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http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=17231

 

A Real Senior MomentBertie Evans and Robert Porter and Gene Smith and Dick

Wisott, TomPaine.com

November 20, 2003

The authors, all people with Medicare, are also members of the Medicare Rights

Center's Consumer Action Board.

 

Like many of the 41 million Americans with Medicare, we feel betrayed by AARP.

 

The Washington leadership of the powerful senior citizens' organization has

opted to join forces with the White House to steamroll legislation through

Congress. It is legislation that may irrevocably damage Medicare, all for a drug

benefit that is meager or worse for most Americans.

 

Most of the 35 million people who belong to AARP are drawn to the group's

insurance programs, prescription drug deals and hotel discounts. These and other

businesses bring AARP hundreds of millions of dollars annually in revenue.

Despite this membership, it isn't clear that many older Americans have retained

AARP's Washington politicos to serve as their political voice. We have not. AARP

is a big business; it shouldn't pretend to represent its members' political

interests, few of whom have been asked their view of this dangerous Medicare

overhaul.

 

Checking in with members is not the way of a top-down, Washington-centric

organization. It appears that doing its homework isn't either. AARP has just

endorsed what will be a 1,000-page bill that not only hasn't been reviewed; it

hasn't even been fully drafted. Yet, AARP is already in league with political

operatives at the White House working to force Congress to vote on this massive

legislation.

 

AARP does not speak for us.

 

This legislation is bad for people with Medicare. And the damage it will cause

to the stability of this valuable entitlement program is not a price worth

paying for a paltry drug benefit. Many, many people with Medicare are left worse

off, and the only clear winners are the pharmaceutical industry (which will reap

an estimated $139 billion in additional profits) and the insurance industry

(which stands to receive added bonuses of $12 billion to enter the Medicare

market). For consumers, the worst is yet to come.

 

Here are just some of the toxic provisions that have been leaked out by the

Congressional leadership about the bill:

 

 

Most people with Medicare will not receive any net drug benefit under the

legislation.

 

 

Many of the poorest seniors will be shut out of their Medicare drug benefits

by bureaucratic obstacles.

 

 

Nearly six million people with Medicare face increases of 30 percent in

Medicare premiums under the " demonstration " move to privatization.

 

 

Millions of retirees face losing existing benefits. And, finally,

 

 

The table is set to continue the dismantling of Medicare's reliable benefit

package in the very near future.

 

 

We do not believe that the ideal should defeat the good. But this bill is not

good. It is worse than no bill at all.

 

If the White House, the Congressional leadership and the AARP executive staff

had confidence in their plan to overhaul Medicare, they would support Minnesota

Republican Congressman Gil Gutknecht's proposal to defer a vote and let members

of Congress consider the legislation and take it home " for a test drive. "

 

The same Congress will return to Washington in January. Let members of Congress

hear from their constituents. AARP may want to listen to its members. If the

legislation is good for the public interest, not just private interests, it will

pass.

 

Sadly, there are obvious reasons why neither the White House nor the

Congressional leadership nor AARP's leadership want this to happen. Sunshine

will expose how dangerous a bill this is.

 

Bertie Evans, RN, is the Community Case Manager of Wichita County, Kansas, and

an advocate for the seniors attempting to obtain prescription medication from

pharmaceutical companies. Robert Porter is president of the United Seniors of

Oregon and president of the Northwest Oregon Labor Council Retirees. Gene Smith

is president of the Senior Statesmen of Virginia, a group that speaks for senior

citizens in the Commonwealth. Dick Wisott is president of the Colorado

nonprofit, Seniors Inc.

 

 

 

 

Let AARP know what you think about this bill. If you're a member, tell them

you're quitting. If you're too young to be eligible, tell them you'll never

join. National hotline: 1-800-424-3410.

 

 

 

© 2003 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.

 

 

 

 

 

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