Friday, August 28, 2009

Archive for August, 2009

Healthcare Town Hall events this weekend

Friday, August 28th, 2009


Senator Karen Keiser and Representative Eileen Cody
Saturday, August 29
2:00 – 4:00 pm
Cowlitz County PUD
961 12th Ave
Longview, WA

Representative Jay Inslee
Saturday, August 29th
11:30am – 1:00pm
North Kitsap High School gymnasium
1780 NE Hostmark St
Poulsbo, WA

Sunday, August 30th
1:30pm – 3:00pm
Edmonds-Woodway High School gymnasium
7600 212th St SW
Edmonds, WA




60 seconds on healthcare plan enrollment

Thursday, August 27th, 2009


Here’s a short, funny video on enrolling in and changing health plans.



The video is also available here.




Congressman Jim McDermott hosts online Q & A

Thursday, August 27th, 2009


Yesterday Congressman Jim McDermott participated in an online question and answer session on healthcare policy reform. Read the conversation here from the Seattle Times.




Senator Cantwell on the passing of Senator Kennedy

Thursday, August 27th, 2009
WASHINGTON, DC –
“I am very saddened by the passing of Senator Ted Kennedy.

He was a tour de force in American politics the likes of which we will never see again. From drawing the battle lines, to waging the campaign, Ted delivered victory after victory for the American people.

For all the Kennedy name and fame, Teddy at heart was a legislator; he simply knew how to get things done. And for nearly half a century, he was the best.

From workers rights, to health care to civil liberties, and the cause of educational opportunities there is one way to describe Ted Kennedy: our champion.

He will be sorely missed and never replaced.”




Ted Kennedy’s eulogy of his brother

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009


As we continue to reflect on the role Sen. Ted Kennedy had on healthcare and indeed the country, this eulogy he gave for his brother, Robert Kennedy, is well worth a watch. It is a good reminder of what he, Ted Kennedy, meant to America as a political figure in a period of upheaval. He was the only brother left. And he carried on.




Representative Cathy McMorris Rodgers talks about healthcare reform

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009


Representative Cathy McMorris Rodgers has been on the healthcare town hall circuit in Eastern Washington the last few weeks.

I do believe we need to reform health care, as I said during this interview on Spokane Forum with Harv Clark to be broadcast this Sunday. You can hear the entire interview on these stations at these times.

KISC/98.1 FM at 6:30 a.m.
KKZX/98.9 FM at 6:00 a.m.
KCDA/103.1 FM at 6:00 a.m.
KIXZ/96.1 FM at 6:00 a.m.
KPTQ/1280 AM at 6:00 a.m.
KQNT/590 AM at 6:00 a.m.

Listen to the Congresswoman talk about healthcare reform here.




Sen. Murray on the passing of Sen. Kennedy

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009


Senator Murray has posted a statement on the passing of Senator Edward Kennedy, which comes across as warm, sincere, and reflective of Kennedy’s impact on his colleagues.

“(Washington, D.C.) – Today, U.S. Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) issued the following statement on the passing of U.S. Senator Edward M. Kennedy (D-MA). Senator Murray served with Senator Kennedy for 16 years in the U.S. Senate, including many years as a senior member of Kennedy’s Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee.

”When I was young Ted Kennedy was larger than life. I could not believe it when I first walked out on the floor of the Senate and he walked over to welcome me. From that day on, he became a valued friend, a courageous partner, and a personal mentor.

“From my earliest memories in the Senate when I watched him patiently and passionately argue to pass the Family and Medical Leave Act, to his last moments when he led the charge to pass legislation that guaranteed equal pay for women and encouraged Americans to serve and give back to their country as he did, Ted never once stopped fighting for those who couldn’t fight for themselves. The country is indeed a better place because of him.

“His loss is very personal to me. I will miss him. Our country will miss him.

“My thoughts and prayers, and those of all Americans, are with his family at this difficult time.”

View the press release on Publicola here.




Washington legislators hold second healthcare town hall

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009




On Tuesday night in Bellevue, Senator Karen Keiser (D-Kent), chair of the Senate Health & Long-Term Care Committee, and Representative Eileen Cody (D-Burien), chair of the House Health Care & Wellness Committee, held their second in a series of four healthcare town halls.

Of the first two events in the series, Senator Keiser said she believes, “These are marvelous. Democracy in action.”

Thus far the town halls have gone smoothly and have been largely disruption free. That is in stark contrast to what people have seen from national news sources. “People have a lot of concerns,” said Senator Keiser. “It’s a wonderful development, they’ve been misrepresented.”

This town hall attracted several more members of the political world, including Senator Rodney Tom (D-Bellevue), Representative Ross Hunter (D-Bellevue), Steve Hill, Administrator of the Health Care Authority, and former State Representative Max Vekich, who is currently running to be a Seattle Port Commissioner.

Senator Keiser and Representative Cody emphasized the need for a transition to evidence based methods in healthcare policy, which will help reduce healthcare costs. Keiser cited the $55 million in savings in 2008 on prescription drugs when the drugs were compared by patient outcomes and the effectiveness of the drugs rather than their cost.

Washington legislators are now working with Congressman Jay Inslee to adapt some of that language for H.R. 3200, the healthcare reform bill from the House of Representatives.

Federal healthcare reforms would include consumer protections that prevent rescission, the practice of taking insurance away from consumers after they have become ill, extending health benefits of younger adults that are on their parents’ health plan to the age of 26, ending gender discrimination, and ending cost-sharing for preventative care, such as expensive colonoscopies.

Another key theme in the discussion was aligning physician incentives to patient outcomes. Currently, if a patient has the wrong arm amputated and has to go back in to get the other one removed, the hospital would be paid for both operations. Keiser said that under the new system, “Avoidable errors will not be reimbursed.” That would mean only “paying the hospital when you have recovery” she said.

Confronting popular misnomers in the media, Keiser assured the crowd, “There will be no death panels. There has never been a death panel.”

The pair also confronted reimbursement inequities around the country. Keiser said, Washington is 11% under the national average for Medicare reimbursements, and Florida is 13% over the national average. Yet Washington State has better outcomes, said Keiser.

Currently, taxpayers and people with health insurance pay for those who do not have health insurance but utilize medical facilities. “Healthcare is a system of cost shifting,” said Keiser. “We pay one way or the other.”




Sen. Kennedy passes away

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009


ted-kennedy
Sen. Edward Kennedy passed away tonight. America has lost one of its greatest members of its democratic experiment, one of the greatest senators ever to serve in that chamber.

Sen. Kennedy chaired the important Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions committee, which is one of the two important Senate committees considering health care reform. In July, while he was absent from the Senate, he released a statement about the progress of what he called “the cause of my life,” and the committee vote on its reform bill. While Kennedy was a partisan, he was also of a different era – an institution in his own right. His comments in that statement are testament to that, particularly in contrast to the behavior at “town halls” in America.


I could not be prouder of our committee. We have done the hard work that the American people sent us here to do. We have considered hundreds of proposals. Where we have been able to reach principled compromise, we have done so. Where we have not been able to resolve our differences, we have treated those with whom we disagree with respect and patience.

That principled commitment to the “cause” matched with a “respect and patience” for his colleagues is in increasingly short supply these days in American politics.

Kennedy was elected in 1962 and served through a tumultuous 47 years at the center of American politics. While he was attacked by the right as the image of liberalism, he was nevertheless always open to working with conservatives on issues he held dear. Among the most prominent examples in recent history is the “No Child Left Behind” Act, where Kennedy’s support was crucial to the bill’s passage.

In 2000, I spent 3 weeks staffing then-Senate candidate Maria Cantwell on a bus tour of Washington State. Just her, me, another fellow and our driver. And A LOT of time on the bus.

During that time, I read former NY Times reporter Adam Clymer’s book on Kennedy. Cantwell and I spent at one point about an hour discussing Kennedy, his role in American history, and his impact on the country. She didn’t vocalize her own self-reflections or comparisons of what kind of senator she might be next to him. But you could see the wheels turning.

The moral of that story is only this: Kennedy’s impact will long out live him — in terms of policy, but also in terms of the lasting lessons and impressions left by him on members of the Senate, on our political class, and on Americans everywhere committed to public service.




EVENTS: Healthcare Town Hall Meetings Tonight

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009


Tuesday, August 25th

Representative Adam Smith
9th Congressional District
7:00pm – 8:30pm
Harry Long Stadium
6615 111th St SW
Lakewood, WA

State Senator Karen Keiser
State Representative Eileen Cody

7:00pm – 9:00pm
Temple B’nai Torah
15727 NE 4th St
Bellevue, WA