Health Care Action Week: Calling, Writing and Meeting with Congress
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The health care reform fight rolls on this week on Capitol Hill and working families, local and state union activists and leaders are making sure Congress hears from those who aren’t singing from the health insurance industry’s hymnal.
The Senate Finance Committee, which voted down a public health insurance option last week, is expected to vote and pass its bill tomorrow or Wednesday. The next step is to merge that bill with the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee legislation that includes a public option and doesn’t tax workers health benefits. That could be on the Senate floor as early as next week. House action will likely come soon after the Senate mover.
On Wednesday and Thursday, more than 125 labor activists and leaders from 27 states will be on the Hill telling lawmakers that a final bill must, like the HELP bill, include a public option and not tax workers’ health care benefits.
Coalition to Ensure People of Color Have Role in Health Care Debate
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A coalition of African American and Latino groups, along with other civil rights and grassroots organizations, launched a campaign today to make sure the voices of people of color are heard in the final weeks of the health care reform debate.
A series of TV and print ads in English and Spanish will run in key states and urge viewers and readers to let members of Congress know the importance of health care reform to people of color.
In a press conference today, leaders from Leadership Conference on Civil Rights (LCCR), the NAACP, National Council of La Raza and Campaign for Community Change said recent studies have shown the inequality in the health care system falls most heavily on communities of color. People of color are more likely to suffer and die from diabetes, cancer, cardiovascular disease and other chronic diseases.











