Hello Everyone:
Health care reform in Vermont is still out there. The Vermont Workers Center “health care as a human rigt campaign” got a promise last night from Racine at a public forum at St. Michael’s college to take up single-payer healthcare, specifically the two-single-payer bills now laying dormant under the dome, S.88 and H.100, in the next session. We could now be on our way to finally getting a rational and sane health care reform in Vermont, despite the insane stupidity of the Federal non-efforts. Let’s hope so.
The Worker’s Center has been holding these forums around the state. The first one was in Montpelier in September; the next one is in Warren, on the 8th of this month, at the Warren Library, followed by the Lamoille County Forum on the 17th of December. With luck Shap Smith will be there. So far, we’ve had about 70 legislators from all over Vermont attend these forums. If we can get more and make ourselves heard even louder, maybe we’ll get the reform Vermont so desperately needs this year. The announcement of Racine’s intent follows.
“Healthcare Is a Human Right campaign succeeds in getting single-payer healthcare taken up in 2010 in Vermont Legislature
COLCHESTER, VT – Tuesday evening at the Vermont Workers’ Center’s second Chittenden County People’s Forum on Healthcare held at St. Michael’s College, Senator Doug Racine, chair of the Senate’s health and welfare committee, announced that his committee will begin holding hearings on S.88, the bill that, with its House companion, H.100, will put Vermont on the road to enacting healthcare as a human right.
“Healthcare is the most basic of human rights,” said Racine, who has scheduled the first public hearing – to be held jointly with the House health care committee – for January 12, exactly one week after the start of the 2010 legislative session.
Racine’s choice of Tuesday’s Healthcare Is a Human Right forum for the announcement was seen by many as recognition of the success of the Vermont Workers’ Center’s state-wide, grass-roots campaign at putting pressure on the Vermont legislature to enact healthcare-reform legislation that embodies human-rights principles.
“We now have organizing committees state-wide and we have been working with a number of other organizations to build a grassroots network capable of changing what is politically possible for healthcare reform in Vermont. It is clear that these efforts are pushing things in the right direction. We hope other Vermont elected officials will join Senator Racine as champions to make this moral shift to make healthcare a public good for everybody,” said James Haslam, Director of the Vermont Workers’ Center.
Six other state legislators participated in the forum, which was the eighth of its kind the Workers’ Center has held this Fall with a total of 70 state legislators and over 800 total participants. The event included testimony from area residents about their experiences with the broken healthcare system and a presentation on the principles and goals of the Healthcare Is A Human Right Campaign.
On January 6, for the start of the 2010 legislative session, the Workers’ Center plans to solidify this position by delivering thousands of postcards demanding healthcare as a human right that Vermonters from around the State have signed to the legislative leadership.
“Vermont can lead the way. Where Congress has failed to stand up to the corrupting influence of powerful interests vested in the unsustainable healthcare status quo, Vermont will succeed,” said Bekah Mandell, the facilitator of the People’s Forum and who is a leader of the Healthcare Is a Human Right Campaign. “Ordinary Vermonters will continue to put pressure on their elected representatives until we win this fundamental human right. It is clear to us, now, that we can win, and we will win.”
The next People’s Forum on Healthcare is scheduled for Lamoille County at 7 P.M. on December 17th at the River Arts Center in Morrisville, where House Speaker Shap Smith and other state legislators are expected to participate.”
I am committed to looking at the possibility of a single payer health care system in Vermont. This won’t be easy — we’ll need to convince the federal government to allow us to demonstrate that there is a better way. I do believe we can do this, and I need your help. Please join me in this effort and help me to identify the most important criteria to focus on:
http://dougracine.com/health-care
Petey, thanks for that heads up. I’ll check it out. I have not read that Bridge issue yet. That does not surprise me at all. $6700 for a night is cheap by American standards. yeah, it’s a huge racket that the GOP has allowed and profited from, just like any black market.