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Tag: “senator collins”

Each of these Cans is a Human Being: Sharing Our Stories

By Megan Rosati on June 19, 2009 6:40 PM

3633489213_7568cf4745_o.jpg

Here in Maine, we want to remind our Senators of the human cost of our health care system. According to the consulting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers, employers' health care costs will increase by 9 percent next year. That means more American businesses struggling to compete and stay viable. And it means even higher premiums, deductibles, and co-pays for working families.

At Change that Works, we're highlighting the stories of the men and women forced to reach out to their neighbors to cover the costs of expensive medical procedures that are either not covered, or are inadequately covered by their current insurance. And thanks to Maine Public Broadcasting Network, our message is being heard:

"Sometimes I think we forget the humanity behind the cans, that each one of those cans is a human being," says Greg Howard, Maine spokesman for the Change that Works campaign from the Service Employees International Union. The group set up a display of collection jars in Portland.

They'll be collecting more photographs of posters and collection jars to send to the state's Congressional delegation, and to help underscore the need for a public option. "We thought it was important to point these people out and to try to give them a voice that their cans scream every single day in convenience stores, but some don't seem to hear," Howard says.

The rising cost of health care is a crushing burden on the hardworking families of Maine, and all across America. Last year, more than half of Americans postponed medical care or skipped their medications because they couldn't afford it. But what if you are the parents of a sick child that needs medical care? Then, like her parents, you could be forced to ask for help to ease the enormous financial burden of her health care:

"She's been receiving chemo since she was three months old," says Sadie Bowden of Canaan, aunt to one-year-old Faylynn McEwen, who has a brain tumor.

Insurance is covering hospital stays and a nurse comes to the home once a week. But Bowden says the parents have been relying on fundraisers like the concert she organized to help pay for things like long drives to the hospital in Bangor.

But the $8,000-plus in donations does not make up for the fact that both parents had to leave their jobs to provide home care. "Honestly, with the fundraisers we've been doing, we're raising money but it's not a ton of money. It's helping them basically pay their bills while they're at home taking care of her," Bowden says.

Until we reform our broken system, stories like Faylynn's will continue to remind us of how far we have to go before our system provides quality, affordable coverage to everyone who deserves it.

An important part of reforming our heath care system so it works for everyone is providing a public health care plan option, for those who are unable to afford private insurance coverage. Although the MPBN story cites a report by the Lewin Group stating that a public plan option would siphon 119 million people off of private insurance, a FactCheck report by Newsweek refutes this claim as misleading and untrue:

That's misleading. The 119 million figure comes from an analysis of a plan that would mirror Medicare and be open to every individual and business that wanted it. But that's not the type of public plan President Obama has proposed. Nor is such a plan gaining acceptance on Capitol Hill.

The author of the study says that while some have backed the Medicare-like proposal, using the 119 million number "overstates the impact of what now is being considered."

A public plan would provide support for those people who are unable to afford private coverage. The people of Maine should not be forced to ask their neighbors for help in order to pay their health care bills. There are faces behind these cans: let's stop begging for change, and start focusing on real reform.

View more photos of Mainers 'Begging for Change' and send in your own pictures by emailing healthcarecans@gmail.com

Tags: begging for change, health care cans, health care horror stories, maine, maine public broadcasting network, senator collins, senator snowe

Faces of the Employee Free Choice Act Gains Support from Shipyard in Kittery

By Megan Rosati on June 4, 2009 8:06 AM

Last week, the Faces of the Employee Free Choice Act billboard kicked off with style in the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in Kittery, Maine. Covered in an article by Seacoast Online, the purpose of the tour is to urge Senators Snowe and Collins to support the Employee Free Choice Act by showing the real-life workers behind the movement against worker intimidation.

Some of those 'faces' present at the rally on Wednesday in support of the Employee Free Choice Act were Paul O'Connor, President of the Metal Trades Council, and Kirk Miller, President of IFPTE Local 4, the local union of the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard. Said Miller, to Seacoast Online, on why he and his fellow workers support the act:

"At the Shipyard most workers are represented by a union because they not only see the importance of having a voice in the workplace, but because the Navy, to their credit, does not stand in the way of the will of a majority or workers to have a union, if they so choose," said Kirk Miller, President of IFPTE Local 4 at the shipyard. "Sadly, this is not the case in the private sector, where hard working people who want to improve their working conditions are threatened and intimidated by their employers when they show an interest in forming a union."
Just as Maine's Veterans stand in support of the Employee Free Choice Act for what it can do to improve Maine's private sector economy, so do the people who build the ships they fight on. They all understand that a stronger workforce means a stronger middle class, which means a better economy for everyone, and that the ability to organize without intimidation is the first step.

Also present at the rally were two of the campaign's featured 'faces,' E.J. Russell and Cecile Martin, two workers from Maine who have been victims of employee harassment and intimidation while trying to organize unions. Said Paul O'Connor, President of the Metal Trades Council, of the opposition both faced while attempting to form unions:

"Cecille,almost 20 years ago and E.J. just last year. Both of them faced employer opposition, in both cases their employer sought to stop their efforts to form a union and bargain. It is because of stories like these that we are calling on our Congressional Delegation to support the Employee Free Choice Act."
Across the state, hard working Mainers and their families are stepping forward to voice their support for what Maine AFL-CIO president Ed Gorman calls "common sense legislation": the Employee Free Choice Act. By putting reasonable time limits on contract negotiations, and strengthening penalties against employers who attempt to intimidate workers who desire a union, the Employee Free Choice Act will put the power back where it belongs: in the hands of the workers who make our state great.

In addition to the statistics that prove the positive impact increased unionization will have on Maine's economy, stories from workers like Martin and Russell prove the need for increased protection from harassment provided by the Employee Free Choice Act.

Do your part: sign our petition to support the Employee Free Choice Act in Maine today: http://action.seiu.org/page/s/millionforfreech

Tags: employee free choice act, faces of the employee free choice act, kirk miller, kittery, maine, portsmouth naval shipyard, senator collins, senator snowe, veterans

Maine's Veterans Support Employee Free Choice

By Megan Rosati on May 12, 2009 7:22 PM

Write a letter to Senator Snowe to support our veterans and say yes to Employee Free Choice

Last week, a group of Maine veterans gathered together in Portland to voice their support for the Employee Free Choice Act. A recent segment on the Maine Public Broadcasting Network highlighted the stories of three of these veterans, and how their experience serving our country convinced them that passing the Employee Free Choice Act is necessary for Maine and for our country.

All three combat veterans, now employed in the U.S. Postal Service, spoke of the difficulty of returning home from war to a job market with uncertain employments, meager benefits, and no security. The lack of benefits and security available in the civilian job market even prompts some to re-enlist in the military. Says combat veteran Sean Kraft:

"After having the safety of the military, knowing that you're going to have food, clothes on your back and a roof over your head, it's really hard to come into the civilian world and you really don't know if you'll have that, and that's why a lot of people end up going right back in."

Meanwhile, Maine veteran Archie Etheridge empathized with those hardworking Maine families struggling every day to make ends meet. While Etheridge returned home from war to a steady job with the postal service, he saw friends and neighbors who weren't so lucky:

"Yeah, quite a few of them I'd say, probably two-thirds. A lot of people from Maine are self-employed and I would call it under-employed, like doing one of two jobs just to make ends meet. To me, I was saying, well, that's kind of strange. I could back to the Post Office like I never left, because the union and all that keeps my job there, so when I come back I just walk back in and start delivering mail again like I never left."

It's not only Maine's veterans that support the Employee Free Choice Act: the Center for American Progress' latest report shows how Maine's economy as a whole would benefit from increased unionization.

  • Union workers have higher wages:
  • Union workers in Maine were on average 8.6% higher than non-union workers with similar jobs. So Maine workers who are employed in a union earn $1.54 more per hour than their non-union counterparts.

  • Unionization rewards workers' productivity:

  • If union coverage rates were 5% higher than they are currently, Maine's newly unionized workers would earn an estimated $77 million more in wages and salaries per year.

  • Increased unionization provides increased benefits:

  • Union workers nationwide are 28.2% more liked to be covered by employee health insurance and 53.9% more likely to have employer-provided pensions than their non-union counterparts.

So support our veterans. Support our workers. Support our economy, and support Maine's future. Write a letter to Senators Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins and urge them to support the Employee Free Choice Act today:
http://action.seiu.org/page/speakout/veterans4choice

Tags: employee free choice act, maine, senator collins, senator snowe, veterans, workers rights

Maine's Veterans Support Employee Free Choice

By Megan Rosati on May 12, 2009 7:22 PM

Write a letter to Senator Snowe to support our veterans and say yes to Employee Free Choice

Last week, a group of Maine veterans gathered together in Portland to voice their support for the Employee Free Choice Act. A recent segment on the Maine Public Broadcasting Network highlighted the stories of three of these veterans, and how their experience serving our country convinced them that passing the Employee Free Choice Act is necessary for Maine and for our country.

Tags: employee free choice act, maine, senator collins, senator snowe, veterans, workers rights

Continue reading Maine's Veterans Support Employee Free Choice.

Maine's Families Can't Afford Continued Delay on HHS Nominee

By Greg Howard on May 4, 2009 6:30 PM

Augusta, ME - President Obama's nominee for Secretary of Health and Human Services has yet to be confirmed by the Senate despite her proven commitment to bipartisanship. Last week, the Senate Finance Committee confirmed Governor Kathleen Sebelius with bipartisan support, but obstructionists are once again playing politics. Maine's families, caught between surging costs for healthcare and an unstable economy, are the real victims of any delay of Governor Sebelius' nomination.

"We strongly applaud our Senator Olympia J. Snowe for her vote in support of Governor Sebelius in the Senate Finance Committee. She has again shown that she puts the needs of the people of Maine and the nation ahead of the partisan mud-wrestling that is business as usual in Washington. It was a vote to help Maine's uninsured, under-insured, small businesses and taxpayers. We all owe her a debt of gratitude for her vote to move this nomination forward," said Dr. Karen Hover, M.D. of Bangor.

Escalating medical costs have taken a large toll on Maine's overstretched budget. In 2007, for example, medical care for children and low-income residents alone comprised nearly 32 percent of all state spending. The New America Foundation discovered Maine's economy lost as much as $413 million because of the poor health and shorter lifespan of the uninsured in 2007. That equates to $3,600 per uninsured Maine resident. Fixing healthcare is a necessary component of restoring fiscal balance to Maine.
"Maine's working families have been waiting a long time for the Federal Government to address our healthcare crisis. Now that we're so close, this delay in approving Governor Sebelius for HHS is just plain wrong. The 19,000 children right here in Maine without health insurance are at the end of their ropes and shouldn't have to wait any longer. Reining in healthcare costs will dramatically improve our economy, the lives of working Mainers, and future outcomes for our children," said Kids First Coordinator Aymie Walshe.
As some obstructionists in Washington drag their feet on Governor Sebelius' nomination, Americans continue to struggle with substandard care and crushing costs. Families with insurance must pay a 'hidden tax' to cover patients without insurance. A study by the Center for American Progress found families in Maine pay an extra $800 this year on their premiums to provide care for uninsured Mainers. This hidden tax comes at a time when premiums are soaring and wages struggle to keep pace. In fact, between 2001 and 2007, premiums in Maine grew by an astonishing 89.7 percent while wages increased only 16.8 percent according to FamiliesUSA. The individual financial impact of a healthcare system in disarray has long been a leading cause of bankruptcy and foreclosures.
-MORE-


"As Secretary of HHS, Governor Sebelius will play a central role in comprehensive reform of America's healthcare system. Every day that passes without a leader in this vital role we risk losing critical momentum to develop solutions and begin turning Maine's economy around. We call on Senators Snowe and Collins to support Governor Sebelius' nomination so we can bring relief to Maine families," Dr. Hover concluded.

Tags: healthcare, maine, press statement, sebelius, senator collins, senator snowe

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© SEIU | Privacy Policy