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Ater Wynne Legal Beagles Follow Alpha Male Saxton Down Archaic Charity Health Care Path
Submitted by Richard Ellmyer on February 27, 2006 - 9:49pm
President George W. Bush would be impressed with the lockstep loyalty commanded by law firm Ater Wynne for its public leader and gubernatorial candidate, Ron Saxton. This blind obeisance begs the question: Are Ater Wynne's clients also required to swear allegiance to the archaic health care policy advocated by Ron Saxton that is obediently embraced by Saxton's lawyer colleagues at Ater Wynne? Not long ago the upper echelon of Oregon's professional campaign managers, from both sides of the aisle, appeared before the Portland City Club and unanimously agreed that health care would be the most important issue in the upcoming governor's race. Ron Saxton, a partner in the Ater Wynne law firm, refuted this prediction by indicating that health care is NOT a major issue much less the major issue. Solving Oregon's health care crisis is so low on Ron Saxton's agenda that it isn't even on it. There are more lawyers, 38, in Saxton's office then words, 35, on his website that mention health care. Here they are. "Businesses that offer health care to their employees will be offered greater tax deductions, and I will promote health savings accounts as alternatives for individual workers and small businesses in an effort to control costs." So the question arises, do Ron Saxton's fellow workers at Ater Wynne, who presumably all endorse his candidacy, support his position on health care? Let's find out what they should be willing to tell their friends, their families, their legal brethren and, most importantly, their clients. Below are 6 questions put to the 37 lawyers who work on the same legal team as gubernatorial candidate Ron Saxton in the Portland office of Ater Wynne. As you know, it is my practice to use both direct responses and available public evidence as a method of presenting the truth of a matter to my readers. As always, you are encouraged to contact those mentioned to discuss and confirm their responses. Our state is in a moral and economic health care crisis as evidenced by the facts that: The federal government and the private health insurance industry have failed to provide affordable health care to Oregonians and Oregon's public institutions. 1. Do you agree or disagree that our state is in a moral and economic health care crisis, (see specifics above) which must be solved by our state government? 2. Do you agree or disagree that Ron Saxton has offered a health care solution to our state's moral and economic health care crisis (see specifics above)? The solution to these problems is the Oregon Community Health Care Bill because it: 3. Do you support the Oregon Community Health Care Bill? 4. If you agree that our state is in a moral and economic health care crisis which must be solved by our state government and you do not support the Oregon Community Health Care Bill then what solution do you propose? 5. Do you agree or disagree with Ron Saxton's view that when Oregonians and Oregon's public institutions can not afford health care private charity not government should be responsible? Perhaps under the wise and creative counsel of their righteous leader, Ron Saxton, these 37 lawyers are considering the creation of the Ater Wynne Chaitable Trust which, every Sunday afternoon, would dispense through high windows in their corporate offices, charitable manna to those sick and needy petitioners below. The men could throw quarters and the women, given gender credit for greater compassion, could throw Susan B. Anthony dollars amongst the clamoring crowd. Can you imagine how satisfyingly charitable that would feel? Before you know it every lawyer in town will be tossing coins amidst the great unwashed. Imagine the public accolades heaped upon good governor Saxton for declaring special Health Holidays so that charitable men and women of the law could be joined in their corporate towers by intelligently designed men and women of science who would toss sample packets of aspirin, ibuprofen and words of good health from on high to those suffering in pain down below.] "HSAs, health savings accounts, offer a lot of money to the most well-off among our fellow citizens without increasing health coverage. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, argues that HSAs would lead to a net increase in the number of uninsured. Elisabeth Bumiller pointed out in the New York Times, a $5,000 contribution to an HSA would have saved a couple with two children and a combined income of $40,000 just $630 on their 2005 federal income taxes. (And that assumes the couple could have afforded to put away the whole five grand, which is unlikely.) But a comparable couple with an income of $120,000 [as many if not all of the lawyers at Ater Wynne enjoy] would have saved $1,500. In other words, HSAs give the smallest benefits to those least able to afford health insurance." 6. Do you agree that health savings accounts, as recently explained by president Bush and endorsed by Ron Saxton, are NOT, as widely analyzed in the press, primarily a benefit to the rich that can already afford health care but rather a solution to Oregon's health care crisis as mentioned above? So, those of you who may chose to do business with Ater Wynne such as: Richard Ellmyer |
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