Tag Archives: sb 810

Paul Butterfield for California Senate (a better Democrat)

If the SCOTUS rules against the ACA, the Single Payer movement will get a lot of visibility.  It’s the talk of the town now;

http://news.google.com/news/st…

Getting Single Payer in DC will be much more possible if in November we get true Democrats in the Senate and Congress but it will be still uphill.

Getting it passed state by state as in Canada will be much easier.  

If California goes Single Payer, I believe the whole country will pay attention and the Single Payer will make progerss everywhere.

There are two ways of getting this done; an initiative (proposition) or via the legislation.

The initiative strategy is supported by many groups in California but I think (an many others do) that it may not get in the ballot until 2018.

The legislative strategy was given a setback when 6 Democratic Senators did not vote for SB 810 on January 31;

http://www.dailykos.com/story/…

All we needed was 2 votes.  But 6 Democratic Senators did not vote for SB 810.

6 blue dog senators against single payer

One of the 6 Senators is up for reelection in 2012. Rod Wright in the newly formed 35th district.

Wouldn’t it be great if we could teach these blue dogs a lesson by defeating them when they are up for reelection?

That would send a clear message that taking money from insurance companies and voting against Single Payer is a big non no, even if you support Obama’s ACA.

We have a unique opportunity to do this in California in the next 2 months.

We can all pull together and help elect Paul Butterfield, a Single Payer supporter and a much better Democrat.

The California primary election will be held on June 5.

On June 6 we can be on the way to a legislative process for Single Payer in California (and to Netroots Nation.)

An invitation to a blogger event in Butterfield’s campaign HQ below.

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I have met Paul Butterfield in person and in my opinion he is an outstanding human being.  We need better Democrats like him in Sacramento and everywhere.

The things that I like about Paul are his character, his  optimism, his intellect and his drive.

He is a teacher!

Obviously his stand on issues is important.

And he is getting endorsements;

GARDENA, CA, March 20 – The Gardena Valley Democratic Club unanimously endorsed Paul Butterfield for State Senate (35th District).

The club is the oldest chartered Democratic organization in Los Angeles County, this year celebrating 80 years of Democratic activism from Franklin D. Roosevelt to Barack Obama.

“Paul Butterfield was endorsed unanimously Monday night at the Gardena Valley Democratic Club’s general meeting.  His endorsement of SB 810 (the single-payer health care bill) was a deciding factor in winning the club’s endorsement and was in sharp contrast to his opponent’s failure to vote for SB 810, which contributed to the bill’s defeat,” said Gardena Valley Democratic Club President Richard Vaughn.

Los Angeles City Council Member Joe Buscaino Endorses Paul Butterfield for State Senate

“Paul Butterfield has proved his commitment to serving our community, and has been recognized for his work mentoring students and young athletes.  He cares deeply about the issues that concern San Pedro and the Harbor Gateway Area.  That’s why I’m endorsing Paul Butterfield for State Senate,” said Buscaino.

Rod Wright has a lot of baggage (a lot more than not supporting Single Payer) and this makes him vulnerable if he gets to November even in this traditional blue area of Los Angeles.

Paul’s campaign just got started but I believe that if we can get the word out he has a chance.  And if he wins, the Single Payer movement has a chance to get SB 810 passed in early 2013.

So donate if you can.  Even $5 will help.

Butterfield 1

If you live in Greater Los Angeles, help us door knocking, getting the word out to the media or staging events.  Contact the campaign.

If you can get the word out somehow it would be great.

The 35th Senate district has become the front lines of the Single Payer movement.  If Paul wins the message to all Dems will be clear; support Single Payer or face a tough primary when you are up next time.  

We can get a Single Payer bill on Jerry Brown’s desk next year.  And when he signs it, Single Payer movements everywher else will be energized.

And isn’t one of our objectives to get better Democrats elected?

Butterfield 2

Finally, we are inviting SoCal progressive bloggers to meet Paul Butterfield at campaign HQ in San Pedro on Thursday April 26th at 7PM.  I hope you can make it.

Also posted at DailyKos

Church Lobbyist: Obnoxious Callers Killed CA Single Payer — FOREVER!

(Portion below the fold cross-posted from the Orange Juice Blog and to Daily Kos.)

You really have to read the letter to appreciate its full horror.

The short story is this: California’s “single payer health care” proposal for this two-year session had to pass the State Senate by January 31 in order to stay alive.  Despite the fact that Democrats control the Senate 25-15, it fell two votes short.  Two Democrats, Lou Correa and Ron Calderon, voted no; four others refused to vote at all.

This was a shock without being a surprise.  It’s shocking that Democrats can control the legislature and yet fail to get one of our signature proposals through even one chamber.  Yet we’ve dealt with these Senators before — we’ve seen who gives them money — so it was not a surprise.

The surprise came yesterday.  Apparently, it was our fault that SB 810 failed.  Not the insurance industry that fought so hard against the measure; not the pusillanimous Democrats who wouldn’t defend it.  Our fault: activists’ fault.  Why?  Because we kept calling Senators’ offices and some of us were allegedly obnoxious.

That’s what the letter from the Director of Public Policy of the lobbying branch of the California Council of Churches says.

My post from the local blog where I also publish is below.

Apparently, I and people like me were the ones who killed Single Payer.  Everything was well in hand and then … whoops!  We were mean to people and so it died.

The sordid tale — or at least some vague accusations of terrible things being said by aggrieved voters to office interns — may be found in this letter from Elizabeth Sholes, Director of Public Policy for California Church Impact, the lobbying arm of the California Council of Churches.  California Church Impact sports the following motto on its website:

We advocate for those who can’t afford high-priced lobbyists: low-income mothers, hungry children, elderly.

I hope that we can all agree that that is a lovely sentiment.

First, Ms. Sholes explains how the people who dropped the ball were the sponsors of the Single Payer Study Group.  Here’s the relevant excerpt:

Over a year ago the single payer grassroots steering committee, the State Strategy Group, agreed to create a panel of experts who would do a new fiscal analysis to update the information from the Lewin Report. IMPACT helped find experts on health care financing for the panel, and the SSG knew that it would cost about $250,000 to get this done well.

For both the incoming governor, Jerry Brown and all the new legislators, this evidence of cost savings for individuals, families, small business, and the state was crucial. Single payer had to show it would be at least as if not more effective than federal health care reform in cost savings for all parties. It would be impossible to convince legislators unfamiliar with single payer that it was a very responsible measure without those data.

Consequently, in its first foray under Senator Leno’s authorship, the bill did not pass on the Assembly floor. There were simply too many grave doubts, and the newer members had no interaction with single payer supporters who might have eased their concerns.

In response to that loss, the SSG decided suddenly to abandon SB 810 and the fiscal report and go the initiative route thinking it would be simple and that the governor could put it on the ballot. That is not possible since it would have to be done legislatively and requires a supermajority vote. To do an independent initiative with signature gathering is extremely expensive. SSG fund raising therefore turned to obtaining the $2-3 million needed just to do a signature drive, but the money never materialized for the ballot measure, much less the financial analysis.

No initiative. No fiscal study.

Ms. Sholes may or may not fully appreciate that, in presenting the matter as she does, she is in effect calling her “allies” like Sen. Leno and 18 other Democratic Senators irresponsible.  They, after all, supported single payer without the requisite study — given that “this evidence of cost savings … was crucial … [and it] would be impossible to convince legislators unfamiliar with single payer that it was a very responsible measure without those data.”  (Yet 19 of them irresponsibly voted “yes” anyway, based on existing evidence!  Thanks for the support, “ally”!)  And is it the case that new members had “too many grave doubts … [having] had no interaction with single payer supporters who might have eased their concerns”?  Did they, um, seek out such interactions?  I know plenty of people who would have talked to them!  We’ve interacted with Sen. Correa, but he just keeps repeating that “the state’s piggy bank isn’t big enough.”

But the failure wasn’t ultimately the legislators’ fault, you see: it was the supporters who killed the bill … FOREVER!!!

Senator Leno continued to shepherd SB 810 until, as is customary, it went into “suspense” the last week of January in Senate Appropriations. Suspense occurs when there are large questions about costs and means to cover them. Despite the pressure to hold the bill for lack of financial analysis, President pro Tem of the Senate Darrell Steinberg used his leadership strength to send it to the floor. At the first floor vote, five Senators abstained, all of whom had the same fiscal reservations expressed by Senators in Appropriations. Steinberg, as a strong single payer supporter, kept the bill “on call” until the absolutely last moment, January 31 by which time legally it had to pass or die.

Over the weekend senators Leno and Steinberg asked the abstaining members for a “courtesy vote.” This is a vote that occurs when a member with reservations still moves a bill to keep it going.

Those votes were getting pinned down when on January 30th the grassroots advocates started a massive phone campaign to senators. The results were shocking. Office after office including Leno’s and Steinberg’s were flooded with calls — angry, berating, nasty, threatening, and bullying calls. These were not from opponents of single payer. These were from supporters.

When callers could not access senators or their top staff, they lambasted lower-level staff right down to the receptionists.  One young woman, new to the Capitol, was shattered by the vicious attacks on her and her senator. She was absolutely devastated by the personal assaults on her character and politics. Other, older staff were tougher, but every one of them was shaken to their foundations by how incredibly violent and abusive the calls were from supporters.

What the enraged supporters did not realize — because they never asked — is that yes, the requisite number of courtesy votes were being gathered. But after the barrage of abuse, these senators, all with reservations due to the absence of information on financial impacts, withdrew those votes in disgust. Senator Leno then pulled the bill rather than having it die on the floor.

We are aware that these calls did not involve the faith community. Insofar as people identified themselves, those from faith groups were not the source of the harassment. It did not matter enough, however, to prevent the massive meltdown from other less responsible groups and individuals.

At this moment so much damage has been done from the barrage of nasty calls that it is seriously doubtful any legislator will ever work with any of the single payer supporters again, not even in the faith community.

I was certainly one who encouraged people to contact their State Senators regarding SB 810.  When I do so, I usually tell them to be polite; I also tell them that they should tell their stories.

Here’s one of their stories: I was recently asked, through my work for the Occupy movement, for help by a woman I’ll call Alice.  She is a cancer survivor — or at least in remission.  She recently received notice of a premium increase for her individual policy.  She’s now expected to pay $830 per month — $10,000 per year — just for herself.  She’s disabled by her illness, can’t work enough to make ends meet, too young for Medicaid — and she’s concerned that she will have to give up her insurance altogether.  For her, that could be a fatal outcome.

You know what?  She’s pissed off.  She’s going to meet with Correa’s office today — at my urging — in the hope that perhaps they’ll be able to find some angle that can keep her insured, keep her alive — keep her, by the way, from burdening the state with emergency room bills that she would not be able to pay.

I told her — other strong activists told her — “don’t lobby him.  Don’t make a statement.  Just find out how to help yourself.  We don’t want you to die.”

She said “I just want to ask him some questions about why he voted against single payer.”

“Don’t do it,” a chorus of us said.  But it’s probably in vain.  Do you know why?  It’s because she is a very intelligent woman, she knows that a bill like SB 810 would possibly save her life if it were now in effect, she has her dignity, she has enough pride to think that others should honor her dignity — and she’s pissed!!!

That’s how people are — we in the 99%.  If you act unreasonably towards us, and thereby threaten our lives and our families’ well-being, we get uppity.  Some of us are hard to calm down.  Some of us get impolite — because this is not some abstract enterprise for us, but this is our lives.

Now I should make clear that I don’t entirely believe Ms. Sholes’s story.  I’m not saying that she’s lying; I’m saying that perhaps she was counting chickens, when it comes to these “courtesy votes,” that were not quite hatched.  I’d like to know which two Senators among the four Democratic holdouts — Padilla, Vargas, Rubio, and Wright — were the ones who had tentatively committed to the courtesy vote.  (I presume that it wasn’t Correa or Calderon, who voted “no.”)  Oh, I know that I won’t be told this — I know that I’m supposed to just accept that this must be kept secret, but I do really want to know.

Here’s why I want to know.

Let’s presume for the moment that Ms. Sholes’s story is correct.  Let’s, just because we could use some examples, say that the two who were in the bag and then jumped out of the bag, were Vargas and Rubio.  (I choose Vargas because this website has taken an interest in his campaign; I choose Rubio because he’s retiring from office.)

What Ms. Sholes is asking us to believe is that Vargas and Rubio (or whoever) had been convinced that sending the bill to the Assembly was worth doing — presumably because it would allow time to investigate the financial aspects of the bill that 19 members either didn’t care about or (more likely) didn’t find lacking — but they changed their minds because individual citizens alerted to the situation called up and were (allegedly) abusive to their staff.

And, what’s more, the abusiveness of citizens to these staff members was so awful that “it is seriously doubtful any legislator will ever work with any of the single payer supporters again.”  It was THAT BAD!

Well, now.  I would take all of the anguish of all of the staffers who answered all of the calls on January 30 and 31, roll it up into a ball, and set it on one pan of a scale in which the other pan held only Alice’s anguish about the idea of her dying because she can’t afford health insurance.  And then I would let go.

My strong suspicion is that the anguish of Alice would outweigh all of the anguish of these staffers, and all of the anguish of their bosses, and all of the anguish of the members of California Church Impact over this event, combined.

And that is how it should be.

[Let’s say that hypothetically] I’m planning on running for State Senate this year.  If I should win, I will tell my staffers this:

If you can’t handle being abused by angry citizens, who may or may not have legitimate grievances and may or may not have a couple of screws loose, then you should not be answering the phones.  If you are abused, I will feel bad for you, and I might even call up some of those constituents and give them a piece of my mind on your behalf.  But there is one thing that I will never do:  I will not vote against an otherwise worthy bill, or vote for an unworthy one, because people were mean to you … or to me.

Ms. Sholes’s depiction of our legislators, as people who are not willing to put aside their personal emotions and do what they think is right every single time they vote, is insulting and, I would like to think, inaccurate.  People will suffer and die — the low-income mothers and children and the elderly served by California Church Impact will continue to suffer and die — due to the lack of affordable health insurance and adequate health care in this state.  To say that this solution of this problem should be put aside forever because they were mean to legislators is breathtaking in its temerity.  It fundamentally misconstrues the role of legislators as masters rather than servants.  I’d expect better of a church group.

Beyond this, Ms. Sholes’s story is insulting to Majority Leader Steinberg and Senators Leno.  If the votes were truly in the bag — which I doubt — and they knew that calls were coming in, those figures should have raised the alarm immediately to tell supporters to get out the word for people to STOP CALLING!  If things were really taken care of, they just had to give the word — that’s a lot easier than people trying to control the message that someone might have seen five steps removed from the sender, alerting them to call.  But no such word came out — and yet proponents of single-payer take the blame.

If I took Ms. Sholes’s story seriously, this would have to be the lesson I’d take: don’t ask people to call the government.

Don’t ask people to call the government because some of them may at some point be mean and mess everything up.  And you can’t even say “don’t call the government anymore if we tell you to stop,” because by then it might be too late.  So the only thing to do, if you want people to support the bill, is to carefully control which voters do call in — make sure that they’re all polite and charming and well-spoken.  (And then you have to hope that your opposition doesn’t engage in a “false flag” operation of calling in and being abusive while claiming to be proponents, because from the looks of Ms. Sholes’s letter that would work wonderfully.)

Taking Ms. Sholes’s teaching at face value means a commitment to abjuring popular activism because someone might not be as well-bred as a lobbyist or constituent called on behalf of California Church Impact.  It is advice not to get people riled up, to “shut up and leave it to the pros.”

Indeed, Ms. Sholes’s advice is very comforting to those legislators who would prefer not to have to deal with hoi polloi at all.  I am also struck — gobsmacked, in fact — by the fact that these six Democratic State Senators, let alone their fifteen Republican counterparts, are entirely exculpated from the failure of this bill.  Nope!  It’s the activists’ fault, and only the activists’ fault!

Sadly for Ms. Sholes, and for me, and for progressive Senators and Assemblymembers and activists everywhere, the estimable level of decorum she sees as critical simply is not going to be met in the future — because income distribution is getting worse, and times are getting tougher, and people are getting mad.  They’re going broke and they’re dying and they see their government not quite accomplishing what it needs to do.

I’m sorry for the staffers who, to credit Ms. Sholes’s story, received such abuse from constituents (or from non-constituents.)  That should not have happened to you.  But if the lesson you gleaned from it is that it is OK to change your vote in a life-or-death matter against the interests of people who are worked up into righteous indignation, then I am doubly sorry for you, because you have learned a false and corrosive lesson.

As for Ms. Sholes — I’d like to introduce her to Alice.  Another bill, AB 52 — already passed by the Assembly — would give the Insurance Commissioner the ability to regulate unreasonable premium rate increases of the sort that might soon kill Alice.  These same six Senators (plus one other, whom I won’t name) are believed to be the ones blocking its passage.  If you can tell me which Senators are just being coy, but who really would vote for the bill if people are just nice to them, I’ll try to spread the word to people not to vent their anguish at them.  (Following the example of the very polite Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones, I already do this, but I’ll try even harder.)

Please, someone, get me their names.  Then it can be only those Senators who can’t be moved to vote to respect the lives of people like Alice who will receive holy hell — because that’s what we have to deliver to them.

Update [in original post]: How did I gloss over the best paragraph of Sholes’s letter, right after what I copied above?

This means single payer likely is dead in California. The most important point is that SB 810 died NOT due to the insurance industry or even from Senate opposition — the votes were ready for passage – but due to the obnoxious and outrageous actions of its supporters.

Yes, it’s pretty easy to say that the insurance industry and Senate opposition killed SB 810 — what with the actual evidence at hand suggesting it at all.  But it’s also getting easier to say that Ms. Sholes is mostly carrying water (and body armor) for one or both of the above players.  One wonders, given her protestations of progressivism: why?

‘Medicare for All’ Would Solve California’s Budget Deficit

by Jennifer Epps

In Canada, the only way to see a doctor is to call one up and make an appointment. Or walk in to their office. In Britain, the only way you’ll get surgery is if you actually need it. And yet State Senator Mark Leno and 44 co-sponsors want to bring this kind of healthcare system to everyone in California! Imagine.

In fact, the California legislature twice approved such a system, in which private providers carry on as independently as always but the public pays their bills directly (rather than indirectly as it does now, through a patchwork quilt of emergency care, programs to bring healthcare to the poorest and the elderly, and subsidies for insurance premiums.) Both times Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger vetoed the bill. But Senator Leno, a longtime campaigner for single-payer — a.k.a. “Medicare-for-All” — has brought the bill back again as SB 810. Last week, the bill fell just two votes shy of passage with a tally of 19-15 in favor. (It needs 21 to pass because it requires more than a simple majority.) Sen. Leno plans to push for another vote under Reconsideration, because several Democratic state senators abstained, but the deadline to win their support is today.

(Edit by Brian…More over the flip)

This single-payer bill is championed by Campaign for a Healthy California, a coalition which includes the California Nurses Association, Physicians for a National Health Program, California Alliance for Retired Americans, Progressive Democrats of America, California School Employee Association, Democracy for America, the California Health Professional Student Alliance, and many others. They have put out action alerts to supporters of SB 810 to call on five key state senators to vote Yes: Los Angeles area state senators Alex Padilla, Rod Wright, and Ron Calderon; San Diego area senator Juan Vargas, and Fresno/Bakersfield senator Michael Rubio. If supporters can bring just two of these state senators around in time for a Reconsideration vote today, then patients in California could very soon be able to choose which doctor to see (rather than submitting to a ‘network’ or their HMO). And the leading cause of bankruptcy for both the insured and uninsured – medical bills – could be eliminated.

A lot of people – i.e. all other advanced democracies in the world – think access to healthcare is a basic human right, and that organizing that access is one of the functions of a government and of a civilized society. In fact, in poll after poll, the majority of Americans support a publicly-funded universal health care system as well.

But never mind that. This is a time of economic struggle, an overstretched state budget, and financial uncertainty. Giving the government the job of administering health insurance at this particular juncture is above all else…the most fiscally conservative thing to do.

SB 810 would eliminate private health insurance entirely. All Californians’ healthcare costs would be paid for from one big pool. It’s just like the way people get insurance coverage now, except much much simpler, everyone would be covered, and the profit motive would be removed. And making health insurance a government-run program would dramatically reduce a huge portion of health care expenses that are eaten away by needlessly complicated administration costs. It’s the exact opposite of what the bill’s detractors pretend. Rather than creating more bureaucracy or paperwork, SB 810 would very quickly whittle down the costs of administering healthcare, currently at 33% of California’s total healthcare spending, to under 5%.

Providers would only have to bill one entity, a new California Healthcare Agency, and would have no need to chase after patients for unpaid balances, or argue with insurers about whether the insured really does need that organ transplant or dialysis. That’s how Sen. Leno’s site can claim that SB 810 would save California $20 billion in the very first year by reducing administrative costs alone.

Moreover, health insurance commissioners would not need to watch over insurers and fight their premium hikes on behalf of consumers (health insurance premiums grow 4 times faster than wages). After SB 810, there would be no premiums. There would be no deductibles. There would be no co-pays. There would be no private health insurance.

These companies would still find a way to sell insurance for non-essential services — just as in Canada insurers offer policies for things like private rooms should the insured be hospitalized. Insurance companies are nothing if not resourceful, and we shouldn’t worry about them too much. The big change would be that with a single-payer program, insurance companies could no longer build their business by keeping the whole health system stratified.

The U.S. spends twice as much of its GDP on healthcare as other wealthy nations do. It spends more, and gets less. Americans receive less doctor consultations, hospital care, and surgery than people in other industrialized nations, yet our healthcare costs are higher. Insurance companies, by insisting on their privileged position as middlemen between patients and physicians, balloon healthcare costs out of all proportion. Far from delivering medical care more cheaply, these companies take money from patients – and from non-patients, like those who put off getting care because they can’t afford their deductibles or co-pays but who keep sending in premiums to ward off catastrophe – and apply it to profit dividends, CEOs’ bonuses and even marketing to win over more customers. And all we get in exchange is the 37th best healthcare in the world, according to the WHO.

In addition to Big Insurance, we have Big Pharma driving up healthcare costs. Countries like Canada began long ago to use the leverage of government to negotiate down drug prices, but in the U.S., the government behaves as if it is powerless in the face of whatever pharmaceutical companies wish to charge. SB 810 would tackle prescription drug pricing in California by using its bulk purchasing power. Sen. Leno estimates that such savings on medication, as well as equipment, would save the state $5.2 billion.

Lack of or inadequate insurance leads many to wait until their health is seriously threatened and then seek care in Emergency wards, rather than getting preventative screenings or catching the problem at the initial symptoms. This is not only costly to the hospital which provides the Emergency services, and to taxpayers who have to make up the costs, but it escalates costs in general, since by the time these patients seek care they are in need of much greater intervention. SB 810 would transfer the emphasis to preventative care and primary care, and thereby save Californians an estimated $3.4 billion.

In short, Sen. Leno maintains that SB 810 would be fully funded from the money we already spend on health care, and that, to boot, California would save a total of $29 billion just in the first year.

Considering that these cost-cutting measures would completely solve the state’s fiscal crisis without either cutting social services or raising taxes, if Republicans really were fiscal conservatives they should have jumped on board with full support for SB 810. But of course insurance and pharmaceutical companies would be pretty unhappy with them, and campaign donations would stop flowing.

Considering that the Republicans’ objections to the federal Affordable Healthcare Act was that it would force people to buy private health insurance – the result of the Obama Administration’s barring single-payer advocates from all planning sessions – you would think that they would all be in favor of the freedom that SB 810 would bring. But of course it’s hardly the freedom of the 99% that matters.

SB 810 has strong backing from ordinary, non-radical Californians. Sen. Leno’s website lists 172 groups (unions and professional association, religious groups, city governments, Democratic Clubs, etc.) who endorse SB 810 and who have been working hard to make California the 2nd state in the nation to enact single-payer.

Single-payer advocates affiliated with the Campaign for a Healthy California include the American Medical Student Association, Consumer Federation of California, League of Women Voters of California, Progressive Caucus of the California Democratic Party, Amnesty International USA, California National Organization of Women, Courage Campaign, California Teachers Association, California Federation of Teachers, and California Faculty Association.

The bill’s champions expect that Governor Jerry Brown would happily follow in the footsteps of Vermont’s Governor Peter Shumlin and sign a single-payer bill. (The passage last spring of a publicly-run health insurance system made Vermont the first state in the U.S. to take this bold step.) If Sacramento fails to pass SB 810 this year because one Democratic senator voted No (Calderon) and four Democrats abstained (Padilla, Wright, Vargas, and Rubio), there will be a lot of very disappointed people in this state.

There will also continue to be 7 million Californians without insurance. Even after the federal Affordable Healthcare Act kicks in, 3 million Californians will remain uninsured, says Sen. Leno. Despite the fuss the country went through over health insurance reform, so-called ‘Obamacare’ would only manage to cover four out of five at best. And it is predicted that many who will still be unable to afford health insurance will choose to pay the fine instead. We will still have a tiered health care system. And we will stay pay more for less.

Alex Padilla (Pacoima/LA area)
Capitol – 916-651-4020
District – 818-901-5588

Rod Wright (Los Angeles area)
(916) 651-4025
(310) 412-0393

Juan Vargas (San Diego area)
Sac: (916) 651-4040
Dist: (619) 409-7690

Michael Rubio (Fresno/Bakersfield area)
Sac: (916) 651-4016
Dist: (661) 395-2620

Ron Calderon (Los Angeles area)
Sac: (916) 651-4030
Dist: (323) 890-2790

The 1st 6 one-a-day California Single Payer TV spots (you can help too)

Once people understand Single Payer, they support it.

So how do we get the word out?

Our idea is to release a new 30 second TV spot every day for one year.

We have enlisted popular Hollywood stars, influential politicians, health care reform organizers and activists and we now want to enlist you.

The 6th one, released today, is this one by Alberto Saavedra a HCR activist;

The Latino vote in California is pivotal.

So please visit our web site, inform yourselves and help by volunteering, blogging or just donating so we can broadcast some of these spots on TV or support our effort by voting for our campaign at Change.org

find out a lot more below.

These are the other 5 spots released so far;

# 1 California Senator Mark Leno author of SB 810.

#2 Actress and Comedienne Lily Tomlin (a.k.a. Ernestine)

#3 Actor Elliott Gould

#4 Deborah Burger President of the 85,000-member California Nurses Association

#5 Comedienne Paula Poundstone

Help us by volunteering, donating or blogging.

You can also produce your own spot. Find out how here.

If we get enough donations we will broadcast some of these spots on regular TV.  But anything you can do to help us spread the word will be welcome.

Or simply recommend this diary.

Thank you very much.

Also posted at DailyKos;

http://www.dailykos.com/story/…

So…What about single-payer and SB 810?

( – promoted by Brian Leubitz)

Does passage of a bill that funnels millions of additional Americans into the private insurance system, and the decision of House leaders to shut down debate on one single payer amendment and scuttle another, mean the end of the years of efforts by single payer activists to win the most comprehensive reform of all?

Does it mean the end of SB 810, even once Governor Schwarzenegger has wandered off the stage?

For the nation’s nurses and the many grassroots activists, the answer is clearly no.  And we’ve got work to do.

In discussions and organizing, now occurring coast to coast, including a strategy conference this weekend in St. Louis hosted by Healthcare-NOW, many are charting a new course that turns next to the U.S. Senate, to the Senate-House Conference Committee, and then to state capitols from Sacramento to Harrisburg where vibrant single payer movements and campaigns continue to grow.

Most single payer advocates acknowledge some important reforms in the House bill, especially the expansion of Medicaid to millions of low income adults, increased regulation of the insurance industry, expanded public health funding for community programs for low income families, and a more progressive tax plan than the onerous tax on middle income health benefits proposed in the Senate.

But those who dismiss the weaknesses, coupled with the overhyped rhetoric comparing the bill to the civil rights legislation of the 1960s or passage of Social Security and Medicare, should be wary of the backlash when millions of Americans continue to face health insecurity and potential bankruptcy as their healthcare costs rise largely unabated and continue to experience denials of medical treatment insurance companies don’t want to pay for.  

As California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organizing Committee Executive Director Rose Ann DeMoro has written

Social Security and Medicare were both federal programs guaranteeing respectively pensions and health care for our nation’s seniors, paid for and administered by the federal government with public oversight and public accountability

By contrast, the main provision of the House bill, and its Senate counterpart, is to expand health care coverage by requiring everyone to “have insurance” — mostly buying private insurance (since the public option is open to so few). Ultimately whether some want to admit it or not, a massive bailout worth tens of billions of dollars to the insurance industry.

Further, while Social Security and Medicare were both significant expansions of public protection, the House bill actually reduces public protection for a substantial segment of the population, women, with its unconscionable rollback of reproductive rights in the anti-abortion amendment.

To that end, tempering some of the triumphalism would be advisable. Equally unfathomable is the threat by some liberal groups to target single payer proponents Dennis Kucinich and Eric Massa who voted against the anti-choice amendment as well as the full bill. (Massa, in particular, was elected with active support from the single payer community and took a principled stand in a swing district.)

Those who start down this road would do well to remember the nurses, physicians, and thousands of single payer grassroots activists who have carried the flame of genuine healthcare reform for years, and will certainly continue to make their voices heard, especially as employers continue to shift skyrocketing healthcare costs to workers and out-of-pocket costs eat up, by some accounts, 15 percent to 19 percent of family incomes.  

One of those suggesting that work must continue, even prior to the vote, was House Whip James Clyburn who told the Associated Press November 5:  

“I didn’t want anyone to think that if you don’t get everything you want in this health care bill right now, that’s the end of the game. What we need to do is lay a foundation. Get passed what we can pass that will have a meaningful impact on people’s lives – not put too many of our people in jeopardy – and then build upon it later. It’s a long road.”

For single payer proponents, the construction on that long road begins in the Senate now where Sen. Bernie Sanders plans to introduce single payer language. As he said on Vermont Public Radio this week:

“I believe that a single payer system is the most effective way to provide comprehensive, universal, cost-effective health care. … (Without single payer) that ain’t going to happen. The health insurance industry and the drug companies are too powerful.”

Sanders is also proposing a federal exemption of legal barriers for states that opt to establish single payer systems, similar to the Kucinich amendment that was stripped out of the House bill by House leaders in the hours leading up to its final vote.

The reason for the amendment, Sanders notes:

“So that if states like Vermont or California or Pennsylvania – states that are strong in a single payer movement – want to move in that direction that they will be able to do so. And I think … what you will probably end up seeing is we will move toward a Medicare for all program when one state does it and does it well. And other states say, ‘You know what? That looks like the most cost effective, fairest way to provide quality care to all people.'”

You can help. Contact your Senator, (202) 224-312, and urge them to join Sanders in supporting this important amendment. That’s what a lot of us will be working on next.

Single Payer Push Begins Anew in California

While thousands of activists step up efforts to make single payer a part of the national debate on healthcare reform, similar efforts are underway in many state capitals as well.

With a dual purpose. Single payer might end up enacted in a few states first, then spread like a prairie fire across the nation — the approach that worked for Canada. And the grassroots campaigns in states should reinforce the national push.  

California is a case in point. Twice in the last few years, a single payer, Medicare for all style bill has passed the state legislature, only to be vetoed by the insurance companies’ ever loyal Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.  

But the campaign to pass the bills has brought together dozens of healthcare, labor, and community organizations across California who have subsequently become a central component of national coalitions for single payer, and an impressive army of activists who have made their voices heard on healthcare.

Just ask the insurance trade lobby association which hosted a national convention in San Francisco last June, only to be greeted by 3,000 people surrounding the conference center and resonating it with chants that were heard throughout the conference hall.

Fast forward to today, and the re-introduction of a single payer bill in Sacramento in a press conference jammed with dozens of nurses, health care activists, doctors, medical students, union members, seniors, and many others.

As bill author State Sen. Mark Leno of San Francisco, put it, the new bill, SB 810, “is not just legislation. It’s one of the fastest growing social movements in California.”

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California State Sen. Mark Leno with California Nurses Association/NNOC Executive Director Rose Ann DeMoro to his right and community activists at Sacramento press conference.

Despite the political pragmatists or cynical policy wonks or legislators who have tried to shut single payer out of the healthcare reform debate, the movement itself has taken on a life of its own.

“We’re not going away — and our ranks are building,” said Rose Ann DeMoro, executive director of the California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organizing Committee, principal sponsor of the bill, said at the press conference.  

Among the many others represented were the California School Employees Association, One Care Now (a coalition of many other community and senior groups), Los Angeles Unified School District, California Physicians Alliance, medical students, and about a dozen other legislators.

“What we are doing here will influence and impact the debate nationally,” Leno pointed out, adding that it just might be passed in California — or any number of other states — first.

And he used a national example, the banking meltdown, to emphasize part of the argument for the single payer. “In health care, it is the industry who decides who they will insure and who takes the profit, and we the public who take all the risk. Just as in the banking system, the private banks took the profits, and now we the public are taking the risk.

Anticipating the expected opposition of Schwarzenegger again, Leno noted, “we intend to keep the debate alive through the facts” of the bill, place it on the governor’s desk again, said Leno, and, if needed, “work hard to elect a governor in 2010 who will sign our bill.”

SB 810 is an successor to SB 840, the single payer valiantly carried for years by now retired State Sen. Sheila Kuehl.  From both a health care policy and economic perspective the bill is more critical than ever.

As if any more reminders were needed, one came with a Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index survey reported today in USA Today which found that 21 percent of Americans have difficulty paying for needed medical care or medications, with great disparities based on race and class. And the numbers facing that financial stress grew rapidly in 2008. http://www.usatoday.com/news/h…

Single payer remains the most cost-effective, comprehensive way to fix the broken system.

Cost effective by removing the bloated private insurers with their high administrative costs and financial incentives to continually raise premiums, co-pays, deductibles, and other fees that are the primary cause of rising costs.

Comprehensive in guaranteeing choice of provider, all you lose is your claims adjustor and utilization review team blocking care recommended by your doctor.

And, as a CNA/NNOC study has demonstrated, DeMoro added,  single payer “not only saves lives and people’s health, it is also an economic stimulus.”

Nationally, the study found, implementation of a single payer system would create 2.6 million new jobs, infuse $317 billion in new business and public revenues, and inject another $100 billion in wages into the U.S. economy. The jobs, through increased spending on health care delivery, ripple through the economy, creating employment in retail, manufacturing, and other sectors in addition to healthcare. But in healthcare alone, DeMoro noted, the impact would be especially great in California where an estimated 15 percent of the new jobs would be generated. http://www.calnurses.org/resea…

A large part of the task of the coalition, several emphasized, is public education. The campaign has begun.