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Public Employee Press
Health Care Crisis
Members demand single-payer insurance,
drug price controls
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Retiree Hilda Tennent, in the window seat, and Local 1549's
Diane Rhodes sign post cards for the single-payer health care
and drug price control campaign.
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The unions new campaign for national health care and
drug price controls is already picking up steam.
Since DC 37 Executive Director Lillian Roberts announced the initiative
in February, more than 1,000 members and retirees have signed post cards
for the campaign. The union hopes to deliver the post cards to Congress
members and senators in a bus trip to the nations capital in the
fall.
Clearly the Bush administration isnt sympathetic to national
heath care, and his administrations policies are only worsening
the health care crisis in the United States, where an astonishing 45 million
people lack coverage, Roberts said.
But there is a growing belief in this country that we need universal
health care. And we want to play a role in helping to create the political
climate to make national health care and the control of drug prices a
reality.
Wanda Williams, director of the DC 37 Political Action and
Legislation Dept., reported that the union is distributing cards to the
unions 56 local unions and urging members to sign up at community
association meetings and during political and other activities. Roberts
kicked off the campaign with a Public Employee Press editorial on the
health care crisis that included coupons at the bottom of the page.
Hundreds of members and retirees signed cards March7 during a bus trip
to Albany to attend the annual lobby day of DC 37s national union,
the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees.
The costs of drugs are ridiculous, said Doris Miller, a Local
1549 member. Even though we have a prescription drug card, many
of us still have to pay a lot. There are so many people who dont
have a card at all, and they have to pay the full cost of their drugs.
Its not fair.
Local 420 retiree Billie Smith, a former Ambulatory Care
Technician, said she felt fortunate to have her health care covered through
her GHI plan and to be insulated somewhat from the sting of soaring medication
prices because she has the unions prescription drug card.
But she expressed her sadnessand angerthat so many millions
of people dont enjoy her benefits. Smith said the health care crisis
hit home for her when a friend lost his health coverage after his employer
went bankrupt and he found himself out of work.
Its outrageous, said Smith. A lot of people need
health care. And when you start paying out $40, $50 to $60 for your medications
at the pharmacy, you have to go without something else.
On Feb. 17, during the monthly meeting in Albany of the states six
AFSCME affiliates, Roberts won the support of the other unions for DC
37s campaign. All told, the AFSCME affiliates in New York State
represent more than 400,000 public employees.
For years, the national union has supported universal health care. During
President Clintons first term in the 1990s, AFSCME worked closely
with the administration on its universal health proposal, which ultimately
was doomed because of a backlash from right-wing interests, insurance
companies and employer groups, particularly those representing small businesses.
On March 8, the DC 37 Executive Board unanimously backed H.R. 676, the
National Health Insurance Act.
Sponsored by U.S. Rep. John Conyers (Dem.-Mich.), the proposal calls for
a single-payer health care system. It would expand Medicare to provide
health care to all U.S. residents through a publicly financed and privately
delivered program. Conyers introduced the bill, which has 68 co-sponsors,
in 2003.
Gregory N. Heires
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