1 Page A4 ®I|e ‘JporHanò (Observer O pinion 71,6 Portland Observer lanuary 01. 2003 Opinion articles do not necessarily reflect or represent the views o f The Portland Observer E O IT O H -I N -C H i e r , P C I L I S H [ I C I H T I V l D I » K C T O K Charles H. Washington Paul Neufeldt E III T O I A s s o c ia t ì E d i t a i Michael Leighton Wynde Dyer USPS 9 5 9 -6 8 0 Established 1970 4 7 4 7 NE M artin L uther King, Jr. Blvd., D Portland, OR 9 7 2 1 1 M a n a g k k Mark Washington is t k iiv t io m V /l I T t l , P H O T O G A \ T H t H David Plechl P a s r iA s n » : S e n d a d d re s s c h a n g e s to P o r t l a n d O b s e r v e r P O B o x 3 1 3 7 , P o r t la n d , O B 9 7 2 0 8 P e r i o d i c a l P o s t a g e p a i d In P o r t l a n d , OR i S u b s c r ip tio n s « re $ 6 0 .0 0 p e r y e a r 5 0 3 2 8 8 0 0 3 3 • FAX5 0 8 2 8 8 0 0 1 5 • EMAIL: r subscriDtion&Dortlandobserver.com ads@Dortlandobserver.com The Portland Observer welcomes freelance submissions. M anuscripts and photographs should be clearly labeled and w ill be returned i f accompanied by a self addressed envelope. A ll created design display ads become the sole property o f the new spaper and cannot be used in other publications or personal usage w ithout the w ritten consent o f the general manager, unless the client has purchased the com position o f such ad. © 1996 T H E P O R T L A N D O BSERVER A L L R IG H T S R E S E R V E D , R E P R O D U C T IO N IN W H O L E O R IN P A K T W IT H O U T P E R M IS S IO N IS P R O H IB IT E D . The Portland O b server-O regon’ s Oldest M u ltic u ltu ra l P u b lic a tio n -is a member o f the National Newspaper A ssociation-Founded in 1885, and The National A dvertising Repre­ sentative Amalgamated Publishers, Inc, New Y ork, N Y , and The WestCoast Black Publishers Association • Serving Portland and Vancouver. Seniors, Disabled at Grave Risk If state does not raise revenues, life-sustaining services will end BY Dos B utsch The Governor’s Commission on Senior Services finds it hard to be joyful as the New Year approaches when we know tens of thousands of seniors and people with disabili­ ties are gravely at risk because of the state’s budget crisis. If the state does not raise rev­ enues, these frail seniors and people with disabilities will lose critical, life-sustaining services. These are people w ho cannot bathe them selves, cannot shop or cook, cannot w alk w ithout as­ sistance or m ust use a w heel­ chair. Many cannot even feed them selves or use the bathroom with out substantial help. M any are iso lated , w ithout friends or family to depend upon. These individuals are among the poorest of the poor in Oregon. They have had to survive on meager in­ comes or have spent down all of their hard-earned savings, and have nowhere left to turn except to the state. W ithout M edicaid paym ents, nursing homes and other care fa­ cilities will be forced to move needy residents out o f their facilities. econom y. Thousands o f caregivers who help seniors and people with disabilities in their own home will lose their jobs. This only deepens O regon's recession and will delay any recovery. Thousands o f caregivers who help seniors and people with disabilities in their own home will lose their jobs. This only deepens Oregon’s recession and will delay any recovery. —Don Butsch, chalrof the Governor’s Commission on Senior Services Many o f these seniors and people with disabilities will have nowhere to go. Even worse for the state’s economy is that for every two dol­ lars we cut from programs that serve seniors and people with disabilities we lose an additional three dollars from the federal government. Fa­ cilities will need to lay off staff, creating a horrible ripple effect on the rest of the community and the A in this county. Other critical im­ pacts due to the proposed budget cuts include: Elimination of critical mental health services to 10,400 individuals; Reducing payments to foster homes which care for abused and neglected children, Curtailing services that help welfare families find jobs. The Oregon Legislature, over five special sessions, required the cutting o f these critical services rather than developing new rev­ enue sources. Many o f these cuts are scheduled to start on Feb. 1. We urge Oregonians to contact your legislators to say how you feel about these distressing cuts and to urge them to solve the stat's bud­ get problem s before these cuts become a reality. We must do some­ thing before it is too late. We are not the little boy crying wolf. These dire predictions are true. Not a single county will be spared the impact o f these catastrophic cuts. For example, in Multnomah County 3,976 seniors and people with disabilities who need helpevery single day will be eliminated from Don Butsch is chair o f the services. This equals 53 percent of Governor's Commission on Senior die Department of Human Services’ Services, a 21-memberofficialad­ current senior and disabled clients visory body on senior issues. Subscribe!,, .. Fill out. Clip out & Send to: Portlanh (Observer Attn: Subscriptions PO Box 3137, Portland OR 97208 s u b s c r ip t i o n s a rc j u s t $ 6 0 p e r y e a r (please include check with this subscription form) N ame : . A ddress : T elephone : . EDITORIALS for the Portland Observer? Do you have an opinion on current events that hasn't been discussed In other newspapers? If so, the Portland Observer editorial s ta ff would like to know. Please fill our this form and attach a brief description of your editorial so we can con tact you. Title, Author & Outline of Editorial: Support Wyden-Hatch Health Care Act Setting health care priorities and mandating a vote makes sense The American Association of Retired Persons, the AFL-CIO and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce support the Health Care that Works for All Americans Act, written by Senators Ron Wyden, D-Ore. and Orrin Hatch, R-Utah. The W yden-H atch proposal calls for a national discussion of health care priorities and mandates a Congressional vote on health care legislation that springs from the recommendations of the American people. In accepting the endorsement, Wyden said, “After years of health care reform proposals from Wash­ ington, D.C. that die without Con­ gressional action, it’s time for a fresh approach to creating a health care system that can serve all Americans. By providing the public an opportu­ nity to participate, with a guarantee that it will be quickly followed up by Congressional votes. Congress can break the gridlock. The Chamber, the AFL-CIO and AARP are an extraor­ dinary coalition that has come to­ gether to support this unique, care­ fully structured roadmap to real re­ form.” The Health Care that Works for All Americans Act is designed to help the citizens o f this country face the realities o f the health care system and improve it by allowing regular Americans to discuss the kind of health care system they want, decide the best ways to con­ tain cost and improve care and re­ quire Congress to deliver a plan that works for everyone. AARP, AFL-CIO and the U.S. Chamber noted the proposal ’ s two main com ­ ponents - public participation and a guaranteed vote in Congress - in their statement of support. After the American people have had the opportunity to participate directly in this process and the working group [established by the Act | has compiled its recommenda­ tions, the W yden-Hatch bill pro­ vides a guarantee that Congress will consider the proposals. The United States spends ap­ proximately 15 percent o f its gross domestic product on health care. This country spent $ 1.4 trillion on health care in the year 2001 - a 10 percent increase from the previous year. Health insurance costs have risen sharply, making health cover­ age harder to get and harder to keep for millions of Americans. The Wyden-Hatch proposal is built around the idea that the ques­ tions o f what constitutes effective health care and how that care should be financed should not be avoided any longer. “I believe that at the end o f the day, only the citizens o f this coun­ try can make the fundam ental choices that affect their health and their well-being - and health and well- being of the society in which they live,” said Wyden. “What Senator Hatch and I want to guar­ antee is that their voices will be heard - and that this Congress will act, with a mandatory vote in both houses - to make the people’s vi­ sion for health care come to pass.” N a m e :________________________________________ _________ P h o n e :_________________________________ __ Send your response to: The Portland Observer Editorial Staff, 4747 NE MLK Jr. Blvd., Portland, Or. 97211 or fax 503-288-0015. Submissions can be made by emailing news@portlandobserver.com p e n can Dream o fF 18th Annual Keep Living The Dream Tribute To: Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. better to the (Scditop The Truth about PERS The Oregonian is on a crusade, working with the business com mu­ nity, to destroy the PERS system. The public needs a place to see the truths about the importance of this basically sound system that al­ lows older workers to retire. PERS makes a decent life possible for many older people of color and women since civil service protections against discrimination allows more to suc­ ceed in a career in public service. The PERS shortfall is being used by public employers and corporate heads to shout “The sky is falling.” What they should be saying is that the system is funded securely for years to come. There is a future shortfall that needs to be dealt with. But those who always want to get their hands on working people’s money are heating a drum about future short­ falls o f $57 billion that may be due to a com puter glitch because the experts can't explain the result. The actual future shortfall is due. 4 in addition to a bull market, to Mea­ sure 5, which cut corporate taxes. Before the 1990 measure, taxes were split 50-50 between working people and corporations. In 2002, accord­ ing to the Legislative Revenue Of­ fice, the split is now an outrageous 70 percent burden for workers and 30 percent for big business. This is a question o f trying to rob public employees pockets to make up for corporate grand theft. The shortfalls in schools and public services are not due to PERS, but to the woefully inadequate taxes that big business pays. We need to raise corporate taxes to fully fund our public services and begin a retirement system for all Oregonians. I'd like to see The Oregonian and other media get behind an issue that really serves Oregonians and not just a few busi­ ness types like the Cascade Policy Institute big business think tank. A d rie n n e W e lle r, N o rth Portland U n iv e rs ity O f P o r tla n d ’s “C h ile s C e n t e r ” 5 0 0 0 N o rth W illa m e tte Blvd. M o n d a y , J a n u a ry 2 0 , 2 0 0 3 1 2 :0 0 P .M . - 6 : 3 0 P .M . Live Broadcast/Simulcast Portland Cable Access, Television Services (PPS) KBOO 90.7 FM Donation: $2.00 OR 3 cans of non-perishable food For More Information Please Call (503) 816-9001 A Production of World Arts Foundation, Inc. Sponsored by: Portland Public Schools • Oregon Education Association • SAFECO Corporation Portland Association of Teachers • Portland Parks and Recreation • Enterprise Rent-A-Car • University of Portland