Tuesday, March 31, 2009

A break in the single payer media blackout...

...thanks to a group of belly dancing activists who brought some visibility to this issue at the office of West Virginia Representative Shelley Moore Capito.

"A group of single payer advocates have met with her and her staff recently-and she wouldn't budge," dancer Angela Petry said. "So we though we would have some fun, go and dance in front of her office, and see if we could shake things up a little bit."

The protest, "Shake It Up for Single Payer," was sponsored by Single Payer Action, which has links to coverage, including this video from the local NBC affiliate. The web page with the video also features a poll on single payer, which is currently running 56 to 43% in favor of an HR676 plan--check it out and cast your vote!

Read more...

Rally at the final regional health care summit in Los Angeles, April 6

Calling all Southwesterners! Join single-payer advocates at the final White House Health Care Forum, to be held Monday, April 6 in Los Angeles.

The forum will be held at The California Endowment, 1000 Alameda Street. The event will start at 10:30am and doors open at 9:00am. Attendees must be seated by 10:00am. Folks should starting arriving no later than 8:30 a.m.

Several local groups have pledged to bring members to LA, including the California Nurses Assocation, the California School Employees Association, the Labor Task Force for Universal Healthcare, and other members of the Leadership Council for Guaranteed Health Care, of which the Alliance is a member.

If you're in the Rancho Cucamonga area, join California School Employees Association and the California Nurses Association on the Metro-Link "Freedom From Insurance Train." To get a ride, contact Cyndi Young at cyoung@csea.com by Thursday, April 2nd. CSEA/CNA will pick up the cost of the ticket.

Coming by car or bus? Make a statement on the freeway! Print out our banner and put it in the window! Get the .pdf here!

Read more...

Monday, March 30, 2009

April 11 in Massachusetts! Maintaining Democracy: Undermining the Corporate Agenda from the Bottom Up

More information on this event!

A conference for Northeast region AfD members, supporters, and allied activists! Join us!

SATURDAY APRIL 11, 9:00 AM to 7:00 PM
Walker Center, 144 Hancock Street at Grove Street
Newton, Massachusetts
(Exit 22 off Rt I-95, or a 0.5 mile walk from Riverside Green Line station)

Registration ($15, early-bird rate of $5 by April 4)
Lunch and dinner available, with vegetarian option. Lunch $12, dinner $14.

CALL 781-894-1179 (AfD National Office, Waltham) to REGISTER NOW, or email afd@thealliancefordemocracy.org

We look forward to seeing you there!

Speakers/presenters include:

  • NANCY LEE WOOD (Bristol Community College): Overview and Resource Depletion
  • JILL STEIN (MCHC: Massachusetts Coalition for Healthy Communities): Taking on the Climate Crisis -- Local, State, and National
  • GARRET WHITNEY (Concord Climate Action Network) The 350ppm Campaign
  • Sustainable Community Initiatives: Reports from Aperion and Green Drinks of Rhode Island
  • MARY ROSSBOROUGH (Salem State College Lifelong Learning Institute): The Economy -- Pitfalls and New Directions
  • DAVID LEWIT (Dispatch): Participatory Budgeting & Trade Issues
  • PAT McSWEENEY (Citizens for an Informed Community): Militarism as a Tool for the Corporate Agenda
  • Radio hosts STAN ROBINSON & JOHN GREBE: The Local and Larger Independent-Media Presence
  • KATIE ROBBINS (Healthcare-NOW!): State Legislative Initiatives
  • BARBARA CLANCY (AfD Health Care Campaign): Action Tools
  • TONI SERAFINI (AfD) & SHERYL CRAWFORD (Mass Vote): Electoral Issues

Additional Media Initiatives:
  • COMMUNITY SHOWINGS/ACTIONS: David Whitty (Town of Ashland), Joan Ecklein (Women's International League for Peace & Freedom: WILPF), Sue Gracey (Boston Bio-Weapons Lab, WILPF), The Raging Grannies
  • COMMUNITY CABLE PROJECT: "OTHER VOICES": Ruth Weizenbaum (Overview with distribution team), Jane Lynn (Marlboro), Michael Bleiweiss (Methuen), Charlie Phillips (Concord), Bob Datz (Brimfield), Cornelia Sullivan (Boston), Joanna Herlihy (Cambridge & Somerville): editing & filming work, Leo Immonen (Wrentham)
  • LETTER-WRITING
  • WEB OPTIONS
  • NEWSLETTERS

Read more...

HR 676 gains 500th union endorser!

http://unionsforsinglepayerHR676.org

IAMAW Local Lodge 2339H in Houston, Texas, representing 5,000 flight attendants at Continental and Express Jet Airlines, is the 500th union organization to endorse HR 676.
Rosalie Canton, President of Local Lodge 2339H, said: "When our membership has to stop work for whatever reason, it is not uncommon to hear, 'Well, I will just have to risk not having health insurance for three months. I cannot afford to pay for COBRA.' The system must change so that your health insurance is not tied to your employer. It just doesn’t work anymore."

The local's Legislative Committee has met with Rep. Gene Green but has not yet
secured his agreement to join the 72 House members who are already co-sponsors of HR 676, in addition to the bill's author, Rep. John Conyers (D-MI).

HR 676 has been endorsed by 500 union organizations in 49 states including 123 Central Labor Councils and Area Labor Federations and 39 state AFL-CIO's.

For further information and a list of union endorsers, visit unionsforsinglepayerHR676.org. If your local or union would like to endorse HR 676, contact Kay Tillow, All Unions Committee For Single Payer Health Care--HR 676, c/o Nurses Professional Organization (NPO, 1169 Eastern Parkway, Suite 2218, Louisville, KY 40217, (502) 636 1551. Her email is nursenpo@aol.com.

Read more...

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Saturday, April 11: Northeast AfD Regional Meeting

Fed up with corporations running the country? Want to know how the corporate agenda shapes policy on energy, trade, and regional issues? Grassroots action for changing the status quo will be the focus of the Alliance for Democracy's Northeast Regional meeting on Saturday, April 11. Entitled "Maintaining Democracy: Undermining the Corporate Agenda from the Bottom Up," it will be held at the Walker Center, 171 Grove Street, Auburndale, MA. The day-long conference features a special emphasis on preserving and expanding democracy as we deal with peak oil, health care, media, sustainable communities, trade and other issues. For information, call the Alliance office at 781-894-1179, or email afd@thealliancefordemocracy.org.

Read more...

Return of single payer to California!

AfD chapters and AfD members in California will be joining the statewide campaign for Single Payer in California. State Senator Mark Leno, of California's Third Senate district, representing Marin and parts of Sonoma and San Francisco counties, recently introduced a single payer bill, SB 810, with broad support from labor, medical and nursing professionals, teachers, and the general public. A similar bill, SB 840, was defeated in the last legislative session. To learn more about California's campaign for health care for all, visit www.onecarenow.org.

Read more...

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

AfD supports California's AB 301

AfD recently endorsed AB 301, authored by Assembly member Felipe Fuentes, 39th District in Northeast San Fernando Valley, and sponsored by Food and Water Watch. This bill requires bottled water corporations to report the source and amount of water they extract from local communities in the state and whether that source is publicly or privately owned. It is supported by some 20 conservation and labor organizations and was voted out of the State Assembly Committee on Environmental Safety and Toxic Materials on March 23. It now goes to the Assembly Appropriations Committee. Last year Gov. Schwarzenegger vetoed a similar bill that made it to his desk after being passed by both the Assembly and Senate.

Water bottlers have argued that information on where they pump and how much they take is “proprietary.” If passed, this bill will ensure that large bottlers like Pepsi-Cola, Coca-Cola, Crystal Geyser and NestlĂ© operate with badly-needed public scrutiny. The next step is for communities to organize to assert their right and the rights of nature to protect local water sources. You can read a hearing report on the bill here.

Read more...

The list of HR 676 co-sponsors is growing!

In just over a week, HR676 has gained eight new co-sponsors, bringing the total to 72!

Thank you's to:

  • Representative John Lewis, Georgia 5th District
  • Representative Xavier Becerra, California 31st District
  • Representative Ed Pastor, Arizona 4th District
  • Representative Maxine Waters, California 35th District
  • Representative George Miller, California 7th District
  • Representative Kendrick B. Meek, Florida 17th District
  • Representative Ben Ray Lujan, New Mexico 3rd District
  • Representative David Loebsack, Iowa 2nd District

Read more...

Two quick health care actions!

First, for those in the south-east and central U.S., the next Regional Healthcare Summit will be held on March 31 in Greensboro, North Carolina. Events kick off with a rally for single payer at the North Carolina A&T Alumni Foundation Event Center, 200 N Benbow Road, at 9 a.m. You can submit questions at www.healthreform.gov/regionalhealthforum.html.

The final summit will be held April 6 in Los Angeles.

We've posted a .pdf of our banner here. You can shrink the image at home to print, or take it to a copy shop to get it printed at 24 x 16 inches or larger. (Print out a small one and put it in your car window!)

And secondly, on April 1 in Washington DC, single payer activists will be organizing a briefing for members of Congress and their staff on "National Lessons for Health Reform: An Examination of US Health Insurance." The briefing takes place from 2:00 - 4:00 pm, in 2226 Rayburn Office Building. Call your Congressperson and ask that he/she attend or send a staff member. Click here for list of witnesses and topics.

Turnout to the last briefing, on the Massachusetts health care plan, was tremendous--the room was packed, according to attendees, with more folks listening in the doorway or waiting in the hall to get in. We can do it again--call today!

Read more...

Monday, March 23, 2009

Portland (OR) AfD rallies against wars, Guard deployment



Portland Alliance for Democracy was one of many groups rallying in the state capital of Salem, Oregon, to protest continued wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and to call for an end to overseas deployment of the Oregon National Guard. The weather was unseasonably nasty, which kept turnout low, but spirits were high.

Read more...

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Video from Vermont Health Care forum

This is video of Dr. Shana Spitzman, a primary care practitioner working with homeless patients in New York, who spoke about the delays that her patients face in receiving specialized care.

Read more...

Clean elections: the problem and the solution

Two interesting observations from a recent California Clean Money Campaign newsletter:

First, the Center for Responsive Government shows that spending on Capitol Hill is truly the gold standard in high-yield investments. So far, 161 financial institutions have received federal bailout money. Their initial investment: $114.2 million ($37.5 million to contributions to candidates and almost $76.7 million in lobbying expenditures in 2008 by financial institutions). Yield so far? $305 billion in TARP funds (and rising!).

This is a rate of return of more than 2,500!

On the plus side, the November elections saw a record number of Clean Elections candidates win their races, with more than 370 Clean-running candidates voted to statehouses, the judiciary, and statewide positions in six states. Citizens in Arizona, Connecticut, Maine, New Mexico, North Carolina, and Portland, Oregon voted for a diverse mix of Clean Elections candidates from across the political spectrum -- Democrats and Republicans, incumbents and challengers, men and women. Some highlights:

  • Connecticut held its first-ever elections under their new public campaign finance program, and 81% of the seats in the General Assembly are held by officials who participated in the program.
  • An astonishing 93% of Connecticut's women candidates ran under the public financing system, including 41 of the 45 women incumbents running for re-election!
  • In Maine, where Clean Elections were instituted in 2000, Clean Elections officials now hold 85% of the seats in the Maine legislature.
  • Nine of Maine's Cleanly-elected officials in the current legislature are under the age of 30.
  • 54% of the Arizona legislature is Cleanly-elected, up from 42% in 2008. Also, 8 of Arizona's 11 statewide officials used the state's Clean Elections program.
Clean Elections candidates were also elected in Portland, OR, New Mexico, and North Carolina.

Read more...

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Your suggestions for health care reform requested at You-Tube Senate Hub

Sen. Chuck Grassley (D-Iowa) is the Senator of the Week on You-Tube's Senate Hub, and the topic is health care reform. You can post a suggestion, or vote on one that's already been made. Single payer is quite a way down the list, so if you get a chance, follow the link and give the Senate a piece of your mind.

Read more...

Single payer activists protest and participate in Vermont health care meeting

When health care experts, medical providers, patients, legislators and the public met for a second regional health care meeting, some 200 single payer advocates were on hand to make sure their message did not go unheard. And while single payer isn't officially "on the table," it was definitely raised in the questions and comments session inside the meeting, following remarks by Governor Deval Patrick of Massachusetts, Governor Jim Douglas of Vermont, and, by video, President Obama. While Governor Patrick defended the Massachusetts universal care program as an improvement over the options of "perfect or nothing", Dr. Deb Richter, who was a main organizer of the protest through SaveVermontHealthcare.org, asked the assembly, "why don't we just say, `Everybody in, one system,' and pay for it through taxes?"

With a few stark exceptions, most of the participants in the forum were insured--a call for the uninsured participants to raise hands sent only a few into the air. The inconvenient time and out of the way location of the forum also limited participation. It would have said more about the Obama administration's commitment to inclusion to hold this event in the evening, in a huge auditorium in a more centrally-located city. However, the majority of demonstrators were supportive of the Obama administration, and felt confident that citizen activism would lead to a HR 676-like program.

Labor leaders who attended were disappointed that the concerns of hourly, non-union, and underemployed workers were not addressed, nor were nurses able to speak to their concerns, although there were many demonstrating outside. (We posted a statement from the Labor Campaign for Single-Payer Healthcare on our headline blog here.)

You can read new about the summit here in the Boston Globe, here in the Burlington Free Press, here in Forbes, and watch footage of local tv coverage here and here.

Read more...

Monday, March 16, 2009

More on why we need to get the profit motive out of health care

Video from the March 10 "Burn Your Insurance Bill" action, thanks to Singlepayeraction.org:

Read more...

Dates and locations for next three health care summits

The final three regional health care summits are scheduled for Des Moines, Iowa, on March 23, Greensboro, North Carolina on March 31, and Los Angeles on April 6.

Healthcare-Now! is organizing rallies at each of the three events. This page on their website has the details and will be updated as dates draw closer.

The Des Moines forum starts at 10 a.m. at the Polk County Convention Complex. Dr. Ron Lind, of Physicians for a National Health Program, will be speaking at a 9 a.m. press conference and rally outside the complex.

The goal of the demonstrations are to show the overwhelming support that single payer health care enjoys among the public and health care professionals, and to ensure that the single payer option is given its due as Congress and the Obama administration move forward with policy development.

Single-payer advocates have been invited to attend these forums, although getting in the door and getting your program on the table is not the same thing! So the need for public support for single payer is as strong as ever.

One last note: If you live near one of the regional forums, you can submit a question and ask to attend at www.healthreform.gov.

Read more...

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Single Payer Rally in Vermont this Tuesday!

On Tuesday, March 17, the second of five planned regional health care summits will take place at the University of Vermont, Burlington.

The summit will be held at the University's Davis Center, and will be hosted by Vermont Governor Jim Douglas and Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick. Admission to the center is by invitation only. According to Dr. Deb Richter of SaveVermontHealthcare.org, single-payer is not expected to be one of the options discussed, although some single-payer advocates have obtained invitations to the event.

As a result, several groups plan to participate in a peaceful and respectful protest outside the University of Vermont Davis Center. Please join us!

A similar rally took place outside the first health care summit, held this past week in Dearborn, Michigan. You can connect to press coverage here.

Please be at the Davis Center at 11 a.m. to rally at 12 noon. For directions to the Davis Center, click here. Organizers say a shuttle service will be available from the Gutterson parking area; for a map, click here.

Look for the AfD banner and stand with us and others demanding reform. Health care professionals, bring white coats and stethoscopes!

A good turnout makes a powerful statement! If you can get to Burlington, please join us! For information or to coordinate ride-sharing, please contact the AfD office at afd@thealliancefordemocracy.org. If you're in the Boston area and would like to drop by the AfD office on Monday, March 16 to make signs, call 781-894-1179.

Read more...

Friday, March 13, 2009

A follow-up: photos of Tuesday's health care action


We have posted video from this week's action at the Americas Health Insurance Plans conference, and here's a follow-up: photos of the demo featuring Single-Payer Action's symbolic burning of health insurance bills. Check out Single-Payer Action's website as well!

Read more...

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Some good video links from Democracy Now!

If you missed Wednesday's Democracy Now broadcast, check out these links to some fine coverage of single payer activism:

Three of the nation's top nursing organizations have come together to form a new national nursing union with single payer on their agenda. An interview with union co-president Geri Jenkins.

An interview with Russell Mokhiber, editor of Corporate Crime Reporter, introduces Single Payer Action, a new group advocating direct action for single payer health insurance.

Lastly, an interview with single payer advocate Dr. Quentin Young. Dr. Young was Rev. Martin Luther King's doctor when King lived in Chicago and he is a longtime friend and ally of President Obama, yet highly critical of Obama's rejection of single payer.

Read more...

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Video from yesterday's demonstration at health insurance trade group conference

Here's video from the American News Project, produced in cooperation with the Huffington Post, of Monday's protest at the 2009 national conference of Americas Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), a trade group for the health insurance industry.

Congressman Eric Massa (D-N.Y.)'s statements reinforce the broad support that single payer has among the public: "We are not radicals! We are not a fringe element!" shouted Massa, who opted not to use the bullhorn provided by protest organizers. "We are the 48 million Americans who cannot access health care today!"



The full Huffington Post article is here.

Read more...

Monday, March 9, 2009

Thank you to...

...Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. (Il-2) and Rep. Tim Ryan (OH-17), the latest House members to sponsor HR 676, who signed on March 5.

Read more...

Friday, March 6, 2009

Single payer advocates win seats at White House health summit

Here's a statement by PNHP president Dr. Oliver Fein, which he had hoped to make at yesterday's White House health care summit. Dr. Fein and Rep. John Conyers were the two single-payer advocates in attendance at that event, thanks to persistent requests by single payer activists nationwide.

According to PNHP, Dr. Fein will shortly be posting his impressions of the event to the group's blog.


Two leading advocates of single-payer health reform, sometimes characterized as an improved Medicare for All, received last-minute invitations to attend the White House health care summit being held today. The invitations were greeted as a victory by single-payer supporters.

Rep. John Conyers Jr. (D-Mich.), chief sponsor of the single-payer U.S. National Health Care Act, H.R. 676, was invited to attend the meeting late in the day on Tuesday, and Dr. Oliver Fein, president of Physicians for a National Health Program, was invited on Wednesday afternoon.

The White House invitations were extended to the two leaders after intense grassroots lobbying efforts by single-payer supporters, who were concerned that no single-payer voices would be present at the meeting. The efforts included an outpouring of phone calls and e-mail messages to the White House, along with a threatened demonstration outside the White House gates by doctors and other health professionals wearing their white coats. The demonstration was called off when word arrived that Rep. Conyers and Dr. Fein had been invited.

In his prepared remarks, the full text of which follows, Dr. Fein says, "We are pleased to be here today and appreciate the implicit recognition of the majority support for single payer in our country. We hope this is the beginning of a serious dialogue on how to enact single-payer health reform and we look forward to working with [President Obama] and the Congress toward this end."

Prepared remarks by Dr. Oliver Fein:
Mr. President, Physicians for a National Health Program agrees with your statement during your presidential campaign: health care should be a basic human right.

Physicians recommend an improved and expanded Medicare-for-All - that is, a single-payer national health insurance program, providing care that is publicly financed but largely privately delivered. This fundamental health reform - which enjoys solid majority support among physicians and the public - has become even more urgently needed in view of our severe economic recession.

Millions of people are losing their employer-sponsored health insurance, joining the 46 million who already lack coverage. Millions more, including those with insurance, are finding it harder to pay their co-pays and deductibles and are scrimping on their medications and doctor visits. Many go without care, risking their health and often their very lives.

Physicians find that private, for-profit health insurance companies add cost but no value to the health care system. The administrative waste associated with the private-insurance-based industry - enormous paperwork, marketing costs, and other costs that have nothing to do with delivering care - consumes 31 cents of every health care dollar.

As long as we rely on private health insurers, universal coverage will be unaffordable.

Mandates to buy private insurance are not the answer. Experience with mandate plans in Washington state (1993), Oregon (1992) and Massachusetts (1988 and today), shows they simply don't work, achieving neither universal health care nor cost containment.

Some of these plans offer a Medicare-like, public option that people could buy into, but experience with Medicare shows that the private plans refuse to compete on a level playing field. They cherry-pick healthier patients and insist on more than their share of payment.

In contrast, single payer guarantees everyone access to comprehensive, quality health care and choice of their own doctor and hospital.

Single-payer health reform, an improved Medicare for All, is the only reform model that offers $400 billion in annual savings in administrative costs. It is the only approach that contains effective cost-containment provisions such as bulk purchasing and global budgeting.

Such economies would allow for expanding health coverage to everyone - with no co-pays or deductibles - with no overall increase in health care spending. In other words, it's the only health reform proposal that pays for itself.

The single-payer model is the only fiscally prudent proposal available, an especially important consideration at a time of economic distress. And we know from our experience with Medicare and other single-payer systems that it will work.

With a single-payer national health insurance program we can assure lifelong, high quality, comprehensive and affordable coverage for everyone. Such a program will lift the heavy burden of crushing medical expenses off the shoulders of our population, expenses that often lead to personal bankruptcy. And we can save lives: the Institute of Medicine estimated in 2002 that more than 18,000 Americans die each year from lack of health insurance. That number is certainly higher today.

From the standpoint of what benefits our patients, single payer is the health policy model that best reflects their needs and values.

Support for single payer is extensive. In a peer-reviewed statistical study in the Annals of Internal Medicine, 59 percent of U.S. physicians said they would support government action to establish national health insurance. In a recent Associated Press poll, 65 percent of the respondents said, "The United State should adopt a universal health insurance program in which everyone is covered under a program like Medicare that is run by the government and financed by taxes."

Single-payer health reform is embodied in the U.S. National Health Care Act, H.R. 676, sponsored by Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.). It had 93 co-sponsors in the 110th Congress, the most of any health reform legislation.

We are pleased to be here today and appreciate the implicit recognition of the majority support for single payer in our country. We hope this is the beginning of a serious dialogue on how to enact single-payer health reform and we look forward to working with you and the Congress toward this end.

A short biography of Dr. Fein is available here.

Read more...

Thursday, March 5, 2009

A video retrospective: Obama on Single Payer

The following three clips were posted on Commondreams.org yesterday, as part of a call to include single payer advocates in the health care summit that took place today at the White House.

As you may know, thanks to a flood of phone calls and emails from people across the country, the White House did send 11th-hour invitations to Dr. Oliver Fein, president of Physicians for a National Health Program, and Rep. John Conyers, whose bill, HR 676, would create a single-payer system here in the US, similar to systems enjoyed by healthier, longer-living, and less economically-pinched people of all ages and backgrounds elsewhere in the industrialized world.

Thanks to all who called--action does get results! Now we need to keep the pressure on and give President Obama and Congress a mandate to institute a plan that saves lives and money.


In 2003, Barack Obama addressed an audience of AFL-CIO members and spoke firmly about the health care problems of Americans. "I happen to be a proponent of a single-payer universal health-care plan," he said to applause. "I see no reason why the United States of America, the wealthiest country in the history of the world, spending 14 percent of its Gross National Product on health care, cannot provide basic health insurance to everybody."

Here's the clip:



During the 2008 Presidential campaign Obama was confronted with this same issue and responded with the following qualification of his stance on a single payer, universal system:



And when subsequently interviewed on the Today Show, he reiterated this qualification:



So we must ask, on the eve of the Health Care Summit in Washington, why has Obama - now President of the United States - not only fallen silent on the single payer solution, but actively blocked participation for those who would advocate for a solution he once lauded as ideal?

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HR 676 Cosponsors

Several members of Congress have signed on as co-sponsors of HR 676 in the last few weeks, bringing the total to 62 members of the House.

Here are the latest--if your rep is a recent co-sponsor, please call to say thank you. If not, let them know you want them to sign on. More call-ins are scheduled!

February 11, 2009
Rep. Michael M. Honda [CA-15]
Rep. Robert Wexler [FL-19]
Rep. Chaka Fattah [PA-2]
Rep. Bob Filner [CA-51]
Rep. Robert A. Brady [PA-1]
Rep. Gwen Moore [WI-4]
Rep. Neil Abercrombie [HI-1]

February 23, 2009
Rep. Alcee L. Hastings [FL-23]
Rep. Elijah E. Cummings [MD-7]
Rep. Sanford D. Bishop [GA-2]
Rep. Robert C. “Bobby” Scott [VA-3]
Rep. Emanuel Cleaver [MO-5]
Rep. John A. Yarmuth [KY-3]
Rep. Carolyn B. Maloney [NY-14]
Rep. Bennie G. Thompson [MS-2]
Rep. Bobby L. Rush [IL-1]
Rep. Nydia M. Velazquez [NY-12]
Rep. Al Green [TX-9]
Rep. Janice D. Schakowsky [IL-9]
Rep. Michael E. Capuano [MA-8]
Rep. Mazie K. Hirono [HI-2]
Rep. Peter Welch [VT]
Rep. Patrick J. Kennedy [RI-1]
Rep. Dale E. Kildee [MI-5]

March 3, 2009
Rep. Corrine Brown [FL-3]
Rep. Donald M. Payne [NJ-10]
Rep. James McGovern [MA-3]

Read more...

Houseparty for Healthcare!

We're putting together our "Houseparty for Healthcare" packets, and to get you intrigued, we'd like to share some of the material here with you.

Here's the cover story from our Winter, 2008 issue of Justice Rising, "Healthcare for Humans--Not Corporate Profit."

AfDJR3301

Join us in organizing for a rights-based approach to health care that will be more affordable and more equitable--saving lives and money! Check back for more information, or email afd@thealliancefordemocracy.org.

Read more...

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

White Coats at the White House, Thursday, March 5

UPDATE, March 5: Thanks to your calls and emails, the White House invited Rep. John Conyers and Dr. Oliver Fein, president of Physicians for a National Health Plan! So no need to demonstrate, at least today!

We've asked our D.C. area members to join this demo tomorrow, with their white coats, scrubs & stethoscopes, if appropriate!

White Coats to The White House
Thursday, March 5, 12 to 1 p.m., Lafayette Park, Washington, D.C.

President Obama is holding a Healthcare Summit on Thursday, March 5th, which is expected to draw more than 120 individuals, including representatives from Americas Health Insurance Plans, the largest group of private health insurance lobbyists--but no advocates for single payer healthcare, the plan favored by a majority of Americans.

Please join Physicians for a National Health Program and other members of the Leadership Conference for Guaranteed Health Care, the National Single Payer Alliance, for a demonstration at Lafayette Square, in front of the White House, Thursday, March 5th from noon to 1:00 pm. For more information contact Danielle Alexander, (202) 662-0614, danielle@pnhp.org

If you're not able to attend, please spread the word among friends, family and neighbors!

"It appears that despite the fact that a majority of Americans and American physicians support a single payer -- an improved Medicare for All -- as the best solution to our nation's health care crisis, they will have no voice at this Thursday's summit," said Dr. Quentin Young, national coordinator of Physicians for a National Health Program.

Single payer - which would create a health care system based on public financing of privately delivered care much like that seen in other industrialized nations - is the health reform with support from 60% of the American public (Gallup Poll, 2007) and the majority of American physicians (Annals of Internal Medicine, 2008). Single payer would usher improved health and affordable health care to all Americans.

Single payer national health care is the only model proven to lead us out of a seemingly perpetual health care crisis. "In years past, President Obama endorsed single payer as the best solution to the crisis," Young said. "Today it appears that this option will not even get a hearing at the summit. We believe this exclusion compromises, profoundly, the possibility of a popular, effective solution to our No. 1 domestic problem. This is a colossal blunder."

Read more...

Call the White House and tell President Obama to make room at the table for Single Payer!

UPDATE, March 5: Thanks to your calls and emails, the White House invited Rep. John Conyers and Dr. Oliver Fein, president of Physicians for a National Health Plan. Keep in the loop--we'll need to speak out again and again to build a movement for health care policy that cures people, not ailing corporations.

This Thursday, March 5, the White House will host a summit on how to reform the health care system.

The 120 invited guests include lobbyists for various interest groups, including the private-for-profit insurance industry (AHIP), some members of Congress including Senate Finance Chairman Max Baucus who has already ruled single payer "off the table," and various others concerned with health care.

No single payer advocates have been invited to attend.

Please urge President Obama to fulfill his promise for transparency and openness in government. Call The White House (202) 456-1414 or (202) 456-1111 before the start of the summit on Thursday. Tell the president to listen to experts on single payer health care--the system favored by both a majority of Americans and a majority of physicians.

Let's get a place at the table for Single Payer!

Please forward this email widely, and ask your friends and family to forward it as well! We need a groundswell of support for real change on health care!

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North Bridge Chapter affiliates with Mass-Care

The Alliance's North Bridge (Concord, MA) chapter has become an affiliate member of Mass-Care, the statewide coalition working to pass single payer health care legislation in Massachusetts and to promote single payer healthcare nationally. North Bridge member (and office manager) Barbara Clancy participated in a lobbying day for single payer health care at the Massachusetts State House, while other members called legislators to voice support for both the statewide single payer bill and Cape Care's bill to bring a community health trust to residents of Cape Cod.

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Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Good reading on Massachusetts's universal coverage

There's a concise look at the failures of Massachusetts's universal coverage health insurance reform in Monday's Boston Globe. Dr. Susanne L. King, the author of the piece, practices medicine in the western part of the state.

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Monday, March 2, 2009

A victory in Shapleigh for water democracy!

Shapleigh, Maine, residents have said no to Nestlé's Poland Springs bottled water division, which came to the town with a proposal to test, pump and sell local water. On Saturday, they voted to approve a ban on private companies bottling and selling water, despite opposition by the town's Board of Selectmen. The board favored a set of regulations on water pumping, which will still appear on Shapleigh's town meeting warrant on March 14.

Read news coverage at our headline blog, here.

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News from Portland (OR) Alliance for Democracy

Past events and upcoming actions from the Portland Alliance for Democracy include movement-building in response to economic crisis, a critical look at tar sands exploitation, and a video presentation on the "birthplace" of the atomic bomb. Portland AfD'ers are also working on legislation to support renewable energy development, and will be part of a demonstration marking the sixth anniversary of the Iraq war.

At the end of January, AfD successfully co-sponsored and co-organized an Economic Town Hall on the Economic Crisis attended by over 800 people. Delivering the keynote talks were Marty Hart-Landsberg, economic professor at Lewis and Clark College and Veronica Dujan, sociology professor at Portland State University.  Those talks were followed by about a dozen workshops including one on building democracy led by AfD Portland President David Delk.
 
The Portland chapter now has two public events coming up. 
 
The first is a talk by Andrew Nikiforuk on Tuesday, March 31st at the First Unitarian Church, SW 12th and Main Street in Portland.  Nikiforuk is the author of Tar Sands, Dirty Oil and the Future of a Continent.  Canada has become America's largest foreign oil supplier and what we import is largely tar sand oil. But the environmental and economic impacts of extracting tar sand oil are so extreme that our reliance on this supply is the chief indicator that peak oil is here and the age of cheap fossil fuel is over.  

If you are concerned about peak oil, water supplies, nuclear energy, petro-state "democracy" or a whole host of other issues, this presentation is for you. See the flyer here.  Co-sponsoring this event is the Economic Justice Action Group of the First Unitarian Church and KBOO, community-supported radio (additional co-sponsors listed on the flyer). 
 


The focus remains on environmental issues in the chapter's second scheduled event, a presentation of "Arid Lands," a video made by two local Oregon residents several years ago about the Hanford Nuclear Reservation in Washington State. Hanford was the "birthplace" of the bombs which fell on Japan at the end of WWII and has since been the principle dumping ground of nuclear waste from both weapons production and peaceful nuclear uses.

The Department of Energy has plans to increase the worldwide production of nuclear waste and to use Hanford as a "recycling" site; recycling produces yet more nuclear waste to be stored at Hanford.  Gerry Polett, Exec Director of Heart of America NW, will be there to talk about current threats and calls to action.  Event is scheduled for Wednesday, April 1st but that might change.  Please check our Portland website for updated information.
 


The Portland chapter also continues to make progress with spreading the word on the many benefit of Renewable Energy Payments (Feed-in Tariffs), through their "Democratize the Grid" campaign. The use of Renewable Energy Payments (R.E.P.) by Germany has propelled that nation into the forefront of renewable energy production worldwide.  It accelerates the rapid development of renewable energy as well as greatly increasing good paying green jobs. Energy utilities are required to buy all the energy produced by R.E.P. projects for set prices higher than rates customer pay the utility, thereby guaranteeing a profit for the project owner.  That in turn makes it easy to get a loan to pay for it as the bank knows that the project is very low risk.  The whole process favors small producers as opposed to the multinational corporations which have dominated the wind farm development which rely heavily on complicated tax-credit mechanisms. 

The chapter has written a legislative bill for presentation to the current session of the Oregon legislature.  Please visit their website to learn more on this exciting project. 
 

The chapter is also co-sponsoring and co-organizing a rally and march on Sunday, March 15, starting at 1 PM at the steps to the State Capital Building in Salem, to observe the 6th anniversary of the beginning of the war on Iraq.  The rally demands we "Stop the Wars at Home and Abroad - Keep Oregon's Guard Home from Iraq and Afghanistan!" All are welcome to march with the chapter--download a flier here.

Lastly, our project to change the electoral system continues with efforts to enact Local Option Instant Runoff Voting in Oregon. Instant runoff voting allows voters the option of ranking candidates in order of their preference and, if no candidate has a majority of votes, then eliminates the lowest vote getting candidate, followed by a recount of the vote.  The process continues until one candidate has a majority and is declared the winner.  IRV is a great way to increase the number of candidates as the charge that third party or independent candidate are “spoilers” is eliminated. 
 
The Local Option legislation (SB29) would allow cities, counties and special service districts the option of using IRV in their elections.  Please contact your Oregon state senator or representative; ask them to support SB29.  More information is here on our website.

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Support low-power FM radio

The Local Community Radio Act of 2009 (HR 1147) has recently been introduced in the House. The Act nearly passed in the last Congress with the support of more than 100 members.

HR 1147 would open up the airwaves to more Low Power FM (LPFM) radio stations (including a proposed station in Washington state supported by AfD's South Puget Sound chapter). These stations have the potential to bring local news and information, non-commercial music and art, and alternative points of view to the public airwaves, to increase media access among traditionally-underserved communities, rural and urban, and to allow more people to get experience in broadcasting.

Visit this advocacy page at Freepress.net to send a message to your representative in support of the bill!

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