Tuesday, August 4, 2009Health Care Debate Heads for the HeartlandAs members of Congress leave Washington for the August recess without completing health care reform, the health insurance industry is preparing to launch a deluge of ads to sell the idea that fixing our broken health care system is too expensive, too complicated and somehow un-American. The insurance industry will spend millions in the effort, but much of the battle will be fought in the viral world of the Internet, where rumors, half-truths and outright lies will share the stage with outrageous claims about secret horrors hidden deep in the proposed legislation. Among the urban myths already circulating is the claim that the government will force senior citizens to undergo counseling to encourage suicide as an alternative to expensive procedures. This bizarre notion is being aggressively promoted on talk radio, where much of the scare campaign will take place. In addition false claims of government-sponsored euthanasia, the campaign will include dire warnings about health care rationing, higher taxes and a government “takeover” of the nation’s health care system. But there will be no mention of how the current system allows insurance companies to deny coverage for pre-existing conditions or how millions of American families are regularly forced to choose between food and medicine. Perhaps the most outrageous claim that will be made during the August recess is the idea that giant health insurance companies are not ruthless profiteers, but scrappy underdogs, valiantly struggling to deliver quality health care to a deserving and grateful nation. In the days ahead, every IAM member should contact their lawmakers, by phone, by mail or in person and demand an end to the chokehold that health insurance companies have had on this nation for too long. Solidarity Prevails in Washington D.C. Organizing WinA determined group of nearly 120 employees who provide maintenance and security services on the streets of Washington, D.C., voted solidly for IAM representation recently after brushing aside a fierce anti-union campaign. The new IAM members are employed by the Downtown D.C. Business Improvement District and provide assistance to tourists in addition to maintaining streets and reporting suspicious activity to the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department. The campaign turned ugly when the company resorted to harassment tactics in the final weeks before the vote, including surveillance of employees who accepted IAM campaign literature. The workers refused to be intimidated and organizers were joined by volunteers from IAM headquarters, the William W. Winpisinger Center and IAM Local CE 1 in Washington, D.C. who helped get the word out in a final push before ballots were cast. “I want to congratulate our new members for standing strong in the face of adversity and to thank all the volunteers who stepped up when this election was on the line,” said General Secretary-Treasurer Warren Mart. “Special thanks also go to District 98 Business Representative Roosevelt Littlejohn and IAM National Pension Fund Coordinator Jim Lauter, who coordinated this successful drive.” New Mexico Machinists Rally to Save Aerospace JobsDozens of active and retired members of Local 794 in Albuquerque, NM, took to the streets this week to oppose a decision by G.E. Aviation to close a jet engine facility that has been an economic anchor in the Albuquerque community for more than 30 years. “There’s no reason this plant can’t be saved,” said Local 794 President Ernest Dow in an interview broadcast on New Mexico’s KRQE News 13. “The workers here are dedicated workers, they’re skilled workers. All General Electric has to do is keep this work in house.” General Electric announced last week that it intends to close the Albuquerque plant in the fall of 2010. The move will put more than 400 G.E. employees out of work and cost up to 1,400 additional workers their jobs when the impact of the closure spreads to sub-contractors, retail establishments and municipal employees. Go to http://www.krqe.com/dpp/news/business/business_krqe_albuquerque Machinists Union Wins Print, Web & Video Awards
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