Aliquippa Hospital Workers Still Have Not Been Paid

The following article was posted as a comment to an earlier post about the closing of Commonwealth Medical Center in Aliquippa. It deserves to be at the top of our page. – Randy Shannon

Hi this is Erin Bradovich the dedicated former employee of Commonwealth Medical Center Inc. and I just want to say Merry Christmas to all the other former Employees of CMC that I considered my extended family and miss so much.

There still is no resolution to this scandalous, indecency brought upon us by the greedy former executives of CMC. Even today which is December 18, 2009 I know for a fact that not one single dedicated employee who was let go from that hospital where we all worked so hard to keep open and available to serve the needs of the public, even now 1 year later, still have not received our paychecks that we worked so diligently for. Just ask my family, my mom, my sisters and my neighbors who had to sit with my 3 young daughters while I faithfully worked sometimes mandatory 12-16 hour shifts in the end how much I loved my job.

I really don’t mean to sound regretful, because I really loved my job, and my work there changed my life, but while I was hard at work like all the  other faithful employees striving to serve the community of Aliquippa and their medical needs, my children were at friends and relatives homes while mommy was out EARNING a living and had I known that there was going to be no compensation for the time that I / WE devoted to the employers who have deceived us all, then I would gratefully had been home spending Quality time with my girls, making memories especially at Christmas Time.

Long story short then: CMC you not only robbed me and all of your other former employees of our earned paychecks but you have stolen away precious time i could have shared with my children. How can you sleep at night. Here’s your opportunity to make it right – better late than never huh- all I want THIS Christmas is the paycheck I earned LAST Christmas.

Oh and my New Year’s Resolution is never give up the fight for justice — Slavery was abolished in 1865. My fellow citizens of AMERICA, and to my extended family of former co-workers and friends Stay Strong in these tough economic times I miss you all. Merry Christmas to you, Erin Bradovich and her Family

Sen. Bob Casey Votes against lower cost drugs for Pennsylvanians

Drug Company Pawn Bob Casey and Hospital Lobbyist Jason Altmire

by Randy Shannon

Sen. Bob Casey Votes to keep drug prices high

December 17, 2009

Merry Christmas from Senator Bob Casey! Yesterday the US Senate defeated 51-48 (60 votes to pass) an amendment to allow reimportation of US drugs from certain foreign countries. Senator Casey voted with the drug lobbyists against the people of his state.

Democratic Sen. Dorgan has introduced this bill repeatedly over the years. When the Democrats were in the minority and could not pass the bill, they all voted for it. Now that there are enough votes on both sides of the aisle to pass this bill, key Democrats voted against it.

Continue reading Sen. Bob Casey Votes against lower cost drugs for Pennsylvanians

AFL-CIO Pres. Rich Trumka: The Senate Bill Is ‘Inadequate’

Rich Trumka

Trumka: The Senate Bill Is ‘Inadequate’
Rachel Slajda | December 17, 2009

The president of AFL-CIO, Richard Trumka, said in a press release today that the Senate bill is “inadequate” and promised to fight for something closer to the House bill, which he said is “the model for genuine health care reform.” Here is the full text of the release:

The labor movement has been fighting for health care for nearly 100 years and we are not about to stop fighting now, when it really matters.

But for this health care bill to be worthy of the support of working men and women, substantial changes must be made. The AFL-CIO intends to fight on behalf of all working families to make those changes and win health care reform that is deserving of the name.

Continue reading AFL-CIO Pres. Rich Trumka: The Senate Bill Is ‘Inadequate’

Howard Dean: Current Senate Healthcare Bill is worse than nothing

Howard Dean

Health-care bill wouldn’t bring real reform

by Howard Dean
Thursday, December 17, 2009; A33
The Washington Post

If I were a senator, I would not vote for the current health-care bill. Any measure that expands private insurers’ monopoly over health care and transfers millions of taxpayer dollars to private corporations is not real health-care reform. Real reform would insert competition into insurance markets, force insurers to cut unnecessary administrative expenses and spend health-care dollars caring for people. Real reform would significantly lower costs, improve the delivery of health care and give all Americans a meaningful choice of coverage. The current Senate bill accomplishes none of these.

Continue reading Howard Dean: Current Senate Healthcare Bill is worse than nothing

Altmire’s “Budget Neutral” Healthcare Reform Leaves the Children to the Ruthless Insurance Companies: No More SCHIP

The Next Most Underreported Health Reform Story

What will happen to SCHIP?

By Trudy Lieberman

Columbia Journalism Review

Where are the chips falling, so to speak, when it comes to the popular State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP)? The press ought to be finding out, and fast. Last week, the Children’s Defense Fund sent me an invitation for an informational call discussing SCHIP’s future: “If the Senate doesn’t take a stand for children in the next days or weeks, our worst fears could clearly come to pass.” The dire-sounding invite piqued my interest, especially since I had read in the House bill that SCHIP would be repealed. What was going on?

It turns out that the House indeed wants to repeal the program and require kids to get coverage via the insurance exchange, the government’s soon-to-be gigantic brokerage service. Their parents, of course, would be getting subsidies to help buy coverage, courtesy of the U.S. taxpayer. Rep. John Dingell, a Democrat no less, touted the advantages of dumping SCHIP. One advantage: the program wouldn’t be subject to the periodic and occasionally problematic Congressional reauthorizations that threaten its existence. Dingell said kids could have the same insurance as their parents—an incentive to force parents to cover their kids. (Sometimes parents, daunted by bureaucratic red tape, don’t enroll their children even if they are eligible.)

Continue reading Altmire’s “Budget Neutral” Healthcare Reform Leaves the Children to the Ruthless Insurance Companies: No More SCHIP

Labor Leaders Weigh Senate Health Insurance Reform Bill in Senate

Corporate Enforcer White House Chief Emanuel

Labor Holds Emergency Meetings To Discuss Senate Bill, May Formally Oppose . . . .

 

12-16-09

Two of the country’s largest labor groups, the SEIU and the AFL-CIO, are each holding emergency executive meetings today to discuss whether they should support the latest round of health care compromises made by Senate Democrats.

Though there’s no official word yet, early indications based on talks with various officials are that the groups will either formally oppose the legislation or, less dramatically, just not fight very hard to ensure its passage.

Labor leaders are fuming at the concessions that Democratic leadership made in the last few days to win the support of the caucus’s most conservative members, notably Sen. Joseph Lieberman (I-Conn.). A bill that already included one highly objectionable provision (a tax on so-called Cadillac insurance plans) was stripped of a provision beloved by labor: a public alternative to private insurance coverage. Frustration boiled over even further after the leadership succumbed to Lieberman’s demand to jettison even the compromise to the public option — a proposal to expand Medicare to those as young as 55.

Continue reading Labor Leaders Weigh Senate Health Insurance Reform Bill in Senate

Jason Altmire’s Shameful Vote Against our Constitution

by Randy Shannon

The article following is an account of the sordid story of how a majority of Congress showed the sensibility of a pack of hyenas as they passed an unconstitutional bill of attainder against ACORN. At the end of the article is a link to the roll call and to District Justice Nina Gershon’s opinion ordering an injunction against an act of the US Congress, a rare event.

4th CD Congressman Jason Altmire voted for this unconstitutional bill. By so doing, he has brought shame on himself and the people of his district. Our Constitution can protect our liberty from encroachment by powerful economic interests, but only if we the people defend its principles. Altmire’s vote to undermine our freedom shows that he votes the interests of the powerful and not the people. This is reason enough to vote him out of office.

Major victory for ACORN and the Constitution
By Glenn Greenwald

In September, I interviewed Rep. Alan Grayson about the unconstitutionality of Congress’ attempt to de-fund ACORN, and a couple of weeks later, examined Supreme Court precedent — principally the 1946 case of U.S. v. Lovett — that left little doubt that the Congressional war on ACORN violated the Constitutional ban on “bills of attainder.” Yesterday, in a lawsuit brought by the Center for Constitutional Rights, Federal District Judge Nina Gershon of the Eastern District of New York found Congress’ de-funding of ACORN unconstitutional and enjoined its enforcement. This is a major victory not only for ACORN, but also for the Constitution.

Continue reading Jason Altmire’s Shameful Vote Against our Constitution

Maine AFL-CIO Calls for Labor Summit & Strategy to Win Single Payer

2009 Maine AFL-CIO Convention

Maine AFL-CIO Calls for Labor Summit & Strategy to Win Single Payer

by Matt Schlobohm, Public Policy & Poltical Mobilization Director, Maine AFL-CIO, and Charlie Urquhart, Organizer, Maine Labor Group on Health

On Friday October 23, 2009 the delegates at the Maine AFL-CIO’s 27th
Biennial Convention unanimously passed a resolution calling on the AFL-CIO to convene, after the current healthcare reform process in Congress concludes, a democratic strategic planning process to develop a long term strategy to win Single Payer national health insurance.

Continue reading Maine AFL-CIO Calls for Labor Summit & Strategy to Win Single Payer

Senator Specter Emerges as Peace Candidate

Photo: Specter vs. Sestak

Can Arlen Specter

End the War

in Afghanistan?

By Robert Naiman
Huffington Post

Who knew Pennsylvania Senator Arlen Specter would emerge as one of the most vocal opponents in the Senate of the President’s military escalation in Afghanistan?

But so it is. In an op-ed this week in the Philadelphia Inquirer, Specter not only challenges the “surge”; he also challenges fundamental premises of the war. Specter writes:

I’m opposed to sending 30,000 more American troops to Afghanistan because I don’t believe they are indispensable in our fight against al Qaeda. […] But if al Qaeda can organize and operate out of Yemen, Somalia or elsewhere, then why fight in Afghanistan, which has made a history of resisting would-be conquerors – from Alexander the Great in the 3rd century BC, to Great Britain in the 19th and early 20th centuries, to the former Soviet Union in the 1970s and 1980s? Continue reading Senator Specter Emerges as Peace Candidate