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Let The Games Begin
Submitted by Richard Ellmyer on February 8, 2006 - 7:13pm
Health care benefit negotiations are no longer a private matter between a few civil servants discussing how much of the public treasury should be spent on those sitting at the table. Every health care benefit package negotiated by every public jurisdiction affects every Oregonian's ability to find affordable health care. Candidates for public office that believe health care should be a matter of charity not government, elected officials that believe the federal government will solve Oregon's health care crisis and bargaining units that believe that they deserve better health care protection than the taxpayers who pay for that health care must all be exposed and held to account in the court of public opinion. You, my dear readers, are that court. Very soon, Oregon's largest city, Portland, will begin the bargaining process for health care benefits. During mayor Potter's term in office there will be an INCREASE in health care costs, paid by some employer/employee contribution, of $25,000,000. To a lesser degree, every public jurisdiction in our state will face similar circumstances. It will be instructive to observe how the players in Portland's game move the pieces. Following are the fundamental questions that have been asked of these players. Their positions were indicated either directly or by publicly available evidence. These questions need to be asked of every candidate for public office, every elected official and every bargaining unit in Oregon's public arena: 1. Do you as a city commissioner or does your bargaining unit organization agree or disagree that our state is in a moral and economic health care crisis, (see specifics A,B,C below) which must be solved by our state government? AGREE DISAGREE 2. Do you as a city commissioner or does your bargaining unit organization support the Oregon Community Health Care Bill? YES NO 3. If you as a city commissioner or your bargaining unit organization agrees that our state is in a moral and economic health care crisis which must be solved by our state government and you or your bargaining unit organization does not support the Oregon Community Health Care Bill then what solution do you or does your bargaining unit organization propose? How these folks approach bargaining for health care benefits depends on how they answer these questions. Once again, my dear readers, you are the judge and jury. You decide which of these players are moving us in the right direction and which of them needs to be persuaded to change or be replaced. Richard Ellmyer P.S. |
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