single payer health insurance
Progressive Values Stories: Patricia Player on Security
by WhatAre Progressive Values [courtesy of Blog for America]
America's health care system is neither healthy, caring, nor a system. Walter Cronkite
Patricia Player volunteers for OneCareNow.org, the California single payer health insurance initiative. I interviewed her at a street fair in El Cerrito, California where she was staffing the One Care Now booth. She didn't identify as being progressive because she doesn't like labels. She did talk about the value and importance of security and from her talk, I realized the relationship between security and caring. When people don't have health care and are feeling anxious and insecure, it causes them to become more concerned about themselves. When they feel secure, knowing they don't have to worry about having health care, it's easier for them to care about others. If progressives want to create a caring society, we need Single Payer Health Care.
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Joe Alioto Veronese Endorses and San Francisco Unites for Mark Leno
by Mark Leno Campaign [courtesy of Calitics - Front Page]
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As Health Bill Dies, California Activists Turn to Single Payer Bill
[courtesy of California Progress Report]
By Jesse Douglas Allen-Taylor
Advocates of single payer health insurance in California are saying that the collapse of the Nuñez-Perata-Schwarzenegger health care bill is a good thing and are moving forward with reviving their own single-payer legislation.
“We were opposed to the Nuñez bill,” Vote Health representative Kay Eisenhower said by telephone this week. “We considered it a step backwards.”
Vote Health is an Alameda County-based health care activist organization.
Eisenhower said statewide single-payer health care advocates will be holding a two-day conference in Los Angeles later this month to talk about ways to put State Senator Sheila Kuehl’s (D-Santa Monica-Los Angeles) SB 840 single-payer health care bill back on track. “SB 840’s not dead,” she said. “It’s only on ice.”
Two years ago, it seemed dead. After SB 840 passed the state legislature in 2006, Gov. Schwarzenegger vetoed it.
Kuehl revived her single payer bill a year later, and the bill passed the Senate on a 23-15 vote and the Assembly Health Committee on a 12-5 vote last summer, but it stalled in the Assembly Appropriations Committee as attention in the Assembly turned to a compromise bill being put together by Assembly Speaker Fabian Nuñez.
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One Progressive's View of Prop 93
by malb [courtesy of Calitics - Front Page]
Some of my progressive friends have come out against Prop 93, arguing that because it is really designed to save the jobs of some current legislators, it must be flawed. In my opinion that is a very short sighted way of looking at things, and it risks swamping the public policy baby with the self-interest bath water. The argument for Prop 93 is really very simple, to wit:
(Edited by Brian for space, see the extended).
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"Blue Shield, Blue Cross, Don't Kill My Wife"--A Powerful Case in Support of SB 840 and the Need for Health Insurance Reform in
[courtesy of California Progress Report]

State Senator Sheila Kuehl, author of SB 840, the single payer health insurance bill dubbed "Medicare for All," joins Allen and Cynthia Campbell in front of the state Capitol in Sacramento.
By Frank D. Russo
An incredibly sad story of two human beings--a nurse, who despite 30 years of working and paying health insurance premiums is now uninsurable with a rare form of cancer--and her loving and supportive husband--was told both outside the state Capitol and inside to the Assembly Health Committee on Tuesday, as it debated, and eventually passed SB 840 by Senator Kuehl that would bring universal health insurance coverage to all Californians.
On the Capitol lawn, holding a sign that said, "Blue Shield, Blue Cross, Don't Kill My Wife," Allen Campbell stood next to his wife and supported her when she became weak. They spoke to passersby using a bullhorn. I was able to talk with them and to get to know them. They are both extraordinary individuals who at great peril have helped to save victims of genocide in Rwanda. They are also ordinary Californians who are experiencing a hellish nightmare with the current private health insurance system in our state.
Here is what they had to say to the Assembly Committee, speaking truth to power that brought tears to my eyes and many others.
Cynthia Campbell
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