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Freshman Senators Fight for Lower Costs in Health Care

by Seth Michaels, Dec 8, 2009

Photo credit: Andy Thompson/Wisconsin AFL-CIO  
  Sue Conrad, an AFSCME retiree, is one of the thousands of union members fighting for health care reform.  
 
   

Today in the U.S. Senate, 11 first-term senators are introducing a package of amendments that will improve the Senate’s health care bill by getting health care costs under control.

AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka says the Senate should pass this set of amendments to improve health care for all families and make our health care system more sustainable in the long term:

These senators have their eyes on what’s most important to all Americans—affordable, high-quality health care that will be there when we need it. We must transform our current health care system into one that rewards value-constraining cost growth without compromising care.

A number of the amendments announced today would, individually, represent significant steps forward from the current draft Senate legislation. Taken together, however, they amount to a robust expansion of critically important provisions in the legislation. 

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House Health Reform Bill Debate Begins, and Other Health Care News

by Seth Michaels, Nov 2, 2009

 
   

The U.S. House’s historic health care reform legislation—which would dramatically improve health coverage in this country while cutting the U.S. budget deficit in the long term—is headed to the House floor today for debate. The vote on H.R. 3962 will happen later this week or early next week.

This comprehensive, fairly funded bill will provide millions of uninsured people with affordable coverage and put tough new rules in place on insurers to protect consumers who already have insurance. The bill includes real responsibility for employers, subsidies for low- and middle-income families to help pay for insurance and a public health insurance plan to compete with insurance companies.

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Health Care Reform Action: Rallies, a ‘Die-In’ and a Visit from the VP

by Mike Hall, Sep 23, 2009

Photo credit Barb Kurcera  
   

In Hartford, Conn., union and health care activists marched on the headquarters of health insurance giant Aetna. In Minnetonka, Minn., the target was the posh headquarters of UnitedHealthcare. And in Fargo, N.D., demonstrators took a list of health care reform demands to the offices of Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Dakota.

In Philadelphia, AFL-CIO Executive Vice President Arlene Holt Baker led a rally and march of several hundred to CIGNA’s headquarters.

Meanwhile, Vice President Joe Biden today met with Alliance for Retired Americans seniors to describe how the administration’s health care plan would benefit them.

Those rallies and marches and dozens of others in cities around the country were part of a National Day of Action for health care reform and against the private health insurance companies’ multimillion-dollar campaign to block comprehensive reform that includes a quality and affordable public health insurance option.

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Health Care Reform Needs Public Option—Not Band-Aid

by Mike Hall, Sep 22, 2009

Today, union and health care activists around the country are raising their voices against the private health insurance companies’ mutlimillion-dollar campaign to block health care reform. In dozens of rallies and demonstrations they are saying: “Big Insurance: We’re sick of it.” 

Union members are joining a march on Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association’s Portland, Ore., headquarters. In a letter to Blue Cross President Scott Serota, Oregon AFL-CIO President Tom Chamberlain calls on the company to cease opposition to a public health insurance option and stop the use of union members’ premium payments to fund lobbying against a public option. 

Union members in Oregon have spent too many years at the bargaining table knowing that they have to choose between bargaining for better wages, or maintaining their healthcare. This is unsustainable; healthcare reform with true cost controls is necessary. For union members to now see their healthcare dollars spent lobbying against the reform they support is absolutely unacceptable. 

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