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    Democrat Senator Hypocritical in Criticism of Governor’s Media Coverage-Sen. Espero Has His Own Public Television Show at Taxpayers’ Expense

    Hawaii Reporter should listen more attentively to Sen. Willie Espero, D-Ewa, when it comes to manipulation of the television media and abuse of state funds.

    See Espero’s letter to Hawaii Reporter: “Rebutting Political Tittle-tattle Report on Media Ethics, Free Speech, Govenor’s Japan Trip”

    He’s been doing it for years and should be considered an expert.

    Espero is the only legislator of the 76 with a regular Olelo program, The Espero Report.

    His cameraman, producer, writer and editor is not so coincidentally his state paid legislative office manager and campaign worker, Tom Berg.

    It is nearly impossible to attend an event where Berg is not filming or taking pictures of his employer — Espero — that nearly always shows up on his Olelo program or the other Berg Olelo production, “Ewa Today.”

    And who is paying Berg’s salary? We are — the state taxpayers.

    It is hypocritical of Sen. Espero to criticize Gov. Lingle’s trip to Japan being covered by a local news television station and paid for by HVCB when his very own television program is also funded by the state taxpayers and is being produced by his state employee.

    While Espero grilled in the recent House-Senate tourism committee hearings Gov. Lingle’s public relations people about how he feels they wasted state funds on coverage of the governor’s goodwill trip to Japan, he is busy using his own state funded employee to film and produce his own various public relations promotions on public (taxpayer funded) television.

    Espero’s potential abuse of state resources, personnel and funds should be included in the investigation he and other state Democrat legislators recommended the Legislature make of Gov. Lingle’s Japan trip and the Hawaii Visitors and Convention Bureau’s $4,100 expenditure (which will be refunded) so a local news crew could cover the trip.

    ”’Garry P. Smith, a resident of Ewa Beach, can be reached via email at:”’ mailto:garrypsmith@juno.com

    Democrat Senator Hypocritical in Criticism of Governor’s Media Coverage-Sen. Espero Has His Own Public Television Show at Taxpayers’ Expense

    Hawaii Reporter should listen more attentively to Sen. Willie Espero, D-Ewa, when it comes to manipulation of the television media and abuse of state funds.

    See Espero’s letter to Hawaii Reporter: “Rebutting Political Tittle-tattle Report on Media Ethics, Free Speech, Govenor’s Japan Trip”

    He’s been doing it for years and should be considered an expert.

    Espero is the only legislator of the 76 with a regular Olelo program, The Espero Report.

    His cameraman, producer, writer and editor is not so coincidentally his state paid legislative office manager and campaign worker, Tom Berg.

    It is nearly impossible to attend an event where Berg is not filming or taking pictures of his employer — Espero — that nearly always shows up on his Olelo program or the other Berg Olelo production, “Ewa Today.”

    And who is paying Berg’s salary? We are — the state taxpayers.

    It is hypocritical of Sen. Espero to criticize Gov. Lingle’s trip to Japan being covered by a local news television station and paid for by HVCB when his very own television program is also funded by the state taxpayers and is being produced by his state employee.

    While Espero grilled in the recent House-Senate tourism committee hearings Gov. Lingle’s public relations people about how he feels they wasted state funds on coverage of the governor’s goodwill trip to Japan, he is busy using his own state funded employee to film and produce his own various public relations promotions on public (taxpayer funded) television.

    Espero’s potential abuse of state resources, personnel and funds should be included in the investigation he and other state Democrat legislators recommended the Legislature make of Gov. Lingle’s Japan trip and the Hawaii Visitors and Convention Bureau’s $4,100 expenditure (which will be refunded) so a local news crew could cover the trip.

    ”’Garry P. Smith, a resident of Ewa Beach, can be reached via email at:”’ mailto:garrypsmith@juno.com

    Congressmen Challenge Hawaii's Representation in Nation's Capitol

    ”’This is a letter from U.S. Democrat Reps. Ed Case and Neil Abercrombie to Alan Hantman, Architect of the U.S. Capitol:”’

    This letter addresses two important matters relating to our state of
    Hawaii’s statue of King Kamehameha the Great located in Statuary Hall.

    The first is to express our concerns with what appear to be frequent
    mischaracterizations of King Kamehameha by Congressional staff providing tours of the Capitol and to ask your assistance with corrective action.

    The second is to request that you evaluate the positioning of the Kamehameha statue, which has been placed in an isolated corner of Statuary Hall since its location to the Capitol in 1969, and, if structurally possible, relocate it to a position of prominence in the Hall.

    Background. King Kamehameha I (Kamehameha the Great) is by far the most prominent figure in the history of Hawaii.

    Historically, in the late 1700s and early 1800s Kamehameha unified the islands of Hawaii under one government and led the difficult transition from pre-Western contact to integration with the external world with extraordinary foresight and wisdom.

    Today, Kamehameha embodies the strength and vitality of the Native Hawaiian people and their culture and the rich history of all of Hawaii’s peoples.

    For all of this, Kamehameha is revered to this day not only by Native
    Hawaiians, but by all who call Hawaii their home. He also is respected and acknowledged as among the great leaders of the cultures of both Native Americans and Pacific Islanders.

    After Hawaii achieved statehood and was entitled to place two statues in Statuary Hall, the selection of Kamehameha was a foregone conclusion. The statue was dedicated in April 1969 and was located to its present location in the back corner of Statuary Hall. (Hawaii’s other statue is of the famed and soon-to-be-sanctified Belgian priest, Father Damien, who gave his life to the service of Hansen’s Disease patients at Kalaupapa, Molokai; Father Damien’s statue is located in the House connecting corridor on the Capitol’s First Floor.)

    The Kamehameha statue is a replica of two statues of Kamehameha located in Hawaii. The first stands outside the current Supreme Court of Hawaii building in downtown Honolulu, while the second stands near Kamehameha’s birthplace at Kapaau on the Island of Hawaii.

    To people who are not familiar with Hawaii, the Kamehameha statue may appear “different” from most if not all of the remainder of the Statuary Hall collection. First, of course, Kamehameha was a full-blooded Native Hawaiian, and to this day he represents but one of only a few statues in the collection who are not Caucasian males.

    Additionally, he is garbed in non-Western attire; this was the traditional attire not only of the Native Hawaiians of his time, but of the “alii nui,” or high chiefs, of ancient Hawaii. For these reasons, even the Hall’s own guidebook describes the statue as “easily the most striking.”

    For all of these reasons, a visit to the Kamehameha statue by those of us who call Hawaii our physical or spiritual home is akin to a pilgrimage.

    This is especially true for Native Hawaiians, who each year since 1969 have conducted a moving ceremony in honor of Kamehameha in Statuary Hall on Kamehameha Day, including the placing of lei on the statue.

    For the same reasons, please understand that any slight to the statue, however innocent, can easily be perceived as a slight upon Kamehameha, Native Hawaiians, Hawaii, Native Americans, Pacific Islanders, and minorities everywhere.

    ”Tour Mischaracterizations.”

    Last Friday, one of our staff members was conducting a tour of the Capitol with a constituent who is also a Hawaii television reporter. She observed, and the reporter videotaped, a staff member from another Congressional office (not an official Capitol Tour Guide) make the following statements to a group about Kamehameha’s statue:

    ”’King Kamehameha is kinda an interesting statue. I’ll just tell you the story behind it. He was the first king to unite all the Hawaiian Islands under a peaceable kingdom. And of course, King Kamehameha was honored by the Hawaiian people by being placed in Statuary Hall. But when they first sent the statue over they discovered that it wasn’t wearing any clothing. Congress was very upset and sent the statue back and said put some clothes on it. So Hawaii took it back and they dressed it as you see here. But even then Congress wasn’t happy because he wasn’t that decently dressed, he’s not really covered and so they decided to put him back here as punishment. They stuck him back here in this corner where nobody would notice him.”’

    This was reported throughout Hawaii on the evening news last Tuesday, July 15th.

    If this were possibly an isolated occurrence, we may simply have taken the matter up with the member to caution his staff. However, yesterday one of our staff observed two other staff members of other offices making comparable remarks to the effect that the Kamehameha statue was “sent back three times because he was morally indecent” and he was “put in the back because he was naked.”

    First, the statements made are factually inaccurate. Second, regardless of motive, they are highly insulting.

    We would greatly appreciate your immediate assistance, especially in this summer visitor peak, in taking whatever action is necessary to assure that Congressional staff, whether official guides or member office staff, are knowledgeable of the facts on the Kamehameha statue and sensitive to the concerns of those who care deeply about these matters. It may also be an appropriate time to provide a broader review of the accuracy and sensitivity of information provided about all statuary in the Capitol, as it may be that comparable situations exist with other statues of our fellow states’ revered citizens.

    Location. As noted, the Kamehameha statue has always been located in the most remote, inaccessible and nonvisible portion of Statuary Hall. From the time of his original placement in 1969, long before these staff mischaracterizations, Kamehameha’s location has been the source of endless questions and concern from Hawaii residents and others.

    Anecdotally, at least, the official position has been that Kamehameha was located there for structural reasons; that, as what has been represented to be the heaviest statue in the collection, it was necessary to place him there and that no other location in the Hall would suffice. However, given the above and the fact that Kamehameha has essentially been isolated for 34 years, it is appropriate that we now ask you whether, in fact, Kamehameha’s location is exclusively structural. If not, we believe it is fair that Kamehameha have his turn at a position of prominence in the front lines of the statues in Statuary Hall.

    We greatly appreciate you prompt attention to this matter of great
    importance to us personally and to those we represent. We stand ready to
    assist you in whatever way you feel appropriate, and look forward to your
    prompt response and action.

    Congressmen Challenge Hawaii’s Representation in Nation’s Capitol

    ”’This is a letter from U.S. Democrat Reps. Ed Case and Neil Abercrombie to Alan Hantman, Architect of the U.S. Capitol:”’

    This letter addresses two important matters relating to our state of
    Hawaii’s statue of King Kamehameha the Great located in Statuary Hall.

    The first is to express our concerns with what appear to be frequent
    mischaracterizations of King Kamehameha by Congressional staff providing tours of the Capitol and to ask your assistance with corrective action.

    The second is to request that you evaluate the positioning of the Kamehameha statue, which has been placed in an isolated corner of Statuary Hall since its location to the Capitol in 1969, and, if structurally possible, relocate it to a position of prominence in the Hall.

    Background. King Kamehameha I (Kamehameha the Great) is by far the most prominent figure in the history of Hawaii.

    Historically, in the late 1700s and early 1800s Kamehameha unified the islands of Hawaii under one government and led the difficult transition from pre-Western contact to integration with the external world with extraordinary foresight and wisdom.

    Today, Kamehameha embodies the strength and vitality of the Native Hawaiian people and their culture and the rich history of all of Hawaii’s peoples.

    For all of this, Kamehameha is revered to this day not only by Native
    Hawaiians, but by all who call Hawaii their home. He also is respected and acknowledged as among the great leaders of the cultures of both Native Americans and Pacific Islanders.

    After Hawaii achieved statehood and was entitled to place two statues in Statuary Hall, the selection of Kamehameha was a foregone conclusion. The statue was dedicated in April 1969 and was located to its present location in the back corner of Statuary Hall. (Hawaii’s other statue is of the famed and soon-to-be-sanctified Belgian priest, Father Damien, who gave his life to the service of Hansen’s Disease patients at Kalaupapa, Molokai; Father Damien’s statue is located in the House connecting corridor on the Capitol’s First Floor.)

    The Kamehameha statue is a replica of two statues of Kamehameha located in Hawaii. The first stands outside the current Supreme Court of Hawaii building in downtown Honolulu, while the second stands near Kamehameha’s birthplace at Kapaau on the Island of Hawaii.

    To people who are not familiar with Hawaii, the Kamehameha statue may appear “different” from most if not all of the remainder of the Statuary Hall collection. First, of course, Kamehameha was a full-blooded Native Hawaiian, and to this day he represents but one of only a few statues in the collection who are not Caucasian males.

    Additionally, he is garbed in non-Western attire; this was the traditional attire not only of the Native Hawaiians of his time, but of the “alii nui,” or high chiefs, of ancient Hawaii. For these reasons, even the Hall’s own guidebook describes the statue as “easily the most striking.”

    For all of these reasons, a visit to the Kamehameha statue by those of us who call Hawaii our physical or spiritual home is akin to a pilgrimage.

    This is especially true for Native Hawaiians, who each year since 1969 have conducted a moving ceremony in honor of Kamehameha in Statuary Hall on Kamehameha Day, including the placing of lei on the statue.

    For the same reasons, please understand that any slight to the statue, however innocent, can easily be perceived as a slight upon Kamehameha, Native Hawaiians, Hawaii, Native Americans, Pacific Islanders, and minorities everywhere.

    ”Tour Mischaracterizations.”

    Last Friday, one of our staff members was conducting a tour of the Capitol with a constituent who is also a Hawaii television reporter. She observed, and the reporter videotaped, a staff member from another Congressional office (not an official Capitol Tour Guide) make the following statements to a group about Kamehameha’s statue:

    ”’King Kamehameha is kinda an interesting statue. I’ll just tell you the story behind it. He was the first king to unite all the Hawaiian Islands under a peaceable kingdom. And of course, King Kamehameha was honored by the Hawaiian people by being placed in Statuary Hall. But when they first sent the statue over they discovered that it wasn’t wearing any clothing. Congress was very upset and sent the statue back and said put some clothes on it. So Hawaii took it back and they dressed it as you see here. But even then Congress wasn’t happy because he wasn’t that decently dressed, he’s not really covered and so they decided to put him back here as punishment. They stuck him back here in this corner where nobody would notice him.”’

    This was reported throughout Hawaii on the evening news last Tuesday, July 15th.

    If this were possibly an isolated occurrence, we may simply have taken the matter up with the member to caution his staff. However, yesterday one of our staff observed two other staff members of other offices making comparable remarks to the effect that the Kamehameha statue was “sent back three times because he was morally indecent” and he was “put in the back because he was naked.”

    First, the statements made are factually inaccurate. Second, regardless of motive, they are highly insulting.

    We would greatly appreciate your immediate assistance, especially in this summer visitor peak, in taking whatever action is necessary to assure that Congressional staff, whether official guides or member office staff, are knowledgeable of the facts on the Kamehameha statue and sensitive to the concerns of those who care deeply about these matters. It may also be an appropriate time to provide a broader review of the accuracy and sensitivity of information provided about all statuary in the Capitol, as it may be that comparable situations exist with other statues of our fellow states’ revered citizens.

    Location. As noted, the Kamehameha statue has always been located in the most remote, inaccessible and nonvisible portion of Statuary Hall. From the time of his original placement in 1969, long before these staff mischaracterizations, Kamehameha’s location has been the source of endless questions and concern from Hawaii residents and others.

    Anecdotally, at least, the official position has been that Kamehameha was located there for structural reasons; that, as what has been represented to be the heaviest statue in the collection, it was necessary to place him there and that no other location in the Hall would suffice. However, given the above and the fact that Kamehameha has essentially been isolated for 34 years, it is appropriate that we now ask you whether, in fact, Kamehameha’s location is exclusively structural. If not, we believe it is fair that Kamehameha have his turn at a position of prominence in the front lines of the statues in Statuary Hall.

    We greatly appreciate you prompt attention to this matter of great
    importance to us personally and to those we represent. We stand ready to
    assist you in whatever way you feel appropriate, and look forward to your
    prompt response and action.

    Congressmen Challenge Hawaii’s Representation in Nation’s Capitol

    ”’This is a letter from U.S. Democrat Reps. Ed Case and Neil Abercrombie to Alan Hantman, Architect of the U.S. Capitol:”’

    This letter addresses two important matters relating to our state of
    Hawaii’s statue of King Kamehameha the Great located in Statuary Hall.

    The first is to express our concerns with what appear to be frequent
    mischaracterizations of King Kamehameha by Congressional staff providing tours of the Capitol and to ask your assistance with corrective action.

    The second is to request that you evaluate the positioning of the Kamehameha statue, which has been placed in an isolated corner of Statuary Hall since its location to the Capitol in 1969, and, if structurally possible, relocate it to a position of prominence in the Hall.

    Background. King Kamehameha I (Kamehameha the Great) is by far the most prominent figure in the history of Hawaii.

    Historically, in the late 1700s and early 1800s Kamehameha unified the islands of Hawaii under one government and led the difficult transition from pre-Western contact to integration with the external world with extraordinary foresight and wisdom.

    Today, Kamehameha embodies the strength and vitality of the Native Hawaiian people and their culture and the rich history of all of Hawaii’s peoples.

    For all of this, Kamehameha is revered to this day not only by Native
    Hawaiians, but by all who call Hawaii their home. He also is respected and acknowledged as among the great leaders of the cultures of both Native Americans and Pacific Islanders.

    After Hawaii achieved statehood and was entitled to place two statues in Statuary Hall, the selection of Kamehameha was a foregone conclusion. The statue was dedicated in April 1969 and was located to its present location in the back corner of Statuary Hall. (Hawaii’s other statue is of the famed and soon-to-be-sanctified Belgian priest, Father Damien, who gave his life to the service of Hansen’s Disease patients at Kalaupapa, Molokai; Father Damien’s statue is located in the House connecting corridor on the Capitol’s First Floor.)

    The Kamehameha statue is a replica of two statues of Kamehameha located in Hawaii. The first stands outside the current Supreme Court of Hawaii building in downtown Honolulu, while the second stands near Kamehameha’s birthplace at Kapaau on the Island of Hawaii.

    To people who are not familiar with Hawaii, the Kamehameha statue may appear “different” from most if not all of the remainder of the Statuary Hall collection. First, of course, Kamehameha was a full-blooded Native Hawaiian, and to this day he represents but one of only a few statues in the collection who are not Caucasian males.

    Additionally, he is garbed in non-Western attire; this was the traditional attire not only of the Native Hawaiians of his time, but of the “alii nui,” or high chiefs, of ancient Hawaii. For these reasons, even the Hall’s own guidebook describes the statue as “easily the most striking.”

    For all of these reasons, a visit to the Kamehameha statue by those of us who call Hawaii our physical or spiritual home is akin to a pilgrimage.

    This is especially true for Native Hawaiians, who each year since 1969 have conducted a moving ceremony in honor of Kamehameha in Statuary Hall on Kamehameha Day, including the placing of lei on the statue.

    For the same reasons, please understand that any slight to the statue, however innocent, can easily be perceived as a slight upon Kamehameha, Native Hawaiians, Hawaii, Native Americans, Pacific Islanders, and minorities everywhere.

    ”Tour Mischaracterizations.”

    Last Friday, one of our staff members was conducting a tour of the Capitol with a constituent who is also a Hawaii television reporter. She observed, and the reporter videotaped, a staff member from another Congressional office (not an official Capitol Tour Guide) make the following statements to a group about Kamehameha’s statue:

    ”’King Kamehameha is kinda an interesting statue. I’ll just tell you the story behind it. He was the first king to unite all the Hawaiian Islands under a peaceable kingdom. And of course, King Kamehameha was honored by the Hawaiian people by being placed in Statuary Hall. But when they first sent the statue over they discovered that it wasn’t wearing any clothing. Congress was very upset and sent the statue back and said put some clothes on it. So Hawaii took it back and they dressed it as you see here. But even then Congress wasn’t happy because he wasn’t that decently dressed, he’s not really covered and so they decided to put him back here as punishment. They stuck him back here in this corner where nobody would notice him.”’

    This was reported throughout Hawaii on the evening news last Tuesday, July 15th.

    If this were possibly an isolated occurrence, we may simply have taken the matter up with the member to caution his staff. However, yesterday one of our staff observed two other staff members of other offices making comparable remarks to the effect that the Kamehameha statue was “sent back three times because he was morally indecent” and he was “put in the back because he was naked.”

    First, the statements made are factually inaccurate. Second, regardless of motive, they are highly insulting.

    We would greatly appreciate your immediate assistance, especially in this summer visitor peak, in taking whatever action is necessary to assure that Congressional staff, whether official guides or member office staff, are knowledgeable of the facts on the Kamehameha statue and sensitive to the concerns of those who care deeply about these matters. It may also be an appropriate time to provide a broader review of the accuracy and sensitivity of information provided about all statuary in the Capitol, as it may be that comparable situations exist with other statues of our fellow states’ revered citizens.

    Location. As noted, the Kamehameha statue has always been located in the most remote, inaccessible and nonvisible portion of Statuary Hall. From the time of his original placement in 1969, long before these staff mischaracterizations, Kamehameha’s location has been the source of endless questions and concern from Hawaii residents and others.

    Anecdotally, at least, the official position has been that Kamehameha was located there for structural reasons; that, as what has been represented to be the heaviest statue in the collection, it was necessary to place him there and that no other location in the Hall would suffice. However, given the above and the fact that Kamehameha has essentially been isolated for 34 years, it is appropriate that we now ask you whether, in fact, Kamehameha’s location is exclusively structural. If not, we believe it is fair that Kamehameha have his turn at a position of prominence in the front lines of the statues in Statuary Hall.

    We greatly appreciate you prompt attention to this matter of great
    importance to us personally and to those we represent. We stand ready to
    assist you in whatever way you feel appropriate, and look forward to your
    prompt response and action.

    Losing the War On Drugs: A Perspective From the Bench

    For more than two decades I was a soldier in the War on Drugs. In the course of my career, I have helped put drug users and dealers in jail; I have presided over the break-up of families; I have followed the laws of my state and country, and have seen their results.

    At one point, I held the record for the largest drug prosecution in the Los Angeles area: 75 kilos of heroin, which was and is a lot of narcotics. But today the record is 18 tons. I have prosecuted some people, and later sentenced others, to long terms in prison for drug offenses, and would do so again. But it has not done any good. I have concluded that we would be in much better shape if we could somehow take the profit out of the drug trade. Truly the drugs are dangerous, but it is the drug money that is turning a disease into a plague.

    I saw the heartbreaking results of drug prohibition too many times in my own courtroom. I saw children tempted by adults to become involved in drug trafficking for $50 in cash, a lot of money to a youngster in the inner city, or almost anywhere else. Once the child

    Losing the War On Drugs: A Perspective From the Bench

    For more than two decades I was a soldier in the War on Drugs. In the course of my career, I have helped put drug users and dealers in jail; I have presided over the break-up of families; I have followed the laws of my state and country, and have seen their results.

    At one point, I held the record for the largest drug prosecution in the Los Angeles area: 75 kilos of heroin, which was and is a lot of narcotics. But today the record is 18 tons. I have prosecuted some people, and later sentenced others, to long terms in prison for drug offenses, and would do so again. But it has not done any good. I have concluded that we would be in much better shape if we could somehow take the profit out of the drug trade. Truly the drugs are dangerous, but it is the drug money that is turning a disease into a plague.

    I saw the heartbreaking results of drug prohibition too many times in my own courtroom. I saw children tempted by adults to become involved in drug trafficking for $50 in cash, a lot of money to a youngster in the inner city, or almost anywhere else. Once the child

    Medicare Bill Faces Tough Committee Battle

    0

    WASHINGTON (UPI) — Analysts are skeptical, lawmakers are drawing battles lines, congressional staff is cautious: the Medicare prescription drug bill is in for a long, hot August full of negotiations.

    A conference committee of lawmakers from the House and Senate is trying to meld disparate Medicare bills that passed each chamber in June. It is a daunting task — the Senate bill is 747 pages and the House bill is 1,043 pages.

    Any final bill also must go back to the House and Senate for approval and be signed into law by President Bush, who probably represents the least contentious aspect as he has indicated he will sign just about anything to gain a Medicare win for the Republicans with elections looming in 2004.

    “We will produce a conference report,” said Liz Scanlon, health policy adviser for Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn. “It isn’t going to be easy.”

    That might be the summer’s biggest understatement as the Medicare prescription drug momentum, which seemed to snowball in June, all but melted in July.

    “I have to say that my assumption all along from the beginning of this Congress was that we would get a prescription drug bill enacted into law,” said Norman Ornstein, an analyst with the American Enterprise Institute in Washington. “I have now seen a very strange process emerge, and come to the conclusion that the odds are probably greater that we will get no bill this year, that we will get no law enacted this year.”

    Both bills create a limited prescription drug benefit in Medicare. Each also contains a coverage gap in which the beneficiary would pay all medical costs until a certain dollar amount is reached, when the government then would begin to pick up most or all of the cost. The are differences in eligibility requirements for seniors in poverty, for whom the drug benefit would pay some, if not all, of their out-of-pocket costs. These differences, although significant, really are money allocation issues within the $400-billion plan and possibly among the easier to resolve in conference committee.

    The fundamental political issues already are proving testy. Democrats want to keep Medicare a government-run and funded program available equally to all seniors. Republicans, concerned Medicare could go from being 12 percent of the U.S. budget now to 30 percent when the baby boomers retire, want to see if private health plans could provide care more efficiently for less money.

    The biggest hurdle seems to be the House provision that would tie traditional Medicare payments in 2010 to what private plans in the program were bidding. If the cost of traditional Medicare were less than prevailing plans, then the difference would be passed along to beneficiaries — 75 percent — and to the government — 25 percent.

    Pat Morrissey, deputy staff director for the House Commerce and Energy Committee who is proffering the Republican side, said this is a “good, responsible provision” because if traditional Medicare is cheaper than the plans cost, the beneficiaries would reap the rewards, and if the traditional program costs more, the 75 percent of the increase beneficiaries pay would be phased in over five years.

    While Republicans consider this modest Medicare reform, it could be a political deal-breaker for Democrats. Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., said he voted against the House bill — which squeaked through with a one-vote victory — because “the purpose of the bill is to end Medicare as we know it.”

    Dingell said he supports the Senate bill. His colleagues in that chamber, including Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D., have warned anything coming back that does not look substantially like the Senate bill will face a very tough battle and probable defeat.

    Democrats contend the House bill would force seniors to enroll in private health plans that would limit their access to physicians and services. They fear those staying in traditional Medicare would be the very sick, as the private plans would cater to more healthy beneficiaries, so the costs in traditional Medicare would skyrocket and, because those extra costs would be passed through to beneficiaries, make even the traditional program too expensive for many seniors.

    Morrissey said it was “critical that we produce a bill this year,” but added there would be a “complex set of negotiations,” with the worst possible scenario being to create an “implementation nightmare” if the final bill is not crafted properly.

    Another high priority for Democrats is a fallback drug plan, contained in the Senate bill but not in the House measure. It would have the government provide a drug plan should private health plans not bid for Medicare business in one or more of the 10 service regions to be set up across the United States.

    One issue could be resolved to help smooth process. Scanlon said the Congressional Budget Office is being asked to clarify how many retirees who now receive health care coverage from their former employers might lose it if a Medicare drug bill passes. Scanlon also said she was hearing “something quite different” than what the CBO was saying, noting employers actually might be more likely to retain their retiree benefits.

    Means testing in the House bill, which would require seniors with higher incomes to pay more for their drug coverage, remains a bone of contention, as does dealing with beneficiaries who are eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid, the health care program run in conjunction with the states to help the indigent. The Senate bill would require states now paying the costs for the 6 million so-called dual eligibles under Medicaid to continue to do so, while the House bill would have Medicare pick up the tab.

    The House bill also contains a $174-billion provision for health savings accounts and flexible spending for seniors who want to invest their own money to pay for their health care needs.

    Kate Leone, a legislative assistant for Daschle, said Democrats think if there is $174 billion available it should be put toward the prescription drug benefit. Morrissey said the money is separate from the $400 billion drug package.

    Leone said Democrats are committed to producing a bill better than either the House or Senate version, but “not at the expense of the program itself or beneficiaries.”

    Ornstein said he thinks this Medicare legislation does not follow the usual Bush White House models, which try to gather substantial Republican support and then persuade just enough Democrats needed for passage to go along. Examples: the tax cut; the education bill, in which he wooed both parties and struck coalition deals in both the House and Senate; or the campaign finance bill, in which Bush stayed out of it entirely and then signed what came forward.

    The president has said he will sign a drug bill, but he has not been hands-off with Medicare. The Republicans cut a deal in the Senate to pass the bill, but in the House, where Bush kept close tabs on his conservative sector, there still was divisiveness and a one-vote GOP win.

    “Now can this hybrid work?” Ornstein pondered. “Well, we now are in a conference committee … where the suggestion is ‘no.'”

    He said Senate Democrats and House Republicans have drawn battle lines over privatization. He predicts three possible outcomes: –Gridlock and no conference committee report.

    *A compromise that includes the guts of the Senate bill and has House leaders in effect telling the “70 most conservative members of the House, ‘Sorry, you’re screwed and we’re going to go out and get our 218 votes by going to mainstream Democrats,'” he said.

    *House Republicans and the White House force Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, to come up with a 5-4 partisan vote among Senate conferees for the House bill and then bring it up in the Senate and dare the members there to filibuster or vote it down.

    “To get Grassley to move on this is going to be difficult without bribing him with lots of rural healthcare money,” Ornstein said. “That may be however, the most likely outcome in the end.”

    Gail Wilensky, an analyst at Project Hope in Washington, who has advised both Bush presidents on Medicare issues, said the private sector competition provisions in the House bill are very important to the future of the program.

    “It is my hope that the conservatives in the House mean what they say, that these were deal breakers from their point of view in terms of supporting legislation,” she said. “While it’s hard for me to imagine the House leadership reaching out to very many Democrats to try to… make up their numbers were they to become disaffected, it may be more possible to imagine the White House or others reaching out in order to try to salvage the bill.”

    The conference committee is not rushing negotiations — the staff will meet regularly through August and a report in September or even October likely is the earliest date possible.

    Copyright 2003 by United Press International. All rights reserved.

    Medicare Bill Faces Tough Committee Battle

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    WASHINGTON (UPI) — Analysts are skeptical, lawmakers are drawing battles lines, congressional staff is cautious: the Medicare prescription drug bill is in for a long, hot August full of negotiations.

    A conference committee of lawmakers from the House and Senate is trying to meld disparate Medicare bills that passed each chamber in June. It is a daunting task — the Senate bill is 747 pages and the House bill is 1,043 pages.

    Any final bill also must go back to the House and Senate for approval and be signed into law by President Bush, who probably represents the least contentious aspect as he has indicated he will sign just about anything to gain a Medicare win for the Republicans with elections looming in 2004.

    “We will produce a conference report,” said Liz Scanlon, health policy adviser for Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn. “It isn’t going to be easy.”

    That might be the summer’s biggest understatement as the Medicare prescription drug momentum, which seemed to snowball in June, all but melted in July.

    “I have to say that my assumption all along from the beginning of this Congress was that we would get a prescription drug bill enacted into law,” said Norman Ornstein, an analyst with the American Enterprise Institute in Washington. “I have now seen a very strange process emerge, and come to the conclusion that the odds are probably greater that we will get no bill this year, that we will get no law enacted this year.”

    Both bills create a limited prescription drug benefit in Medicare. Each also contains a coverage gap in which the beneficiary would pay all medical costs until a certain dollar amount is reached, when the government then would begin to pick up most or all of the cost. The are differences in eligibility requirements for seniors in poverty, for whom the drug benefit would pay some, if not all, of their out-of-pocket costs. These differences, although significant, really are money allocation issues within the $400-billion plan and possibly among the easier to resolve in conference committee.

    The fundamental political issues already are proving testy. Democrats want to keep Medicare a government-run and funded program available equally to all seniors. Republicans, concerned Medicare could go from being 12 percent of the U.S. budget now to 30 percent when the baby boomers retire, want to see if private health plans could provide care more efficiently for less money.

    The biggest hurdle seems to be the House provision that would tie traditional Medicare payments in 2010 to what private plans in the program were bidding. If the cost of traditional Medicare were less than prevailing plans, then the difference would be passed along to beneficiaries — 75 percent — and to the government — 25 percent.

    Pat Morrissey, deputy staff director for the House Commerce and Energy Committee who is proffering the Republican side, said this is a “good, responsible provision” because if traditional Medicare is cheaper than the plans cost, the beneficiaries would reap the rewards, and if the traditional program costs more, the 75 percent of the increase beneficiaries pay would be phased in over five years.

    While Republicans consider this modest Medicare reform, it could be a political deal-breaker for Democrats. Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., said he voted against the House bill — which squeaked through with a one-vote victory — because “the purpose of the bill is to end Medicare as we know it.”

    Dingell said he supports the Senate bill. His colleagues in that chamber, including Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D., have warned anything coming back that does not look substantially like the Senate bill will face a very tough battle and probable defeat.

    Democrats contend the House bill would force seniors to enroll in private health plans that would limit their access to physicians and services. They fear those staying in traditional Medicare would be the very sick, as the private plans would cater to more healthy beneficiaries, so the costs in traditional Medicare would skyrocket and, because those extra costs would be passed through to beneficiaries, make even the traditional program too expensive for many seniors.

    Morrissey said it was “critical that we produce a bill this year,” but added there would be a “complex set of negotiations,” with the worst possible scenario being to create an “implementation nightmare” if the final bill is not crafted properly.

    Another high priority for Democrats is a fallback drug plan, contained in the Senate bill but not in the House measure. It would have the government provide a drug plan should private health plans not bid for Medicare business in one or more of the 10 service regions to be set up across the United States.

    One issue could be resolved to help smooth process. Scanlon said the Congressional Budget Office is being asked to clarify how many retirees who now receive health care coverage from their former employers might lose it if a Medicare drug bill passes. Scanlon also said she was hearing “something quite different” than what the CBO was saying, noting employers actually might be more likely to retain their retiree benefits.

    Means testing in the House bill, which would require seniors with higher incomes to pay more for their drug coverage, remains a bone of contention, as does dealing with beneficiaries who are eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid, the health care program run in conjunction with the states to help the indigent. The Senate bill would require states now paying the costs for the 6 million so-called dual eligibles under Medicaid to continue to do so, while the House bill would have Medicare pick up the tab.

    The House bill also contains a $174-billion provision for health savings accounts and flexible spending for seniors who want to invest their own money to pay for their health care needs.

    Kate Leone, a legislative assistant for Daschle, said Democrats think if there is $174 billion available it should be put toward the prescription drug benefit. Morrissey said the money is separate from the $400 billion drug package.

    Leone said Democrats are committed to producing a bill better than either the House or Senate version, but “not at the expense of the program itself or beneficiaries.”

    Ornstein said he thinks this Medicare legislation does not follow the usual Bush White House models, which try to gather substantial Republican support and then persuade just enough Democrats needed for passage to go along. Examples: the tax cut; the education bill, in which he wooed both parties and struck coalition deals in both the House and Senate; or the campaign finance bill, in which Bush stayed out of it entirely and then signed what came forward.

    The president has said he will sign a drug bill, but he has not been hands-off with Medicare. The Republicans cut a deal in the Senate to pass the bill, but in the House, where Bush kept close tabs on his conservative sector, there still was divisiveness and a one-vote GOP win.

    “Now can this hybrid work?” Ornstein pondered. “Well, we now are in a conference committee … where the suggestion is ‘no.'”

    He said Senate Democrats and House Republicans have drawn battle lines over privatization. He predicts three possible outcomes: –Gridlock and no conference committee report.

    *A compromise that includes the guts of the Senate bill and has House leaders in effect telling the “70 most conservative members of the House, ‘Sorry, you’re screwed and we’re going to go out and get our 218 votes by going to mainstream Democrats,'” he said.

    *House Republicans and the White House force Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, to come up with a 5-4 partisan vote among Senate conferees for the House bill and then bring it up in the Senate and dare the members there to filibuster or vote it down.

    “To get Grassley to move on this is going to be difficult without bribing him with lots of rural healthcare money,” Ornstein said. “That may be however, the most likely outcome in the end.”

    Gail Wilensky, an analyst at Project Hope in Washington, who has advised both Bush presidents on Medicare issues, said the private sector competition provisions in the House bill are very important to the future of the program.

    “It is my hope that the conservatives in the House mean what they say, that these were deal breakers from their point of view in terms of supporting legislation,” she said. “While it’s hard for me to imagine the House leadership reaching out to very many Democrats to try to… make up their numbers were they to become disaffected, it may be more possible to imagine the White House or others reaching out in order to try to salvage the bill.”

    The conference committee is not rushing negotiations — the staff will meet regularly through August and a report in September or even October likely is the earliest date possible.

    Copyright 2003 by United Press International. All rights reserved.

    The Courage of Mayor Williams

    It may well be the “beginning of the end” for the liberal education monopoly. Washington D.C. Mayor Anthony Williams, a Democrat, is enthusiastically pressing forward with his advocacy of “school choice,” through a system of vouchers. Facing fierce opposition from what would traditionally be his voter base, Mayor Williams has recognized that the current system is simply broken, and nothing presently suggested by its advocates (certainly not the ever more outlandish sums of money continually being demanded) is going to fix it.

    But unlike the members of the public education/Democrat political machine, Mayor Williams has a true regard for the supposed objects of the public education debate … the children. For far too long, big government liberals have gotten away with portraying themselves as having concern for the welfare of the children, when what they really seek is an ever-growing budget for the education bureaucracy. “The children” end up merely as fodder to be fed into the system in order to keep its engines running. Worst of all, the budgetary patterns of recent years have established a scheme that essentially guarantees continued academic failure, since the perpetually falling test scores of students provide the single biggest excuse for educrats to demand even more extravagant expenditures on schools than is already the case.

    It is in this realm that a voucher program, if properly implemented, would yield a multitude of significant benefits. Taxpayers could conceivably save thousands of dollars per student, with no adverse effects on the quality of education received by the student. And it is also this aspect of the voucher movement that has the public education bureaucracy trembling in fear. For years, budgetary sessions of most state legislatures have been mired down by demands for greater educational funding. It is always presumed that better academic performance from students will magically follow. But the consistent result is merely fancier facilities, more administrators, and a further decline in standardized test scores. So the vicious cycle continues.

    However, this scenario isn’t good enough for Mayor Williams. Citing the inherent competition that results from parents having a choice as to where to send their children to school, Williams stated that the end result of a voucher program would be no less than a revitalization of the District’s middle class. The Mayer has seen the pattern of recent years, and he isn’t willing to sit quietly by while it continues. And though he hasn’t stressed the cost savings aspect of voucher programs, he has made it clear that he wants better education, not simply more expensive education, for the city’s young people.

    In an opposing statement that must ring hollow, even among those who claim philosophical alignment with it, Linda Moody, president of the D.C. Congress of Parents and Teachers, insists that “D.C. public schools can provide the services that we need.” It is noteworthy here that she didn’t claim they presently do provide those services, but that they potentially “can.” In other words, after certain things are “fixed” in the D.C. public schools, they could be expected to perform. And, no doubt, the required “fix” means only one thing… more money.

    Among Mayor Williams’ biggest supporters is Milwaukee Mayor John Norquist, who has seen his own city’s voucher program grow exponentially in the past few years. Norquist asserts that not only have students benefited from access to private and parochial schools, but, as a result of competition, the public schools have improved as well.

    Unfortunately, throughout much of the rest of the country, the liberal education bureaucracy continues to forcefully dominate any discussion of much-needed academic reform. In Nevada, this takes the form of a billion dollar tax increase, which is being enacted through collusion of the Governor and the state Supreme Court, and in direct defiance of a voter referendum outlawing such action.

    In California, mandated graduation proficiency assessment testing is being delayed for at least another two years, at the behest of the education establishment who claim that the system isn’t presently ready to fulfill such a requirement. In other words, the educrats are demanding that, for the next two years, students should be given diplomas regardless of their inability to fulfill minimum requirements for graduation.

    No doubt, during the next two years, budgets will continue to mushroom, staffing will increase, and the ruse that is public education will continue to flounder just as it has for the past several decades. But that’s fine because it’s for the children.

    ”’Christopher G. Adamo was born in Cheyenne Wyoming, but has lived in several places, ranging from the East Coast to the West Coast, before settling back in southeastern Wyoming to raise his family. He has held an interest in politics for many years and has worked within the Wyoming GOP as well as the Wyoming Christian Coalition. His archives can be found at:”’ https://www.ConservativeTruth.org