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UPDATED RETIREE NEWS
FROM AFT
February 2005
- AFT Council Rejects Social Security Privatization
- AFT Plans Legislative Activist Network
- Bush Budget Slashes Domestic Programs, Hides Real Deficit
- Privatization Tax Would Eat Up Most Social Security Benefits
- New Poll Says Young Reject Private Accounts Tied to
Reduced Social Security Benefits
- Medicare Drug Price Tag Skyrockets To $724 Billion
- Senators Want To Allow Medicare To Bargain For Rx Drugs
- AP Poll Shows Drop in Bush's Job Approval
- Governors Ask To Meet Canadian Prime Minister on Rx Drugs
- Large Employers To Monitor Medco PBM
- Wal-Mart Rejects Bargaining, Closes Canadian Store
- Is It A Stroke?
- Union Plus Offers Online Tax Prep Service
- Quote of Note
- Web Site of the Week: http://www.seniordiscounts.com
AFT COUNCIL REJECTS
SOCIAL SECURITY PRIVATIZATION
The Bush administration's proposals to make significant changes
to the nation's Social Security system, including privatization,
will do nothing to enhance the program's solvency and will
simply add to the already runaway federal deficit, says the
AFT. In a statement approved by the union's executive council
at its Jan. 31-Feb. 2 meeting in Orlando., Fla., the AFT warned
that the financial strain of creating private retirement accounts
will impose "serious and long-lasting perils to the stability
of this tremendously successful program." Although President
Bush has not unveiled a detailed proposal, a central piece
of the administration's discussion about reforming Social
Security is to allow workers under age 55 to divert a portion
of payroll taxes to individual private retirement accounts.
This diversion of payroll taxes could result in a $2 trillion
increase to the federal debt in the first decade alone, say
Social Security Administration analysts. In fact, to restore
solvency to a privatized Social Security program, says the
AFT, younger workers' benefits would have to be cut by 26
percent to 45 percent--"a prospect that is totally unacceptable."
While modest steps should be taken to maintain the integrity
of the program, Social Security is "not headed for disaster."
Also see The
Basic Facts about Social Security Privatization and its Impact
prepared by the Economic Policy Institute .
AFT PLANS LEGISLATIVE
ACTIVIST NETWORK
AFT executive council members have approved a plan to create
a member activist network in congressional districts across
the country that will boost the unionâ€Ts political
involvement and move our legislative agenda. At the council's
meeting in Orlando, AFT political and legislative mobilization
director John Ost said the initiative will strengthen relationships
between locals and their members of Congress. By talking with
elected officials and holding them accountable over the long
term, network members will improve our grass-roots lobbying,
he said. State and local presidents will be asked to identify
activists who will meet with their members of Congress at
least twice a year to discuss one or two unionwide priorities.
The AFT will provide tool kits for these local meetings that
include issue information and talking points. This will be
coupled with an online reporting mechanism to keep the national
office informed. The network is intended to harness some of
the tremendous energy AFT members generated during the 2004
presidential campaign and will link members to the national
agenda in a more systematic way, says AFT president Edward
J. McElroy: "Over a fairly short period, we can make real
connections and inroads."
BUSH BUDGET SLASHES
DOMESTIC PROGRAMS, HIDES REAL DEFICIT
President Bush's proposed budget, which includes broad cuts
in domestic spending programs while calling for new tax cuts,
"flies in the face of his re-election campaign that stressed
family values and compassion," says AFT president Edward J.
McElroy. The fiscal year 2006 budget, released Feb. 7, includes
limits on food stamp eligibility; an end to a program that
provides housing, education and employment services to the
poor; energy assistance to help people pay their heating bills;
and measures that reduce Medicaid payments to states. The
budget "turns its back on children, the elderly and the most
vulnerable, while shifting the burden of assisting them to
cash-strapped states," says McElroy in a statement
. "His budget also irresponsibly masks the tremendous
hidden costs of the administration's misguided scheme to privatize
Social Security." Missing from the Bush budget were the initial
cost of privatizing Social Security, estimated to cost $4.9
trillion over 20 years, and costs for the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan, which are now running about $5 billion a month.
Had the president included the full cost of his tax cuts,
the wars and Social Security, deficits over the next decade
would total more than $4 trillion, a more than 50 percent
increase in the national debt.Â
PRIVATIZATION TAX WOULD
EAT UP MOST SOCIAL SECURITY BENEFITS
In his State of the Union address, President Bush outlined
some of the details of the private accounts he is proposing,
but failed to mention a critical fact about those accountsâ€"individuals
who chose to have a private account also would get a large,
automatic reduction in their Social Security benefit at retirement.
A senior White House official said in a background briefing
on Feb. 2 that individuals would give up guaranteed benefits
from the traditional system in exchange for private accounts.
He said that a retiree would come out ahead if the personal
account exceeded a 3 percent real rate of return after discounting
inflation. This is the rate of return that Social Security
trust fund bonds receive. According to the Congressional Budget
Office, private accounts would be, in fact, expected to produce
a risk-adjusted rate of return of 3 percent above the inflation
rate. Therefore, the automatic reduction of Social Security
benefits would equal the entire income earned by the private
accounts. In effect, the automatic benefit reduction would
constitute a 100 percent tax on the retirement savings in
those accounts. This â€oprivatization taxâ€
would cost many workers all or most of their private account
benefit, subjecting them at the same time to needless risk.
If a worker earned the real average rate of return assumed
by the Bush administration (4.6 percent above inflation on
a mixed stock-bond portfolio), the privatization tax would
recapture an amount equal to 70 percent of the entire account,
according to CBO.
NEW POLL SAYS YOUNG
REJECT PRIVATE ACCOUNTS TIED TO
REDUCED SOCIAL SECURITY BENEFITS
A new poll shows young voters may not be the political base
that some politicians expect for phasing out Social Security
in favor of private investments. Released Feb. 3 by Rock the
Vote, a nonpartisan, nonprofit advocacy group for young people,
AARP, and the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies,
a civil rights organization, the poll finds that nearly 60
percent of 18- to 39-year-olds oppose private accounts if
they would mean a lower guaranteed benefit in retirement.
The survey of 1,000 adults, conducted by Roper Public Affairs,
reaches similar conclusions as previous polls: Many young
people doubt they will receive Social Security and are receptive,
at first blush, to the idea of investing their own Social
Security money. But when they consider the price of creating
private accounts, young people, like most Americans, no longer
support them. Other findings of the poll among 18- to 39-year-olds
include:
- 63 percent would oppose private accounts if it meant â€omassive
new federal debt in order to pay current benefits.â€
- 65 percent would oppose private accounts if it meant that
changes in the way Social Security benefits were calculated
would result in cuts in guaranteed benefits for everyone,
not just people who chose to participate in a private accounts
program. Under President Bushâ€Ts plan, benefit
cuts would be mandatory for everyone, regardless of whether
they chose to invest. For young people who decided to stick
with a guaranteed benefit, cuts would approach 50 percent.
MEDICARE DRUG PRICE
TAG SKYROCKETS TO $724 BILLION
Medicare's drug benefit is now projected to cost $724 billion
from 2006 to 2016, a massive increase from the $400 billion
limit President Bush vowed in his 2003 State of the Union
address. This is not the first time lawmakers
have been stunned by Medicare estimates. After the Bush administration
and the Republican leadership rammed the Medicare bill through
Congress, the White House announced the original $400 billion
estimate was actually closer to $534 billion. "The irony is
that $700 billion buys an extremely stingy drug benefit,"
says Ed Coyle, executive director of the Alliance for Retired
Americans. "Seniors struggling with their prescription drug
costs are not the ones being helped. This law translates into
billions of dollars in giveaways to drug companies, HMOs and
corporate interests." Lawmakers from both parties are calling
for changes to the Medicare law in light of the new estimates.
SENATORS WANT TO ALLOW
MEDICARE TO BARGAIN FOR Rx DRUGS
A bipartisan group of senators introduced legislation Feb.
8 that would allow Medicare to use its tremendous purchasing
power to get lower drug prices, a provision strictly prohibited
by the 2003 Medicare law. The bill would empower the secretary
of health and human services to bargain directly with drug
companies on behalf of Medicareâ€Ts 40 million
beneficiaries. Sens. Russell Feingold (D-Wis.), Dianne Feinstein
(D-Calif.), John McCain (R-Ariz.), Olympia Snowe (R-Maine)
and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) are sponsors of the bill. To further
aid consumers, the legislation would have the Government Accountability
Office review retail drug prices and report them to Congress.
This information would then be released to consumers to help
them compare drug prices in their region. The White House
and the congressional Republican leadership both oppose the
legislation.
AP POLL SHOWS DROP
IN BUSH'S JOB APPROVAL
The public's confidence in President Bush's job performance
and the nation's direction has slipped in the opening weeks
of his second term, particularly among people ages 50 and
older, according to an Associated Press poll released Feb.
11. Adults were evenly divided on Bush's job performance in
January, but now 54 percent disapprove and 45 percent approve.
The number of people who think the country is headed down
the wrong track increased from 51 percent to 58 percent in
the past month. Older Americans, especially those ages 65
and above, were most responsible for the declining confidence
and approval numbers. Middle-aged people between 30 and 50
were about evenly split on Bush's job performance. "It looks
like people are reacting to the State of the Union and plans
to change Social Security," said Charles Franklin, a political
scientist from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
More info: http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2005-02-11-bush-poll_x.htm
.
GOVERNORS ASK TO MEET
CANADIAN PRIME MINISTER ON Rx DRUGS
A bipartisan group of governors from six states requested
a meeting with Canadian prime minister Paul Martin to discuss
the reimportation of lower-cost prescription drugs from Canada,
amid mounting speculation that the Canadian government is
set to clamp down on the practice. Canadian health officials
have purportedly begun to draft a proposal seeking to limit
reimportation because of safety, ethical and medication supply
concerns. In a Jan. 19 letter, spearheaded by Minnesota Gov.
Tim Pawlenty (R), Govs. Kathleen Sebelius (D-Kan.), John Baldacci
(D-Maine), John Hoeven (R-N.D.), Jon Huntsman (R-Utah) and
Jim Doyle (D-Wis.) wrote, "We believe it is imperative that
the Canadian government realize the restriction of prescription
drug supplies could mean the difference between life and death
for many Americans." Baldacci spokesperson Trish Riley said
the governors would like Canada to establish a formalized
bulk purchasing program.
LARGE EMPLOYERS TO
MONITOR MEDCO PBM
On Feb. 3, 30 large private employers on announced that they
had formed a group called the Rx Collaborative to monitor
the practices of pharmacy benefit manager (PBM) Medco Health
Solutions and work to reduce their prescription drug spending.
PBMs, which work with drug companies to obtain discounts on
medications, control 75 percent of drug purchases by employers'
health plans and insurers. Many employers have difficulty
figuring out where the rebates PBMs receive from drug makers
go. In April 2004, Medco agreed in a settlement with 20 state
attorneys general and the Department of Justice to inform
companies about the payments it receives from drug makers
to convince physicians to prescribe certain medications. Through
the Rx Collaborative, companies such as Eastman Chemical,
Mattel, Unocal and ING Americas will use an independent auditing
firm to monitor Medco's revenues, as well as rarely disclosed
information like payments made by drug makers for information
on product purchases by doctors and consumers. The alliance
is expected to save participants at least $50 million during
the first year.
WAL-MART REJECTS BARGAINING,
CLOSES CANADIAN STORE
Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, is planning to lay
off nearly 200 employees rather than accept a union contract.
The corporate giant announced Feb. 9 it will shut down the
Canadian store where workers had formed a union six months
earlier. Workers at the Jonquiere, Quebec, facility had been
negotiating with Wal-Mart for several months. The company
pulled the plug when workers appealed to the Quebec Labor
Ministry to start a process to establish a wage and benefit
settlement. The AFL-CIO is asking union members, their families
and friends to sign a petition demanding that Wal-Mart CEO
Lee Scott reverse plans to close the store and negotiate in
good faith with Wal-Mart workers. To sign, please click the
following link http://www.unionvoice.org/campaign/walmart_accountable
IS IT A STROKE?
Sometimes symptoms of a stroke are difficult to identify.
Unfortunately, the lack of awareness can spell disaster. The
stroke victim may suffer brain damage when people nearby fail
to recognize the symptoms. Now doctors say a bystander can
recognize a stroke by asking three simple questions:
- Ask the individual to smile.Â
- Ask him or her to raise both arms.Â
- Ask the person to speak a simple sentence.
If he or she has trouble
with any of these tasks, call 911 immediately and describe
the symptoms to the dispatcher. After discovering that a group
of nonmedical volunteers could identify facial weakness, arm
weakness and speech problems, researchers urged the public
to learn the three questions. They presented their conclusions
at the American Stroke Association's annual meeting last year.
UNION PLUS OFFERS ONLINE
TAX PREP SERVICE
Itâ€Ts that time again: tax time. This year, the
AFL-CIOâ€Ts Union Plus is offering an online tax
preparation service and e-filing tool to help you prepare
and file your federal and state taxes at half the cost of
commercial preparers. E-filing means a quicker return without
high cost rapid-refund service fees. This tax tool calculates
your taxes, saves information if you start and complete your
tax filing at different times, saves year-to-year information
and has a built-in customer service component. The cost of
the online tax service, which covers both federal and state
tax, is $21.95--half the cost of similar services from H&R
Block and Quicken. You are not charged until you either file
or print your return. However, if your adjusted gross income
is $28,500 or less, you can use the Union Plus Tax Service
at no cost. The service is provided through CCH Inc., the
leading provider of tax and business law information and software
for tax preparation professionals. CCH offers help every step
of the way. If you have a question not covered by the online
help, you can either e-mail the company and receive a response
within 24 hours or chat directly online with a CCH customer
service representative for $4.95 per session. Go to http://www.unionplus.org/taxes/
for more information and access to the online tax service.
QUOTE OF NOTE
â€oThe president touts this budget as lean, and
necessary to bring deficits under control. But the presidentâ€Ts
new tax cutsâ€"$1.6 trillion over 10 years, going
overwhelmingly to the wealthiest Americansâ€"and
his continuing wars insure that the debt and deficits will
continue to rise. The next generation will be stuck with the
bill.â€
Robert Borosage
Co-Director
Campaign for Americaâ€Ts Future
WEB SITE OF THE WEEK:
http://www.seniordiscounts.com
Â
Airlines, movies, online shopping and more--this free Web
site offers information on senior discounts in your state
and region. You can customize your request down to the zip
code. Just make sure your pop-up blocker is up-to-date. The
site makes its money through advertising.
Contributors and sources: Marilyn Higgins, Washington Post,
New York Times, CQ Today, Associated Press, South Florida Sun-Sentinel,
Inside AFT, AFT PSRP Electronic Newsletter, Rock the Vote, Social
Security Information Project, Campaign for Americaâ€Ts
Future, Alliance for Retired Americans Friday Alert, Kaiser
Health Policy Report. Frank Stella, editor; Annette Licitra,
copy editor; Renee Turner, design.
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MARCH
NEWS FROM AFT
AFT Retiree-enews - March 2, 2004
* Greenspan Calls for Cuts in Medicare and Social Security
* Rangel, Matsui Press President on Social Security Cuts
* Drug Reimportation Crackdown Continues
* Pfizer Cuts Off Supplies to Canadian Mail-Order Companies
* Bush Names McClellan to Head CMS
* Tauzin Puts PhRMA Job on Hold for Now
* FBI Looking at Bribery Allegations in Medicare Vote
* The Medicare Index--Part II
* Beware Telemarketers Selling Discount Drug Cards
* Retirees on the Delegate Trail
* In Memoriam: Juanita Dunlap Smith
* AFT PLUS Savings on National Hotel Chains
* Quote of Note
* Web site of the Week: www.familiesusa.org
GREENSPAN CALLS FOR CUTS IN MEDICARE AND SOCIAL SECURITY
Federal Reserve chair Alan Greenspan has put Social Security back
on the front burner as an election issue. In testimony at a House
Budget Committee hearing Feb. 25, the administration's chief economic
guru urged the federal government to cut programs, including Medicare
and Social Security, rather than raising taxes. He also called for
raising the eligibility age for Medicare and Social Security and
reducing cost-of-living increases in Social Security. "Social
Security and Medicare are earned rights paid for by payroll taxes,"
said George Kourpias, president of the Alliance for Retired Americans.
"They did not cause the current financial crisis facing this
nation. The Bush tax breaks for the wealthy are the real culprit."
He urged Congress to oppose the president's call for making his
tax cuts permanent--a move that would add more than $1 trillion
to the deficit between 2011 and 2021. Social Security payroll taxes
today actually exceed current benefit payments. Largely due to the
president's $1.7 trillion tax cut, every penny of today's Social
Security surplus goes to other programs, disguising the true size
of the deficit, which this year is projected at a record-setting
$521 billion.
RANGEL, MATSUI PRESS PRESIDENT ON SOCIAL SECURITY CUTS
In other action targeting Social Security, the Bush administration
recently released its Economic Report of the President, which outlines
two principal goals for "reforming" the program: Cut Social
Security benefits and create private accounts. In a Feb. 23 letter
to the president, House Ways and Means ranking member Charles Rangel
(D-N.Y.), and Ways and Means Social Security subcommittee ranking
member Robert Matsui
(D-Calif.) argued that the proposed Social Security cuts would not
make the program solvent for 75 years or "until everyone now
paying into the system is dead." They added that the transition
costs of the plan, at their peak, would eat up 24 percent of the
country's gross domestic product and add a huge strain to the federal
budget at a time when a record-breaking number of American workers
are retiring.
DRUG REIMPORTATION CRACKDOWN CONTINUES
The Bush administration is continuing its crackdown on states and
localities that seek to reimport lower-cost U.S.-manufactured prescription
drugs from Canada. In recent days, the U. S. Food and Drug Administration
has labeled a plan by Montgomery County, Md., "undeniably illegal"
and sent a letter warning Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty (R) that his
state's Web site is "unsafe, unsound and ill-considered."
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has informed Michigan
state officials that it is rejecting the state's prescription drug
purchasing pool with Vermont because it "violates federal procurement
procedures." Meanwhile, the National Conference of State Legislatures
reports that as many as 25 states are considering plans to reimport
medications from Canada to reduce prescription drug costs.
PFIZER CUTS OFF SUPPLIES TO CANADIAN MAIL-ORDER COMPANIES
In a Feb.12 letter, Pfizer told Winnipeg-based Universal Drug Store
and six other Canadian mail-order pharmacies that they could no
longer purchase Pfizer products. The drug giant claimed that U.
S. purchasers threatened the supply of its products to Canadians.
In January, Pfizer sent a letter to Canadian pharmacies warning
that it would only authorize sales to those pharmacies that promise
not to sell company products to U.S. residents. "The U.S. pharmaceutical
industry is threatening the Canadian people," said Andy Troszok,
vice president of the Canadian International Pharmacy Association.
"If you allow this to continue, it will create shortages in
Canada." Minnesota attorney general Mike Hatch (D), who has
filed an antitrust lawsuit against GlaxoSmithKline, which has taken
similar action, called concerns raised by Pfizer and other pharmaceutical
companies over prescription drug shortages in Canada a phony argument
made by a "highly arrogant" industry.
BUSH NAMES McCLELLAN TO HEAD CMS
President Bush has chosen Mark McClellan as the new administrator
of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). McClellan,
currently commissioner of the U. S. Food and Drug Administration,
is the administration's point man in the battle to prevent the reimportation
of lower-cost, U.S.-manufactured prescription drugs from Canada.
At CMS, McClellan would oversee programs--including the new prescription
drug program--providing about $700 billion annually in benefits
to an estimated 83 million people. Three key U. S. senators--John
McCain (R-Ariz.), Byron Dorgan (D-N.D.) and Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.)--are
threatening to block McClellan's confirmation until he gives a complete
explanation of his opposition to Americans' buying cheaper drugs
from Canada.
TAUZIN PUTS PhRMA JOB ON HOLD FOR NOW
Rep. W. J. "Billy" Tauzin (R-La.) who was being courted
by the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA),
the trade association of the drug industry, says he has broken off
negotiations to head the group. Tauzin, who as chairman of the powerful
House Energy and Commerce Committee helped write and shepherd the
Medicare prescription drug bill through the House, is leaving Congress
and says he did not wish to do so under an ethical black cloud.
PhRMA reportedly offered him a record-setting salary in excess of
$2 million. Tauzin has, however, left the door open to take the
PhRMA job later if it is not filled until after he leaves Congress.
FBI LOOKING AT BRIBERY ALLEGATIONS IN MEDICARE VOTE
FBI agents reportedly are investigating allegations that Rep. Nick
Smith (R-Mich.) was offered a $100,000 donation for his son's House
campaign in exchange for a yes vote on the Bush Medicare law (HR
1). In December, Smith, who is retiring this year, said that unnamed
Republican leaders promised such a contribution. However, he later
backed away from that comment, terming suggestions he was bribed
"technically incorrect." Smith said that some Republican
lawmakers had vowed to oppose his son's campaign if he did not vote
for the Medicare legislation, but they did not offer to donate any
money to the campaign. Smith ultimately voted against the bill.
The House Committee on Standards of Official Conduct has conducted
an informal probe into the situation but has so far resisted calls
for a formal investigation.
THE MEDICARE INDEX--PART II
* Average elderly American's drug costs in 2002: $2,400
* Portion of individual drug costs covered by the new
Medicare drug benefit: 45 percent
* Average markup on U.S. drug prices relative to Canadian drug
prices: 45 percent
* Retirees with health insurance before Medicare was signed
into law: 50 percent
* Retirees with health insurance today: 99 percent
* Compensation package, including stock options, for the chief
executive of one Medicare HMO in 2002: $529 million
* Number of elderly Americans dropped by an HMO (1999 to 2003):
2.4 million (31 percent of total)
BEWARE: TELEMARKETERS SELLING DISCOUNT DRUG CARDS
Phony telemarketers are already offering Medicare prescription drug
cards over the phone. Don't buy them. Medicare drug cards will not
be sold via any telemarketer or door-to-door salesman. Beginning
in April, legitimate drug card sponsors will be listed at http://www.unionvoice.org/ct/EdqR3o91gpi4/.
RETIREES ON THE DELEGATE TRAIL
Richard and Janet Miller, UFT retiree activists in Nevada, were
elected by precinct caucuses Feb. 14 as Kerry delegates to the Clark
County Democratic Convention to be held in Las Vegas, the next step
to the statewide convention. In Florida, NYSUT retiree activist
Bill Cea and UFT retiree activists Marna Davidson, Phyllis Lapidus
and Murray Sussman are running as Kerry delegates in the March 9
primary in that state.
IN MEMORIAM: The AFT mourns the loss of longtime staffer Juanita
Dunlap Smith, 54, who died Feb. 21 at Indiana University Hospital
in Indianapolis. She had been on a waiting list for a liver transplant
for nearly a year. Ms. Dunlap Smith joined the AFT staff in 1978
and spent most of her career at the AFT as a national representative,
working in numerous organizing campaigns throughout the country.
For the past five years, she worked in the AFT president's office
and the political and legislative mobilization department on political
campaigns with affiliates around the country. "She was well-loved
and respected by AFT locals and the staff with whom she worked,"
said AFT secretary-treasurer Edward J. McElroy. Ms. Dunlap Smith
is survived by her husband, Bill Smith, two stepchildren, her mother,
Mattie Sue McMillan Dunlap, two sisters and two brothers.
AFT PLUS SAVINGS ON NATIONAL HOTEL CHAINS
With warmer weather on the way, AFT PLUS has the perfect member
benefit for spring. As an AFT member, you can receive discounts
of up to 30 percent at nine national hotel chains representing more
than 5,000 locations across the country. To get special AFT rates,
just make your reservations using the telephone number for each
hotel. Call in advance and mention your AFT member benefit discount
number: 20952. Visit http://www.unionvoice.org/ct/mpqR3o91gpiB/
for the complete listing of hotels and their telephone numbers.
Enjoy the savings.
QUOTE OF NOTE
"In January, a poll by Princeton Survey Research Associates
showed that slightly more people said they'd be less likely to vote
for [President] Bush because of the drug plan than more likely.
Last week, the Gallup organization reported a slide in Bush's standing
with voters on the healthcare issue--57 percent now disapprove of
how the president handles healthcare, just 35 percent approve."
Marie Cocco
Newsday, 2/24/04
WEB SITE OF THE WEEK: www.familiesusa.org
Families USA has added a special Medicare Road Show section featuring
its tour of more than 20 cities in the next three months, a video
with Walter Cronkite, Q&A on the new Medicare law and other
key information, plus its previously featured Medicare law drug
calculator.
______________________________________________________________________
Contributors and sources: Bill Cunningham, Shantel Edmonds, Richard
Miller, Bill Cea, Marna Davidson, U.S. Rep. Sherrod Brown, Inside
AFT, Alliance for Retired Americans Friday Alert, New York Times,
Congress Daily, Roll Call, Social Security Information Project,
Washington Post, Associated Press, Philadelphia Inquirer, Kaiser
Health Policy Report. Frank Stella, editor; Annette Licitra, copyeditor;
Renee Turner, design.
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