îlie ^ortlanÖ ©bserucr Page A4 O pinion lune IO, 2009 Opinion articles do not necessarily represent the views o f the Portland Observer. We welcome reader essays, photos and story ideas. Submit to news@ portlandobserver.com. Health Insurance Lets Kids Down But her father m ade $260 a m o n th ab o v e th e lim it th a t w ould en ab le K atie an d her o ld e r brother, N ath an , 7, to qualify for CHIP. Mr. H ebert is a reliable w o rk e r w h o h a s by M arian W right E delman K atie Hebert, age 4, is a very helped m aintain the sick little girl. She gets severe c o m p u te r s fo r a seizure-like attacks that can last banking system in 11 hours from an undiagnosed P a s a d e n a , T e x a s, neuro-developm ental disorder. over the last six years. He re­ She is deaf in one ear, has a quested a voluntary pay cut in feeding disorder and requires an already m odest incom e so daily m edication for asthma. In his children could get in su r­ h er sh o rt life, she has been ance, but his em ployer didn't re­ rushed to the em ergency room spond. The fam ily eventually spent six times and hospitalized twice. H er h ea lth w as put at even dow n its incom e by paying for greater risk when she lost her unnecessary child care to be­ health coverage-w hich meant com e financially elig ib le for no more regular doctor visits, CHIP. That w asn't the end o f it, w eek ly th erap y o r atten tio n however. W hen Katie's dad got an au­ from specialists. To deal with this crisis, Katie's tom atic three percent cost o f father tried to buy private in­ living raise in D ecem ber, the surance, but he couldn't afford family's income once again ex ­ the roughly $1,000 a m onth, ceeded the CH IP limit, this time about 30 percent o f his salary, by $20.54 a month. D uring the to pay for the plan offered by p e rio d th a t h e r fa th e r w en t his em ployer. A nd even if he through the process o f having could have afforded the insur­ his wages low ered, Katie was ance, it would not have covered without health coverage-again. Katie is one o f m illions o f all of K atie's needs. On top of children in working families who th a t, o th e r p riv a te in su re rs face im possible barriers to ob­ would not accept Katie in their ta in in g h ea lth co v e rag e im ­ program s because o f her pre­ posed by insurance com panies existing conditions. The only alternative was the that make enorm ous profits and Texas Children's Health Insur­ pay their CEO s and top m anag­ ers fat com pensation packages. ance Program (CHIP). Knock down the barriers with a public plan They have the pow er to d e­ cide who gets coverage, w hat medical treatment they'll pay for, and they set the prices for c o v ­ erage. The premiums these com panies charge and the restrictio n s they im pose are m ajor reasons why 46 million Americans are with­ out health insurance to ­ day-including nine million many moderate- and m iddle-in­ come families. T he average annual fam ily insurance premium in 2008 was m ore than $1 2 ,5 0 0 o r above $ 1,000 each month. Since 2001, the cost o f family coverage from an em ployer clim bed by almost 80 percent, com pared with only a 24 percent rise in workers' eam ings. Congress must establish a strong public health insurance plan if we are to give families choices and foster competition in the private health insurance market. children. Insurance com panies' m as­ sive profits and outsized execu­ tive salaries are largely m ade possible by soaring prem ium s, high deductibles and rising co ­ pays that put private health in­ surance b eyond the reach o f U ninsured and underinsured Am ericans have had to bear the financial burden o f high m edi­ cal costs. About h alf the people in the United States with homes in foreclosure and a large por­ tion o f those w ho have filed for bankruptcy have nam ed m edi­ plan if we are to give families cal expenses as a cause. There are a variety o f ways choices and foster com petition in su ra n c e c o m p a n ie s b o o st in the private health insurance th e ir p ro fits w h ile lim itin g m arket that will bring escalat­ p ayouts to co v e r h ealth care ing costs down. W hy sh o u ld w e co n tin u e to costs for people they insure. They routinely deny coverage let ch ild ren fall into e ith er the to people like Katie with pre­ ch asm o f p ro fit-d riv e n h ealth ex istin g m ed ical co n d itio n s. in s u r a n c e c o m p a n ie s -s o m e They also refuse to cover those pay th e ir C E O s betw een $10 they think will becom e ill in the and $30 m illio n an n u ally - or future. In these cases, the cost in c o m e -re stric tiv e M ed icaid o f treatm ent may com e to tens and C H IP p ro g ram s th at are o f th o u sa n d s o f d o lla rs that d if fe r e n t in e a c h o f th e 50 m ust be bom e by the fam ily as s ta te s ? C h ild ren n eed u rgent help o u t-o f pocket expenses. Indi­ vidual health insurance policies and all o f us m ust act now to bought by people w ho are self- en su re that all children have e m p lo y e d o r n o t c o v e re d access to affordable, com pre­ th ro u g h th e ir e m p lo y e r are hensive health coverage, w her­ am ong the m ost expensive and ever they live in w hatever fam ­ frequently the m ost restrictive. ily. O ur fragm ented system o f All these restrictio n s harm h e a lth c o v e ra g e a llo w s to o policy holders and increase the m any o f them to go without the bottom line o f insurance com ­ c ritic a l h e a lth se rv ic es th ey p an ies w h ile d e c re a sin g the need. G o d d id n o t c r e a te tw o choices o f fam ilies that w ork hard and play by the rules. U n­ classes of children. O ur children fortunately they nev er get to sim ply can't w ait any longer. feel secure that their children Let's m ake sure C ongress hears will have health coverage from this from us. M arian W right E delm an is one year to the next. C o n g ress m ust estab lish a presiden t o f the Children's D e­ strong public health insurance fe n se Fund. MNMNNMSWMMMMRmMmMM When Mrs. 0 Touched the Queen by M ichael H udson N ew s item: The First Lady touched Queen Elizabeth. W hat does this mean ? Is it a signal that W estern C iviliza­ tion will soon collapse and that the world is doom ed? M ethinks, no. It w asn 't mean It w asn’t obscene It w as actually quite serene W hen Mrs. O touched the queen. Mrs. O C om pared to Jackie O Topping the fashion and beauty scene She looked so elegant she looked so lean W hen Mrs. O touched the queen H er Icon husband takes his place King dream ed when Am erica would ignore race In 2009 to truth from a 60s dream W hen Mrs. O touched the queen Tw o Young children now grace the white house lawn No more sneaking fake ids in the A ustin Daw n W ith joy Am erica starts to scream W hen Mrs. O touched the queen A Supreme Nominee Just yesterday Ms. Parks took her seat W hy couldn’t a black w om an ju st rest her feet N ow All A m erica could finally sing W hen Mrs. O touched the queen Sonya Sotomayor is just what the court needs The netw orks send their greatest teams The W hite H ouse press corps bursting at the seams Yes, it seem ed to be quite a scene But it w as only fulfillm ent o f the 60s dream W hen Mrs. O touched the queen. by M ichael H udson is a labor relations specialist in Los A n g e­ les a nd a regular contributor to the Portland Observer. J udge G reg M athis P resid en t O bam a has nom inated Judge Sonya S o to m a y o r to th e S u ­ prem e C ourt is a surpris- Chiropractic Auto Injury Clinic, PC Zchon R. Jones, DC 333 NE Russell St., #200, Portland, OR. 97212 (503) 284-7838 Truly making a difference in the lives of Auto Accident victims and Injured W orkers for 16 years. If you or someone you know has been in an accident, call us so we can help you with your needs. (503) 284-7838 We are located on the com er o f MLK and Russell Street, on the second floor above the coffee shop. W Paikuia Arm JJJNE FbiMdl «200 R usull St a ing - and inspirational - selec­ tion. If co n firm ed by C ongress, Sotom ayor w ould be the sec­ ond w om an on the S uprem e Court and the third w om an ever p ic k e d fo r th e jo b . She would also be the first Latina in the po­ sition. S in c e th e an­ n o u n cem en t, m edia pundits and politicos have d iscu ssed S o to m a y o r’s background and wha, role it will play in her decision making. Her ap p o in tm en t to the S uprem e Sotom ayor excelled academ i­ c a lly an d e v e n tu a lly w on a scholarship to Princeton U ni­ versity. She then w ent on to study at Yale Law School. T he ju d g e ’s back g ro u n d is not m uch d iffe ren t from the president’s: being raised by a single m other in less than ideal circum stances, rising above all obstacles and w orking hard to achieve academ ic and career goals. O bam a's real-life upbringing, aw ay from the country clubs an d p rep sc h o o ls th a t m o st politicians are accustom ed to, The country needs a justice who understands exactly how the average American lives. C o u rt w o u ld be a b rea th o f fresh air to A m erica's judicial sy stem ; the co u n try n eeds a ju s tic e w ho u n d ersta n d s e x ­ actly how the average A m eri­ can lives. Judge Sotom ayor was raised by her Puerto Rican fam ily in a public housing project in the South Bronx in New York. Her father, a factory w orker with only a third-grade education, died w hen she w as ju s t nine years old, leaving her mother, a nurse w ho worked six days a w eek, to raise her. D espite her family struggles. is one o f the reasons he con­ nected so well w ith the A m eri­ can public. M any believed he u n d e r s to o d th e m , th e ir struggles and their desires. It is Sotomayor’s similar back­ gro u n d that w ill provide her with the sensitivity and em pa­ thy needed to serve as a Su­ prem e Court Justice. She will bring to the court both an aca­ dem ic and real-w orld u n d er­ standing o f the issues the court votes on, not ju st ivory tow er intellectual thought that rarely finds its w ay to the average man or w oman on the street. T he ju d g e ’s rulings on low er courts are a strong indication that she will w ork to maintain civil rights gains m ade over the la s t s e v e ra l decad es. Sotom ayor ruled against white firefighters from New Haven, Conn, who claim ed reverse dis­ crim ination when they were not prom oted after possible race- based irregularities with a re­ q u ired test w ere d isco v ered ; prom otions for all fire fighters, black or white, were put on hold w hile the city investigates. The case is currently in front o f the Suprem e Court. S o to m a y o r’s a p p o in tm e n t also brings the court one step c lo se r to re fle c tin g the w ay A m e ric a a c tu a lly lo o k s. W omen make up over half o f th e U .S . p o p u la tio n w h ile Latinos com prise about 14-per- cent o f the A m erican people. C u rren tly the court only has one w om an and one A frican A m eric an am o n g its ran k s. S o to m ay o r's selection brings diversity to a ruling body that is dom inated by w hite men. If confirm ed, Sotom ayor will bring more federal judicial ex ­ perience to the court than any justice in 100 years. Her resume show s a true co m m itm ent to justice. She is exactly who the court has been waiting for. Ju d g e G reg M athis is vice p re sid e n t o f R a in b o w P U SH a n d a b o a rd m em b er o f the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. I