Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Northwest labor press. (Portland , Ore.) 1987-current | View Entire Issue (April 6, 2012)
‘Healing the health care blues’ Blues festival to benefit Oregon Single-Payer Campaign It’s considered a jinx in the per- forming arts industry to wish someone “good luck” before a show. Instead, it’s customary to say “break a leg.” But, say a performer was to break their leg, chances are it would put them in such financial straits that it could take years for them to climb out. That’s because many performers can’t afford to buy health insurance. And it’s why more than a dozen blues musicians from Portland are getting together April 14 for a “Healing the Health Care Blues” concert at Melody Ballroom. The concert is a reunion of the In- ner City Blues Festival, a popular an- nual event that started in 1988 by the Portland Rainbow Coalition. The last concert was held in 2003. This year’s reunion is a fundraiser for the Oregon Single Payer Campaign, a coalition promoting a universal, af- fordable health care system for all. Headlining the event will be the Nor- man Sylvester Band. Sylvester and his band mates are members of Portland- based Musicians Local 99. The union is endorsing the event. In fact, the American Federation of Musi- cians was an early endorser of a na- tional campaign promoting a single- payer health care system. Musicians don’t work a typical 9-to- 5 job with health care covered under an employer’s insurance plan, said Bruce Fife, president of Local 99 and an in- ternational vice president of the Amer- ican Federation of Musicians. When Fife was performing decades ago, he had to buy his own health insurance, too. But, he said, pay was much better, he worked a steady five nights a week, and insurance premiums were more af- fordable. “Union density in the industry at that time was more than 80 percent,” Fife said. “The union had agreements with booking agents and venues, and musicians could make a good living. Today, most musicians can’t survive playing music alone; they need other jobs to survive.” Fife said the industry began to un- ravel starting in 1978, following a court ruling that declared musicians inde- pendent contractors. The decision stemmed from a lawsuit the music in- dustry filed against the union. “It took time for the lawsuit to af- fect the industry,” Fife said. “But it changed the whole dynamic in so many ways.” [Symphony musicians are the ex- ception. In fact, Local 99 recently rati- fied a new three-year contract with the Oregon Symphony that provides 100 percent employer-paid health insur- ance.] Fife said one of the first things he did as president of the union was to reach out to Kaiser Permanente to ac- quire health insurance for musicians. He polled members, asking them what would be most beneficial in a health care package. Kaiser determined that it was impossible to provide a health care PAGE 12 Norman “The Boogie Cat” Sylvester, a member of Musicians Local 99, will headline the Inner City Blues Festival April 14 at the Melody Ballroom in Portland. The event is a fundraiser for the Oregon Single-Payer Campaign. Nine labor unions and 31 community organizations are members of the coalition. package because musicians have too many different employers. “So we turned our focus to single- payer,” Fife said. Reforming the health care system to a single-payer format would benefit all Oregonians, supporters say, by replac- ing an expensive and complicated sys- tem — dominated by a multitude of private insurance companies — with a single non-profit agency that would collect and distribute funds equitably and fairly. Norman “The Boogie Cat” Syl- vester, is a staunch supporter of a sin- gle-payer system. He and his wife Paula are helping plan the benefit show. One of the premier bluesmen on the West Coast, Sylvester has shared the stage with B.B. King, Buddy Guy, James Cotton, Junior Wells, Otis Clay, Tower of Power, Peter Frampton and many other national touring stars. Early in his career, Sylvester needed to work a day job to survive. But even after becoming an established star he relied on his wife’s business to pay for his health insurance. “I’m one of the blessed ones,” he said. Sylvester worked for 23 years at P-I-E International trucking company — start- ing in the shop, moving to the parts de- partment, and ending up as a purchasing agent. He recalled a time in 1987 — after performing at the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall and partying most of the night with B.B. King — how he was up early the next morning at his Teamster job at P-I-E International. It was only after the trucking com- pany filed for bankruptcy and closed in 1990 that Sylvester took the bold step of trying to make a living playing mu- sic. Prior to that decision he was in a NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS dislocated worker program (that tried to steer him toward accounting), and he relied on the government to pay for his health insurance. “You learn to deal with pain, or you try home remedies or to diagnose and heal yourself using the Internet,” he said, pointing out that it didn’t take him long to discover that The Mayo Clinic “has a killer web site.” There was a four-year stretch from 1990 to 1994 that Sylvester said he was under tremendous stress. What if some- thing happened to him? What if his kid falls off the monkey bars at school (and gets hurt)? What if he cracks a tooth? “One of the biggest health care is- sues out there is stress,” he said. “Stress can lead to a bunch of other bad things. Having universal health care would take a lot of the stress out of peoples’ lives.” In 1994, Sylvester married Paula. She operated a small janitorial business and was able to pay for family cover- age health insurance. Today, at 66, Sylvester is in his sec- ond year under Medicare, a program that single-payer health care advocates would like to emulate. To help promote the single-payer plan, the Sylvesters and more than a dozen co-sponsors have put together a show April 14 featuring a host of Northwest blues stars. In addition to the Norman Sylvester Band, which will unveil a new song, “Healing the Health Care Blues,” guests will include tap and sax sensation Shoehorn (members of Local 99), Lloyd Jones Struggle, Chatta Addy, Lloyd Allen, Sara Billings, LaRhonda Steele, Sonny Hess, Jim Mesi, Richard Arnold, Bill Rhoades, Peter Moss, Lenanne Miller- Sylvester and Janice Scroggins. Sylvester said Melody Ballroom is donating the venue for the event. Music will be performed upstairs, and tables will be set up downstairs with informa- tion about Mad as Hell Doctors, Nurses for Single Payer, Musicians Local 99, the Fair Trade Music campaign, the Di- abetes Association, and others. Food will be for sale, along with a full service bar. Tickets to the Inner City Blues Fes- tival Reunion are $15 and can be pur- chased online at www.ticketsoregon. com. You must be 21 or older. Melody Ballroom is located at 615 SE Alder, Portland. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. For more information about the Oregon Single Payer Campaign, go to www.singlepayeroregon.org. APRIL 6, 2012