Pamela Julian

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Healthcare NOT Warfare: Co-chair Donna Smith to appear on Bill Moyers Journal

Tuesday, May 26, 2009 – 7:36 pm

WATCH Bill Moyers Journal this Friday, May 22, at 9 p.m. EDT on PBS (check local listings).

Bill Moyers speaks with PDA Heathcare NOT Warfare co-chair Donna Smith about how our broken system is hurting ordinary Americans. Then, policy analysts and physicians Sidney Wolfe of Public Citizen and David Himmelstein of Physicians for a National Health Program join Bill Moyers for a frank discussion about the political and logistical feasibility of a single-payer system amidst the troubled economy and a government dominated by lobbyists.

By Pamela Julian | Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments

Richard Dreyfuss on Civic Education

Tuesday, March 24, 2009 – 6:17 pm

Read the Original Article

By Pamela Julian | Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Election Day

Tuesday, November 4, 2008 – 9:28 am

Subject: Hope to see you at the polls today and at the Election Night; Party 8am-10:00pm Please Vote Yes on 4! Health Care is your Right!

Dear Neighbors and Friends,

Presidential Candidate Barack Obama is expected to win today. Let’s celebrate this historic achievement together in Brookline at the Holiday Inn on Beacon Street 8am and at the Fairmount Copley Plaza Hotel in Boston.

I know you will vote today and make sure everyone you know votes too. Join me at the polls today if you can.

Today, I will volunteer at the polls to help support Single Payer Health Care (Question 4 on the ballot).  Join us at the polls in West Roxbury, Brookline  and Roslindale. Encourage your neighbors, friends and co-workers to support single payer healthcare by voting Yes today on question 4.

Please see Mass Care Co-Chair Pat Berger’s Tab editorial on my website pamelajulian.com for more details about the bill or visit masscare.org. Pat’s contact info:  617-566-6847, email: patberger@yahoo.com.

After the election, lets work together to continue what we started in September. Sign onto pamelajulian.com today! Organize your community, host a listening party, make a donation.

Let’s work together to establish the 10th Suffolk District Board. By working together we will identify and solve problems in the district and beyond. And improve communication with our state and federal legislators.

We can make progressive changes in Massachusetts and end discrimination of all kinds, if we work together we will win!

On to Victory!

Pam

Party Tonight:

Election Night Party, Tuesday, November 4
Sponsored by the Brookline Delegation:
Congressman Barney Frank, State Senator Cynthia Creem, State
Representatives Frank Smizik, Michael Rush, Michael Moran, and Jeffrey Sanchez

8:00 - 10:00 p.m.
Brookline Holiday Inn, 1200 Beacon Street
Special Guest: Congressman Barney Frank  (Joining us on the early side of the event)

Refreshments Served (for hungry campaign workers)
Cash Bar
Share the fun of watching the election returns with your fellow Brookline Democrats.
After stopping into the Brookline Party, hop on the T and go downtown to the Massachusetts Coordinated Campaign Party with Senator John Kerry at the Fairmount Copley Plaza Hotel

By Pamela Julian | Posted in Election, Voting | No Comments
Tags: Campaign, Election, health care, Question 4

Eliminating income tax ‘reckless’

Tuesday, October 21, 2008 – 8:50 pm

By Shaari S. Mittel, League of Women Voters of Brookline
Brookline Tab -

The League of Women Voters of Brookline urges citizens to vote NO Nov. 4 on Ballot Question 1 — a proposed law to eliminate the state income tax as of January 2009. This is a reckless proposal that would cut $12 billion from the state’s tax base, or 40 percent of the state’s $27 billion budget.

Twelve billion dollars less in state funding for public works projects, public safety, school budgets and other state services, such as Medicaid, will have dire consequences in our communities. Cutting state aid to cities and towns will force municipal governments to roll back services and seek overrides, increasing the property tax to maintain basic services.

Public safety will be at risk with fewer police officers, firefighters and ambulance crews. Residents can expect longer waits for response to 911 calls, and to have streets cleared of snow and ice.

Education cuts will lead to larger class sizes and fewer academic and extracurricular opportunities for all students. More fees will be imposed by local school districts for transportation, field trips, athletics and other extracurricular activities.

Infrastructure will deteriorate further with less money for roads, bridges and public transportation systems. This means more crumbling roadways, potholes and repair bills for drivers, and a greater risk of train derailments and unsafe bridges.

Reducing or eliminating dollars for healthcare services will negatively impact our senior citizens, working families and people with disabilities. Federal Medicare matching funds will be lost if the state does not contribute its share.

Proponents of the law claim taxpayers would save money, state spending would be trimmed and jobs will be created. State spending funds our schools, our roads and bridges, our public safety, and helps the most vulnerable people in our communities with necessary services.

The League of Women Voters of Brookline considers Question 1 a reckless proposal that could increase local property taxes, cause sweeping cuts in education, cripple our public safety departments and speed the deterioration of our infrastructure. We encourage all voters to VOTE NO on Question 1 in the interest of preserving vital services for the citizens of Massachusetts.

www.brooklinewickedlocal.com

By Pamela Julian | Posted in Issues | No Comments
Tags: Issues, press

Opinion: Say ‘yes’ to single-payer health care reform

Tuesday, October 21, 2008 – 8:47 pm

By Pat Berger/guest columnist
Wed Oct 15, 2008
Brookline Tab -

Voters in Precincts 14, 15 and 16 in Brookline (Michael Rush’s district) will have the opportunity to vote on a non-binding ballot question on Nov. 4. The ballot question was initiated by Mass-Care, the organization that sponsors the campaign for single-payer health care reform in Massachusetts.

The wording of the ballot question is: “Shall the representative from this district be instructed (1) to support legislation that establishes health care as a human right regardless of age, state of health or employment status, by creating a single payer health insurance system that is comprehensive, cost effective, and publicly provided to all residents of Massachusetts, and (2) to oppose any laws penalizing the uninsured for failing to obtain health insurance.”

Voters may wonder why they should vote YES on the Nov. 4 ballot question that asks support for a universal single-payer health care system. Don’t we have universal health care now? Didn’t we pass a new law in 2006 that gives everyone health insurance coverage?

The fact is that we don’t have universal coverage now. More than 400,000 people have signed up for subsidized and non-subsidized health insurance plans, but there are still around 300,000 uninsured who haven’t bought private commercial insurance policies, largely because the premiums and out-of-pocket expenses are not affordable. Even residents with “good” employer-based private health insurance are vulnerable to crushing medical debt, whether from serious illness or economic problems, if they lose their jobs. Only a single-payer system guarantees health care for all Massachusetts’ residents, continuously.

Our present law was designed to cover the uninsured by having the state subsidize the health care premiums for families earning below 300 percent of the Federal Poverty Level, and helping people in higher income brackets find “affordable” insurance through the Connector. Many other states, including Tennessee, Vermont, Washington, Oregon, California and Hawaii, have tried similar plans in the past. But all of these plans have failed in the long term, because the annual 10 percent to 15 percent escalation of health insurance premiums have made the subsidies unaffordable for the state.

The basic problem with the new law is that it leaves the health insurance industry (with its profit motive) in control of our health care system. The insurers set the premiums for their “products;” health insurance premiums are not set by the state. Furthermore, the insurance industry wastes 20 percent to 30 percent of the health care dollar on high CEO salaries, administrative waste, marketing, underwriting and an endless round of claims denials. In the spring of 2008, the 12 percent to 15 percent hike in proposed health insurance premiums prompted the state’s Connector to protest and demand that the insurance companies find a way to lower their premiums. The insurers came back with a 7 percent to 8 percent rise in premiums, but shifted the costs to patients by raising co-pays and deductibles, and reducing benefits. As Dr. Marcia Angell, former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, said, “The health insurers try to keep premiums down and profits up by stinting on medical services. We are the only nation in the world with a health care system based on dodging sick people.”

What we all want is easy access to affordable, high-quality medical care, and regular preventative care that promotes good health and gives us a full choice of providers. We want our health care system to be sustainable in the long term, and be equitable so that access to medical care is not based on race, ability to pay, gender, religion or sexual orientation, but is based on medical need. We want patient care to be the focus of health care reform.

We oppose the punitive individual mandate in our present law, which fines the most vulnerable residents for not purchasing health insurance. We need to support single-payer health care reform!

www.brooklinewickedlocal.com

By Pamela Julian | Posted in Issues | No Comments
Tags: Brookline Tab, Issues, press
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  • Michael Durickas, a graduate of Mass Bay Community College, the University of Massachusetts and is currently a graduate student at the London School of Economics
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    • Healthcare NOT Warfare: Co-chair Donna Smith to appear on Bill Moyers Journal
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    • Opinion: Say ‘yes’ to single-payer health care reform
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