Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Rep. Conyers calls for your support for HR 676

Video from Progressive Democrats of America.

Building congressional support for HR 676 is "a question of harnessing, motivating, and directing the energies of millions of citizens who are right here, right on time, ready for change," says Rep. John Conyer in the video below. Calls are needed to reps to get them on as HR 676 cosponsors--the count is up to 77 (it was 75 on the day the video was taped, but is up to 77 thanks to the two most recent co-sponsors, Rep. Eleanor Holmes Norton of DC and Rep Zoe Lofgren of California. Norton and Lofgren are democrats, as are all the co-sponsors so far; Conyers points out that the bill needs broader support, and the issue itself needs a place at the table.

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Bill Moyers Journal on single payer, archived online

If you missed Friday's broadcast coverage of single payer on PBS's Bill Moyers Journal, you can see the show online here. You can also leave a comment, or read a transcript of the show.

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Friday, May 22, 2009

Reminder -- Bill Moyers hosts single payer activists tonight!

Healthcare NOT Warfare co-chair Donna Smith will be a guest on Bill Moyers Journal tonight, Friday, May 22, at 9 p.m. EDT on PBS (check local listings here). They'll discuss how our broken health care system is hurting ordinary Americans. Then, policy analysts and physicians Sidney Wolfe of Public Citizen and David Himmelstein of Physicians for a National Health Program join Bill Moyers for a frank discussion about the political and logistical feasibility of a single-payer system amidst the troubled economy and a government dominated by lobbyists.

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Wednesday, May 20, 2009

A New Way Forward sponsors national economic crisis video screenings & forums

If a bank's too big to fail, it's too big period. To build support for commonsense reconstruction of our financial system, A New Way Forward is asking people to host national video screenings and town hall forums to learn about the financial crisis and begin working on restoring our economy and democracy.

To see or download the video, to find an event in your area or to publicize your own screening, visit the website here.

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Media on single payer

Bit by bit, the media wall shutting out debate on single payer health care is coming down. Here's some links to recently-broadcast shows featuring advocates of a sensible, economical and equitable health care system:

In Maryland, Maryland's WYPR-FM's daily public affairs program, "Midday", hosted Paul Hochfeld, producer of the excellent film "Health, Money and Fear" and Margaret Flowers, one of the Baucus 8 who were arrested at the Senate Finance Committee hearings. If you'd like to listen, follow this link to download a podcast.

Today, Jim Fisher's radio show "Common Health" on WERU-FM community radio in Orland, Maine focused on health care reform and featured Dr. Philip Caper, a Maine health care advocate (and AfD member!) as one of the guests speaking for single payer. The site for the May 20 show is here, and audio of the show should be posted soon.

Lastly, a cartoon by Dan Wasserman in the Boston Globe:

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Monday, May 18, 2009

Justice Rising on the web (and, members, in your mailbox!)


The Spring issue of Justice Rising: Grassroots Solutions to Corporate Domination is available online here. This quarter, we focus on Deglobalization/Localization, with articles by co-editors Ruth Caplan and Jim Tarbell, Mark Anielski, Maia Campoamo, C.R. Lawn, Dave Lewit, and Ellen Brown.

Remember, you are always free to use Justice Rising for your own organizing--just download and print. Paper copies are available from the national office as well. And if you'd like to make sure you never miss an issue, join the Alliance for Democracy!

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Single Payer Actions target Max and Massachusetts

Thanks to Health Justice's Single Payer Action site for organizing the following:
Fax Max: After ordering the arrest of five more single payer speakers on May 12, Baucus said "I will personally meet with anyone." Single Payer action wants you to take him up on his offer. Send your request for a personal meeting to the Senator's scheduler. This free e-fax also goes to the White House and the Senate Finance and Health Committees. Single Payer Action also suggests holding the meeting "in the National Stadium, where Max can charge admission so he won't have to keep taking insurance money."

Meanwhile, Congressmen John Conyers and Dennis Kucinich are collecting health insurance horror stories, especially from folks in Massachusetts who have already experienced universal mandates. (Stories from the rest of the country are needed too!) Write your story here. It will become a free fax to the White House but will also be used by single payer supporters in Congress to illustrate why the insurance companies do not belong in health care.

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Single payer on the air!

Thanks to everyone who called to pressure mainstream media to give this issue some long-overdue attention.

  • Check out this column by Chicago Sun-Times writer Don Terry.
  • Single payer will be a topic on NPR's Diane Rehm, broadcast Monday, May 18 at 10 a.m. (It's rebroadcast on other NPR stations nationally; check local times.) Or listen to a podcast here. Guests include Dr. David Himmelstein and Senator Bernie Sanders.
  • Bill Moyer's Journal, which airs Friday, May 22 on PBS, will cover single payer and the arrests at Senator Baucus' May 12 roundtable; Moyer's show had a film crew at the event.

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Hundredfold Farm, a low-impact co-housing project, is focus of Earth Day broadcast

For the past several years, Alliance for Democracy co-chair Lou Hammann has been one of the organizers of a unique co-housing project in the south central Pennsylvania town of Orrtanna--Hundredfold Farm. The project was recently featured on National Public Radio, as part of their Earth Day coverage. You can access the .mp3 of the show here and hear about Hundredfold Farm (mistakenly referred to as Hunter Fall Farms) in the first third of the show.

You can also visit Hundredfold Farm's website here.

Lou recently told the Alliance council that Hundredfold Farm is quickly becoming the local "go-to" group on environmental and sustainability issues, because of the low-impact design of the housing and their unique wastewater treatment facility, which uses an artificial wetland to purify water on-site, so that it can return to the local aquifer.

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Thursday, May 14, 2009

"Congress is not listening..."

Democracy Now! interviews Dr. Margaret Flowers and Russell Mokhiber on support for single payer and the control of debate by corporate funders and lobbyists. Mokhiber calls for more protest, in Washington and in congressional districts: "The regular means of communication have been shut down... Congress is not listening. Congress is only listening now to the big industries, to the pharmaceutical and health care industries. And so we have no choice now."

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Public comment sought on Senate FinCom findings

The Senate Finance Committee is releasing "Description of Policy Option" statements generated by their recent health care roundtables. These are available online by following the links below.

On April 29, the Senate Finance Committee issued "Transforming the Health Care Delivery System: Proposals to Improve Patient Care and Reduce Health Care Costs." A report dated May 14 covers "Expanding Health Care Coverage: Proposals to Provide Affordable Coverage to All Americans."

You can read and comment on these options--and their lack of consideration of single payer--at Health_Reform@finance-dem.senate.gov. Email your comments in the form of word or .pdf file attachments.

The deadline for public comments on the delivery system reform policy options is tomorrow, May 15, 2009, and on affordability, May 22.

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"Fresh out of Jail"

An email from Jerry Call, co-founder of Midcoast Health Care Reform/Maine Healthcare Reform. Jerry was one of the protesters arrested on the 12th.

Hello all,

I have to tell you, it's nice to be out of jail. I don't recommend it to anyone! I never appreciated fresh air like I did this evening.

But, it was well worth it. My only regret is that I didn't have the stamina to stay longer. My intent was to stay for a few days, but after 30 hours of standing and laying on a sheet steel mattress and concrete floor, and I don't know how long in leg irons, I'm afraid to say I gave in.

I first want to thank those of you that stood on main street in Rockland on Tues. for me. That was one of the first things I heard after getting out and I have to tell you I went from being in the dumps to being on top of the world. Thank you all!!!

I also want to thank Margaret Flowers, Russell Mokhiber and the other 6 of the "Baucus 8" for leading the way last week and giving me and the other 4 to participate in yesterday's protest. Without their support in getting the press there yesterday it would have been for not.

I plan to be at the planning meeting for the RALLY on Sat. in Augusta, at the Mediation Center [Suite 254, 222 Saint John St, Portland, Maine] from 2-4; look forward to seeing as many as can make it. I still firmly believe that the rally in Maine and the others around the country on the 30th can have a major impact! It is imperative that we go all out to get a huge crowd!!

Will head back home tomorrow morning.

Thanks for all your support,

Jerry

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Wednesday, May 13, 2009

One more voice in support for single payer yesterday

Not everyone who spoke out in favor of single payer was under threat of arrest... according to RTT News, which covers business online, Gerald Shea, Assistant to the President for Governmental affairs of the AFL-CIO, gave a hat-tip to the idea. "If you're going to do it the right way, I think that single-payer is the way to go," Shea said. Several AFL-CIO unions already endorse single payer; you can get a list at www.laborforsinglepayer.org.

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Attention Oregonians! Make a single-payer push!

David Delk, of the Alliance for Democracy's Portland chapter, reminds Oregonians:

...remember that Rep Earl Blumenauer stated in a public forum that he would not lead on this issue [single payer]; that single payer had no legs to walk on and that he does not, therefore, support it. Call him at 503-231-2300 to suggest that he change his mind.

And our newly elected US senator, Jeff Merkley, has on several occasions said that he will vote for single payer if it comes to a vote in the senate. We need some leadership by elected officials. Call Jeff and tell him you support single payer and you want him to lead on the healthcare issue by sponsoring single payer legislation. His phone number in Portland is (503) 326-3386: Fax: (503) 326-2900.

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Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Media and video on today's Senate Finance Committee roundtable

Once again, the people who addressed the Senate Finance Committee on behalf of the majority of Americans and their doctors, nurses, and allied health-care professionals did it from the floor, without official invitation, and five of them got tossed from the hearing room for it.

The five arrested included two RNs, members of the National Nurses Organizing Committee/California Nurses Association; two physicians, members of Physicians for a National Health Program, and a patient activist with PNHP and Health Care Now. The California Nurses Association press release, with statements from those who engaged in civil disobedience, is here.

Marking the anniversary of the birth of Florence Nightingale, some 40 other RNs staged a silent protest – standing before the committee in red nursing scrubs and turning their backs to show signs reading "Nurses Say: Patients First. Stop AHIP. Pass Single-Payer." AHIP, America's Health Insurance Plans, is the private insurance industry lobby arm that is given a regular voice by the Committee, chaired by Sen. Max Baucus, which is in the forefront of discussion on a health plan.

As they left the room about three minutes into Baucus's opening remarks, several in the audience applauded. The protesters also got a round of applause, as well as a call from Baucus for Capitol police to intervene "more expeditiously."



Other coverage:
RTT News, MSNBC, Springfield (MO)News-Leader profile of one of the arrested doctors

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Five actions for single payer

The Alliance mission is to "end corporate rule." Together AfD members, friends and allies are building a 1-million-or-more national movement to break the corporate for-profit health industry stranglehold on Congress.

Take action now. We can win!
A majority of the American people and a majority of doctors, nurses, health professionals and labor want single-payer.

Make you voice heard. Please circulate this message widely to your family, friends and email list.

Not one pro-single payer speaker was invited to speak before the Senate Finance Committee's recent roundtables on health care. But the committee heard from representatives of the Business Roundtable, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Blue Cross/Blue Shield, the AARP, the Heritage Foundation, the drug industry (The Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association), and the high tech medical equipment industry (Advanced Medical Technology Association), among others.

The only voices for the single payer majority so far have been protesters, including the Baucus 8--advocates and doctors who stood up for us at the May 5 roundtable and were arrested by Capitol police (see the video here.) And this morning, as Senate Finance Committee chair Max Baucus opened today's roundtable on health care financing, about 25 nurses in hospital scrubs stood in silent protest, before filing out to applause from several attendees. Five more protestors stood during the roundtable to speak for single payer, and were taken away by police.

Tomorrow, Wednesday , May 13, is a National Lobby Day for Single-Payer, with a rally from 12:00 - 2:00 pm in Upper Senate Park, near the Union Metro Stop, Washington, D.C. But wherever you are, we must keep up the pressure for single payer!

Here are five actions you can take to make sure "everybody's in, nobody's out" of our healthcare system:

1. H.R. 676, Rep. Conyer's Single-Payer bill now has 75 cosponsors, but we need 218 votes in the House to pass H.R. 676. (see a list of cosponsors here). If your Representative is not a cosponsor call his/her office at 202-224-3121.
2. Send a fax supporting single payer to the President and top Congress and Committee members at www.1payer.net/campaigns/fax.html
3. Leave your comment to show strong support of single-payer reform bills HR 676 and S 703 at the comments page of www.healthreform.gov.
4. Write/call/email your Governor, state and Congressional representatives. Find contacts at www.usa.gov/Contact/Elected.shtml
5. PLAN NOW: May 30 is a National Day of Action to show solidarity with demonstrations at the AHIP-American Health Insurance Plans National Convention in SanDiego, CA.

May 30 National Day of Action
Check this site to see if your town/city has an event planned. If not, plan one and post it to the calendar by emailing info@healthcare-now.org. Call your local press - let them know the "what, when and where." Videotape events, post them online, and don't forget to tell us about your action at afd@thealliancefordemocracy.org.

Your event can be large or small with local allies and friends. Contact the AfD office at 781-894-1179 or afd@thealliancefordemocracy.org for copies of "Truths and Myths about Single Payer", or download here. Have sign-up sheets and forward names to your Congress members.

Some ideas:

* Table at a Farmer's Market in support of HR 676 and Senate Bill 703
* Hold a vigil at a district office of your member of the state legislature or of Congress. Dress in black to honor the 22,000 who die every year from lack of health insurance.
* Hold a rally - create political theater to "Put Healthcare on the Table." Get attention! - wear a hospital gown and "foam butt" (to see what we mean, here's some photos) and hold signs saying "I Demand Full Coverage." Order "foam butt" here.
* Hold a Single-Payer Truth Hearing.

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Wells, Maine, residents vote this weekend on local versus corporate power

A lot of media attention has been directed at the town of Wells, Maine, this week, in anticipation of a vote on a groundbreaking rights-based ordinance, designed to protect the town's groundwater, as well as the wider environment, by putting water in public trust and stripping corporations of constitutional rights within town borders.

"Water is essential for life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness," according to the Wells Water Rights and Local Self Government Ordinance--and the life and health of the environment is ranked as high as that of town residents. The ordinance bars corporate water withdrawals, and allows any town resident to seek legal damages for damage to the ecosystem.

Nestle's Poland Springs division, which unsuccessfully tried to get the local water district to allow them to pump water from a local river last summer, has been running radio spots urging town residents to vote against the ordinance at Saturday's town meeting. The town attorney and Chamber of Commerce have also come out against the ordinance.

In a recent story on the Maine Public Broadcasting Network, Defending Water for Life organizer Emily Posner defended the ordinance and the thinking behind it: "This type of approach is reflective of a paradigm change that's happening in our society and our culture around how we want to interface with the economy and the environment and the future," she said. "We're seeing people moving away from big box stores and trying to revitalize their local economy, and this is a similar type of approach that's happening through the political sphere, where we're trying to re-localize our political infastructure so that we as communities have the right to decide what will actually happen within our town borders."

In addition to the Maine Public Broadcasting Network story, you can read coverage in the Portland Press-Herald here, on our headline blog.

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Thursday, May 7, 2009

Friday, May 8: events and actions for single payer

We received this list of actions and events from Frederick W. "Rick" Ford, President of Floridians for Health Care, Inc. Thanks, Rick!

If you have not already heard, THIS FRIDAY - MAY 8 - there is a TON of action being planned around the country, online, and on the street to urge Congress to put single payer on the table - pass HR676, S703, et al.

In light of the arrest this week of 8 activists including several doctors during the Senate Finance Committee's healthcare reform "Roundtable," this call to action is even more important.

Easy events anybody can participate in:

  1. "Follow Friday":   If you're on twitter, you should "tweet" single payer tweets until "single payer" gets onto Twitter.com's "trending topics" board. Sign up for Twitter at: http://www.twitter.com and start by following "singlepayer".
  2. www.1payer.net has launched a "fax them 'til they drop' campaign: http://1payer.net/campaigns/finance-committee.html  to members of the Senate Finance Committee
  3. Watch the footage from BOTH CSPAN and 1Payer of the arrests and what went on at the Senate this week: www.singlepayercentral.com
  4. There is a "teach-in" this weekend in San Francisco (info at www.singlepayernow.net) and you can find lots more at the California Facebook group on single payer and SB810
  5. Everyday we're calling (1) Senator Baucus re: his shutting out single payer and (2) the media who continue to refuse to cover these events (For example, NPR today, when asked why Bristol Palin and the tea parties got coverage but not the arrests of the MDs at the Senate, responded "I guess we didn't think it [the arrests] were newsworthy"). Baucus: (202) 224-2651. Find media phone numbers here. Call and demand that they cover single payer issues.
NOW IS OUR MOMENT - President Obama said on March 5th, "In this [health reform] effort, every voice has to be heard.  Every idea must be considered. Every option must be on the table.  There should be no sacred cows."     LET"S HOLD HIM TO HIS WORD!!

Check Healthcare Activists at SinglePayerCentral.com (online 24/7 news updated hourly and resource clearinghouse for the single payer movement)

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California AfD'ers defend human right to water through support of AB 1242

The Alliance has joined with water justice, environmental, and religious groups as co-sponsor of AB 1242, the Human Right to Water Act sponsored by Assembly Member Ira Ruskin of the San Francisco area. This is the first bill to address the human right to water in any state or the country. It is in concert with the global people's water movement call that "water as human right" be recognized at the United Nations. For more on this effort at the UN, read "Water: A Human Right, Not a Commodity" on page 4 of our water tabloid, "Water Democracy in California: Community Rights not Corporate Control," at www.defendingwaterincalifornia.org

The bill was heard on April 28 by the Water, Parks and Wildlife Committee which voted along party lines in support. Nancy Price thanks all California AfDers who responded to the Action Alert on this bill.

AB 1242 now goes to the Appropriations Committee where it may meet with difficulty because the bill requires state agencies act to provide safe and affordable water to all Californians. Hopefully, the bill will get voted out of this committee and to the Assembly floor - when, again, we'll send out an action alert for all CA members to call their Assembly Member. And, if it gets approved in the Assembly, the process starts over in the Senate. Stay tuned, stay alert!

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Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Call the media re Senate FinCom arrests

Get the message beyond the choir and show the American people that someone out there is standing up for their interests, even if they're getting hauled off in handcuffs as a result.

ABC News - 212-456-7777 - netaudr@abc.com
CBS News - 212-975-4321 - evening@cbsnews.com
CNBC - (201) 735-2622 - info@cnbc.com
CNN - 404-827-1500 l
MSNBC/NBC - (212) 664-4444 - hardball@msnbc.com - rachel@msnbc.com - nightly@nbc.com
PBS - 703-739-5000 - newshour@pbs.org

If your local paper still has a Washington bureau, don't forget to call them too. Mention there is going to be a third Finance Committee roundtable on May 14.

Meanwhile, here's some coverage:

  • Snark from the WSJ blogs
  • High dudgeon from Dow Jones--damn those protesters and their sneaky "business casual"!
  • Professional journalism by Arthur Delaney of the Huffington Post
  • California Nurses Association organizer Donna Smith writing on Commondreams.org

Read more...

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Eight single payer advocates protest and are arrested at Senate Finance Committee hearing

Despite having the support of a majority of citizens, health care professionals and health care economists, single payer has remained "off the table" as far as Sen. Max Baucus is concerned.

This is why Tuesday's Senate Finance Committee roundtable, the second of three looking at health care reform, invited fifteen speakers, none of whom spoke in favor of single payer, and several of whom had ties to the for-profit health care and insurance industries, both of which are hefty funders of committee chair Max Baucus's re-election efforts, according to OpenSecrets.org. Writing on CommonDreams.org, California Nurses Association organizer Donna Smith noted that "Karen Ignagni, head of the industry lobby group American Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) was escorted into the room like royalty by staff members of the Senate committee."

But single payer got a hearing after all, as eight activists and doctors stood up at the start of the roundtable, addressed the committee, were ruled out of order, escorted from the room by Capitol police, and arrested.

The eight wore black in memory of the 22,000 people who die every year due to lack of health insurance. They represented a coalition of single-payer advocacy organizations including Physicians for a National Health Program (PNHP), Healthcare-NOW, Single Payer Action, Private Health Insurance Must Go, the Campaign for Fresh Air and Clean Politics, Prosperity Agenda, and Health Care for the Homeless.

“Health insurance administrators are practicing medicine without a medical license,” said Dr. Margaret Flowers, co-chair of Maryland chapter of PNHP. “The result is the suffering and death of thousands of patients for the sake of private profit. The private health insurance industry has a solid grip on patients, providers and legislators. It is time to stand up and declare that health care is a human right.”

According to Donna Smith, organizer for the California Nurses Association, the protest changed the mood in the room from "a giddy and gleeful assembly of industry lobbyists" to a recognition, however dim, that "some brave and patriotic fellow citizens had just been hauled out for arrest for nothing more than demanding that a point of view held by a majority of patients, nurses, physicians and other healthcare providers be included in the national discussion."

She also that the senators on the panel and the assembled press seemed more bemused than intrigued by the demonstration, and only two reporters mustered the curiosity to follow the protesters out of the hall and find out more. It could well be that the media blackout on single payer will continue even when activists are getting hauled off in handcuffs.

Given that there is one more roundtable in the series, your response is more vital than ever. If you're a constituent of one of the senators that sits on this committee, make it a point to call, protest the treatment of the eight activists, and demand that single-payer representatives be included next time. Let your neighbors, friends, co-workers, and family know you made the call and urge them to do the same. For details, see this blog post.

Call your state legislators and tell them to sign on to this appeal for single payer. Your state officials are much more likely to know how the cost of for-profit health care is affecting citizens, local budgets, and small businesses, and much less likely to be cashing big checks from health industry PACs and CEOs.

Lastly, start planning for May 30, a national day of action for single payer health care. Even small actions--screening a film or hosting a speaker--help spread the word and convince others to add their voices to the ever-growing call to get "everybody in, nobody out!"

Read more...

Monday, May 4, 2009

Alliance for Democracy’s Defending Water in Maine rallys and speaks for enhanced home rule and rights of nature

Maine is considering a state-level bill, LD 1028, “An Act to Enhance Municipal Home Rule Statues”, which would legally allow Maine cities and towns to adopt and enforce ordinances stating that corporations are not people, and denying them constitutional personhood rights. The bill got a public hearing in front of the Maine legislature’s Joint Standing Committee on State and Local Government on Wednesday, April 29, preceded by a rally in front of the State House in Augusta, at which Emily Posner, Defending Water in Maine organizer, spoke.

Water extractors claim the bill paints the state as “bad for business,” but supporters disagree, saying it reaffirms community rights to control what goes in within their borders.

You can see video from Portland, Maine’s WCSH-6 tv at www.defendingwaterinmaine.org/media. To read more, visit this page on the Defending Water in Maine webpage

Emily Posner was also one of a trio of speakers addressing water protection issues in New England at a forum sponsored by the Environmental Leadership Program and held on April 27 at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Emily spoke about the work she’s done in Maine, linking it to international struggles to protect water by localities and often by marginalized populations.

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Southern New England Afd'ers meet

On April 11, AfD members from Eastern Massachusetts and Rhode Island met for a day-long conference entitled "Maintaining Democracy: Undermining the Corporate Agenda from the Bottom Up." It was an opportunity to find out more about member and supporters activism, and to hear from groups allied with AfD about their work, with special focus on climate change and localization, healthcare, and media.

Invited speakers included Nancy Lee Wood, who has been working on peak oil education and preparing her community and university for a post-carbon future: Jill Stein, from Massachusetts Coalition for Healthy Communities, speaking on climate change: local radio hosts Stan Robinson and John Grebe on media: and Katie Robbins, from Healthcare-Now, discussing the national push for single-payer health care. Barbara Clancy from the Alliance office talked about AfD’s work for single payer, focusing on state level work in New York, Pennsylvania, California, and Massachusetts. Member-educator Mary Rossborough discussed her work on economics; Garrett Whitney
introduced Concord (MA) actions on climate change and the transition town concept, and David Lewit talked about economics and localization, Cynthia Whitty gave a short history of her town’s long-term community-building activism, and Ruth Weizenbaum recognized the volunteers who keep the “Other Voices” video project on the air. Raging Grannies provided the music!

It was a full day, with, sadly, less time for open discussion than had been originally planned. A “post conference” chapter meeting is in the works to consider follow-ups to the event, including a possible New England conference in the fall, and a roundtable on localization and building local and regional economies.

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