Connecticut

Post posts about what is happening in the State of Connecticut.

News Briefs, Connecticut and Beyond

Life keeps on ebbing and flowing, even if you are on vacation. Over the past week, most of my blog posts have been pictures or brief comments from my family’s vacation on Cape Cod. The town of Truro celebrated its 300th birthday. Fiona played with new friends at the campground and at the beach and found time to visit with her cousins also staying on Cape Cod. We had ice cream with an old friend from online social media that we had yet to meet face to face.

Yet while I was there, the ebb and flow of life continued. Walter Cronkite died. Frank McCourt died. Friends attended wakes and funerals for their loved ones. Jen Just reflected on the passing of her ex-husband five years ago, and people thinking about the moonwalk considered Neil Armstrong instead of Michael Jackson. “The Eagle has landed… one giant leap for mankind”.

Healthcare in Connecticut

Yesterday, the Connecticut General Assembly convened to override Gov. Rell’s vetoes of many bills. Leading the list was SustiNet. I don’t know the exact details of the bill. How does it relate to the ‘public option’ that is being considered in Washington? Is it a prototype or framework for this public option? When can people start participating in SustiNet? What will be the mechanism for municipalities to participate and how will that relate to existing contracts that municipalities currently have with workers? What will it cost for a small business to participate?

Some criticize SustiNet and the national public option as not going far enough. They want to see a real public option based on single-payer plans. Public healthcare should be like public schools or public libraries, some argue. You shouldn’t need to do anything other than perhaps prove you are a resident to get to use the schools, the libraries, the roads, or the health care system.

Others have said that it will cost too much, but they seem to overlook many costs that are currently passed on to citizens, like to cost of health care provided to municipal employees and paid for by property taxes.

Meanwhile, healthcare lobbyists fight against a public option the way auto industry lobbyists fought against higher CAFE standards. Yet while some automobile manufacturers were fighting these standards, Toyota spent time working on a hybrid car that would exceed these standards and through this became the world’s leading automobile manufacturer. Yes, the electric vehicle purists complained that hybrids weren’t the electric vehicles they believe we really need, but now as we move towards new generations of plug-in hybrids, they are becoming closer and closer to what the electric vehicle enthusiasts dream of. Let us hope that some in the insurance industry will show similar foresight as Toyota did.

Other Vetoes Overridden

Half a dozen other Vetoes were overridden yesterday by the Connecticut General Assembly, tying the number of vetoes overridden in 1992 and falling two short of the 9 vetoes overridden in 1974. The CT News Wire was busy with Stamford Mayor Dan Malloy sending out press releases congratulating the General Assembly on their work and taking yet another opportunity to point out Gov. Rell’s inadequacies. These were joined by press releases from the Senate Democrats and the General Assembly.

Milford Politics

Meanwhile, in Milford, Tim Chaucer announced his intentions to seek the Democratic Nomination for Mayor. He joins Genevieve Salvatore who announced her candidacy sometime ago and already has a strong campaign up and running. (Full disclosure: I am helping with Ms. Salvatore’s campaign). The nominating convention is Wednesday evening. Mr. Chaucer recognizes that he has an uphill battle and won’t rule out a primary. Ms. Salvatore and Mr. Chaucer are joined by Peter Spalthoff who is running as an Independent party candidate and there had been rumors of a possible Republican primary as well.

The Death Penalty

Also, while I was on vacation, Connecticut added an eleventh person to death row. After four days of deliberation, the jury in the Richard Roszkowski found that he should face the death penalty. Meanwhile the The Connecticut Network to Abolish the Death Penalty (CNADP) has set September 24 as their Abolition Day with a rally scheduled for the Capitol’s North Lawn.

Jury Duty

For me, I will do my civic duty today and report for Jury Duty. I have mixed feelings about this. I feel that Jury Duty is an important civic responsibility, much like voting. On the other hand as a freelancer who has no earnings while sitting on a jury, this presents a financial hardship. I hope to get at least a few messages out from Jury Duty while I wait to be called, and perhaps even to get some important phone calls and writing done.

Then, when this civic duty is completed, I will be heading off to five days of camping and folk music at Falcon Ridge Folk Festival

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Week in Review, a Personal Perspective

Between celebrating my fiftieth birthday and preparing for vacation, a lot of other things have gone on in the world that deserve noting.

Iran

#iranelection is still a trending topic on Twitter, although it doesn’t consistently hold the top position the way it did for the first several days after the election. My birthday, July 9th, or 18 Tir in the Persian calendar is the tenth anniversary of the brutal suppression of student led demonstrations in Tehran. The Tehran Bureau has a good background piece on the significance of 18 Tir. This year, thousand of Iranians poured into the street, partly in remembrance of ten years ago, and partly in remembrance of a few weeks ago. Time Magazine and The New York Times provide a traditional media view of the events and The Green Brief #23 and Revolutionary Road provide more raw details of what people are seeing on the street.

Efforts to keep these sources available as the Iranian government refines its filters to limit communications continue to evolve. A Google mailing list entitled the Student Information Center provide Farsi and English details of what is going on. Austin Heap who has done so much in terms of helping with proxy servers is working on a new project called Haystack. For more details read “Haystack,” Program Providing Unfiltered Internet Access in Iran to be Released.

When I get back from vacation, I’ll follow up with Austin about providing servers and bandwidth for Haystack. Until then, I’ll keep TOR up and running as much as I can.

I also read in the blog of a Chinese friend that after the Uighurs uprising the Chinese Government has started restricting Internet access more so I’m keeping TOR up for friends in China as well.

Health Care

This week I wrote two blog posts about health care in Connecticut. In The True Cost of Health Care, I look at the large premium increase that Anthem has asked for and note that the are spending some of the premium money on lobbying against providing more health care choices to the people of the United States. This became all the more striking when Gov. Rell vetoed two bills that would have greatly improved health care in Connecticut. I wrote to my State Representative about this and recounted the emails in Continuing the Health Care Debate.

Meanwhile, I read that Bob Massie has just had a liver transplant. Years ago, I went to Grace Church in Manhattan. Bob was an assistant priest at Grace Church who left to study business, ethics and Christianity at Harvard. He has grown up and lived with hemophilia. His parents wrote about book entitled Journey about the experience and later wrote a book about hemophilia in Russia in the book Nicholas and Alexandra.

I encourage everyone to stop and read a little bit of Finding God at Harvard where Bob talks about his experiences. In particular, on page 211, there is a section which talks about a cold remedy which introduced no new medical features and spent a majority of its budget on advertising, and no one objected publicly.

There is something wrong with our medical system, but too few people speak up publicly. Yes, if you are rich or well connected, we have the best medical system in the world. Yet according to the 2009 CIA World Fact book, 45 countries have lower infant mortality rates than the United States, and 49 countries have higher life expectancies at birth than the United States.

Meanwhile, Gov. Rell and some Republican State Legislators are content to take no meaningful action to address healthcare issues in our state.

The Death Penalty

A few weeks ago, I wrote about my experience attending part of the death penalty hearing for Richard Roszkowski. I wanted to make it back to the hearing to see how things were progressing; it was taking much long than people wanted or expected. Well, Wednesday there were the final arguments and the jury is now deliberating on whether or not Roszkowski should become the eleventh person on death row here in Connecticut.

I believe that the death penalty is wrong. What Roszkowski did was horrible. Yet I also believe that the death penalty is horrible. We will see how long the jury deliberates and what decision they reach.

The Rest of Life

Meanwhile, I continue to talk with people struggling with difficulties in their jobs or the loss of loved ones. It has made the week, a week of extremes. I am exhausted and look forward to sitting quietly by the sea for a little while.

I will try to keep posting daily during my vacation, but the posts are more likely to be more about vacation and less about politics, technology and related topics.

More soon.

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Continuing the Health Care Debate

After Gov. Rell vetoed Sustinet, I sent the following email to Rep. Klarides who is the State Representative for the district where I live:

Rep. Klarides,

I was very disappointed to learn that Gov. Rell has vetoed House Bill 6600, An Act Concerning The Establishment of The Sustinet Plan. We need meaningful healthcare reform in our State and in our Country and Gov. Rell’s actions are a grave disservice to our State.

I realize that you have failed to show any leadership in addressing the greave issues of health care in our state as well, but you have an opportunity to redeem yourself.

Please join with the Democrats in overriding this ill thought out veto

To which, I received the following reply:

Dear Aldon:

I understand and share your concerns with the need for affordable health care in the state. However, H.B. 6600, AN ACT CONCERNING THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE SUSTINET PLAN, was vetoed by the Governor because, as stated in her veto message, it is a well-intentioned bill, but ultimately does not resolve the central problems of access and affordability. While this plan on paper may seem effective and efficient, it will cost billions of dollars to implement. In this current economic situation with record budget deficits, unemployment, and business closures, there is no guarantee that the funding necessary to sustain the program over the long-term will be available.

It is important to note that our state has been one of the nation’s leaders in health care coverage. Our uninsured rate was recently reported at just 9% in a 2007 census study. This is a reduction from the 11% uninsured in 2005. I think that the actions we have taken in recent years by expanding outreach on HUSKY (Public Health Insurance for the Uninsured Children) and implementing the Charter Oak plan for uninsured adults has helped keep Connecticut ahead of the rest of the nation in access to health care. Our system may have flaws, but it makes practical sense that any new reforms work with the existing system and future federal reforms to expand coverage to those not fortunate enough to have insurance.

To address the need for affordable health care, the governor has created a new advisory board of health care. Given the fact that Congress is currently looking at making fundamental changes to health care coverage nationwide, it is important to develop a process that will insure that Connecticut is prepared to make the most of the policies established on the federal level as quickly as possible.

While we may not agree on the process, I think we both agree on the need for a health care program that benefits the majority of citizens and is both affordable and accessible while not compromising our difficult economic situation.

Here is my latest reply to her:

Dear Themis,

I have read Governor Rell's veto message, and I believe it is extremely misguided. I firmly believe that the cost of doing nothing, or setting up some advisory board, the way Governor Rell has done with her executive order will actually cost the state much MORE than implementing the Sustinet plan. We already pay for the cost of the uninsured when we visit a hospital that bears the brunt of providing emergency room services to the uninsured and unable to pay. This gets passed on to insurance companies and we pay the cost in increased insurance premiums, such as the increase that Anthem just requested. This gets passed on to local governments and we pay the cost in increased local taxes as local governments provide insurance to their workers. We pay the costs in decreased jobs when small businesses cannot compete because of the costs of trying to provide insurance to their employees.

Yes, Sustinet will cost money to implement. However it will far cost far less than doing nothing, or setting up an ill conceived panel by executive order. Governor Rell and the Republican leadership has been seriously remiss in addressing this issue and our state continues to suffer from this.

Yes, we do disagree with the actions and more importantly, the inactions of Gov. Rell and the Republican leadership. As far as I can tell, the new advisory board is nothing but another bureaucratic boondoggle, an attempt to avoid doing anything until someone else, such as perhaps the U.S. Congress comes along and addresses the issue in a manner that is more acceptable to the insurance companies that are using our money gathered in the form of premiums to lobby Governor Rell and people in Congress. Meanwhile, we all pay too much for too little coverage.

So, again, I ask you to look much more closely at this very important issue. Show some leadership instead of simply echoing empty talking points of Governor Rell.

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The True Cost of Health Care

As politicians line up to bash Anthem on their proposed rate increase of 22 to 30%, perhaps we should look at why they need these rate increases. CTNewsJunkie lists some of the people who have been speaking out about the proposed rate increase; State Health Care Advocate Kevin Lembo, whose office Gov. Rell tried to eliminate sent a letter to the Insurance department last week, urging them to reject the cut.

This week, Sen. Chris Dodd sent a letter to Anthem’s President David Fusco urging him to reconsider the proposed rate increase. Attorney General Richard Blumenthal called on the Insurance Commissioner to reject the increase. Stamford Mayor Dan Malloy chastised Gov. Rell for her silence on the proposed rate increase, and now Representatives Rosa DeLauro and Joe Courtney have sent their letter Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield President David Fusco expressing serious concern about the proposed rate increase.

Yet Anthem needs to increase the money that it takes from those of us that have their coverage so that they can lobby the government to make sure that we are not given any new choices in where we can get our health insurance. According to opensecrets.org they increase their national lobbying from ten million dollars in 2007 to nearly fourteen million dollars in 2008. The forty percent increase in their lobbying expenses is greater than the measly 22 to 30% rate increase they are asking for here in Connecticut.

In addition, Anthem has registered in with the Office of State Ethics in Connecticut to spend $120,000 here for the year of 2009. You could buy a lot of health care for $120,000, or a few hot tubs. That money isn’t coming out of Mr. Fusco’s compensation. It is coming from the premiums that you and I pay them each month.

While some conservatives are concerned about big government taking our money and limiting our health care choices, I’m much more concerned about big businesses like Anthem taking our money to limit our health care choices.

(Originally posted at MyLeftNutmeg.)

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Wordless Wednesday

Not completely. Follow @LastChancePets for more info.



Pitbull Needs a Home, originally uploaded by Aldon.

Every so often I get an email from the Animal Control Officer in Hartford, CT looking for homes for pets that will be put down if no one adopts them within the next day or two. This pup is the latest on the list. Recently, @LastChancePets started tweeting announcements about these pets in need. Please follow them and spread the word.

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