Thursday, May 29, 2008

Domestic Call May 29

When I reported on the Cedar Rapids group, I reported how excited we all were about our upcoming ice cream social. I also reported that we would be collecting money for a memorial for John and Polly Ely for RESULTS Microcredit. Paul from Minneapolis knew the Elys, and he is sending money for the memorial. Also Lois from Baltimore wants to contribute.

The Baltimore group is hosting a healthcare forum Sunday afternoon. They have invited local doctors to speak and expect about 50 people. I wonder if we could think about a forum in Cedar Rapids -- not necessarily on healthcare. Perhaps on the world food crisis or some other issue. Ideas escape me right now. Something to think about?

Global Call May 28

The Supplemental Bill is going to conference committee because the Senate version is virtually unrecognizeable compared to the version the House passed.

PEPFAR is still being held up in the Senate by seven Republicans. Efforts are underway to work with "reasonable" Republican Senators to stop this block. Grassley is not on the list of Senators targeted for this effort.

Paul Farmer is going to be on the conference call June 14. According to the Harvard Medical School website, "Medical anthropologist and physician Paul Farmer is a founding director of Partners In Health, an international charity organization that provides direct health care services and undertakes research and advocacy activities on behalf of those who are sick and living in poverty. Dr. Farmer’s work draws primarily on active clinical practice (he is an attending physician in infectious diseases and chief of the Division of Social Medicine and Health Inequalities at Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH) in Boston, and medical director of a charity hospital, the Clinique Bon Sauveur, in rural Haiti) and focuses on diseases that disproportionately afflict the poor. Along with his colleagues at BWH, in the Program in Infectious Disease and Social Change at Harvard Medical School, and in Haiti, Peru, and Russia, Dr. Farmer has pioneered novel, community-based treatment strategies for AIDS and tuberculosis (including multidrug-resistant tuberculosis). Dr. Farmer and his colleagues have successfully challenged the policymakers and critics who claim that quality health care is impossible to deliver in resource-poor settings."

Farm Bill Online Article

Mixed Reactions to U.S. Farm Bill
Caitlin G. JohnsonOneWorld US
Fri., May. 23, 2008
WASHINGTON, May 22 (OneWorld) - The $300 billion U.S. Farm Bill, which is expected to be passed into law despite this week's veto by President George W. Bush, is getting high marks from advocates of U.S. food and nutrition programs but was blasted by those concerned about the global poor and giveaways to the already rich.

The legislation that sets laws and spending guidelines for a range of nutritional and agricultural programs doesn't usually attract much public notice when it comes up for reauthorization every five years. This year, however, may be different. Congress passed the bill with a bipartisan majority big enough to reverse Wednesday's veto by President Bush -- marking only the second time a veto of his would be overturned. Then a procedural mistake was uncovered, meaning the bill will likely be passed in Congress and vetoed again in the coming days before the Senate and House of Representatives make their final votes to enact the legislation.

But as the political maneuvering continues in Washington, advocates and others around the country are vocally calling attention to what they see as bill's pros and cons: a significant increase in domestic nutrition funding on one hand; big subsidies for "mega-farms" and worrisome foreign food aid rules on the other.

Strengthening Food Programs at Home
Anti-poverty advocates praise the bill for adding more than $10 billion over 10 years to key domestic nutrition programs, including free fruits and vegetable snacks in schools with high shares of low-income students and the Food Stamp program, which is expected to reach a record 28 million enrollees this year.

The bill also adjusts food stamp benefits and tax-time deductions to keep pace with rising prices and allows families to deduct more child care expenses from their income -- a move that will mean an average of nearly $500 a year more in food stamps for some 100,000 households, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a policy analysis organization.

"As a package, this is the most significant set of improvements in the Food Stamp Program in nearly 15 years," Stacy Dean, director of food assistance policy for the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, told One World. Results, a grassroots citizens lobby organization, called the bill "an important first step toward the goal of ending hunger in America."

Diane John-Smith who lives in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, turned to food stamps when she was unemployed for two years. She says she had to spend down her 401K retirement fund in order to be eligible for food stamps. Since 1986, the food stamp asset limits have remained $2,000 for most households -- meaning anyone with savings, a car, or other assets greater than that amount is generally ineligible for enrollment. The new Farm Bill "unfreezes" those limits by indexing them to inflation, so they will not decrease in real value each year.

John-Smith says it is about time the food stamp program got an update and more funding. "I am just so gratified [by the increase in funds]. $10 billion over ten years is significant and it's going to make a difference for a lot of people."

Concern Over "Mega-Farm" Subsidies and Foreign Aid Rules
At the same time, some aid organizations are criticizing the bill for failing to fix what they call a "broken" system of U.S. food aid abroad and increasing subsidies to wealthy farmers at home, at the expense of smaller farmers. "Although we, too, cheer the increases for programs for nutrition, Congress failed to deliver any serious reform [on farm policy and food aid]," Laura Rusu, a spokesperson for Oxfam America, told OneWorld.

"The current subsidy system does little to protect family farmers in the U.S. or alleviate problems in rural America. Taxpayers actually provide the funds that enable the biggest producers to gobble up smaller farms, driving land prices up and making it difficult for family farmers to afford to stay in business, and nearly impossibly for beginning farmers just starting out," she added. According to Oxfam, the largest 10 percent of producers receive about 75 percent of the $20 billion in U.S. commodity subsidies each year.

Leo Tammi, a sheep and livestock farmer in Mount Sidney, Virginia, says he's pleased that the bill adds money for nutrition and conservation, but is "more than a little disappointed that there wasn't the kind of reform in crop subsidy payments that many of us were hoping for." "I think most taxpayers wonder why we need to subsidize the upper-income mega-farms that will continue to be receiving the subsidies," he told OneWorld.

Oxfam and its allies -- including national groups such as the Environmental Working Group, the Center for Rural Affairs, Citizens Against Government Waste, and the Episcopal Church -- also fault the bill for failing to shift U.S. food aid policy away from an emphasis on U.S.-grown commodities to offering more cash assistance that would enable countries to buy more quickly and directly from local sources. Such a move, they say, would make U.S. assistance abroad much more efficient and support local industries in those countries at the same time, helping break the long-term cycle of poverty.

For some groups that support the domestic provisions -- which make up two thirds of the Farm Bill's focus -- the commodity subsidy provisions made it a difficult decision to support the bill. "As pleased as we are with the nutrition title, we are as equally disappointed in Congress' failure to enact meaningful commodity reform," Jos Linn, Results' domestic outreach organizer, told OneWorld.

"To make only cosmetic changes to a system that continues to reward rich farms at the expense of struggling farmers is inexcusable. Commodity supports also exacerbate world poverty through their trade-distorting effects and strain relations with our trade allies."

Linn was referring to the phenomenon that allows U.S. farmers to sell their goods abroad at excessively low prices because the subsidies provided by U.S. taxpayers make up the difference in revenue. This drives down prices -- and incomes -- for farmers around the world, and creates particular hardship for those in Africa and other parts of the world where vast majorities of the population depend on income from farming. "Congress chose the easy way out," added Linn, "and we all will have to pay for it."

In a statement quoted by the Food Research and Action Center, Senator Harry Reid (D-NV) said the bill was the result of necessary compromise. "This bill has reform in it. Could we have done more? Perhaps, but had we done more, we would not have gotten a bill. What did we get as a result of the compromises made? We got nutrition. What a wonderful thing. We got food stamps," Reid is quoted as saying.

Before his veto, Bush called the bill "bloated" and costly. In a May 13 statement, the administration criticized the bill for failing "to reform subsidies to multimillionaire farmers at a time of high farm income and rising grocery prices."

Still Time for 'Tweaks'
Congress is expected to vote to override the veto, since the bill originally passed both houses with more than the two-thirds majority needed to do so. "There's still time for Congress to tweak the bill for reform while retaining the gains made on the nutrition front," said Oxfam's Laura Rusu. "A lot of Americans haven't paid attention to the Farm Bill debate, undoubtedly thinking, 'I'm not a farmer, this isn't for me.' But if you care about where your food comes from, where your taxpayer dollars go, and how we hurt or help poor people, you should care about the Farm Bill," she said.

Saturday, May 24, 2008

RESULTS Diversity Task Force Strategies and Goals

Strategies:
A) Determine contact person in the minority community.B) Set up a meeting with the contact person to cover:

1) This is RESULTS
a) personal story
b) RESULTS activities locally and nationally
c) RESULTS campaigns for 2008

2) Intent of Diversity Task Force
a) Cedar Rapids is a pilot city
b) The identified minority communities are: African-American, Hindu-American, Hispanic, Jewish, Muslim-American, Native American
c) This community can join an existing RESULTS group or four members can function as a group within a Cedar Rapids coalition. We will listen to conference calls together, do fundraisers together, do outreach meetings together; we can hold second monthly meeting separately in order to focus on public or political education.

3) What I need from you (the contact person):
a) What do I need to know about your community? citizenship, culture, economics, language, literacy, transportation
b) Can you help me set up an informational meeting? Identify people who might be interested, invite the wider community

C) Hold informational meeting
1) Use Compassion and Empowerment presentation; Everyday Heroes DVD; testimonial from RESULTS activist; depending on literacy and citizenship of group, write letters to MoC or LTEs.
2) Collect contact information from interested people.
3) Set up training sessions.

Goals:
Native American community
Have meeting with contact by June 2008; 1 new member.

Hispanic community
Have meeting with contact by end of June 2008; do informational meeting by end of July 2008; 3 new members in training by end of August 2008.

Muslim-American community
Have meeting with contact by end of July 2008; do informational meeting by end of August 2008; 5 new members in training by end of September 2008.

Jewish community
Have meeting with contact by end of August 2008; do informational meeting by end of September 2008; 5 new members in training by end of October 2008.

Hindu-American community
Have meeting with contact by end of September 2008; do informational meeting by end of October 2008; 5 new members in training by end of November 2008.

African-American community
Establish contact by end of June 2008; meet with contact by end of October 2008; do informational meeting by end of November 2008; 5 new members in training by end of January 2009.

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Leslee's Op-Ed Published May 18

Better world through education

I’ve had the opportunity this school year of volunteering in my daughter’s kindergarten class. No, not as a parent of a kindergarten child, but as the parent of the teacher. As I’ve worked with these beautiful children, I’ve witnessed their skills grow from knowing a only few letters and sounds to reading books. What pride they have when they finish reading and get to take the books home to read to their parents. Seeing these 5- and 6-yearolds and their first public school experiences makes me wonder what they will choose for careers as adults. They will learn much over the course of their next 12 years in school. Lucky children — attaining an education is their fundamental right. Unfortunately, education as a fundamental right is not the case in many developing countries of the world. As a member of RESULTS, a grass-roots advocacy organization committed to ending hunger and poverty, I have learned that education in developing countries is the most effective way to break the cycle of poverty. However, consider: . More than 72 million primary (elementary) school children around the world are not in school; 226 million do not have access to secondary education. . There are many reasons why children do not attend school: school fees, child labor, poor quality schooling, health crises such as HIV/ AIDS, discrimination and conflict. . Nearly 70 percent of the world’s out-of-school children live in South/West Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. . Studies find that 100 million girls enrolled in school will drop out before completing primary schooling often because of their inability to pay fees or because they are needed to take care of their household where a parent is dying of AIDS. . Less than 10 percent of children with disabilities are in school. . The ability to attend school is only the first challenge. In some places, there may be as many as 150 children in each classroom and not enough teachers or supplies. In 2000, 189 countries, including the United States, agreed to support the United Nations’ Millennium Development Goals for reducing global poverty by 2015. One of the eight goals includes universal access to education and equal access among boys and girls. The United States’ commitment is falling far short of what was pledged. In 2006, we gave a total of $477 million to education in developing countries — the approximate cost of building just 17 U.S. high schools. The Education for All Act is bipartisan legislation that would authorize an initial $1 billion in global education funding for this year, scaling up to $3 billion by 2012. Sens. Chuck Grassley and Tom Harkin and Rep. David Loebsack — please co-sponsor this act. We’re all better off when the children of the world are educated.

Leslee Sandberg of Cedar Rapids is a retired longtime educator and member of the Cedar Rapids RESULTS group.

Leslee's Op-Ed Published May 18

Better world through education

I’ve had the opportunity this school year of volunteering in my daughter’s kindergarten class. No, not as a parent of a kindergarten child, but as the parent of the teacher. As I’ve worked with these beautiful children, I’ve witnessed their skills grow from knowing a only few letters and sounds to reading books. What pride they have when they finish reading and get to take the books home to read to their parents. Seeing these 5- and 6-yearolds and their first public school experiences makes me wonder what they will choose for careers as adults. They will learn much over the course of their next 12 years in school. Lucky children — attaining an education is their fundamental right. Unfortunately, education as a fundamental right is not the case in many developing countries of the world. As a member of RESULTS, a grass-roots advocacy organization committed to ending hunger and poverty, I have learned that education in developing countries is the most effective way to break the cycle of poverty. However, consider: . More than 72 million primary (elementary) school children around the world are not in school; 226 million do not have access to secondary education. . There are many reasons why children do not attend school: school fees, child labor, poor quality schooling, health crises such as HIV/ AIDS, discrimination and conflict. . Nearly 70 percent of the world’s out-of-school children live in South/West Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. . Studies find that 100 million girls enrolled in school will drop out before completing primary schooling often because of their inability to pay fees or because they are needed to take care of their household where a parent is dying of AIDS. . Less than 10 percent of children with disabilities are in school. . The ability to attend school is only the first challenge. In some places, there may be as many as 150 children in each classroom and not enough teachers or supplies. In 2000, 189 countries, including the United States, agreed to support the United Nations’ Millennium Development Goals for reducing global poverty by 2015. One of the eight goals includes universal access to education and equal access among boys and girls. The United States’ commitment is falling far short of what was pledged. In 2006, we gave a total of $477 million to education in developing countries — the approximate cost of building just 17 U.S. high schools. The Education for All Act is bipartisan legislation that would authorize an initial $1 billion in global education funding for this year, scaling up to $3 billion by 2012. Sens. Chuck Grassley and Tom Harkin and Rep. David Loebsack — please co-sponsor this act. We’re all better off when the children of the world are educated.

Leslee Sandberg of Cedar Rapids is a retired longtime educator and member of the Cedar Rapids RESULTS group.

Polly's Funeral

I talked to Jos about coming to Cedar Rapids to speak at Polly service. He said he really didn't know her that well and felt pretty uncomfortable saying anything. So I told him I would be glad to talk about what Polly did for RESULTS.

Domestic call May 22

There were four of us on the call when Jos Linn joined to talk about the Farm Bill. Because of a clerical error in the House Ag Committee, 35 pages of the Farm Bill were not sent to the President. The House had voted to override the veto and didn't lose any votes compared to the original vote on the Farm Bill. Because of the error, the House will have to revote today on the bill and the Senate will revote today or tomorrow. Then the President will veto it, and both chambers will vote to override. Jos isn't worried. He says there's enough of a margin for an override.

I was interviewed yesterday by a web reporter on my Food Stamps experience. She took pause several times during our conversation. I think she was moved.

Global group call May 21

There were four of us on the call.

Allison read Leslee's oped word for word. She was very proud of the excellent job Leslee has done, as were others on the call.

Allison Gallaher, our regional coordinator emailed information about the Supplemental Spending Bill:
Last week, the House passed an emergency defense supplemental that includes $1.86 billion in emergency food aid. Only a small portion of this assistance was provided in the form of flexible cash assistance. The bill also includes a requirement for withdrawal deadlines from Iraq. The House defeated funding for the war. The bill goes to the Senate on Thursday.

Diversity Task Force Call May 21

There were seven of us on the call. The International Conference group has decided to have break-out sessions at the conference: a diverse panel discussing what we can do to reach various communities. There will also be an update on Leadership Day -- for Regional Coordinators and group leaders. There will be materials at the exhibit section. They have their work cut out for them. As for me, I have identified goals for each of six minority groups in the CR community and will email the group strategies and goals tomorrow.

Thursday, May 8, 2008

Domestic Call May 8

I reported on our outreach meeting with Churches United's Zero Poverty Group on Monday. We faxed 10 letters to Senator Harkin's office Tuesday morning. Lois from Baltimore is gearing up for her healthcare forum on June 1. The focus will be Medicare reimbursement. Tom from Des Moines says his group is planning more outreach meetings in the DsM area at different communities of faith.

The focus of the conference call Saturday will be Healthcare for All by 2010.

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Global Call May 7

We each talked about the things we're most proud of over the last three months and things we're looking forward to in the next three months. I chose our meeting with Congressman Loebsack as the thing I'm most proud of. I thought it was a wonderfully successful meeting. I look forward to seeing him in July to see if he remembers us! And I chose the diversity task force and Cedar Rapids being a pilot city as the thing I'm most looking forward to in the next three months.

David Beckman of Bread for the World is going to be the speaker on the conference call on Saturday, to talk about the world food shortage.

The Executive Director of the Global Fund is going to be a presenter at the international conference. That's big news!

Diversity Task Force: Pilot City Call

Cedar Rapids is one of the pilot cities for the diversity task force. I have identified three groups in which I have relationships with contacts already: the Asian Indian Americans; the Muslim Americans; and the Hispanic Christians. I need to develop a relationship with a leader in the African American community.

There is a good possibility that Chapel Hill, NC and Miami, FL will also be pilot cities.

We talked about the possibility of creating groups in each of these communities and getting together for monthly conference calls but each group functioning with its own leader and doing its own training, so long as leaders communicate on monthly actions to take and events planning.

There is another conference call for pilot cities next Wednesday and I will know more then.

Thursday, May 1, 2008

May 1 Domestic Call

Farm Bill Update:

An agreement has pretty much been reached prior to the May 2 deadline. The issue now is the maximum income levels for farm commodity payments. Bush has threatened to veto the bill if the limit is set too high. Senator Grassley is meeting with Bush this afternoon to discuss the farm bill. We may be on the verge of having a new farm bill!

May 5 Outreach Presentation

Compassion and Empowerment

What is RESULTS? RESULTS is a non-profit, nonpartisan citizens grassroots network which exists to create the public and political will to end hunger and the worst aspects of poverty. RESULTS works on hunger and poverty in the US in its domestic campaigns, and on hunger and poverty in the world in its global campaigns. The Cedar Rapids Area RESULTS group is unique among RESULTS groups in that we work on both global and domestic issues.

I. Personal Story
Let me start tonight by telling you my own story. I am originally from Cedar Rapids. Went to Jefferson High School and then Wartburg College; worked at KHAK Radio and St. Luke’s Hospital. I grew up a Lutheran, and about 13 years ago converted to the Episcopal Church. I am very happily single and celibate, and I have a cat, Epiphany Jeanne Louise. I work on two Episcopal Church websites, I’m a member of the Board of the Inter-Religious Council and I do the website and newsletter for the local League of Women Voters. I enjoy working at the polls during elections because I get to reinforce voters for the decision they made to come in and vote.

a. LTEs and letters to members of Congress
For many years I used to write Letters to the Editor about issues that concerned me. Some of them got published and others did not. I used to email members of Congress relentlessly and very seldom got a response.

b. Feelings of powerlessness
All this left me feeling alone and powerless. I quit watching the news because it just depressed me to see the suffering and to know I was powerless to change anyone’s life. And then I lost my job and didn’t work for two years waiting to go on disability for bipolar disorder. During those two years I went to the welfare office once a month to get rent money and a $20 stipend for non-food products. And I fed myself with food stamps –I could afford potatoes, bread, macaroni and cheese and peanut butter. But no meat, no fruit and no vegetables. These didn’t fit into the one dollar per meal food stamp allotment.

c. And then RESULTS happened
And then I attended Churches United’s Zero Poverty Symposium in 2006 and my life changed. I heard a presentation on RESULTS and knew I had to be part of it. And it changed my outlook. And it changed my life.

II. Compassion and RESULTS
One word I want you to remember about RESULTS is compassion. Let me read you what Marcus J. Borg says about compassion in his book Meeting Jesus Again for the First Time: In terms of feeling, compassion means “to feel with,” as even the etymology of the English word suggests: -passion comes from the Latin word that means “to feel,” and the prefix com- means “with.” Compassion thus means feeling the feelings of somebody else in a visceral way, at a level somewhere below the level of the head; most commonly compassion is associated with feeling the suffering of somebody else and being moved by that suffering to do something. That is, the feeling of compassion leads to being compassionate.
The DVD you’re about to see takes about 12 minutes, is a few years old, but what hasn’t aged is the compassion you’ll see and hear from people connected to RESULTS.
(Show DVD)

a. Compassion for those in poverty and hunger
RESULTS is all about having compassion for those living in poverty and hunger. It’s about having compassion for the nine million children in the US who have no health insurance. It’s about lobbying Congress on the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), or what we in Iowa know as Hawk-I.

RESULTS is about compassion for those on food stamps whose minimum benefit hasn’t been raised in over 10 years and lobbying Congress on the Farm Bill. The Farm Lobby spent $80m lobbying Congress on the Farm Bill, and had it not been for RESULTS and its allies, the Nutrition Title, which includes food stamps and emergency food aid, would not have come out of the conference committee with $10.2b in new funding over 10 years.

RESULTS is about compassion for healthcare for all by 2010, and lobbying Congressional candidates to put healthcare for all on top of their priority lists for the 2008 campaign.

RESULTS is about compassion for the 26,000 children who die each day from preventable causes, and lobbying Congress on the Child Survival Act which will provide easy-to-administer, affordable healthcare solutions that could save the lives of two-thirds of the children at risk of death.

b. Members of Congress have the same compassion
In each case I’ve just mentioned, there is legislation in Congress which indicates to me that our Representatives and Senators have the same compassion for those living in hunger and poverty that I do. What RESULTS has given me are the tools and opportunities to do something positive with my compassion.

III. Empowerment and RESULTS
Which leads me to the second word about RESULTS I want you to remember: empowerment. To talk about how she’s been empowered, I’d like to introduce you to Judy McDowell, another of our Cedar Rapids Area RESULTS activists. Judy?

a. Judy’s testimonial

b. Tools
Thank you, Judy. That was moving. RESULTS will teach you how to speak to a member of Congress, to a Congressional aide, to a newspaper editor, about the legislation which will end hunger and the worst aspects of poverty. RESULTS taught me how to write an effective letter to the editor, and I got help from RESULTS in preparing the op-ed that led me to speak to you tonight. RESULTS also taught me the most effective means of written communication with a member of Congress, the hand-written letter faxed to their Washington office. And tonight I’m going to share with you how to write an effective letter and I’ll take your letters and fax them for you so tomorrow morning they’ll be on the desk of a Congressional aide and they will be shared with your member of Congress.

c. Opportunities
RESULTS has also provided me with opportunities to focus my compassion. Our Cedar Rapids RESULTS group meets once a month for 60 to 90 minutes, to put our compassion to work, to be empowered to make changes in the lives of people who live in hunger and poverty.

IV. Conclusion
And now it’s time for you to put your compassion to work. Tonight, I want you to write a letter to Senator Tom Harkin about the need for Healthcare for All by 2010.

a. Letters to members of Congress: how to write
First, I want you to write on one side of the sheet only. A single-page letter is highly effective. Next, I want you to start your letter with your aim: that Senator Harkin make healthcare for all by 2010 a top priority in his campaign for reelection. Now, if you have a personal story, I want you to take about three sentences to tell that story. Maybe you’re without healthcare. Maybe you, like me, have healthcare now but you’ve been without it in the past. Maybe a friend or relative is without health insurance. Often, the personal story you relate will get read on the floor of the House or Senate in debate and end up in the Congressional Record. It’s real stories of real people that make your letter highly effective. Finally, I want you to print your name and mailing address very clearly at the bottom of your letter. It may take a while, but you should get a response from Senator Harkin. When you’re done, bring me your letter and I’ll fax it to Washington for you. With the anthrax screening of mail, it takes two to three weeks for a letter to get through to a Washington office, so we’ll be faxing your letters.

b. How to become a RESULTS activist and volunteer
Finally, becoming a RESULTS activist is easy. It requires having compassion and being willing to be empowered with the proper tools and education on specific legislation so that you can take the steps necessary to help change people’s lives. The training involves an hour every two weeks for six weeks. Then, if you’d like to become an activist, you agree to attend our meetings on the third Monday of the month at 7 p.m. at Christ Episcopal Church. And lastly, there is a financial commitment of $35 every year (or $15 for students and those on fixed incomes). If you cannot afford to contribute, you will not be excluded from RESULTS activities.

Questions?

I have really enjoyed being here with you tonight and I look forward to a richer Cedar Rapids RESULTS Group because of your decision to join us. Thank you.

Contact Congressman Loebsack

I emailed Dave Loebsack (http://loebsack.house.gov/) on this issue. I hope you will call or email as well. (319-364-2288)

Building Momentum to Address Racial Health Disparities
The Health Equity and Accountability Act of 2007 (H.R.3014), is comprehensive legislation aimed at the root causes of the current health disparities crisis. This bill was developed by the Health Chairs of the Congressional Hispanic, Black and Asian Pacific American Caucuses (the “Tricaucus”) and currently has roughly 104 co-sponsors in the House — our website includes a current list of cosponsors.

The bill will help eliminate the persistent health disparities that leave millions of Americans in poorer health and more likely to die prematurely during their most productive life years by:
1. Strengthening educational institutions/the capacity of Historically Black Colleges and Universities, Hispanic Serving Institutions, Tribal Colleges and Universities, etc.;
2. Bolstering efforts to ensure culturally and linguistically appropriate health care and removing language and cultural barriers to healthcare;
3. Increasing workforce diversity by expanding programs to address the shortage of under-represented health care providers;
4. Strengthening and coordinating data collection with appropriate safeguards to privacy;
5. Requiring each federal health agency to develop and implement a national strategic action plan to eliminate racial and ethnic health disparities;
6. Advancing rural health;
7. Supporting the implementation of health information technology as a means to measure, monitor and reduce health disparities.

Estimates show that by 2020, 40 percent of the U.S. workforce will be comprised of minorities; and as we all know, the U.S. employer-based health care system already does a weak job of delivering quality, affordable health care, particularly to these very minorities. Furthermore, the U.S. is signed on to United Nations’ anti-discrimination resolutions that state our intentions to eliminate health and other disparities within our borders. Recognizing this, RESULTS has taken on addressing health disparities as a part of our 2008 Health Care for All campaign.

This bill goes a long way in addressing all of these concerns. Over 300 organizations, including RESULTS (nationally and some local chapters) have demonstrated their support by signing a recent letter to key House committee leaders in support of the legislation.

TAKE ACTION: Urge members of Congress to support The Health Equity and Accountability Act of 2007 (H.R.3014) by cosponsoring the legislation and urging swift action on the bill through a committee hearing. You can use our online alert to target an email to your representatives based on your zip code. And, be sure to make plans to join our next National Conference Call — Saturday, May 10, at 12:30 pm ET, where we will discuss health disparities and our May Domestic Action Sheet (to build support for H.R.3014).

I wasn't able to call in on the Global call Wednesday night. My dad took ill during the day and I went over to my parents' apartment to help out. Sorry I am not able to update you.