Showing posts with label Biden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Biden. Show all posts

May 19, 2023

Two easy actions to protect food assistance

 There are a lot of scary things about the debt ceiling/hostage crisis in Washington, but the scariest to me at the moment is the prospect of millions of people being kicked off SNAP food assistance in order to pay for tax cuts for rich people. 

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office has estimated that if work reporting requirements (that don't promote work) are implemented along the lines of the Retch, Croak and Die Act  Limit, Save, and Grow Act, 275,000 people per month could lose benefits. That would be devastating not only to those directly impacted but also to local charities, businesses and communities.

There are two easy actions you can take to try to ward this off. First, the American Friends Service Committee has prepared this easy to use action alert targeting both houses of congress that can be used by anyone in the US. If you're in West Virginia and want to just message Senators Manchin and Capito, here's a link provided by the West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy. 

Why not shoot the moon and do both? I cannot guarantee that doing this will guarantee a fortunate rebirth in the Pure Land of Amida Buddha, but it's couldn't hurt.



January 22, 2021

Long strange trip

 I've been wracking my brain trying to think of what to say about the events of the week and the years that went before it. For most of the fall, I've been very concerned about the possibility of a coup, quasi-legal or otherwise. I'm still wondering what kinds of violent stunts white nationalist groups may unroll and what other long term damage has been done to the democratic process, imperfect as it is. 

I'm hoping that the nation's flirtation with fascism or at least authoritarianism is at least waning.

Aside from issues of authoritarianism, the last four years have involved a lot of defensive fights, mostly revolving around health care (food security too, but that's another story). If there's been a central theme of my nearly 32 years at AFSC, health care would be it.

My first big fight was the Pittston strike, which was mostly about retiree health and pension benefits. These were also factors in the 1990 teachers' strike and the 1990-92 Ravenswood lockout. Ditto the fights about "reforming" workers compensation that lasted for a decade between the mid 1990s and 2000s. 

The coming of welfare "reform" in 1996 started another decade or so of sporadic fights related to Medicaid. These included issues like transitional coverage for people leaving cash assistance, the possibility of block grants, waivers and such. 

Then came efforts to get the state to implement the federal Children's Health Insurance Program in 1998 and then to expand eligibility for it, eventually up to 300 percent of the federal poverty level by 2011. My late co-worker Carol Sharlip was a major player in building support for this in the early years.

In 2009-2010 came the push to enact what eventually became the Affordable Care Act. I remember going to public hearings around the state and witnessing the WV version of the birth of the white backlash and the Tea Party. These included paranoid ravings about the World Health Organization taking over and someone heckling a priest during an opening prayer. And, yes, people who wanted to keep the government's tentacles off Medicare. There were street actions, press conversations, calls, emails, op-eds, bus trips to DC, and all that. Then lots of outreach and education when it passed.

(There were some serious debates within AFSC about whether to sign on in support of the bill. Some didn't think it was good enough. I may or may not have stopped talking with some people after that.)

The version we got was the Senate's rather than the more generous House version in March 2010. Here's a blog post I wrote about it at the time. Then the 2012 US Supreme Court decision which let it stand but made Medicaid expansion--the real public option--a state decision. The biggest social justice victory of my lifetime was then-Governor Tomblin's decision to expand it. Here's a report we published in an effort to nudge the governor in 2013. My retired colleague Beth Spence did the interviews and photography.

I would never have guessed the state would do such a great job at enrolling people. At it's peak around the time of the 2016 election, the expansion covered nearly 180,000 West Virginians (after four years of assaults by the Trump administration, I think enrollment is around 160,000 now). The new president, aided by WV's attorney general, promised to do away with the whole ACA as soon as he came into office.

It was an all-hands-on-deck moment. Health advocates scrambled to the defense. My co-worker Lida Shepherd and I worked with Cabin Creek Health Systems to interview people covered by the ACA and publish the results and generate other media, including a widely seen video report in the New York Times. Given that WV has been ground zero for the opioid epidemic, protecting the ACA, which opened up recovery to thousands, was critical.

We worked with allies to do all the usual stuff. Some friends of ours, nicknamed "the Capito six," were arrested for sitting in at the WV Republican senator's Charleston office. I remember protesting outside WV's giant Boy Scout center when the President spoke. People put lots of effort into bolstering Senator Manchin's support for the ACA. He eventually came around to a "fix, don't nix" position. In a closely divided Senate, WV was in a critical spot, with a conservative Democrat and fairly moderate Republican. People hit it with all they had.

The critical moment came in July 2017 when a dying John McCain cast a deciding vote after returning from hospital treatment for brain cancer, basically saving the day. Here's a post on that occasion that includes his eloquent statement.

After a pause to catch our breath, WV health care advocates turned next to fight off bad state legislation regarding work reporting requirements for Medicaid expansion that would have kicked tens of thousands of low income West Virginians off the program in 2019 and 2020. I'm hoping that COVID-19 has shown this to be a Really Bad Idea.

By the time of the 2020 election, the ACA was battered but still afloat, although it wasn't clear if it could survive another four years of federal assaults. Then there was the added wrinkle of the US Supreme Court taking up another repeal attempt with three Trump appointees. The decision is expected as soon as this spring, but early deliberations seem promising.

So I guess this is another catch the breath moment. We're still far from universal care, but it's been a long hard fight to get as far as we have. I'm grateful to the many friends who have been in the fight from the beginning. Like the ACA, we're battered but still around.


November 07, 2020

Thinking ahead

 Well THAT was interesting. I'm hoping today's results will signify the end or at least the beginning of the end of America's latest dark journey, although I think we're not out of the woods yet.

I've been thinking a lot about my walk across Spain two years ago on the Camino de Santiago. More than once I passed through what were mass graves of people like me who were murdered by Franco's fascists during the Spanish civil war of the 1930s. For the last few years, I kept reminding myself that many admirable nations had gone on journeys as bad and much worse than ours but eventually emerged.

Still there's a lot to watch out for. Lot's of people, including myself and colleagues with the American Friends Service Committee, have been thinking about worst case election related scenarios, up to and  including the possibility of a coup. We of course are willing to accept an outcome that accepted all votes but were worried about other irregularities that might threaten the integrity of the eleciton, such as voter suppression and/or intimidation.

Assuming the constitutional anchor holds, the next big fight starts next week, when the freshly stacked deck of the US Supreme Court will consider taking away the health care of millions of Americans, to the delight of West Virginia's attorney general Patrick Morrisey.  There are any number of scenarios there.

Keeping that assumption, we might be in for gridlock in Congress but will at least be spared an American approximation of authoritarianism. 

West Virginia is going to be weird in any case. But, as my late friend and WV poet Norman Jordan, who with his wife Brucella operated an African American heritage museum in his home town of Ansted for years, wrote in a funny poem, I guess you can't have everything.

On the positive side, and assuming no funny stuff, we're going to see the end of a federal department of education, led by someone who never attended any institute of public education, trying to sabotage it. We're going to see the end of administrative policies aimed at taking away food assistance of millions of low income Americans and public school students. 

Assuming parts of the Affordable Care Act remain, we're likely to see the end of federal policies encouraging states to impose bogus work reporting requirements designed to deprive people of health care. We might at least see some harm reduction on the climate change front.

There's still so much to do. Many people with whom we disagree were our friends and allies not so many years ago. The country is still tragically divided. Even with a peaceful transition, many of the policies some of us hope to see will be blocked  until that is changed.

But I'll think about that tomorrow.