The peace movement has stood for peace and justice, for ending wars, preventing new ones, and building peace. Our top priority in Washington, D.C., has been ending the funding of the occupation. That work is over for the next year, because Congress has provided that funding.
We can still work against recruitment, we can still educate, we can still agitate, we can still oppose an attack on Iran. But one of our secondary priorities in Washington has been imposing a penalty for the illegal attack on Iraq in order to discourage future attacks on Iran or anywhere else.
We have pushed half-heartedly for impeachment,
with our main lobbying focus on cutting off the money.
Now, at the same time that the money is
a done deal for another year,
the possibility of impeachment is beginning to spark. After over two years of declaring impeachment "off the table," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has relented and suggested that some sort of preliminary hearing be held in the Judiciary Committee - and specifically on the impeachable offense of misleading a nation into war.
If the peace movement is not just a movement against one war or occupation, but a movement for peace, we should push with everything we've got for that (impeachment) hearing to happen, happen soon, and happen well.
We should ask everyone who cares about peace to phone Pelosi and Committee Chairman John Conyers, as well as their own representatives, whom they should ask to introduce their own articles of impeachment.
We've been on a losing streak, brothers and sisters, and the door is cracking open toward a major victory. Let's open that door fully and lead a peaceful march of millions through it.
http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/node/34705
PLEASE CALL and demand that Impeachment Hearings be started
BEFORE the Election
House Judiciary Chairman John Conyers, Jr.: (202) 225-5126
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi: (202) 225-4965
And your Congressman:Contact info
Please join our weekly Impeachment Events, see our Calendar on the website ImpeachCO.com or in the Calendar here on ProgressNowAction.org
John H Kennedy, organizer
Impeach Colorado Coalition ImpeachCO.com
..
July 7, 2008
Governor Bill Ritter
136 State Capitol Building Denver, CO. 80203
Certified Mail No. 7002 2030 0000 0388 5347
Dear Governor Ritter,
On May 22, 2008, I sent you a certified letter regarding the criminal conduct within our judicial and legal system. I detailed how my rights, water, and land was stolen from me through corrupt judges and attorneys. I also detailed that I have been unlawfully subjected to the Summit County Court for more than ten years, and that the criminal conduct is allowed and protected by Chief Justice Mary Mullarkey, and all the Colorado Supreme Court Justices. Instead of answering my letter with concern over the criminal state of the people’s judiciary, and helping to put a stop to it, you answered my petition for an investigation and accountability through an unsigned letter from a Citizen Advocate dated June 18, 2008. I herein answer your letter:
1. You said, “the Governor has no jurisdiction over the Judicial Branch.” Yes you do. When corruption is involved as it is in this case, you, Governor Ritter, have the authority and duty to ask that the CBI and/or FBI investigate and bring charges. You also have the authority to convene the Legislature in order to impeach the corrupt Judges, Justices, and other public officials. Every day they are allowed to remain in office, is another day that all Coloradans are in jeopardy of losing their rights and freedom.
2. You said, “the Governor’s office cannot intervene in court cases, overturn decisions made by judges, or offer legal advice.” I never asked for that. Nowhere did I ask that you intervene, overturn a decision, nor did I ask for legal advice. I asked you to do your job as Governor and call for an investigation and accountability. Again, you not only have the authority, you also have the duty.
3. You recommended that I my petition the Colorado Legal Services, and the Colorado Judicial Department instead. A. Colorado Legal Services does not handle corruption cases, nor do they have investigative authority. B. The Colorado Judicial Department is the State Court Administrator. The State Court Administrator does not have investigative authority.
4. A Citizen Advocate, also does not have authority to demand an investigation, only you do.
Governor Ritter, do not dismiss my worth of your time, nor dismiss my grievances as insignificant. The corruption is real, and our offices of public trust have been turned into a network of organized crime for the super wealthy and connected. The information I sent you on May 22, 2008 evidences that I am not a disgruntled litigant, but rather a victim of the lawless corruption within our Judiciary and legal system.
On June 20, 2008, Judge David R. Lass announced his retirement. He will be allowed to leave public office unaccounted, and allowed to resurface somewhere else. Isn’t this the same as the pedophile priests were allowed to do? Once there were complaints, they were moved and allowed to continue the abuse. By not holding Judge Lass to account for his criminal conduct, he also is a threat to the unsuspecting public everywhere. The criminal conduct will continue, because if he allowed such criminal behavior at work, he’s allowing the same in private life. He has shown his true character, and just as any other criminal, must be brought to justice. It will also be found that Judge Lass did not act alone. There are many more elected officials involved in this criminal network.
Just as Judge Lass has shown his true character, so too have all the other corrupt public officials who today are allowed to interact with the unsuspecting public. How many more victims will there be? In my case, my mortgage company is also being defrauded. How much longer will you allow the corruption to go on? Eventually, all will be brought to light. When it is exposed, what will you tell the people when they find out you knew about the corruption and criminal conduct within our Colorado Government, and did nothing to stop it? What will you tell God? Our Laws are rooted in the Ten Commandments, so this corruption is not only against man, it is also against God. Is He not worth your time either?
On its face, the amount of the corruption is eighty million dollars, crosses State lines, has cost the taxpayers millions, and is being allowed to continue. Imagine what an investigation will uncover. Governor Ritter, I will be expecting that you will use your authority to call for an investigation into the corruption and abuse of power. If there is more information you need, please do not hesitate to contact me at the above address and phone number. Thank you for your time, and I will be expecting to hear from you soon.
Respectfully, Halena Lewis
Note: This letter and all future replies will be shared with the public.
A study published in Health Affairs (6-10-08) documents a sharp (60%) increase in numbers of underinsured between 2003-2007. Underinsurance rates nearly tripled among those with incomes above 200% of poverty. Consequently, 42 percent of U.S. adults were under- or uninsured in 2007, reporting high levels of access problems and financial stress.
Even among those with incomes over 400% of poverty, 15% are underinsured. The study indicates that the move toward greater consumer cost-sharing for minimum benefit insurance policies in recent years is pushing millions of insured non-elderly adults toward spending large shares of their incomes on health care. The clear impact is to increase the share of families at risk for medical debt and loss of savings for retirement, college, or other long-term needs.
Our current insurance system is working well only for the wealthy, who can afford high costs. Politicians' promises that "you can keep the insurance you have" also apply to the wealthy. Read the Report
Following is a 650-word piece I wrote about the failure of profit-centered health care that has been picked up by several newspapers around the state.
Failure of U.S. profit-centered health insurance
Spending almost twice as much, the U.S. has worse health outcomes than other industrialized nations. Uniquely, U.S. health care is dependent on over 1200 for-profit health insurances, functioning as gatekeepers. Underwriting – the art of risk evaluation and avoidance – insures profits by covering the healthy and rejecting everyone else as a "pre-existing condition."
Profit is a perverse incentive for quality health care: imagine for-profit fire or police protection. "Market-driven" health care treats health as a commodity, to be negotiated like a car or a house. The free market has also spawned "designer hospitals," offering only the most profitable specialties, e.g., cardiac procedures, and eliminating less profitable services, e.g., emergency and mental health.
No reform proposal by current presidential candidates addresses the failure of the private health insurance industry, characterized principally by decreasing benefits and greater costs and risks shifted to consumers. In turn, more are subjected to underinsurance and unpaid medical bills – now the leading cause of personal bankruptcies. Premium increases of 87 percent over 6 years have outpaced both cost-of-living and median family income increases.
Incremental reform proposals demonstrate lack of political will – the same failure to confront corporate profit-taking by insurance and pharmaceutical industries that wrote Medicare prescription drug reform with billions of dollars of taxpayer subsidies and inflated profits to benefit their bottom lines.
Commercial health insurance is the 800-pound gorilla, responsible for over 25% of health care dollars siphoned to excessive administrative costs, lobbying, marketing, CEO salaries and profit-taking: $30 billion annual health insurance profits; $32 billion insurance underwriting and marketing costs (McKinsey Group, 2007).
Gaming the system for profit has given rise to the annual $20 billion business of "denial managment" – health insurance middlemen who search claims for excuses to delay, deny or renege on reimbursements.
Responding to double-digit premium increases, more employers are opting to move employees into underinsurance – high-deductible catastrophic plans. Simultaneously, the American Hospital Association reports that both family out-of-pocket health expenses and unpaid medical bills have risen approximately 60% over a decade – still more costs ultimately shifted to taxpayers and consumers.
Notably, more than 20 federal and state studies since 1990, including the 2007 Lewin Group evaluation in Colorado, have demonstrated that single-payer health insurance is the only reform model that can both save money and provide comprehensive health care benefits for all. Indeed, the single payer model is the only truly efficient, equitable, and sustainable financing system, enabling universal coverage by spreading risk across the entire population.
Contrary to assertions by the "free market" choir, only single payer insurance permits true choice of pubic and private providers; private insurance is limited to "in plan" doctors. Only single payer provides comprehensive benefits and protection against medical bankruptcy.
Rather than comprehensive health care reform, most current proposals revert to a Massachusetts-style nostrum, preserving insurance profits and requiring an individual mandate to purchase minimum-benefit insurance, subsidized by taxpayers as needed. It is a formula for continued inflationary consumer health costs and decreasing benefits.
National single payer bill, HR676, calls for a progressive 3 to 4 percent employer and employee payroll tax to replace all health deductibles and premiums. Full-coverage costs for a family of four earning $40,000 annually would drop to $110 a month, from recent levels of $273/month for employer-sponsored coverage, or $489/month for an individually-insured family (Kaiser Family Foundation, 2007).
A political class dependent on corporate money (and privy to 70 percent-taxpayer-subsidized health coverage) sidesteps meaningful reform. Nevertheless, polls by Pew and others have revealed increasing numbers – 54 to 65 percent of people – support a national single-payer health care plan. A recent survey reports that 59 percent of U.S. physicians now support national health care, up 10 percent from 2002.
A grassroots movement and political reforms, including publicly-financed campaigns, may be necessary to instill the political will for meaningful reform. We have everything to gain from quality-, saftey-centered universal single payer health care to replace U.S. dependence on profiteering health care gatekeepers.
Read this from the Tri-Lakes Tribune.....
06/12/2008
District 20 candidates sound off on key issues
By Danny Smith , Staff Writer
Health care, renewable energy and economic growth likely will be at the forefront of the race for the House District 20 representative slot this election year.
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Incumbent Republican Rep. Amy Stephens will again run against Democrat opponent Jan Hejtmanek, who recently announced her candidacy for the 2008 election.
During her two years in office, Stephens has helped pass legislation allowing spouses of active-duty military access to get unemployment benefits, eased transition process for military spouses working in education who move to Colorado and pushed through legislation creating a School Safety Resource Center - intended as a coalescence of security information at public schools in Colorado.
Hejtmenaek ran unsuccessfully against Stephens in 2006, and will try to turn the tide this November with a campaign focusing on sustainable growth, attracting new business, renewable energy and health care.
The candidates' views differ sharply on health care issues.
Stephens co-sponsored a health care transparency bill that passed this year, requiring hospitals to post prices for 25 of the most common inpatient procedures and insurance companies have to post the reimbursement amounts for their most common 25 inpatient procedures.
The bill, according to Stephens, follows her belief in consumer-directed health care.
"I want to continue drawing consumers in to make their own choices in health care, and [work] with insurance so we make that possible," Stephens said. "I really like to explore how we can give consumers more choice. Now, that is tough because your opponents are going to go 'well, do we need this mandate or that mandate?' The more mandates we put on health insurance, the more we are driving up prices and the tougher it is for people to get access."
A state-run health care plan is favored by Hejtmanek.
"Gov. Ritter's 208 Commission recently concluded its research of the top five most viable options for universal health care coverage in the state," Hejtmanek said, "by recommending a single-payer health care system as the most financially efficient means of providing health care for all Colorado residents. Though it is unlikely that any new health care program will be initiated this year, it remains a top priority for this governor and his administration, which I fully support."
Health care legislation would aid small business, Hejtmanek said.
"I think it would alleviate a lot of problems in small businesses," Hejtmanek said. "It supports small business by allowing them to be more competitive. It would be far more efficient and less costly in the long run."
During this year's legislative session, numerous energy bills were passed, many in support of renewable resources. While both candidates support the use of renewable energies, they have divergent views of how to go about supporting it.
"Redirecting the massive coal and gas industry subsidies into renewable energy development will ensure prosperity equaling that of the outmoded energy industries; nurture fledgling industries that have been long ignored; and cultivate the kind of innovation and entrepreneurship for which the United State is world renowned," Hejtmanek said.
Stephens said that redirecting the subsidies effectively means more regulation on energy companies and thinks that the cost of funded research gets balanced on the backs of citizens and individual energy efficiency and stewardship should be the initial step for citizens.
"I don't think there is any problem researching alternative energies as long as we look at how long it's going to take and what the end result is going to be," Stephens said. "When the average consumer looks at how they save energy in their home, what are the things on a personal stewardship level that we can do to make our homes more energy efficient? We don't have enough families who are doing everyday things on a stewardship level. I am not a proponent of the 'nanny state' I don't believe big government should be in every aspect of our lives."
The popular support of renewable energy use was touted by Hejtmanek who cited a Colorado Springs Utilities survey.
"The survey done last year by Colorado Springs Utilities indicated that people are very much in favor of developing renewable energies, and are willing to pay for it," Hejtmanek said, "More than 80 percent who responded were willing to pay more than $1 additional a month on their bill, and around 60 percent would be willing to pay more. I think there is a need, as well as support for it."
To encourage economic growth, Hejtmanek proposes revisions of the 1982 Gallagher amendment to the State Constitution.
"Though the amendment was fair and appropriate at the time, the formulaic complexities of the amendment, combined with a pattern of growth in the past 25 years, has caused business owners to carry an increasingly heavier burden of taxation that is both cumbersome and repellant to businesses," Hejtmanek said.
Stephens was on the Business Affairs and Labor Committee and considers supporting businesses a priority and she said that knowing all the consequences of legislation is of crucial importance when deciding what to support.
"I don't pick up haphazard legislation - that has been a motto of mine. I like to think how it will affect my district," Stephens said.
For more information on Hejtmanek, visit www.janhejtmanek.com. For more information about Stephens, visit www.amystephens4hd20.com/.
CheneyCare -- We taxpayers pay 70% of guaranteed coverage for VP Dick Cheney and 2 million federal legislators and employees.
Link: Bill Moyers' Journal 5/9/08 -- California Nurses' campaign for "CheneyCare" for all. Read transcript or view program: http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/05092008/transcript1.html
Video "Who the Health Cares?" gets straight to the point: Presidential candidates will not determine health care reform -- the ball is in the court of Congress. http://www.moblogic.tv/video/2008/04/30/who-the-health-cares/
For-Profit Health Insurance and Pharmaceutical Industries -- scary statistics
1) Melody Peterson's book "Our Daily Meds" reveals that the benefit of medicines marketed by pharmaceutical companies "has become secondary to how much it will bring shareholders in profit"...due to constant pressure by Wall Street for drug companies to exceed profits made the year before; Big Pharma employs 2 lobbyists for every Congress member.
2) Tests show that placebos often work as well as the drugs being marketed to the public.
3) 100,000 Americans die annually from taking prescribed drugs as prescribed (FDA reports).
4) U.S. experiences 75,000-100,000 preventable deaths annually, ranking 19 out of 19 nations. (Recent study, Ellen Nolte & Martin McKee, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine)
Please join Be the Change-USA & Health Care for All Colorado
for an exciting, engaging and fun event May 31
Are We All Really Covered? Closing the Gaps in Health Care
12 noon - 7:30 PM, Sat., May 31, 2008
First Plymouth Congregational Church
3501 S. Colorado Blvd. (Hampden and Colorado Blvd)
Englewood, CO
Registration: Full program: $35; Dinner & evening speakers: $25; Evening speakers only: $10. Discount for Seniors, students, veterans, BTC and HCAC members: $5
Special program features:
1-3 PM Providers and Patients Panel: "How did we get into this mess, and how can we get out?"
3-5 PM Presentations by CO elected officials and candidates: "Will Colorado begin to close the gap?"
5 PM Dinner "Legislative Grill" -- Members of Congress and candidates and representatives of Presidential campaigns: "Will Congress or our next President begin to close the gap?"
6 PM Evening Keynote speaker: Elizabeth Kucinich
More info: www.BTC-USA.org or www.healthcareforallcolorado.org or call Dick Barkey, 303-808-8504, or Eliza Carney, 970-416-0636
To register online: www.BTC-USA.org
The U.S. spends on average twice as much on health care as other industrialized nations, and has overall worse outcomes. Paul Krugman’s & Robin Wells’ commentary ("The Health Care Crisis and What to Do About It," The New York Review of Books, 3/23/06) attributes the U.S. health care crisis to high dependence on fragmented, for–profit private insurances, hospitals and numerous middlemen that add health costs without adding value. Noting "the strange persistence, in the teeth of all available evidence, of the belief that the private sector can provide health insurance more efficiently than the government," Krugman and Wells remark that free-market ideology is "wholly inappropriate to health care issues." As many observe, health is not a commodity, like a car or house.
Factors of declining U.S. health care:
- -Washington and the Bush administration are in thrall to insurance and drug industry lobbyists.
- -The privatization-for-profit increases the fragmentation of U.S. health care, swelling the ranks of the uninsured.
- -Commercial insurance has abandoned the principle of shared risk, shifting more risk to consumers, and has adopted the principle of adverse selection to guarantee profits for shareholders.
- -Private insurances continue to skim over 20 percent of costs for profit and CEO salaries.
Employer-provided health coverage is unraveling, as U.S. health costs rise twice as high as inflation and 4 times faster than wages, prompting more employers to reduce/eliminate health coverage.
Medicaid rolls grow, as Medicaid picks up the slack from the unraveling system of employer-based insurance.
- -Medicaid is particularly vulnerable as a means-tested program – its consituency is not politically powerful.
- -Authors: "Funding for Medicaid depends on politicians' sense of decency, always a fragile foundation for policy."
- -States fund an average 40 percent of Medicaid – unable to operate at a deficit, states are squeezed by growing Medicaid costs.
- -Attempts to privatize Medicaid for profit – states like South Carolina are seeking federal waivers to offer recipients vouchers for purchase of private insurance – certain to be inadequate for many.
So-called ‘consumer-directed’ health plans requiring higher out-of-pocket medical expenses are not a cure.
- -Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) serve as a tax break for the rich, but do nothing for the lower income.
- -HSAs undermine employment-based health care, encouraging adverse selection – HSAs are attractive to healthier individuals, tempting them to opt out of company plans, leaving them less healthy individuals.
The authors cite a large body of evidence indicating that public insurance of the kind in many European countries achieves equal or better results at much lower cost.
Unfortunately, political will is lacking. Krugman and Wells call it "politically smarter" and "economically superior" to educate voters about the huge advantages of a single payer system, than to merely attempt to coopt the drug and insurance lobbies by writing them into compromise plans that they will likely oppose anyway. Alternatively, say the authors,"things will have to get much worse before reality can break through the combination of powerful interest groups and free-market ideology."
Everything speaks to the need to grow a grassroots movement in order to overcome the powerful insurance and pharmaceutical lobbies that write policy, as they did Medicare prescription drug reform, with billions of dollars of subsidies and inflated profits to enhance their bottom lines.
Anyone else sick of kids peddling gift wrap, candy bars and other unwanted stuff for their schools? Couldn't we just fully fund public education?
Great Education Colorado Action and “Granny” are—again—exposing the chronic underfunding of public education that has taken a toll on kids and families across Colorado. Check it out at: http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/2700/t/5492/petition.jsp?petition_KEY=861.
This video pokes fun at the butter braids, oranges, smelly candles and other random junk that we buy to "help the kids' schools." But it’s a serious problem—these fundraisers now fund the basics like teachers and books instead of “extras.” Why? Because Colorado’s investment in public education is $1,034 less per student than the national average.
If you're sick being bombarded by school fundraisers--and think schools should be fully funded--pass it on!
The reporting in the media around candidate health care reform proposals perpetuates a false premise: the notion that health care reform revolves around the question of whether or not to enforce a mandate to purchase private insurance. Growing numbers of under-insured will testify that insurance does not equal health care. At best, mandates move people from uninsurance to undersinsurance, leaving families at health and financial risk.
However, the insurance industry promotes mandates and taxpayer subsidies to private insurances because they enhance their bottom line, while failing to address cost and quality controls for health coverage.
Following is information forwarded from Rep. Morgan Carroll about the money spent by insurance, pharmaceutical and related lobbies. The insurance and pharmaceutical have recouped many billions of dollars in profits in return for their lobbying investment.
From 1998 - 2007 here''s how much the following industries spent on lobbying activities nationally:
Insurance Industry spent $1,008,474,967 on Lobbying
Pharmaceutical Industry spent $1,316,714,703 on Lobbying
Hospital / Nursing Home Industry spent $563,926,474 on Lobbying
Health Professionals spent $531,096,203 on Lobbying
*SOURCE: Open Secrets.org
Imagine how much cheaper your premiums might be if YOU weren't paying $3.95 BILLION for their lobbying activities since 1998? ($3,951,308,550 to be precise). That would have been enough to pay for an entire year of insurance premiums for 1,069,655 individuals at the average of $3,695 per year for individual coverage.
*SOURCE: Kaiser Family Foundation
The consumer is ultimately footing a big bill for lobbying activities that are not always in their best interests.
Throughout the process of the Colorado Blue Ribbon Commission for Health Care Reform, the two large Denver newspapers have consistently failed to present factual information about the Colorado Health Services Single Payer Proposal -- the one that was most favorably evaluated by the Lewin Group.
Since March of 2007 both The Denver Post and the Rocky Mountain News have each printed a number of commentaries by 'free-market' health care advocates Brian T. Schwartz and Paul Hsieh, as well as commentaries by Sen. Andy McElhany and ex-Senator Mark Hillman. Only Rep. Claire Levy was granted a commentary in the Post that dissented from the predominant 'free market' view.
At least five commentaries since the Spring of 2007 have been submitted by myself and others about the advantages of the Single Payer proposal, as well as the broken system of third-party multi-payer commercial health insurances. The information has been ignored by the Post and the News. Only out-state papers like the Pueblo Chieftain and some northern Colorado papers, including the Fort Collins Coloradoan and the Northern Colorado Business Report, have consistently printed different perspectives of health care reform, including the Single Payer perspective.
In May 2007 Todd Engdahl, a Post editorial page editor, notified me that he planned to print a commentary/overview that I had written about the Colorado Health Services Single Payer health care reform proposal then being evaluated by the Lewin Group for the 208 Commission for Health Care Reform. Subsequently, Engdahl was one of eight or so reporters and editors 'retired' by the Post. I followed up with Post assistant editorial page editor, Barbara Ellis, who repeatedly assured me the paper would print a piece about the single payer health care proposal. Each time we have sent something to the Post, Ms. Ellis has responded to the effect, "Thank you, we are considering how to present health care reform, and we will be in touch."
In January, before the 208 Commission for Health Care Reform presented their final recommendations to the legislature, a piece was sent to the Post signed by the board president and vice president of Health Care for All Colorado, critiquing the draft recommendations by the 208 Commission, based on a Massachusetts-style mandate for private insurance, and elaborating on advantages of Single Payer insurance. When I followed up with Ms. Ellis in early February, inquiring why no commentary presenting the Single Payer health care proposal has been printed in the past year, I received the following email from her:
"With the governor and his staff about to propose their own health care reform plan, publishing anything by the individual groups involved in submitting proposals to the 208 Commission is taking the story backward instead of forward."
"However, if you or anyone else should have anything to write in response to that plan once it is detailed, feel free to send it to us. I'm sure you can understand that the 208 Commission's report may be rendered moot by the governor's plan, so we're trying to take the story forward. Should the single payer plan still be part of the discussion, we'd value your input."
On February 2, 2008, the Post printed an editorial wrongly stating that, of the five reform proposals, Single Payer universal health care is the 'costliest option,' costing an 'additional $15 billion a year.'
The lack of understanding of the Single Payer proposal by the Post editorial board alone is disturbing, and it is quite understandable why Coloradans who have been so poorly served by local media totally lack understanding about what the 208 Commission has done, and what the proposals would accomplish (or not), let alone the results of the Lewin Group evaluation of the proposals.
Only one proposal evaluated by the Lewin Group, the Colorado Health Services Single Payer Plan, demonstrated the capability of providing comprehensive health coverage for all, and of reducing health care costs. Reported annual health cost savings to the state were $1.4 billion. More than $4 billion additional costs savings were reported for Colorado businesses, families, providers and hospitals. See Lewin Report Single Payer Cost Savings. The $15 billion public funding for Single Payer represents a shift from the current higher rate of private out-of-pocket health care costs (premiums, copays and deductibles, etc) that we all currently pay. In place of these high out-of-pocket private health costs, everyone would pay a progressive tax (the individual and employer tax is the source of $15 billion public funding) that for all except those making over $100,000 a year, would be less than their current out-of-pocket health care expenses.
The Rocky Mountain News exercised their own version of news blackout on the issue of health reform, early on writing an editorial titled "Single Payer Baloney" advising that Single Payer reform be dismissed as unreasonable and unworkable.
After saying he wanted to present another perspective and repeatedly failing to do so, Rocky Business editor Rob Reuteman informed me in a phone conversation that he was "not going to confuse the readers by printing" my commentary about single payer, calling it "pie in the sky," and insisting that he could not understand where the funding would come from.
Is it any wonder that so many are still in the dark about health care reform in Colorado? We still have not had a honest and open exchange of information surrounding health care reform – when are we going to hear the broader perspective? If the local news media refuse to provide a forum, then who will? It is no wonder that the multi-billion-dollar insurance and pharmaceutical industries continue to write health care policy, as they did with Medicare prescription drug reform, granting themselves billions of dollars of taxpayer subsidies and inflated profits to enhance their bottom lines. Simultaneously, commercial insurances game the system to increase their profits by delaying, denying and reneging on claims they should be covering.
One can only assume that the corporations that own the media set the standards of news coverage – selectively influencing what information is and is not made available to readers.
The Colorado Blue Ribbon Commission for Health Care Reform based its recommendations to the legislature on its own 5th Proposal, modeled after Massachusetts reform, with a mandate to purchase private insurance, no controls of insurance costs, and taxpayer subsidies to private insurances.
A cornerstone of the Massachusetts plan as adopted by the 208 Commission is an individual mandate that compels everyone to purchase private health insurance, or suffer tax penalties.
Comprehensive health plans in Massachusetts total $6,000 annually for an individual or $14,000 for a family - prohibitive costs for many. 'Affordable' coverage is often a bare-bones, stripped-down 'minimum benefit' insurance averaging $660/month for a family, and $330 for an individual - still unaffordable to many working families. Stripped-down policies, with high copays and deductibles, do not provide adequate protection against serious health or financial risk.
A 2005 Harvard Medical and Law Schools study estimated that 76 percent of those bankrupted by medical bills had insurance at the onset of the illness that bankrupted them. As noted previously, high-deductible or catastrophic insurances have contributed to a 59 percent rise in consumer out-of-pocket health expenses and a 60 percent rise in uncompensated hospital care over a decade (reported by the American Hospital Association).
The Massachusetts plan does nothing to control insurance costs or eliminate the high overhead costs, including exorbitant CEO salaries and profits, of multi-payer insurances. Therefore, Massachusetts continues to experience annual double-digit premium increases, shifting more people into taxpayer-subsidized private insurances or public programs. It is a recipe for the downward spiral that renders more people under- and uninsured, and shifts increasing costs to taxpayers.
Read 2-3-08 Denver Post article about the Massachusetts mandate - the Massachusetts 'Health Care for All' mentioned in the story co-authored Massachusetts reform, and is actually a group funded by commercial insurance companies.
The 45-second video (2nd in a series of 5) pokes fun at the painful truth that many Colorado students are forced to use hopelessly outdated textbooks--including geography books still featuring the U.S.S.R.--due to lack of funding for new books. The comical, well-meaning Granny is clueless about how schools--including her grandson's--are suffering.
You also can go see the video AND sign a petition supporting public education at http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/2700/t/5492/petition.jsp?petition_KEY=861.
If you're moved by the message, please pass it on!
GEC--a statewide, nonprofit, nonpartisan organization of parents and other public school supporters--works to focus attention on the need for better funding for public schools, bring people together to create a vision of 21st century education, and advocate for all public education reforms to be accompanied by adequate resources.
A continuous rise in multi-payer health care premiums (12% annual increases for University of California retirees) has prompted California to look at cutting government retiree health benefits. Until inflationary health insurance costs are controlled, retirees' health benefits everywhere will continue to be on the line. As long as multi-payer insurances continue to protect their bottom line by increasing premiums, copays and deductibles, and denying claims, everybody will be vulnerable to health and financial risk.
Watch candidate YouTube video for single payer health insurance illustrating how "exposed" multipayer health insurance leaves most of us.
Our congressional delegation should be encouraged to support single payer insurance, as written in HR676. At the very least, we can encourage our federal legislators to support Russ Feingold and Lindsay Graham's S1169 and Rep. Tammy Baldwin's HR 506, federal bills intended to free States to create health care reform solutions, by addressing issues like ERISA requirements and Medicaid waivers that now hamstring the states. There is bipartisan support for these measures to permit states greater leeway in writing reform, e.g., Reps DeGette and Musgrave both co-sponsor HR 506.
There was great press coverage, including Colorado Public Radio's report on the large turnout for the rally for Single Payer. Endorsing groups that provided speakers included the Colorado Education Association, the League of Women Voters, the Colorado Nurses Association and the Alliance for Retired Americans. A number of physicians from the Fort Collins area attended, including Dr. Cory Carroll, who spoke about lack of health care choices and obtacles to patient care under the multi-payer insurance system.
Betty Lehman of the Autism Society spoke movingly about how insurance companies game the system by denying needed care. In later comment before the Senate-House HHS Committees, Lehman remarked that it is immoral to require taxpayers to subsidize private insurances that profit by denying care. A number of speakers noted experiencing high out-of-pocket costs, even while paying annual family insurance premiums of $10,000 to $18,000. Also noted -- multi-million dollar annual CEO salaries and $1.6 billion stock options for UnitedHealth's retiring CEO.
Sen. Ken Gordon and Reps. John Kefalas, Jerry Frangas and Claire Levy also addressed the crowd. Larimer County Commissioner Eubanks also attended. Health Care for All Colorado board vice president Barry Keene said the group is working on legislation to keep the issue in front of the legislature, and to prevent passage of an individual mandate to purchase private insurance that will replace masses of uninsured with the underinsured.
It was emphasized that now is the time to contact our legislators, instilling in them the political will to work toward meaningful health care reform, rather than subsidizing private insurances and mandating their purchase without controlling insurance costs, as has been done Massachusetts, and was rejected in California last week. To identify one's legislators, visit www.vote-smart.org or call 1-888-VOTE-SMART.
There was also much support for Single Payer insurance during the comment period before the joint HHS Committees the afternoon of January 31. Dr. Irene Aguilar of the 208 Commission's Vulnerable Populations Task Force urged legislators to "do what is right for all Coloradans," taking into consideration the Lewin Group evaluation of savings and comprehensive coverage for all only with the CHS Single Payer proposal. The Vulnerable Populations Task Force has requested and been granted a hearing in the House HHS Committee this week.
Commissioner Mark Simon, who voted against endorsing the 208 Commission Final Report, commented on elements of his Minority Report, in which he endorses Single Payer as the only comprehensive reform capable of covering all.
The market place is clearly not a solution for improving health care access. Most businesses increase profits by providing more services of higher quality; multi-payer insurances expand profits by denying services.
Not that I'm surprised, but the Gazette butchered the hell out of my quote in their editorial today.
As many of you may know, we recently went after John Caldara (of the Independence Institute) after he said in an interview with Anne Coulter that Hillary Clinton had been "bitch-slapped" in the debate in South Carolina. We called on the advertisers on his radio program to pull their ads because Caldara refused to apologize for using a term so offensive to women in reference to Hillary.
One of Caldara's employees at the Independence Institute researched several instances in which that phrase has been used without reaction from ProgressNow, including use by two weekly newspaper reporters, as well as one blogger on our blog in reference to General Petraeus.
Yesterday, I received a call from the Gazette wanting a quote. What I said repeatedly was that we do not condone the use of the term in question under any circumstances, but that for John Caldara, a paid spokesperson for the Right Wing, to equate himself with a weekly newspaper reporter or a private citizen commenting on a public forum is ridiculous. Caldara has yet to respond on the merits. By his diversion, we can only assume that he's defending his statement.
The Gazette also perpetuated the lie that the person who pointed out the other uses of the term in question is a "blogger". Our understanding is that, in reality, he's on staff at the Independence Institute.
The Gazette was utterly complicit in Caldara's offense to women with their pathetic editorial. I expected nothing less from the state's most blatantly partisan fishwrap.
Please join us on Thursday, January 31 at the Captitol. On that day, the Colorado 208 Blue Ribbon Commission for Health Care Reform will present its recommendations to Colorado legislators. The 208 Commission chose 4 diverse health care reform proposals for evaluation, and wrote one of their own in 2007. Only one proposal - the Colorado Health Services Single Payer Health Plan - demonstrated cost-savings for the state ($1.4 billion) and comprehensive health coverage for all. Nevertheless, the 208 Commission has chosen in its Final Report to the Colorado General Assembly to recommend the elements of its own 5th Proposal, modeled on a Massachusetts-style individual mandate for purchase of private insurance, as well as taxpayer subsidies to private insurances, without any cost or quality controls on private insurances.
Some problems with the Commission's recommendations:
- The 208 Commission seeks to solve the problem of the uninsured by mandating that people purchase products of underinsurance (minimum benefit plans), a cause of increasing unpaid medical bills - yet another form of cost-shifting to taxpayers and consumers.
- The Commission creates many new categories of coverage, means testing, and the added layer of insurance known as the 'Connector,' further expanding the insurance administrative bureaucracy.
- The Commission calls for increased taxpayer subsidies to multi-payer private insurances, without addressing the bureaucratic administrative waste and profit-taking that funnels 31 percent of every health care dollar to overhead costs. Read Full 2-page Overview of 208 Commission's Recommendations
View a 1-page contrast Single Payer vs. Massachusetts Mandated multi-payer
View a half-page Lewin Savings with CHS Single Payer Plan
The Final Recommendations to the Legislature by the 208 Commission widely miss the mark.
The one hope that Colorado has for true health care reform is through grassroots appeal to our legislators. Join us on the west steps of the Capitol at noon, Thursday Jan. 31 to carry a message to legislators that we cannot afford to squander the opportunity for health care reform. We cannot afford to permit the insurance industry to write health care policy to benefit their bottom line, as they did with Medicare prescription drug reform, and Massachusetts reform that creates a captive market for commercial insurance without any cost or quality controls on multi-payer insurances. Read 1-page Physicians' Assessment of Massachusetts Reform
- January 31 actions - do what you can:
10 a.m. - Meet at Central Presbyterian Church (1660 Sherman, a block north of the Capitol)
11:30 a.m. - March to the Capitol (Colfax and Sherman in Denver)
Noon - Rally at the West Steps -- Hear supportive legislators, providers and groups endorse Single Payer Health Care
1:30 - 4 p.m. - The Colorado Blue Ribbon Commission for Health Care Reform presents its recommendations to Colorado State Legislators in the old Supreme Court Chambers. Open to the public.
After the rally, drop in on your legislators.
Meaningful health care reform in the face of big-money lobbies requires activation of a large grassroots movement! Let's urge our legislators to consider the facts about the crisis nature of health care in Colorado and the U.S., and then act in the best interest of their constituents, not to serve the bottom line of multi-payer insurances.
Lastly, take a Resolution for Single Payer Health Care to your Precinct Caucus on February 5.
Thank you for whatever you can do!
NPR reported on January 15 about a study released in the Journal of Health Affairs the same day, describing increasing waits in U.S. Emergency Rooms, even for the very sick. This on the heels of the Institutes of Medicine recent report that ERs are at a breaking point.
Dr. Arthur Kellerman, professor of emergency medicine at Emory U., noted that though it is popular to point to Canada and the UK for their long wait times for elective procedures, the waits in U.S. emergency rooms are "the waits that matter" -- heart attack victims and other true emergencies are receiving delayed care. Waits for heart attack victims doubled between 1997 and 2004.
U.S. Emergency Rooms bear the brunt of the burden of crisis health care access -- those who cannot access primary preventive care resort to emergency rooms for basic health care or delayed crisis care.
Kellerman pointed out that it doesn't matter whether one is insured or uninsured, all are affected by these delays. The report ended with the news that the federal government is planning to cut funding to hospitals with the biggest problems - in inner cities, etc. Listen to the report (approximately 3-1/2 minutes)
As stated on the AMA Web site, "Prompt pay laws have been established since the late 1990s by states to relieve problems of delayed payments by most private health care plans to providers." However, just as they have bypassed statutes requiring insurances to be not-for-profit in Minnesota, so, too, do insurances often bypass this requirement.
Says one doctor:
"In New York, where I live,the law requires that clean claims must be paid in 45 days. But, as you might imagine, the insurance industry has found legal loopholes, and payment delays are the norm for doctors around the country.
"I guess things are so bad for the nation's doctors, that the AMA has an on-line booklet appropriately entitled '15 Steps to Protect Your Practice from Abusive Payment Tactics.' Like most complicated issues in life, there are myriad complexities to the crisis involving third party payments to doctors. But I'll give you a sense of what my friends who are doctors tell me.
"They say that getting paid is more often than not a take-no-prisoners battle. An insurer will reject a claim for the smallest reason. If a claim is submitted with every T crossed and every I dotted, as sure as night follows day, the insurer will require reams of additional information on the patient and the procedure. Almost nothing gets paid without a fight. Some describe the fight as a smoke and mirrors Kafkaesque nightmare.
"Imagine this sort of scenerio playing out in doctor's offices and hospitals across the nation. Imagine the costs associated with an army of claims specialists who are employed simply to pry payments out of the hands of the for-profit insurers. Physicians charge that one of the most common practices leading to long lag times is insurers' refusal to pay claims they say aren't 'clean.' They also ask patients to send unnecessary information before they'll pay, doctors alleged."
One doctor reported that an insurance company denied a claim for procedures performed on both of a patient's knees during one office visit, arguing that the claims were duplicative. Insurers also have asked his patients to provide accident information, even though it's already provided on a claim form, or information about pre-existing conditions. Health plans often won't send a copy of the request, so the doctor's staff can't help patients get the information. One claim for hand surgery included the surgeon's name and license number, but the insurer denied payment because the claim didn't state the doctor's degree.
"Most of it is really ridiculous -- standard form letters in their system that they shoot off and hope the provider doesn't address," explained an office administrator. "A lot of these claims get paid down the road, but they hold the funds 30 to 90 days longer than if it went through with a 'clean' claim," she said.