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http://www.tompaine.com/feature2.cfm/ID/8052

 

Unhealthy Benefits

 

Jeff Blum is the executive director of USAction.

President Bush and the Republican leadership are trying to steamroll an awful

Medicare prescription plan through Congress this month. Progressives need to

stop the steamroller in its tracks, starting today.

The Senate is now discussing a proposal from Sens. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) and

Max Baucus (D-Mont.), the Republican chair and ranking Democratic minority

member of the Senate Finance Committee. The Grassley-Baucus bill, which has

White House endorsement, is an insult to seniors, and leaves them at the mercy

of the drug and insurance companies.

A senior who now spends $1,000 on prescription drug coverage would spend

$1,057.50 under the Grassley-Baucus bill; that's right, it would cost them

money. A senior with high drug costs, say $5,000, would still have to pay $3,695

for prescriptions. Plus, prescription drug coverage would be offered through

private insurance plans, not through Medicare.

The president is trying to pretend that the plan gives seniors the same

prescription drug benefits that members of Congress get. In fact, Bush claims

Congress has a choice of private insurance plans, so seniors would too. Maybe --

but the fly in the ointment is that Congress gets a good benefit. For example, a

member of Congress (earning, incidentally, $154,700) who uses $1,000 of

prescription drugs only has to pay $250. Under Grassley-Baucus, a senior would

have to pay $637.50 to get prescriptions filled -- plus the $420 premium.

In short, the benefit stinks.

The good news is opposition is building fast. AARP has begun running TV ads

opposing the benefits included in the deal. On June 6, AFL-CIO President John

Sweeney sent a memo urging opposition to the plan. On the same day, USAction

delivered 600 letters opposing the deal to Sens. Kennedy and Daschle. On June 9,

USAction and the Campaign for America's Future sent action alerts to their

lists.

But there's still a colossal fight ahead. The benefits under this bill -- and

every other bill Congress is considering -- don't start until 2006. This allows

the president and members of Congress to campaign in 2004 claiming they passed a

Medicare prescription drug benefit -- before people on Medicare find out how

much they'll have to pay under this new, dismal plan.

Every member of Congress ran for office promising to deliver a Medicare

prescription drug bill. But they also remember what happened in 1989, when they

passed a catastrophic drug bill. That sparked a grassroots revolt around the

country, which eventually forced Congress to repeal the legislation.

Progressives need to create that firestorm again, this time before the bill is

passed. We need to show members of Congress that seniors and people with

disabilities -- and their families -- are rebelling against the high costs,

lousy benefits and sellouts to the drug and insurance industries.

Seniors deserve the same affordable prescription drug benefit as members of

Congress. The Grassley-Baucus deal doesn't even come close. The plan doesn't

make prescriptions affordable. It leaves seniors at the mercy of HMOs, the

insurance industry and drug industry. And it has to be stopped.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Gettingwell- / Vitamins, Herbs, Aminos, etc.

 

To , e-mail to: Gettingwell-

Or, go to our group site: Gettingwell

 

 

 

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