylvania's economy. [Bureau of Labor Statistics, "Work Schedules in the National Compensation Survey," 7/28/08; Bureau of Labor Statistics, "Characteristics of Minimum Wage Workers: 2007," 5/7/08; EPI, "What a new federal minimum wage means for the states," 5/25/07]

 

Study Found That 808,000 Pennsylvanians Would Benefit From the 2007 Minimum Wage Hike. The Economic Policy Institute found that approximately 808,000 people in Pennsylvania alone would benefit from a federal minimum wage increase to $7.25 an hour. This include those workers that were earning less than $7.25 as well as workers that would benefit indirectly as other wages increase proportionately. EPI explained, "While a raise is not legally mandated for these workers, empirical evidence shows that many employers raise the wages of workers earning above the new minimum wage in order to preserve internal wage structures, an occurrence known as the 'spillover effect.'" [EPI, "Issue Guide on Minimum Wage, 8/1/08]

 

 IMPACT OF FAIR PAY LAWS ON PENNSYLVANIA:

 U.S. Chamber Opposed Equal Pay Bill, Saying it Would "Undermine America's Civil Rights Laws." In a January 2009 letter to Congress, R. Bruce Josten of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce wrote that the U.S. Chamber opposed the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, a bill to protect workers who receive unfair pay for equal work, "on both substantive and procedural grounds." Discussing another fair pay bill this year, the Chamber's Randel Johnson said, "further increasing the opportunity for frivolous litigation would only further serve to undermine America's civil rights laws." [Chamber Letter, 1/14/09; Chamber Press Release, 1/9/09]

 U.S. Chamber Opposed 1998 Equal Pay Law for Women. In 1998, the U.S. Chamber opposed President Clinton's call for legislation to strengthen laws reducing disparities in men and women's earning power. Randel Johnson, vice president of labor policy at the chamber, said that wage disparities are due mainly to the interruption of many women's job careers to raise families. "Work experience does tend to translate to greater wages," Johnson said. [AP, 6/10/98]

 

Women in Pennsylvania Earn Only 75% Of What Their Male Counterparts Make, Below the National Average. According to a study released by the National Women's Law Center, "In 2007, on average, women in Pennsylvania working full-time, year-round earned only 75% of what men working full-time, year-round earned -- three percentage points below the nationwide average of 78%. The wage gap is even more substantial when race and gender are considered together. White, non-Hispanic women working full-time, year-round in Pennsylvania earned only 74% of the wages of White, non-Hispanic men. However, Black women working full- time, year-round in Pennsylvania earned only 69%, and Hispanic women only 55%, of the wages of White, non-Hispanic men." [National Women's Law Center, April 2009]

 

 IMPACT OF OUTSOURCING ON PENNSYLVANIA:

 U.S. Chamber President Defended Outsourcing of U.S. Jobs, Arguing That Americans Are "Short of Skills." Defending outsourcing in 2004, U.S. Chamber of Commerce President Tom Donohue said, "The big fundamental issue that we need to understand is we are short of skills in this country. Five years from now we'll have 10 million skilled jobs and we haven't got the people to fill." [CNNFN, 5/3/04]

 U.S. Chamber President: "There Are Legitimate Values in Outsourcing." In 2004, U.S. Chamber of Commerce President Tom Donohue said, "there are legitimate values in outsourcing -- not only jobs, but work -- to gain technical experience and benefit we don't have here, to lower the price of products, which means more and more of them are brought into the United States, used, for example, I.T., much broader use than it was 10 years ago, create more and more jobs. But the bottom line is that we outsource very few jobs in relation to the size of our economy. We employ -- American companies employ 140 million Americans. They provide health care for 160 million Americans. They provide training in terms of 40 billion a year. The outsourcing deal over three or four or five years and the two or three sets of numbers are only going to be, you know, maybe two, maybe three million jobs, maybe four." [CNNFN, 2/10/04]

 U.S. Chamber President Suggested More Jobs Were Brought In to the U.S. Than Outsourced to Other Countries. In 2004, U.S. Chamber of Commerce President Tom Donohue said, "nobody knows where Lou got 2.2 [million] outsourced jobs. Maybe we've got 300,000 in the last couple of years. The most interesting thing is that if you take an annual basis, we insource in the very same categories of work $16 billion more than we outsourced, which is 2 million jobs." [CNNFN, 9/2/04]

 

In 2007 Alone, Pennsylvania Lost 228,900 jobs to Outsourcing. According to a study from the Economic Policy Institute, Pennsylvania lost 228,900 jobs as a result of the U.S. non-oil trade deficit in 2007 alone, making Pennsylvania the 8th biggest loser in numeric terms. Nationwide, 5.6 million jobs were lost. 70% of these jobs were in the manufacturing sector. [EPI, 10/2/08]

 

Pennsylvania Has Lost Nearly 350,000 Manufacturing Jobs Since 2000. According to the U.S. Department of Labor, in April 2009, there were 582,600 manufacturing jobs in Pennsylvania. In January 2000, 931,100 Pennsylvanians worked in the manufacturing sector.  [BLS, 5/22/09; 3/28/00]

 

 IMPACT OF CHILDREN'S HEALTH CARE ON PENNSYLVANIA:

 Chamber Opposed 2009 Bill to Expand Children's Health Care. In a January 2009 letter to Congress, R. Bruce Josten of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce urged members to vote against the Children's Health Insurance Program Reauthorization Act of 2009, writing that the bill "raises taxes on a narrow sector of the U.S. economy with the aim of funding a broad-based entitlement program, which is grossly unfair and burdensome to American businesses and consumers." [Chamber Letter, 1/14/09]

 Chamber Opposed 2007 Bill to Expand Children's Health Care. In September 2007, the Phoenix Business Journal reported, "The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is opposing a federal plan to raise tobacco taxes to fund government-provided health services for uninsured children. That puts the U.S. Chamber on the same side of the issue as the Bush administration." "To prejudice a narrow sector of the U.S. economy with the aim of funding a broad-based entitlement program is grossly unfair and burdensome to American businesses and consumers," said the chamber in a letter to congressional leaders on the issue. [Phoenix Business Journal, 9/26/07; Chamber Letter, 7/17/07]

 

129,000 Pennsylvania Children Could Gain Coverage Under the 2009 SCHIP Expansion. A 2009 report from Families USA found that 129,000 Pennsylvania children could be covered under the 2009 bill to expand and reauthorize the State Children's Health Insurance Program. [Families USA, January 2009]

 

Children's Health Care Reauthorization Will Bring $1.8 Billion Into Pennsylvania, Creating 8,498 Jobs.  In 2007, a Families USA study found: "With $50 billion in additional federal funding for SCHIP and Medicaid, SCHIP reauthorization could bring Pennsylvania approximately $1.82 billion in new federal funding for children's health coverage over the next five years. This would result in the state getting three times the amount it would have otherwise gotten for SCHIP... Over the next five years, $1.82 billion in new federal funding will create: $820.6 million in increased business activity, $287.7 million in increased wages, and 8,498 additional jobs for Pennsylvania." [Families USA, May 2007]

 

 IMPACT OF MEDICARE ON PENNSYLVANIA:

 Chamber Opposed 2008 Bill to Prevent Medicare Cuts. In June 2008, R. Bruce Josten of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce wrote that the Chamber opposed the Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act of 2008, S. 3101, because it would cut the Medicare Advantage program. Referring to the bill, and the cuts to the private insurance Medicare Advantage program, the American Medical Association aired an ad saying "A group of U.S. senators voted to protect the powerful insurance companies at the expense of Medicare patients' access to doctors." [Chamber Letter, 6/12/08; AP, 7/2/08]

 

2 Million Medicare Beneficiaries, Along With 161,653 Military Members and Their Families, Would Have Been Affected If 2008 Medicare Cuts Had Gone Through. In 2008, the Chamber opposed a bill that prevented a 10.6% cut in Medicare payments to doctors. According to the American Medical Association, 2,005,670 Medicare patients and 161,653 TRICARE patients in Pennsylvania would have been affected by these cuts. [American Medical Association, February 2009]

 

 IMPACT OF SOCIAL SECURITY ON PENNSYLVANIA:

 U.S. Chamber Opposed the 1935 Social Security Act. According to an official history of Social Security, "In 1935, while there were long debate and votes on many amendments, the Congress passed the Social Security Act by an overwhelming majority.  In the House, the vote was 372 yeas, 33 nays and 25 not voting.  The vote in the Senate was equally positive, with 77 yeas, 6 nays and 12 not voting.  President Franklin Delano Roosevelt signed the Act into law on August 14, 1935.  Despite the strong support, there was vocal opposition to the Act, both in the Congress and externally.  The minority members of the House Ways and Means Committee said it would impose a crushing burden upon industry and upon labor.  The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers opposed the bill." [SSA History: History of SSA 1993-2000]

 U.S. Chamber Wanted to Postpone 1935 Social Security Act. In June 1935, the New York Times reported on a "broad program for recovery and re-employment" adopted by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. On Social Security, they reported, "The chamber will continue to advocate that enactment of the major features of the pending social security legislation be postponed until there can be further examination by a Congressional committee. If a study of this character is made, the chamber will present to such a committee its views as to the constitutionality of the legislation as proposed and will emphasize the fact that the proposals now pending would double the entire present volume of Federal taxes." [New York Times, 6/16/35]

 U.S. Chamber President: Any Social Security Reform "Must" Include Privatization. In June 2005, Thomas J. Donohue, President of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, co-wrote an op-ed that stated, "any Social Security reform must meet four core principles," including "Giving younger workers the option of investing part of their payroll taxes in personal retirement accounts." In January 2005, Donohue  "said a Social Security overhaul is 'doable' this year and said the Chamber believes 'individual investment accounts must be an important component of reform.' [Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, 6/7/05; National Journal's CongressDaily, 1/5/05]

 

If Social Security Were Privatized, Pennsylvania Would Lose At Least $10.9 BILLION Every Year. According to a 2005 report by the National Women's Law Center, "In 2002, $24.2 billion flowed into the Pennsylvania economy through Social Security benefits."  If the cuts expected under President Bush's plan were to take effect currently, "Pennsylvania would lose $10.9 billion per year, even including the proceeds from private accounts. This amount is equivalent to 25% of state government expenditures in fiscal year 2002 (state government expenditures include money generated from state funds, federal funds, and the sale of state bonds). [National Women's Law Center, February 2005]

 

Privatizing Social Security Would Impose a $42.4 BILLION Unfunded Mandate on Pennsylvania. According to the Institute for America's Future in 2005, the Bush Social Security privatization plan would create a new $42.4 billion unfunded federal mandate on the state of Pennsylvania and would plunge at least 244,000 Pennsylvania seniors into poverty. [Institute for America's Future, April 2005]

 

Women in Pennsylvania Would Be Hard Hit If Social Security Were Privatized, With Widow's Benefit Dropping $4,884 Per Year. According to a 2005 report by the National Women's Law Center, "The typical recipient of a Social Security widow's benefit in Pennsylvania receives $904 per month ($10,848 per year).  According to the Congressional Budget Office, under Plan 2 of the President's Commission to Strengthen Social Security, today's kindergarteners are projected to receive 45% less than they are promised under current law, even when the proceeds from their private accounts are included in the total.  If such a benefit cut were to take effect currently, the typical widow in Pennsylvania would receive only $497 per month ($5,964 per year), an amount equal to only 69% of the poverty line. [National Women's Law Center, February 2005]

 

 IMPACT OF WORKER SAFETY ON PENNSYLVANIA:

 The U.S. Chamber of Commerce Vigorously Opposed Occupational Safety Regulations. In an article written between the initial bill supported by President Johnson and the second bill, that passed, supported by President Nixon, the New York Times reported: "The first legislation providing for a comprehensive nationwide system of health and safety standards was proposed last year by President Johnson.  Strongly supported by labor, the bill ran into immediate and vigorous opposition from industry, led by the Chamber of Commerce of the United States." [New York Times, 12/10/69]

 The U.S. Chamber of Commerce "led the fight to defeat the 1968 bill." [New York Times, 3/19/70]

 U.S. Chamber Argued That OSHA Was a Failure. In 1979, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce charged "that the Occupational Safety and Health Administration had failed to reduce worker injuries and illnesses significantly since its inception in 1970." Mark De Bernardo of the Chamber wrote, "In the wake of piles of more O.S.H.A. rules and paperwork, fatal injuries on the job soared by more than 24 percent from 1976 to 1977." [New York Times, 8/27/79]

 U.S. Chamber Spokesman Said OSHA Is a "Blatant Denial of Fundamental Fairness." When describing the structure of the Labor Department within the Executive Branch rather than the Judicial Branch of the government, Richard Berman, then director of labor law for the United States Chamber of Commerce, said "This has a chilling effect on an employer's exercise of his right to appeal and is thus a blatant denial of fundamental fairness." Berman now runs the Center for Union Facts, a corporate front group trying to defeat the Employee Free Choice Act. [U.S. News & World Report, 11/24/75; New York Times, 1/9/09]

 

In 2007, 220 Workplace Fatalities Were Reported in Pennsylvania. In 2007, 220 Pennsylvanians reportedly died as a result of workplace injuries. [BLS Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries, 2007]

 

 


Tags: chamber, chamber of commerce, employee free choice act, healthcare organizing, healthcare system reform, Pennsylvania

At Victory Rally, Al Franken Shouts Out to Labor, Union Health Insurance

By Michael Whitney on July 1, 2009 4:22 PM

At his victory rally today in Minneapolis, Senator-Elect (finally!) Al Franken spoke to an enthusiastic crowd about the race and what he's expecting in Washington. According to The Hill, Franken gave two important shout-outs in his speech: one to his "brothers and sisters in labor," and the other to his union's health insurance plan.

Franken promised progress on President Obama's agenda and gave a special shout-out to his "brothers and sisters in labor."

Franni and I would not have had health insurance for the last four years if I had not been a member of a union," Franken said.

After Franken's victory was announced yesterday, SEIU's Secretary-Treasurer Anna Burger congratulated Franken and noted his commitment to the issues that matter:

"During the election, Senator-elect Franken made clear he will work hard to rebuild our economy through real healthcare reform and the Employee Free Choice Act, as well as tackling the long-term challenges we face on the environment, keeping college education affordable and fixing our broken immigration system," said SEIU's Anna Burger.

And if you haven't yet, watch Minnesota's next senator walk a day in the shoes of an SEIU member:

Tags: al franken, anna burger, employee free choice act, healthcare system reform, minnesota

Colorado Worker Wants Health Care Reform Now

By Rafael Noboa Rivera on July 1, 2009 12:48 PM

Mike Maday visited the CO congressional delegation with the Change that Works Colorado group to discuss why he thinks we need health care reform now. Watch the video above to see what kind of reception he received, and sign up here to show your support for a public option.

Tags: Colorado, health care event, healthcare system reform

Health Care Providers Rally Outside NRSC

By Raf Noboa on June 26, 2009 10:56 AM

As part of the "Healthcare 09' - We Can't Wait" rally in Washington, DC, nearly 250 activists gathered yesterday at the Republican Party's temple to Ronald Reagan - home of the National Republican Senatorial Committee - to demand quality, affordable health care for all.

Led by health care providers from Pennsylvania, Washington State, New York and elsewhere, the crowd chanted "What do we want? Health care! When do we want it? Now!" and "We want health care! We want health care!"

We succeeded in causing quite a stir outside the headquarters, but Republican staffers chose to remain inside. The crowd moved and re-gathered at Union Station to hear Maine singer and Change that Works volunteer Peter Alexander sing "Beggin' for Change," a song Pete wrote to help out his friend Doug, a man burdened by crushing medical debt of an accident.

Find more about Peter Alexander's music at www.peteralexander.us.

Watch the video above to see the scene yesterday at Republican headquarters and Union Station.

Tags: healthcare '09, healthcare '09 rally, healthcare bill, healthcare system reform

Round-Up of this Week's Health Care Events

By Jessica Kutch on June 24, 2009 3:32 PM
775rally.jpg

There's a ton of stuff happening in Washington, DC this week in the movement to win health care reform. Below is a snapshot of what's going on, to help you keep track of everything that's happening during this crucial time period.

Tags: faith, health care event, healthcare equality project, healthcare equity, healthcare system reform

Continue reading Round-Up of this Week's Health Care Events .

Maine small business owner: U.S. Chamber's attacks on healthcare hurt small businesses

By Michael Whitney on June 22, 2009 4:33 PM

In response to recent attacks from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Maine small business owner Lisa McSwain advocated for healthcare reform to help other small businesses struggling with growing healthcare costs.

"At a time when small businesses are struggling, I can't imagine why the US Chamber is fighting healthcare reform that would ease the crushing burden of rising costs," said Lisa McSwain, owner of Mid Maine Restoration in Edgecomb, Maine.

McSwain continued:

"We started to offer healthcare to our employees 12 years ago when it was affordable. Back then, we had about 15 employees, but now we are down to five and just can't afford to pay the high premiums anymore. I would like to see healthcare reform so that I, as an employer, don't have to make life or death decisions for my employees."

McSwain's story is one repeated throughout the country. Small businesses are struggling to pay for skyrocketing costs, while big corporations represented by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce fight to keep the status quo.

Here are some facts on how small businesses are affected by the need for healthcare. Click here for more.

Small Business Struggling Under Crumbling Healthcare System

Small Businesses And Employees Pay 18% More For Health Insurance Than Larger Companies. According to the Small Business Majority, "small businesses and their employees pay an average of 18 percent more for the same level of health insurance benefits as large businesses." [Small Business Majority, 6/11/2009]

Over Five-Year Period, Small Businesses Saw Healthcare Costs Rise By 30 Percent. According to Rand, between 2000 and 2005, "small businesses (those with 25 or fewer employees) saw the expense of providing health insurance rise by nearly 30 percent..." [Rand, 4/4/2008]

Less Than Half Of Small Business Community Offered Employees Health Insurance In 2008. According to the Center for American Progress, "Only 49 percent of firms with fewer than 10 workers offered insurance in 2008." [Center for American Progress, 10/30/2008]

Small Business Owners And Employees Account For Over Half Of Uninsured Population. According to the Center for American Progress, "Small business owners and their employees account for the largest share of the uninsured population - an estimated 27 million of the 47 million Americans without health insurance." [Center for American Progress, 10/30/2008]

Failure To Act Could Cost Small Businesses Hundreds Of Thousands Of Jobs. According to the Small Business Majority, if healthcare reform is not passed, there will be 178,000 fewer small business jobs in 2018. [Small Business Majority, 6/11/2009]

Healthcare Reform Will Help Struggling Small Businesses Offer Affordable Coverage To All Workers

Health Insurance Exchange Would Provide Affordable Options For Small Businesses. According to Sen. Max Baucus' healthcare plan, "the Baucus plan would establish the Health Insurance Exchange through which individuals and small businesses in the market for insurance could obtain affordable healthcare coverage." [Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, 11/12/2008]

Public Plan Option Would Help Small Businesses By Providing An Array of Health Insurance Options. According to a health reform plan put forth by the Commonwealth Fund, including a framework that includes a public plan option "would permit individuals to keep their current coverage if it works for them while providing new choices through the insurance exchange, including a range of private plans and the new public plan. Small employers in particular would be able to offer their employees a choice of multiple plans. Large employers would gain a nationwide plan plus employee choice of regional plans." [Commonwealth Fund, 2/19/2009]

Healthcare Reform Can Save Small Businesses 36% Of Their Healthcare Costs and Reduce Profit Losses By More Than 50%. With healthcare reform, "small businesses can save as much as $855 billion, a reduction of 36 percent." In addition, "over the next ten years...small businesses will lose $52.1 billion in profits to high healthcare costs. Healthcare reform can reduce these losses by more than 56 percent, saving $29.2 billion in small business profits..." [Small Business Majority, 6/11/2009]

Tags: chamber of commerce, healthcare system reform, maine, small business, small business owners

State Legislators to Federal Lawmakers: We Need Health Care Reform Now

By Rafael Noboa Rivera on June 17, 2009 5:28 PM

North Dakota State Legislators Sen. Aaron Krauter, Sen. Carolyn Nelson, and Rep. Richard Holman signed onto a letter along with 700 state legislator from every state, to the President, HHS Secretary Sebelius and leaders of Congress, asking them to support key ingredients for real health care reform. Today, a delegation of legislators from around the nation will be on Capitol Hill to meet with the White House and deliver the letter.

State legislators are at the forefront of good health care reform with states like North Dakota looking for ways to implement health care reform through mechanisms like the State Office of Rural Health.

From the letter:

Key priorities for reform are reflected in recent state initiatives and public opinion polls which show that Americans want more choices and options for quality health care. Americans recognize that the private sector alone has proven incapable of creating a high-quality, fair, and accountable health care system that works for all families. Therefore, a key priority for reform is the choice of a public health insurance plan that is available to businesses, individuals, and families.

These are elected officials who have been legislating on health care reform for years, and have a keen understanding of how burdensome our broken health care system is for state budgets and for people's pocketbooks.

Read the entire letter being delivered on the Progressive State Network's website. You can find a list of North Dakota state legislators after the jump.

Tags: health insurance reform, healthcare reform, healthcare system reform, north dakota

State Legislators to Federal Lawmakers: We Need Health Care Reform

By Rafael Noboa Rivera on June 17, 2009 4:15 PM

Colorado State Legislators Sen. Linda Newell, Sen. Joe Isgar, and Rep. John Kefalas signed onto a letter along with 700 state legislator from every state, to the President, HHS Secretary Sebelius and leaders of Congress, asking them to support key ingredients for real health care reform. Today, a delegation of legislators from around the nation will be on Capitol Hill to meet with the White House and deliver the letter.

State legislators are at the forefront of good health care reform with states like Colorado looking for ways to implement health care reform through mechanisms like the 208 Commission.

From the letter:

Key priorities for reform are reflected in recent state initiatives and public opinion polls which show that Americans want more choices and options for quality health care. Americans recognize that the private sector alone has proven incapable of creating a high-quality, fair, and accountable health care system that works for all families. Therefore, a key priority for reform is the choice of a public health insurance plan that is available to businesses, individuals, and families.

These are elected officials who have been legislating on health care reform for years, and have a keen understanding of how burdensome our broken health care system is for state budgets and for people's pocketbooks.

Read the entire letter being delivered on the Progressive State Network's website.

Tags: colorado, health care coverage, healthcare crisis, healthcare system reform

Chamber of Commerce Defends Bonuses, Bailouts, and the Broken Healthcare System on Fox News Sunday

By Michael Whitney on June 15, 2009 5:07 PM

Yesterday U.S. Chamber of Commerce President Tom Donohue appeared on Fox News Sunday, and in the course of a 15-minute interview, defended taxpayer-funded bonuses, championed a broken healthcare system, and brushed off concerns about bailed out companies.

Let's take a look at just some select segments:

Bonuses: Donohue went to bat for the bonuses at bailed out company AIG, which was the target of public outrage earlier this year.

WALLACE: So are you saying if AIG wants to give million-dollar bonuses, so be it?

DONOHUE: I'm saying if -- AIG is in a lot of trouble, but I'm saying if it took the right people to fix AIG, you're going to have to pay them. Same thing right here in this network. You know, if you lost your -- you couldn't pay your very best people, I'm not sure they'd stay. They'd probably go to another network.

Bailouts: Immediately after defending AIG's outrageous bonuses, Donohue brushes off any and all concerns about bailout companies.

WALLACE: We're also not taking a huge bailout from the federal government.

DONOHUE: But I'm not particularly worried about those few companies that took the bailout. That will work out. . .

Yes. Just close your eyes, cross your fingers, and it "will work out." That's responsible governance for you.

Healthcare reform: Donohue defends the status quo of healthcare in America, asserting both that a.) businesses are doing enough for healthcare already, and b.) a public option shouldn't be used to cover those who don't already have health insurance. Does Donohue prefer the "damned if you do, damned if you don't" option for healthcare reform?

DONOHUE: But what we're saying -- there should be a bill that does wellness. There should be a bill that helps us perhaps have a mandate on individuals. There should not be a mandate on companies. We now cover 170 million Americans.

We -- and by the way, if you're going to do a federal plan, I think you've got a real problem, because you're going to have more opposition to what we're trying to do here than you can imagine, because you're going to put everybody else in a very difficult position and a non-competitive position.

Bonuses, bailouts, and a broken system: Is that the America in which the U.S. Chamber of Commerce believes? Here's hoping they don't get their way for much longer.

Tags: bailouts, bonuses, chamber of commerce, fox news, healthcare system reform

June 20: We need your help on health care

By Ryan Anderson on June 11, 2009 11:14 PM

Next Saturday, June 20, volunteers from across the state will participate in a massive door-to-door campaign to mobilize support for health care reform, and they need your help to succeed.

Organizing for America, working in partnership with our organization and supporters from all over the state, is in the process of organizing canvass efforts in 14 cities that stretch all the way from Scottsbluff to Omaha. Their efforts will no doubt go a long way towards mobilizing the support necessary to pass real health care reform. But they just can't do this one alone.

Barack Obama's job didn't end on Election Day, and neither did ours. It's critical that our Congressmen and our Senators understand just how important this issue is to the voters in their state. That means identifying new supporters and activating new volunteers. That means talking to our neighbors, and letting them know the truth about the current health care debate.

Whether you live in Omaha or Lincoln, South Sioux or McCook or anywhere in between, there is bound to be a canvass in your area that needs your help to succeed. For more details and to RSVP, please check in at our Facebook events page and stay tuned here for more updates as we get closer to the date.

Tags: canvass, canvassing, healthcare organizing, healthcare system reform, nebraska, Nebraska healthcare, organizing for america

24 Hours of Twitter

By Megan Rosati on June 9, 2009 6:21 PM

Thanks to the hard work of the Iowa Change that Works, our 24 hours of health care stories campaign on Twitter was a tremendous success.

With coverage in multiple media outlets, including the WCF Courier, Des Moines Register, as well as several Iowa blogs, such as the Radio Iowa Blog, Blog for Iowa and Iowa Politics, our Twitter campaign focused attention right where it was needed: on the struggles of everyday Iowans dealing with the burden of expensive, inadequate health care.

According to the Des Moines Register, our stories reached Senator Charles Grassley's office:

Late Monday, Grassley's office issued a statement saying he appreciates what Change That Works Iowa is doing.

"It is using Twitter in a similar fashion to how Sen. Grassley uses Twitter -- as another way to communicate with Iowans and make representative government work," press secretary Beth Levine said.

Grassley, who was in and out of meetings all day, including a meeting with Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor, planned to read the group's tweets at the end of the day, Levin said.

Thanks to the bravery of those that shared their stories, our fight to reform our health care system continues to make a difference.

View the stories from our 24 hours of health care campaign here:

• Kathy Olmstead • Sharon Hyke • Cindy Brown • Sara Lang • Mary Pat Lease
• Carol Matthews • Leah Keneps • Iris Ayers • Rita Robinson • Alisa Vickrey
• Bob Meddaugh • Karen Kinkel • Cathy Warner • Mary Vasey • Melinda Myers
• Hugo Ramirez • Robin Van Camp • Michelle Livingston • Shawnae Morey
• Sarah Swisher • Eleanor Pierce • Sarah Posekany

Background on how we launched this campaign here and here.

Tags: grassley, health care stories, healthcare organizing, healthcare system reform, iowa, iowa change that works, senator charles grassley, tweets, twitter

24 Hours Mary Pat Lease

By Andrew Mertens on June 9, 2009 7:00 AM

Today we are taking time to feature stories of every day Iowans who have struggled because of a lack of quality, affordable health care. Every hour, on the hour, we will feature a new story in the hope that these faces and their struggles persuade Senator Charles Grassley that true reform cannot happen without a public health care plan option, and that quality, affordable health care needs to be available to every Iowan.

Mary Pat Lease
Iowa City, IA

My sister worked for 25 years at a job that she hated because she had a "pre-existing condition." Due to a work injury she had herniated discs in her back, and she feared that she could not get health coverage for her and her children if she left.

Another sister was put in an even worse situation. She was a dental assistant and her employer didn't offer insurance as a benefit. Her husband was self-employed and could not get affordable health insurance because he had diabetes, which eventually took his life. So my sister, a widow with two small children and no way to afford private insurance, ultimately had to file for bankruptcy due to medical debt.

Far too many people stay in unfulfilling jobs and marriages because they cannot afford to "divorce" their health insurance carrier. This country needs a public, non-profit option, such as an improved version of our current Federal Employees Health Benefits Plan or Medicare. It can be offered on a sliding-scale to cover income inequities.


Respond to Senator Grassley on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ChuckGrassley

Write Senator Grassley and tell him that you want health care reform today:
http://action.seiu.org/page/speakout/24hrs

Tags: health care horror stories, healthcare system reform, public health plan option, senator chuck grassley, twitter

24 Hours Yenchay Tangkhpanya

By Andrew Mertens on June 8, 2009 8:00 PM

Today we are taking the day to feature stories of every day Iowans who have struggled because of a lack of quality, affordable health care. Every hour, on the hour, we will feature a new story in the hope that these faces and their struggles persuade Senator Charles Grassley that true reform cannot happen without a public health care plan option, and that quality, affordable health care needs to be available to every Iowan.

Yenchay Tangkhpanya

Mount Pleasant, IA

My husband and I immigrated to Iowa in 1979 from war-torn Vietnam. We've been blessed to reside in the greatest state in the union. My husband has worked in a factory for more than 30 years and I have been a small-business owner for more than 20. My husband is over 60 and suffers from chronic back pain. I want him to quit and work a part-time job where he doesn't have to use his back as much but he stays because he needs the health-care coverage that his employer provides for my family. We can't jump into a private plan because we have pre-existing conditions. If I had the option to buy into a public health plan, it would be one fewer burden on my family.

Iowans deserve to have the same health-care plan that their members of Congress get. I am asking Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa to include this in the health care reform bill coming out this summer, and I am asking my fellow Iowans to follow my lead.

Respond to Senator Grassley on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ChuckGrassley

Write Senator Grassley and tell him that you want health care reform today:
http://action.seiu.org/page/speakout/24hrs

Tags: health insurance reform, healthcare system reform, public health insurance option, senator charles grassley, twitter

Louisianans Answer the President's Call for Health Care Reform

By Jamiah Adams on June 8, 2009 10:52 AM

OFAyLActw.jpgOn Saturday, June 6, Change that Works organizers joined as dozens of activists from Organizing for America answered the President's call to meet and discuss health care reform. In house meetings across the state, Louisianans watched the President's health care reform message; shared their health care stories and found out how they could further participate in the health care reform discussion.

At dozens of meet-ups, people shared stories of their experiences with a broken health care system--from small business owners unable to provide expensive insurance to working families being forced to make the unimaginable choices between paying the mortgage and paying for health care. The story was achingly the same, the time for real reform is now.

Plans were made for helping to spread the word and lay the groundwork for the national day of action on June 27. Echoing similar calls from all across the country, the message from Shreveport to New Orleans, Lake Charles to Baton Rouge was clear: it is time to take action and demand the change we need. Join SEIU's Change That Works campaign and stay tuned in the coming weeks for more details on the national day of action.

Tags: healthcare system reform, Louisiana, organizing for america, organizing kickoffs

24 Hours of Health Care

By Andrew Mertens on June 8, 2009 4:00 AM

Today we are taking the day to feature stories of every day Iowans who have struggled because of a lack of quality, affordable health care. Every hour, on the hour, we will feature a new story in the hope that these faces and their struggles persuade Senator Charles Grassley that true reform cannot happen without a public health care plan option, and that quality, affordable health care needs to be available to every Iowan.


Michelle Livingston

Des Moines, Iowa

Michelle Livingston lost her entire family to terminal illness. She and her husband Jim had two sons before they discovered Jim had Huntington's disease. This disease causes degeneration in many regions of the brain and spinal cord and it works into severe dementia. Jim had a family history of this disease, but their private insurance plan wouldn't cover the genetic test to see if he was susceptible, so they couldn't afford to know.

The children of people with Huntington's disease have a 50 percent chance of inheriting the disease. Michelle's children both developed the disease before the age of 10. The condition is extremely debilitating and causes severe seizures with children. Michelle tried to enroll her children in disability insurance several times to help ease the exorbitant costs of their treatments, but she was denied every time because she made too much money.

Tragically, Huntington's disease took Michelle's husband and both of her children from her. Affording care for her family while they struggled with this disease was terribly expensive. She was left without a family and a lien on her house.

People in this country should not have to couple the complete loss of their family with complete financial ruin. It isn't fair.

Respond to Senator Grassley on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ChuckGrassley

Write Senator Grassley and tell him that you want health care reform today:
http://action.seiu.org/page/speakout/24hrs

Tags: health care horror stories, healthcare system reform, iowa, public health plan option, senator charles grassley, twitter

Continue reading 24 Hours of Health Care.

The Value of Reform in California

By Jamiah Adams on June 6, 2009 3:52 PM

The SEIU released a report about the true value of health care reform in the state of California. Read the excerpts below about public option and choice:

Increasing Choice and Portability while Reducing Costs
An essential part of any comprehensive health reform proposal must be to provide American families with more ways to attain quality, affordable health coverage. Providing Americans with a public option would increase options for Americans choosing their health care plans, and allow them to keep their insurance, even when they switch jobs. This new option could also help to remove many of the barriers placed between patients and their doctors by supplying healthy market competition against huge, often monopolistic insurance companies.

  • Insurance Monopolies Come Between Patients and Their Doctors.
  • Lack of choice and competition in the health insurance market is coming between California patients and their doctors. According to the American Medical Association, consolidated insurance markets "systematically undermine" the physician's role, by giving large insurance companies too much power.
  • 94 percent of United States health care markets are considered highly concentrated, meaning that one company or a small group of companies control a great deal of the market. In California, the top two insurance providers control 58 percent of the health care market share.
The Public Option Introduces Real Choice. The Current Health Care System Provides False Competition.
  • Consumers Are Left To Fend For Themselves In Current System "Competition today takes place on a restricted terrain, with each plan cutting its own deal and costs shifted back and forth across plans and providers. Patients-- the ultimate "consumers" of care--generally do not have much choice of health plans and, in many cases, even of providers, and they are often left to go it alone in dealing with the complicated and sometimes harmful practices of other players in the system."
  • Introducing Public Health Insurance Plan Will Provide Real Competition, New Choice For Consumers "Healthy competition requires not an endless array of choices--indeed, the evidence suggests that too many choices can impair consumer judgment. Rather, it requires a reasonable number of meaningfully different choices. One of the key reasons for public plan choice is that public plans can offer a set of valued features that private plans are generally either unable or unwilling to provide."
  • Competition Drives Down Costs for Consumers. Competition between public and private plans will drive down costs for consumers by forcing private plans to cut costs to compete. "It is the competition between private plans and public health insurance, with its distinctive cost control advantages, that presses both public and private plans to provide more for less and ensures that the goal of affordable quality coverage can be maintained over time at a price the nation can bear."
  • The Public Health Insurance Option Would Enhance the Insurance Market By Providing
  • Stability to Consumers. Consumers would be less vulnerable to fluctuations in premiums, would have steady access, and a more stable insurance environment with the addition of the public option. "One of the key reasons for public plan choice is that public plans can offer a set of valued features that private plans are generally either unable or unwilling to provide. Stability, wide pooling of risks, transparency, affordability of premiums, broad provider access, the capacity to collect and use patient information on a large scale to improve care--these are all hallmarks of public health insurance that private plans have inherent difficulties providing."
  • Read the entire Value of Reform in California report here:


Tags: California, healthcare costs, healthcare system reform, the value of reform

What are you going to do about health care reform? (Nebraska)

By Jane Fleming Kleeb on June 5, 2009 6:31 PM

Earlier this week, the enemies of health care reform came to Lincoln. And we met them there, head-to-head.

The DC lobbying group, called "Patients United," held a rally in Antelope Park where they spread their fear tactics and lies about President Obama's health care plan. Meanwhile, a group of Nebraskans--young, old, insured, uninsured, city and rural--gathered to protest from the other side of the street. Holding home-made signs and waving at the passing traffic, these concerned citizens spoke up for real reform and stood strong against the distortions peddled by the other side.

Apparently unhappy to see such strong support for reform, the Chairman of the Nebraska Republican Party, Mark Fahleson, took to his Twitter page and dismissed the crowd as "rent-a-goons." Personally, I didn't meet any goons in our audience, just Nebraskans who aren't happy with the status quo.

For instance, here's Chuck, a reverend who lives in Beatrice, who is looking for bold leadership, not the status quo:

Our opponents would like you to believe that Chuck and people like him are "goons," but that's just not true. They're concerned Nebraskans who are standing up for reform, and you'd better believe that they're making their voices heard and will continue to until we get health care reform passed.

To join them in their fight for real reform, please join our Facebook page. There you can learn more ways to become involved.

Together, we can fight the lies and meet our opponents head-on.

All the best,
Jane Fleming Kleeb
SEIU: Change That Works Nebraska

Tags: health care policy, healthcare campaign, healthcare system reform, Nebraska healthcare

Small Business Owner: Chamber of Commerce Speaks for Me like Burger King Speaks for Cows

By Michael Whitney on June 2, 2009 2:39 PM

Meet Ben Wootten.

Mr. Wootten lives in Blue Hill, Maine. He's the President of Wind River Capital Management, chair of his School Board, and the Chair of the Maine Small Business Forum. He's even a former town chair of the Republican Party.

Today, Ben Wootten spoke out on the congressional lobbying organized by the Chamber of Commerce against the Employee Free Choice Act.

"The US Chamber of Commerce doesn't speak for small businesses any more than Burger King speaks for cows. While the Chamber works overtime to represent the narrow interests of bloated, wealthy corporations, our nation's small businesses are struggling simply to keep their doors open.

"We need common-sense measures like health care reform and the Employee Free Choice Act to help small business owners control costs and ensure that their employees feel truly invested in the long-term future of their workplace."

There you have it, straight from a small business owner who speaks the truth about what our nation's small businesses need.

Tags: chamber of commerce, employee free choice act, healthcare system reform, maine, small business

A Guest Post By Jane Fleming Kleeb

By Jane Fleming Kleeb, SEIU Change That Works on May 29, 2009 2:17 PM
In the current debate over health care reform, an awful lot of attention has been paid towards Nebraska Senator Ben Nelson.  And it's certainly understandable that it should.  After all, Nelson has proven to be a critical swing vote in a divided Senate, and as we documented earlier this week with our "24/7 Project", Nebraskans themselves have a whole lot at stake in this debate.

But in the fights that are still ahead on this issue, it's important to remember who the real obstacles are.  And while Senator Ben Nelson has consistently shown a willingness to listen to his constituents and vote for the real reform that they need, his colleague, Senator Mike Johanns, has not.

This week a DC group launched a direct mail campaign attacking Ben Nelson for his stance on the public option.  But, as has now been documented in the Huffington Post, Nelson has kept his mind open to supporting just such a plan. 

Nelson made these statements while meeting directly with community leaders from across the state, including our organization and many other progressive partners.  By contrast, Mike Johanns has never extended invitations to hold similar meetings, and has been steadfast in his opposition to any public option. 

So why aren't more groups holding Senator Johanns accountable for his record, too? 

After all, the votes really speak for themselves.

Senator Nelson voted to continue and expand SCHIP, a program he actually created as Governor, so that our kids in Nebraska whose families cant afford health insurance can be covered.

Senator Johanns voted against SCHIP, which would have left thousands of Nebraskan kids uncovered and unprotected.

Senator Nelson voted to extend unemployment benefits and COBRA, the health insurance safety net for those who lose their job and lose their health insurance.

Senator Johanns voted against unemployment benefits and COBRA, leaving Nebraskans with not only lost hope but filled with fear of what happens if they get sick in between jobs.

Senator Nelson voted to fund health clinics which are the backbone of our communities.

Senator Johanns voted against our health clinics which would have left a huge hole in coverage for communities across our state.

Groups focusing on Senator Nelson and ignoring Senator Johanns are kinda like the parents who punish their kid who got a B instead of an A, and ignore their kid that got a D because that is what they expect out of him.  We think the D student could use some coaching and focus.

Jane Fleming Kleeb lives in Hastings, Nebraska with her husband Scott Kleeb and their two daughters.  Jane heads up SEIU's Change That Works project focusing on reforming healthcare and labor laws.

Tags: Ben Nelson, health care policy, healthcare system reform, jane fleming kleeb, mike johanns, nebraska, Nebraska healthcare

Support Health Care Workers-Stop Schwarzenegger's Cuts

By Megan Rosati on May 28, 2009 5:48 PM

Tags: budget cuts, california budget, healthcare system reform, heath care, schwarzenegger

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