A7 THE ASTORIAN • THuRSdAy, July 25, 2019 Senators offer compromise to reduce prescription drug costs OBITUARIES Eila Anna-Liisa Rahkola Astoria Dec. 27, 1934 — July 21, 2019 Eila Anna-Liisa Rahkola, 84, passed away with her husband to do some traveling. peacefully on July 21, 2019, of complica- Eila was a member of Peace Lutheran tions from Parkinson’s disease. Church and the Finnish Brotherhood. Her She was born Dec. 27, 1934, greatest joy was welcoming new to Anna Vilhemiina Piukkala in babies into the family; she had a Pyhajoki, Finland. She graduated special gift for calming them. She from high school and continued in was loved by many, and will be home economic school, where she missed. would learn skills that served her Eila was preceded in death by family all their lives. her husband, Antti, and her son, Eila married Antti Rahkola in a Thomas Allan, and granddaughter, beautiful outdoor wedding on June Grace. 20, 1954, in Kalajoki, Finland. The She is survived by her children, young couple saw opportunity in Anne (Rick) Stickel, Marjo Dun- Eila Rahkola agan, Anita (Jyrki) Talus, Karin the U.S., where relatives lived in (Bob) Blair, Allan Rahkola and Esko, Minnesota. They moved there in 1958 with two little children, and one Tina (Tom) Lips; grandchildren, Griffin, Johanna, Stan, Raija, Pete, Anna, Max, Edie, on the way. As the family grew, Eila used her many Mackenzie, Maggie, Lillie, Victoria, Ryan skills to care for her household. She sewed, and Evan; great-granchildren, Ashley, Brock, knitted, cooked everything from scratch Henri, Eila, Brooklyn, Greta, Iris and Zoey; and was an exceptional baker. A decision to and one great-great-granddaughter, Rilee. move to Astoria came after a visit to see rela- A special thank you to the Astor Place and tives. Eila and Antti packed their belongings, all staff members there for the great care they five children and Mummo, Eila’s mother, to gave our mother. arrive Astoria in July 1969. A private graveside service will be held. The beautiful surroundings, good fishing The family invites anyone who knew Eila and Finnish community made Astoria the to join us at Peace Lutheran Church, 565 perfect place to raise a family. So perfect, 12th St., Astoria, Oregon, for a reception on cousins from Finland arrived in 1971. The Saturday, July 27, from 4 to 6 p.m. Vedenojas lived with the Rahkola family, 18 Donations can be made in Eila’s memory people, for six months. to Peace Lutheran Church. After the children were grown, Eila Caldwell’s Luce-Layton Mortuary is in worked in the kitchen at the high school, her charge of the arrangements. Please sign the first job outside her home. She retired along online guest book at caldwellsmortuary.com Raymond Alfie Freel Astoria May 26, 1954 — July 21, 2019 Raymond Alfie Freel, 65, of Astoria, in his shop, and working on his 1959 GMC Oregon, passed away peacefully at home pickup. on July 21, 2019, surrounded by his wife, Ray is survived my his wife of 46 years, Mary, his brother, Rodger, and his Mary, of Astoria; his twin brother, two dogs, Lincoln and Logan. Rodger (Janette) Freel, of Mon- tesano, Washington; sister Trinda Ray was born in Coos Bay, Oregon, to A.V. “Bud” and Clari- (Dan) Bogh, of Warrenton, Ore- gon; his hunting partner and anna “Connie” Freel. He spent the cousin, Jerry (Brigette) Hampel early part of his life in Charleston, and cousin Jack (DeeDee) Ham- Oregon, then moved to the War- pel, all of Coos Bay, Oregon; his renton area in 1965. He graduated brother-in-law, Bob (Sherry) Mul- from Warrenton High School in lins, and sisters-in-law, Alice Wil- 1972. son and Linda (Doug) Flesey, all Ray married the love of his life, Mary Mullins, in 1973, then Raymond Freel of Astoria; numerous nephews, moved to Astoria in 1975, where nieces and cousins; his beloved he lived until his death. He loved taking his hunting companions, his dogs, Lincoln and dogs pheasant hunting in Eastern Oregon Logan, and his two miniature horses, Wan- each year, and sitting in the pasture where nabe and Beemer; and many friends from he would feed his two miniature horses his life working on tugboats. A special thanks to Lower Columbia apples. Ray began his towboat career with Hospice and the wonderful nurses for the Umpqua River Navigation in 1972, then care they provided, and the concern they Knappton Towboat Co., now known as Foss showed during the last month of his life. Maritime, in 1974, where he worked until In lieu of flowers, the family requests 2013. In May 2018, he retired from Dun- memorial donations be made to the charity lap Towing of Everett, Washington. Ray ran of one’s choice. tugs from the Arctic Circle to Mexico, and A celebration of life will be determined on the East Coast. During those years he at a later date. passed on his vast knowledge to many new Caldwells Luce-Layton Mortuary is in mariners. charge of the arrangements. Please sign our Ray loved working with wood and metal online guest book at caldwellsmortuary. com Wyden, colleague say bill would limit copays By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR Associated Press WASHINGTON — Two veteran sena- tors — a Republican and a Democrat — unveiled compromise legislation Tuesday to reduce prescription drug costs for mil- lions of Medicare recipients, while sav- ing money for federal and state health care programs serving seniors and low-income people. Iowa Republican Chuck Grassley and Oregon Democrat Ron Wyden said the bill would for the first time limit drug copays for people with Medicare’s “Part D” pre- scription plan, by capping patients’ out- of-pocket costs at $3,100 a year starting in 2022. They’re hoping to have it ready soon for votes on the Senate floor. The legislation would also require drugmakers to pay a price-hike penalty to Medicare if the cost of their medications goes up faster than inflation. Drugs pur- chased through a pharmacy as well as those administered in doctors’ offices would be covered by the new inflation rebates. Political compromises over health care are rare these days. The bill reflects efforts by lawmakers of both parties to move beyond the rancorous debates over the Obama-era Affordable Care Act and focus on ways to lower costs for people with health insurance. Separate legisla- tion to address “surprise medical bills” has already cleared the Senate Health, Educa- tion, Labor and Pensions committee. The senators said preliminary estimates from the Congressional Budget Office show that the Medicare program would save $85 billion over 10 years, while seniors would save $27 billion in out-of- pocket costs over the same period, and $5 billion from slightly lower premiums. The government would save $15 billion from projected Medicaid costs. CBO also projected that Medicare’s inflation rebate would have ripple effects, leading to prescription drug savings for pri- vate insurance plans sponsored by employ- ers or purchased directly by consumers. The senators announced a Thursday vote on the package by the Finance Commit- tee, which oversees Medicare and Medic- aid. Grassley is the panel’s chairman, while Wyden serves as the senior Democrat. “Pharmaceutical companies play a vital role in creating new and innovative med- icines that save and improve the qual- ity of millions of American lives, but that doesn’t help Americans who can’t afford them,” Grassley and Wyden said in a joint CLATSOP POWER Raymond Cecil Strobel EQUIPMENT , INC. Warrenton May 30, 1930 — July 21, 2019 Raymond Cecil “Ray” Strobel was born in Hatton, Saskatchewan, Canada, to Marie and John Strobel. He moved to the U.S. as a young boy, and grew up in the Astoria area. He enlisted in the Army in 1951, served in Korea, and was honorably discharged in 1956. Ray married Carolyn Wiley on Dec. 5, 1970. Together they raised three children in Warrenton. He worked for the Ameri- can Can Co. until his retirement, when the company closed down. He went into long- haul trucking, and as the owner/operator he would take Carol along, and they traveled the U.S. together. He loved to fish and hunt, and he devoted himself to Clatsop Post 12 American Legion in Astoria until his death. Ray is survived by three children, Ron (Karla) Fortelney, Joanne (Butch) Johnson and Brenda Marugg; seven grandchildren; and 20 great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his par- ents; his wife, Carolyn; and his sister, Alice Schmitz. A memorial service will be held on Satur- day, July 27, 2019, at 1 p.m., at Clatsop Post 12 American Legion in Astoria, Oregon. Please visit hughes-ransom.com to sign the online guest book. SEVENDAY FORECAST FOR ASTORIA TODAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY statement. “This legislation shows that no industry is above accountability.” The White House encouraged the Sen- ate negotiations, and spokesman Judd Deere said the Trump administration stands ready to “work with senators to ensure this proposal moves forward and advances the president’s priority of lower- ing drug prices.” Democrats controlling the House want to go further by granting Medicare legal authority to directly negotiate prices with pharmaceutical companies. Direct negotia- tions are seen as a nonstarter in the Repub- lican-controlled Senate, but the bill’s drug price inflation penalty may yet find support among Democrats in the House. Grassley’s office said the bill will force drugmakers and insurers to take greater responsibility for keeping Medicare pre- scription prices in line, instead of foisting increases on taxpayers and beneficiaries. The lack of a cap on out-of-pocket costs for Medicare’s popular prescription benefit has left some beneficiaries with bills rival- ing a mortgage payment. That’s because with Medicare’s current protection for cat- astrophic costs, patients taking very expen- sive drugs are still responsible for 5% of the cost, with no dollar limit on what they pay. For example, 5% of a drug that costs $200,000 a year works out to $10,000. The Grassley-Wyden bill does not directly address the problem of high launch prices for new medications, but its inflation rebates could put the brakes on price hikes for mainstay drugs such as insulin. The bill drew a rebuke from the phar- maceutical industry, while AARP praised Grassley and Wyden. Other provisions of the legislation would: • Change an arcane Medicaid payment formula through which drugmakers can avoid paying rebates on certain drugs, depending on fluctuations in prices. • Allow state Medicaid programs to pay for expensive gene therapy treatments on the installment plan, spreading out the costs over several years. • Require drugmakers to provide pub- lic justification for new high cost drugs or steep hikes in the prices of existing medications. • Require middlemen known as phar- macy benefit managers to disclose details of the discounts they are negotiating and how much they are passing on to consum- ers. The benefit managers negotiate with pharmaceutical companies on behalf of insurers and consumers. • Provide doctors with new computer tools they can use to estimate out-of- pocket medication costs for patients with Medicare. SALES • SERVICE • RENTALS 34912 HWY 101 BUS • ASTORIA 503-325-0792 • 1-800-220-0792 TUESDAY WEDNESDAY REGIONAL FORECAST Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. Seattle 73 55 Sunny and pleasant 71 60 Partly sunny and nice 71 57 70 58 69 57 70 57 Clearing Mostly sunny and nice Clouds and sunshine Abundant sunshine 69 57 Mostly sunny Aberdeen Olympia 75/57 81/59 Wenatchee Tacoma Moses Lake 83/53 ALMANAC UNDER THE SKY TODAY'S TIDES Astoria through Tuesday Tonight’s Sky: Moon at last quarter (6:18 p.m.) Astoria / Port Docks Temperatures High/low ................................ 67/55 Normal high/low .................. 68/54 Record high .................. 91 in 1924 Record low .................... 44 in 1977 Precipitation Tuesday ................................... 0.02” Month to date ........................ 1.53” Normal month to date ......... 0.83” Year to date .......................... 24.40” Normal year to date ........... 36.74” Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019 Time 7:57 a.m. 8:00 p.m. 5.1 2:06 a.m. 7.1 1:35 p.m. Cape Disappointment 7:23 a.m. 7:51 p.m. Source: Jim Todd, OMSI Hammond SUN AND MOON Sunrise today .................. 5:49 a.m. Sunset tonight ............... 8:55 p.m. Moonrise today ........... 12:47 a.m. Moonset today .............. 2:33 p.m. Last New First Full 7:43 a.m. 7:59 p.m. Warrenton 7:52 a.m. 7:55 p.m. Knappa 8:34 a.m. 8:37 p.m. Depoe Bay July 24 July 31 Aug 7 Aug 15 6:47 a.m. 7:04 p.m. 1.7 2.0 4.7 1:28 a.m. 6.7 1:00 p.m. 1.7 2.0 5.3 1:46 a.m. 7.3 1:18 p.m. 1.9 2.1 5.5 1:50 a.m. 7.5 1:19 p.m. 1.8 2.0 5.4 3:07 a.m. 7.4 2:36 p.m. 1.5 1.7 5.1 1:00 a.m. 2.1 7.2 12:23 p.m. 2.3 City Atlanta Boston Chicago Dallas Denver Honolulu Houston Los Angeles Miami New York City Phoenix San Francisco Wash., DC Today Hi/Lo/W 87/68/s 80/66/s 84/65/s 89/69/s 88/62/pc 90/78/s 91/69/s 89/68/pc 91/78/t 83/70/s 107/90/pc 73/58/pc 86/68/s Fri. Hi/Lo/W 87/68/pc 83/69/s 88/67/s 91/72/pc 94/66/s 89/78/pc 92/73/t 88/66/s 92/80/t 85/72/s 110/90/s 74/56/pc 88/70/s Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow fl urries, sn-snow, i-ice. 91/61 Hermiston The Dalles 94/57 Enterprise Pendleton 85/52 91/58 93/62 La Grande 88/53 89/57 NATIONAL CITIES High (ft.) Time Low (ft.) 83/50 Kennewick Walla Walla 91/64 Lewiston 92/56 84/57 Salem Pullman 91/57 Longview 73/55 Portland 88/61 84/58 Yakima 91/58 83/54 Astoria Spokane 88/62 Corvallis 90/57 Albany 89/57 John Day Eugene Bend 91/58 89/54 92/57 Ontario 97/65 Caldwell Burns 92/55 95/62 Medford 97/66 Klamath Falls 91/54 City Baker City Brookings Ilwaco Newberg Newport Today Hi/Lo/W 91/48/s 73/54/s 70/58/s 88/57/s 67/53/s Fri. Hi/Lo/W 93/55/pc 71/58/s 69/60/pc 89/58/s 67/57/pc City North Bend Roseburg Seaside Springfi eld Vancouver Today Hi/Lo/W 70/56/s 93/60/s 72/57/s 90/56/s 86/60/s Fri. Hi/Lo/W 69/59/pc 90/60/s 71/60/pc 90/56/s 87/61/s