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DeFazio faces angry crowd at health care session



Jeff Barnard | Associated Press A woman denounces health care reforms being debated in Congress at a town hall meeting Wednesday, in Grants Pass, Ore., while U.S. Rep. Peter DeFazio asks her to allow others to ask questions. DeFazio was on the first day of a series of town hall meetings with voters in his southwestern Oregon district.
GRANTS PASS — U.S. Rep. Peter DeFazio ran into a buzzsaw of fear and misinformation about federal health care reform proposals Wednesday on his first day of town hall meetings during the Congressional recess.

At a stop in Grants Pass, the Springfield Democrat repeatedly had to call for quiet and correct people on what the proposed legislation actually says regarding end-of-life care, illegal aliens and other issues.

DeFazio noted that the bill before the House has Medicare pay for the elderly to talk to their doctor about what kind of care they want at the end of their lives. He characterized fears that it would promote euthanasia as ‘‘phony arguments.’’

He added that the current bill notes in two places that illegal aliens will not be covered — a fear raised numerous times.

Despite DeFazio’s assurances to the contrary, one man repeatedly said he was convinced that Medicare would not pay for a new pacemaker to keep him alive after he turns 80.

‘‘It was hot,’’ DeFazio said afterward of the meeting atmosphere. ‘‘I think there was general consensus that there are problems with the insurance system and people want to see those things fixed. They are worried we will go too far and make things worse instead of better, and I think that is a legitimate concern.’’

He told the crowd several times that the proposals continue to change, and he has yet to decide how he will vote.

Joyce McGuffin of Grants Pass stood up in the meeting and said, ‘‘We have been pretty rude.

‘‘I hope you get the right message and take it back to Washington. We are not terrorists. We are for reform. But we do not want the government controlling our health care.’’

Josephine County Sheriff Gil Gilbertson said extra deputies and police were on hand, and that the fire marshal let in only 152 people before the room’s capacity was met.

Outside, more than 100 people held signs in support and opposition to health care reform, and chanted slogans.

Inside, several people voiced support for expanding health care coverage, and a few came up to DeFazio afterward to thank him for facing a hostile crowd.

The Grants Pass stop was the third of the day and one of 14 DeFazio has scheduled over the next week in his southwestern Oregon district.

What do you think about the health care plan? Go online to www.argusobserver.com and check out our blogs.




Comment Blog - Note: All Comments Subject To Approval

FDRAllOverAgain wrote on Aug 17, 2009 7:51 AM:

" If a review of the financial markets doesn't have you grabbing for a double dose of Prozac this morning (8/17/09), watching the healthscare debate may add a bit of comic relief. Why, there's so much plain old 'noise' around this it's like watching the Keystone Cops. One Texas democorp says a healthscare bill 'without a public option would be very, very difficult' to pass. Republicorp Mr. Armey "predicted that supporters of reform would attempt to win over the “bed-wetters caucus”

Not that the issue isn't global,
however. The incoming head of the Canadian Medical Association says that country's healthcare system is imploding, too.

With Health & Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius saying that a government run option isn't essential, I expect this will drag out longer than the TV series Dallas...and leaving us all speculating as to what happened long after the final episode.

The way I have it figured is this:
Whatever happens, it will cost more federal dollars and that will be an excuse to raise taxes.
Whatever happens will be watered down by lobbyists in ways that will defend the current paradigm of dollars for healthcare.

Concurrently, we will see the swine flu hysteria whipped up as a justification despite the headlines like "Swine flu jab link to killer nerve disease: Leaked letter reveals concern of neurologists over 25 deaths in America."
Can't have an omelet without a few broken eggs, huh? I have to wonder if the CEO's of these pharmanical jabbers are taking the same modified-after-trials-are-complete version of the flu vaccine, or if they are taking them at all?
Better question: How come the press hasn't asked this obvious question of top brass of the pharmacorps? Did any of them volunteer their kids for trials? Volunteered their wives or husbands? I doubt it...but I'd love to learn otherwise. "

get real wrote on Aug 15, 2009 8:21 AM:

" "DeFazio ran into a buzzsaw of fear and misinformation??" You're kidding right? The bill is on the net. Read it and then tell me that we are supposed to 'trust' the government to make the choices of where healthcare begins and rationing starts in the broad language of this thing and the scope of the money it's going to cost. Money that simply isn't there. If I had a pacemaker I'd be worried. If I had a disabled child I'd be worried, if my prenatal testing done during pregnancy were 'not normal' I'd be worried. We now want to pay our nurse practitioners and clinic doctors more on scale with our heart surgeons and oncologists??? Which translates we probably would no longer need specialists because we would have our doctors qualified to hand out meds for pain management and that's about all we'd get. Read it. Read what it doesn't say as closely as what it does. The basic truth is that this health plan is for the healthy not the ill the elderly or the disabled. We need reform, but not this way. "


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