Trip to Nanaimo to Campbell River; Powell River to Gibson’s

October 31, 2006

 

 

Just back from a whirlwind trip over to Vancouver Island and back via the Sunshine Coast.  Ella took her first ferry trip (and then two more!)  Nanaimo, our first stop, looked like a funky spot and was bigger than I imagined.  It is set on a hill overlooking a port.  It is only an hour and a half by ferry from Horseshoe Bay so we will go back for a longer stay. 

Next, we drove north and the beaches at Parksville and Qualicum Beach look lovely.  Parksville, in particular, is a favourite spot for retirees.  We arrived in Courtenay in the dark and stayed overnight.  A big treat was decent Chinese food (lacking in Squamish!) 

I liked the Courtenay area which is in the Comox Valley.  One could see the Coast Mountains in the distance across the Straight of Georgia rather than feel surrounded by them.  The area was very much like parts of Ontario and Quebec. 

On Sunday we went to see Comox which is a smaller community on the outskirts of Courtenay.  Aside from the military base, it also houses the local airport.  We then left and headed further north to Campbell River which is another "Salmon Fishing Capital".  We didn’t fish but went to a salmon fish hatchery and drove around the area before heading back south of Courtenay to Fanny Bay to buy fresh oysters (and smoked salmon).   I have never seen such large oysters.  I was a piggy and bought the medium-sized container when I really should have just bought a small.  I still have three or four oysters left as it is only possible to eat three at a time they are so huge (I’ll have to see if I can find out what kind they are).  We then took the ferry from Comox to Powell River arriving there after dark.

We booked into a motel and it was only this morning that I realized we were right on the ocean where we were staying.  We poked around Powell River then drove to Saltery Bay for another ferry ride to the Sechelt Peninsula.  I really liked Sechelt.  It has a great beach and a small downtown core.  A real treat was Vietnammese fare for lunch.  We then went to Gibson’s (of The Beachcombers fame) which reminded me of Lunenburg, NS for some reason. 

Managed to get back to Squamish at around 6 pm.  Ella will likely sleep for a few days to recover.  I’m beat too.  It is great to know that within a couple of hours one can be on Vancouver Island from here and expect that we will go visit fairly frequently.

Znet - Oaxaca reports

October 28, 2006

http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=59&ItemID=11198

Paramilitary attacks continue in Oaxaca

by John Gibler
 October 15, 2006

In the past week, gunmen have killed one and wounded four protesters from the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca (APPO). The recent killings heightened tensions as the conflict again enters into a critical moment with the Minister of the Interior threatening to withdraw the federal government’s settlement offer if teachers do not end their strike by Monday, October 16.

Meanwhile, the Mexican Senate is poised to make a definitive decision this Tuesday, October 17, on the APPO’s central demand that the state government be dissolved.

The teachers union, Section 22 of the National Union of Education Workers, stated that they will not return to classes on Monday, but will wait for the Senate’s decision the following day.

The conflict in Oaxaca began as a teachers’ strike five months ago, but exploded into a massive, statewide civil disobedience up-rising after a failed attempt to violently lift the striking teachers’ protest camp during the pre-dawn hours of June 14.

Since then the teachers union and the APPO, which formed in response to the failed police raid and groups together hundreds of local organizations, have held onto their occupation of Oaxaca’s historic central plaza; blocked state government office buildings; painted most of the city with graffiti calling for Governor Ulises Ruiz’s ousting; led a march of several thousand people over 250 miles from Oaxaca to Mexico City; taken over television and radio stations; and built thousands of barricades throughout the city.

Since August gunmen and civilian-clad police have shot at protesters in marches and at their camps, killing six people and wounding fifteen. Paramilitaries have also abducted movement leaders and participants and held them incommunicado for days before being taken to jail or released. Those abducted testified to having been tortured—with visible scars still covering their faces and bodies. (See ‘Pistol Policy’ ZNet, August 16, 2006)

The recent shootings began on October 11, the day that a “sub-commission” of three senators from the Senate Committee on the Interior was scheduled to arrive in Oaxaca City to analyze whether or not the state government has ceased to function. Since June 14, Section 22 and the APPO have conditioned all their demands upon the renunciation or ousting of the Governor.  Ruiz has refused to resign, and the only legal mechanism for the protesters to force his ousting is to request that the Senate declare that the state government has already, in effect, disappeared, a process known as the “desaparicion de poderes” in Spanish. Hence the APPO’s strategy has been to “create ungovernability” by blocking government buildings and shutting off highways and roads.

In anticipation of the sub-commission’s visit, APPO protesters commandeered four city buses on October 11 and drove throughout the city in “mobile brigades” to take over more state government offices and cover walls, buildings, road signs, other buses, and pretty much any available surface with graffiti calling for Governor’s ousting. The protesters had nearly concluded their mobile brigade when, shortly after 4 in the afternoon, outside a police station, un-uniformed police and gunmen shot into a crowd of protesters who were preparing to get back on their bus and move on.

The gunmen fired for several minutes, wounding four people, who were taken to the hospital and released later that evening. A photographer for the local newspaper, Noticias, and the national newspaper, Excelsior, captured clear images of one of the gunmen firing into the crowd. Gunmen fired over 60 rounds, forcing the protesters to seek shelter under fire. Three hours later a caravan of police trucks arrived to “rescue” the gunmen, allowing them to escape without being apprehended by the APPO protesters. As a result of the violence, the sub-commission suspended their visit until the following day.  

The senators’ visit was an exercise in contradictions. Inside the empty state legislature, surrounded by a few hundred protesters, state legislators told the federal sub-commission that they had not stopped working and had passed four laws in the past five months of the conflict.

The Governor, accompanied by his entire cabinet, testified that he had continued to work “as normal,” and presented the sub-commission with box-loads of documents to support his claim. Most poignant however, was the location of the Governor’s meeting with the sub-commission: a gated and guarded hangar at the Oaxaca City airport a few miles out of town. Ulises Ruiz has not been able to walk freely in the capital city since the June 14 raid.

During a four-hour meeting with organizations from the APPO, people gave testimony about the police raid and paramilitary violence. Instead of handing over boxes of documents, the protesters submitted bullet shells, exploded gas grenades, and police batons and helmets that they have gathered during the months of conflict as proof of the impunity with which the state government and paramilitaries beaten, shot, and killed protesters.

The senators repeated in the meetings with state government officials and protesters that they would not be “deciding” to dissolve the state government, but merely reporting their findings as to whether the government had already lost control or not. The sub-commission will turn their report into the Senate Committee on the Interior on Monday, October 16. The full Senate will vote on the matter on Tuesday, October 17.

In this context, the Minister or the Interior threatened to withdraw the offer to increase teachers’ payments and open the way for institutional reforms in Oaxaca if the Section 22 does not return to classes by October 16. The teachers responded that they would wait for the Senate vote. The Minister or the Interior’s ultimatum once again fueled rumors that a federal crackdown is imminent.

Then, at about 2:30 in the morning on Saturday, October 14, soldiers in civilian clothes who tried to make their way through a barricade on the outskirts of the center of town, opened fire on APPO protesters guarding the barricade. One soldier, 22 year-old Johnatan Ríos Vázquez, dropped his wallet before fleeing, thus leading to his identification and later apprehension by local police.

Ríos Vázquez fired upon the protesters with a 22-caliber pistol, hitting Alejandro García Hernández twice in the head. García Hernández, a nearby resident who nightly took coffee to the APPO protesters guarding the barricades, was serving coffee with his wife and son when the soldiers opened fire.

“My father was bleeding from the head. I held him and they kept shooting, but now at me,” his son Johnatan Halil told a reporter from the Mexico City newspaper La Jornada. “A compañero [Joaquín Benítez] jumped in the way to protect me. That is why they shot him in the shoulder.”

García Hernández languished in the hospital for over 8 hours without receiving medical attention. When the surgeons finally attempted to aid him, he had already gone brain dead. He died a few hours later. García Hernández was the sixth person to die in paramilitary shootings against protesters in Oaxaca.

This number does not include one teacher who opposed the strike, Jaime Rene Calva Aragon, who was hacked to death with ice axes two weeks ago. His colleagues immediately blamed the Section 22 and the APPO, while these organizations denied the accusations, in turn blaming Ulises Ruiz for trying to create the conditions necessary for a federal intervention. While APPO protesters have beaten people caught stealing in the city center and, on one occasion, a local journalist, there have been no cases of premeditated or targeted violence against strike opponents. 

The coming days will be decisive for the conflict in Oaxaca, with the federal government withdrawing their settlement offer with one hand and voting on the dissolution of the state government with the other. The APPO has called for national strikes and marches in solidarity with the Oaxaca movement. On Sunday, October 15, some 40 members of the APPO will begin a hunger strike to be carried out until Ulises Ruiz leaves office. The hunger strikers will join a protest camp in front of the Senate in Mexico City where several thousand teachers arrived on foot from Oaxaca this past Monday, October 9.

more on Oaxaca

 from http://www.narconews.com/Issue43/article2230.html

The Toll of Friday the 27th: Three People Assassinated, Eleven Wounded, Two Missing

The APPO Installs 1,000 Barricades in Broad Daylight; PRI Militants and Police Respond with 21 Armed Attacks


 

By Diego Enrique Osorno
Special to The Narco News Bulletin

October 28, 2006

OAXACA CITY: In the face of a renewed civil strike established in this capital city yesterday by the Popular Assembly of the Peoples of Oaxaca (APPO), groups of gunmen linked to three municipal mayors from the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) launched a “cleansing” of the barricades and building occupations that opponents of PRI Governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz have been maintaining for months.

The result: three people killed, eleven wounded, two disappeared, one detained by the Ministerial Police and hundreds of shell casings left scattered along the streets as a testimony to the 21 shootouts that occurred yesterday in the city.

This capital city has already been under a sort of siege for 154 days, but since 6:00 yesterday morning the city was now truly besieged, just as the APPO leadership collective had warned would happen as part of their attempts to win the ouster of the PRI governor.

And so around 1,000 barricades were installed in broad daylight throughout the city, as part of the dissident strategy seeking to demonstrate that “ungovernability” is a fact in the southern state.

Just before 10 a.m., the first of the twenty-one armed attacks on the rebels’ self-defense fortifications (and more were coming out as this article went to press) was reported.

There were four main points attacked almost simultaneously at 4:00 in the afternoon: one was San Juan Chapultepec, another was Colonia del Maestro, the third the around the State Prosecutors’ office, occupied more than three months ago by the dissidents, and finally, the barricade on Calicanto Street, in the nearby city of Santa Lucia del Camino.

It would be in this last site where the most violent confrontation of the afternoon would take place, when a group of PRI militants showed up to tear down the barricades together with officers of the Santa Lucia del Camino municipal police, who carried R-15 rifles.

Repelling the attack with sticks and rocks, the APPO neighborhood group sent out an alert to the rest of the neighborhood residents, who started to arrive. Journalists did the same, and did not stop their coverage of the shooting, which continued for more than an hour.

During one incursion by protesters trying to set fire to one of the houses that the neighbors were being attacked from, U.S. documentary filmmaker Brad Will was mortally wounded in the pit of his stomach.

In the municipality of Santa Maria Coyotepec, two hours later, another group of “neighborhood residents,” also armed with high-powered firearms, arrived at the area surrounding the state capital building and police facilities to “remove” a hundred teachers who had been camped out in the occupied state buildings for three months.

Two other people died from gunshots: a teacher, Emilio Alonso Fabián, from the Los Loxicha region; and a neighborhood resident named Esteban López Zurita. Upon hearing of the violent events, National Peasant-Farmer Federation (CNC in its Spanish initials, a PRI organization) leader Elpidio Concha denied he had been present but admitted to having spoken with Santa Lucía del Camino residents about the necessity of defending and rescuing the capital.

He claimed that among the people who intervened, “there had been PAN militants as well as PRI, as well as common citizens,” and stated his desire that after this event “federal forces come in at last and restore peace.”

Meanwhile, the mayor of Santa Lucia del Camino, Jaime Martínez Feria, acknowledged that the armed men in civilian clothes were “police acting in legitimate defense against the threat of an occupation of City Hall.”

For its part, the state government criticized the fact that, “a few days away from the agreed upon return to classes by the teachers’ union, members of radical APPO groups led by Flavio Sosa Villavicencio would unleash a day of violence and provocation against residents of the capital and neighboring communities with the clear goal of blocking the changing course of the conflict with these organizations.”

NYC Indymedia volunteer Brad Will killed in attack by Paramilitaries in Oaxaca

Every once is awhile I see a news article (with very little analysis - historical or current) covering the increasingly violent protests that have been going on in Oaxaca, one of the poorest states in Mexico, for the last 5 or 6 months.  For more information about this struggle (available in english and spanish), as well as the death yesterday of the indymedia journalist Brad Will, see:

http://www.indymedia.org/en/index.shtml

http://indybay.org/newsitems/2006/10/27/18323891.php?show_comments=1#18324078

Art Exhibit Focuses On Dalai Lama To Inspire Peace

Art Exhibit Focuses On Dalai Lama To Inspire Peace

The website http://www.luc. edu/luma/ dalailama. shtml for the exhibit says, "With the full life of the Dalai Lama as
inspiration, the intention for this project is to shift the world’s
attention towards peace."

CBS2 Chicago - Chicago,IL,USA
Oct 26, 2006 12:27 pm US/Central

Exhibit Opens This Weekend

(CBS) CHICAGO A new art exhibit on the Magnificent Mile uses the images and
life of a world icon to inspire messages of peace.

The exhibit is entitled, "The Missing Peace: Artists Consider the Dalai
Lama." It focuses on images of the spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhism and
the need for peace in the world.

The Loyola University Museum, at 820 N. Michigan Ave. of art is hosting the
show, which features the paintings, drawings and photos of 88 artists from
around the world.

The exhibit opens to the public this weekend.

The currently serving 14th Dalai Lama, Tenzin Gyatso, won a Nobel Peace
Prize in 1989.

The website http://www.luc. edu/luma/ dalailama. shtml for the exhibit says, "With the full life of the Dalai Lama as
inspiration, the intention for this project is to shift the world’s
attention towards peace."

"Peace starts within each one of us. When we have inner peace, we can be at
peace with those around us. When our community is in a state of peace, it
can share that peace with neighboring communities, " the Dalai Lama is quoted
on the exhibit Web site.

Among the artists who are participating in the exhibit are photographers
Richard Avedon, Michal Rovner and Adam Fuss; painter and visual artist Ken
Aptekar; multimedia artist Laurie Anderson; painter Guy Buffet; video artist
Bill Viola; and avant-garde artists Jenny Holzer.

I caught a BIG one!

We had planned to leave today on an extended weekend jaunt to Vancouver Island (up the Sunshine Coast to Powell River and crossing by ferry to Nanaimo) but it was overcast and pissing rain.  So, the plan changed and I was able to putter this morning, get laundry done, etc. with the plan of going fishing in the afternoon.  R. was out one day this week and caught (and released) 9 chum so I was jealous.

We made it to the Squamish River by about 130 pm and it was still raining.   I wore two cotton sweaters underneath my (new for BC) goretex jacket as well as my silk longjohns underneath jeans.  This garb was warm enough for the first hour and a half but after that the cold and wet started to seep in but not enough to abandon fishing!   As this was day 2 of my salmon fishing career, I initially just focused on CASTING.  There is an art to this but it is frustrating for a newbie because it looks so easy when someone does it well.  However, I did get better and better as the afternoon passed.  It is also frustrating because the salmon that are finished spawning or are in old age/poor health swim in close to shore so that at least 5 or 6 are swimming right in front of you at any one time. 

I had a number of "bites" throughout the day but when this happens you are supposed to pull the rod up to hook them.  Och, they got away.  My first score somehow got away with the lure (disappointing!)  But I did actually reel one in (a BIG one, if I do say so).   Go to my pictures and see!

We left at 345 pm and I am sure I have RFI (repetitive fishing injury).  It took about an hour to warm up and we both had wizened up fingers like we had been in a bathtub for a couple of hours.  Have to add a wool sweater under the goretex as well as gloves to the fishing garb it looks like.  I now think that fishing should be added to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Psychiatric Disorders (DSM), I haven’t felt as obsessed since I learned how to play freecell on the computer (another possible DSM category, in my opinion).  I could hear myself … ‘just another cast’ despite the fact that the casting arm was aching (perhaps more sensitive due to having tendonitis in the past?)  Geez, by the time we left I could hardly move my right arm!

Now that my fishing fix has been satisfied we will leave tomorrow for the Vancouver Island jaunt.  As Campbell River is known for its salmon fishing, I am bringing my rod.

Council of Canadians - Canada failing peacekeeping according to new report

October 27, 2006

MEDIA ADVISORY
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 27, 2006

Canada failing peacekeeping according to new report

Canada has all but abandoned peacekeeping according to
“Marching Orders,” a new report released by the Council of
Canadians today. Launched at a press conference in
Charlottetown, where the organization is holding its 21st annual
general meeting, the report shows how the mission in Afghanistan
has compromised Canada’s role as a leader in peacekeeping.

“Canada has failed in its peacekeeping role, not by
accident, but by choice,” says John Urquhart, executive director
of the Council of Canadians. “Increasingly Canadians are
beginning to see that Canada is in the wrong mission in
Afghanistan.”

According to the report, Canada has invested tremendous
resources in the counterinsurgency operation in Afghanistan at
a time when UN peacekeeping is on the rise. Once a top
contributor to UN peacekeeping missions, Canada is now on par
with the tiny state of Mali with only 56 soldiers currently
involved in UN missions.

“Canada is freeloading on the UN,” says Steven Staples,
author of the report. “Yet the evidence shows that UN missions
are far more effective in resolving conflicts than U.S.
missions, and the UN needs Canada now more than ever.”

The Council of Canadians is demanding that the Canadian
government set itself the goal of once again being among the
top-10 global contributors of military personnel to UN
operations within five years.

“Canadians want their government and military engaged in
resolving international conflicts, not exacerbating them,”
says Urquhart.

Steven Staples will be speaking in communities across
Canada about the findings of this new report.

-30-

For more information please contact:
Meera Karunananthan, Media officer
Cell: (613) 795-8685
meera@canadians.org

Our website for the Marching Orders report and tour
schedule:
http://council-of-canadians.c.topica.com/maafiWwabui9aboCoq6baeQy7T/


The Council of Canadians
700-170 Laurier Avenue West, Ottawa, ON K1P 5V5.
Tel: (613) 233-2773; Toll-free: 1-800-387-7177
Fax: (613) 233-6776
inquiries@canadians.org
www.canadians.org


NYT - Health Care in the U.S.

October 26, 2006

New York Times - October 25, 2006

Hospitals Try Free Basic Care for Uninsured

By ERIK ECKHOLM

AUSTIN, Tex. — Unable to afford health insurance, Dee Dee Dodd had for years been mixing occasional doctor visits with clumsy efforts to self-manage her insulin-dependent diabetes, getting sicker all the while.

In one 18-month period, Ms. Dodd, 38, was rushed almost monthly to the emergency room, spent weeks in the intensive care unit and accumulated more than $191,000 in unpaid bills.

That is when nurses at the Seton Family of Hospitals tagged her as a “frequent flier,” a repeat visitor whose ailments — and expenses — might be curbed with more regular care. The hospital began offering her free primary care through its charity program.

With the number of uninsured people in the United States reaching a record 46.6 million last year, up by 7 million from 2000, Seton is one of a small number of hospital systems around the country to have done the math and acted on it. Officials decided that for many patients with chronic diseases, it would be cheaper to provide free preventive care than to absorb the high cost of repeated emergencies.

With patients like Ms. Dodd, “they can have better care and we can reduce the costs for the hospital,” said Dr. Melissa Smith, medical director of three community health centers run by Seton, a Roman Catholic hospital network that uses its profits and donations to provide nearly free care to 5,000 of the working poor. Over the last 18 months, Ms. Dodd’s health has improved, and her medical bills have been cut nearly in half.

Reaching out to uninsured patients, especially those with chronic conditions like diabetes, hypertension, congestive heart failure or asthma, is a recent tactic of “a handful of visionary hospital systems around the country,” said Karen Davis, president of the Commonwealth Fund, a foundation in New York that concentrates on health care. These institutions are searching for ways to fend off disease and large debts by bringing uninsured visitors into continuing basic care.

The public hospital systems in New York and Denver , for example, have both worked to steer uninsured patients to community clinics, charging modest fees, if any. New York ’s public system, the Health and Hospitals Corporation, has assigned some 240,000 uninsured patients to personal primary care doctors. A computerized system tracks those with chronic conditions, and when necessary, social workers contact patients to make sure they get checkups and follow medical advice.

“For most preventive efforts there is an upfront expense,” said Alan D. Aviles, president of the corporation. “But over the long term it saves money.”

Denver’s public system, Denver Health, has 41,000 uninsured patients enrolled in its clinics. Officials there calculate that for every dollar they spend on prenatal care for uninsured women, they save more than $7 in newborn and child care.

The “safety net” plan of the Seton system in Central Texas accepts people making 150 percent to 250 percent of the federal poverty limit and has resources to support 5,000 patients. (People below the poverty line, which is $13,200 a year for a family of two in the contiguous states, can obtain care through the public clinic system.)

Officials scrutinize the records of plan members to see who is still overusing the emergency room or being repeatedly hospitalized — these high-cost patients total some 40 each month — then assign them caseworkers to help improve care and bring down costs.

A special effort to educate 631 asthma patients saved the plan $475,000 in one year, Seton officials said.

In a more unusual step, Seton officials also look for frequent emergency room users who do not qualify for the hospital’s charity plan because they live in a different county, like Ms. Dodd, or have incomes just above the threshold. In a dozen cases so far, all involving diabetics, a committee has judged that it makes financial sense to bring these people into the charity plan anyway and provide intensive support.

Other answers to the insurance crisis are being tried around the country, including the creation of subsidized, bare-bones policies for small businesses. Vermont , Maine and especially Massachusetts are using combinations of state and federal money and employer mandates to extend insurance.

Still, only a fraction of the uninsured, in Central Texas and in most other states, are benefiting.

“All these local efforts are commendable, but they are like sticking fingers in the dikes,” Ms. Davis of the Commonwealth Fund said, noting that the larger trend was hospitals’ seeking to avoid the uninsured.

Nowhere is the problem more acute than in Texas , where nearly a quarter of the population is uninsured, the nation’s highest rate. Small businesses here are unlikely to offer benefits, and the state government’s unusually stringent restrictions on Medicaid for adults leave many of the working poor at risk.

Even without counting the large immigrant population, Texas has the country’s highest share of uninsured, at 21 percent, according to the Center for Public Policy Priorities in Austin .

“All the hospitals here provide some uncompensated care, and they are eating it and passing the costs along to the payers,” said Patricia A. Young Brown, president of the Travis County Healthcare District, which was set up last year to oversee care of the indigent through public clinics, drawing on property taxes to pay.

“So insurance rates go up, and then more businesses drop insurance,” Ms. Young Brown continued, describing a trend unfolding nationwide. “It’s hard to see where it will end. We hear a cry for national and state leadership.”

The private People’s Community Clinic, supported in part by the St. David’s Hospital system, gives primary care to 11,000 people in Austin who are uninsured or on Medicaid and related programs.

“I think we are a good Band-Aid for those able to come to our clinic,” Regina Rogoff, director of the clinic, said. “But it’s not a solution to have such a ragtag, makeshift system.”

Austin hospitals and charity clinics have also joined in a pioneering data-sharing system to track visits by uninsured patients and fight unnecessary use of the emergency room. But rural counties in Texas offer little aid, and rural residents with serious maladies end up traveling to urban emergency rooms.

The current patchwork also pits different levels of government against each other.

Natavidad Martinez, 51, who used to work as a bookbinder for $7 an hour and never had insurance, has found herself in a bureaucratic nightmare.

In March 2005, Ms. Martinez, a Seton patient, was found to have liver cancer. She was put on Medicaid, applied for federal disability and was put in line for a liver transplant, without which, doctors said, she had six months to two years to live. Through the summer of 2005, she made the hour-and-a-half drive from her home to San Antonio for preparatory tests.

That August, she was awarded disability payments of $561 a month. But because her income surpassed the $535 limit for Medicaid in her circumstances, she said, she was told by the state that her coverage had ended, and the hospital said it could not proceed with a transplant.

“I asked Social Security if they couldn’t just reduce my payments by $30 a month,” she said, “but they said it doesn’t work that way.”

In another twist, by federal rules, she will qualify for Medicare two years after the initial finding of disability. She awaits the start of Medicare coverage next March, when she can rejoin the transplant line.

In Texas , as throughout the country, the coverage of poor children through Medicaid and related programs expanded greatly over the last decade. But a majority of states do not provide Medicaid to parents making even poverty-line incomes, and Texas is one of the least generous: here, a working parent of two does not qualify for coverage if he or she makes more than $3,696 in a year, leaving people like Ms. Dodd to fend for themselves.

Ms. Dodd, who worked as a dental assistant, is married to a truck driver, has four children and lives on a country road in Hays County , south of Austin . Ten years ago, after her weight fell to 82 pounds, she learned that she was a “brittle diabetic,” subject to rapid and dangerous changes in blood sugar. She saw a doctor only sporadically because visits cost $120 — money she did not have.

“I had to stop working, so then I couldn’t afford to go to the doctor, and then I had to go to the emergency room,” Ms. Dodd said.

She was having repeated episodes of ketoacidosis, a chemical imbalance that sometimes put her into life-threatening comas. Years of poor care had weakened her and led to side effects like esophogeal ulcers that could probably have been prevented, her doctors said.

Ms. Dodd still has problems, but the use of a $3,200 insulin pump paid for by Seton, which automatically adjusts her insulin levels, along with access to an endocrinologist and home counseling have reduced their severity. Her care in the last 18 months has cost Seton $104,697, far below the $191,277 for the previous period. More important, the later figures include less hospital time and more medicines and expert advice.

“The money we save,” Dr. Smith, of Seton, said, “money that is not hemorrhaging through the I.C.U., is money we can do so much more with to help her upfront.”

fish forum re: Squamish River

October 23, 2006

http://forum.fishbc.com/index.php?showtopic=38400&st=0&#entry424333

ON - Liberals reject call for $10/hr. minimum wage

Listen to those living in poverty


Liberals reject call for $10/hr. minimum wage
——————————————————————————–
Oct. 18.

We fully agree with Premier Dalton McGuinty who acknowledged this week that "there is more work to be done" to ease poverty.

Ontario’s nurses add their voices to that of Hugh Mackenzie who says "shameful."
Indeed, it isshameful and disgraceful that in a province as rich as Ontario people struggle between feeding their children and paying the
rent.

As nurses, we are gravely concerned about poverty. We know the connection between social determinants of health and health outcomes. We know that those who have a stable and good paying job, a decent and affordable roof over their heads, adequate food for them and for their loved ones, and a support network can expect to enjoy better health and well-being.

For a decade, inadequate social assistance rates have pushed hundreds of thousands into poverty. Street nurses and others see
first-hand how poverty robs people of their dignity and wears away at their health.

The McGuinty government promised to close the gap between the "haves" and the "have-nots." Now is the time to heed the voices of the thousands who live in poverty: increase the minimum wage to $10 an hour, increase social assistance rates, build more affordable housing and restore the cuts to the special diet program.

——————————————————————————–
Mary Ferguson-Paré, President,

Registered Nurses’ Association of Ontario, Toronto

——————-