Daily Independent (Ashland, KY)

Nation

July 29, 2009

Obama health meeting draws Appalachian protesters

BRISTOL, Va. — More than 200 protesters from a conservative corner of Appalachia showed up Wednesday in opposition to President Barack Obama's health care reform effort.

Some held signs reading, "Obamacare is political malpractice" and "Keep your hands off my health care."

The president was holding a town hall meeting later Wednesday, just days after more than 2,700 poor people from Appalachia were treated at a free clinic for decaying teeth, fading eyesight and other maladies.

U.S. Rep. Rick Boucher, a Democrat who has represented southwest Virginia's 9th District since 1982, said the clinic by Tennessee-based Remote Area Medical "put an exclamation point in a very visible way on the fact that we have 47 million uninsured Americans."

The 10th annual clinic in nearby Wise, Va., drew a turn-away crowd of desperate men, women and children from Virginia, eastern Kentucky and northern Tennessee.

"The need is running about the same, but I suppose it is getting worse from the standpoint that it is getting even more expensive for these people," said Stan Brock, the British-born jungle guide for Marlin Perkins on the 1960s TV series "Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom" who founded Remote Area Medical in 1985 to serve the poor in the United States and abroad.

"This is not a peculiarity of southwest Virginia," added Brock, whose next "expedition" will be an eight-day clinic in downtown Los Angeles beginning Aug. 11. "It is like this everywhere. The faces are just different. Health care in the United States is the privilege of the wealthy, the well-to-do and the very well insured."

The protesters, who came from the tri-state area of Virginia, North Carolina and Tennessee, were focused on who will get to make health care decisions.

Art teacher Angie Meade, 39, of Bristol said she worries that government control of health care will mean she can no longer pick her own doctor.

Elaine Powers, 69, also of Bristol, said she thought people over 65 would receive only what she called "end of life care."

Powers said she believed the elderly would be given only pain pills.

The audience inside the town hall meeting was to include about 100 union-represented and insured cashiers, baggers, managers and clerks at a Kroger grocery store. Cincinnati-based Kroger, the nation's largest traditional grocery chain, operates in 31 states and spends more than $1 billion a year on health care and related benefits.

Kroger spokeswoman Meghan Glynn said the company thinks reform is needed. "It is a complex issue that must balance the needs of citizens, the costs to individuals and businesses, and issues of access and quality of care," Glynn said.

Bristol is a city uniquely divided with the Tennessee-Virginia state line running through the center of this combined community of about 41,000.

U.S. Rep. Phil Roe, a Republican and retired obstetrician who represents the Tennessee side of Bristol, said the vast majority of his constituents "are scared to death" about Obama's health care initiative.

"They are worried about the government intrusion into their health care system," he said.

"We have experienced firsthand in Tennessee what a public option meant, which was TennCare," Roe said of Tennessee's expanded Medicaid program. The program once covered the uninsured who made too much money to qualify for Medicaid. However, soaring costs forced the state to scale it back substantially in 2003, and thousands of people lost coverage.

"It decreases access, and when you decrease access you decrease quality and increase costs," Roe said.

Boucher supports health care reform and thinks most Americans do, too — as long as it doesn't compromise treatment options and their quality of care.

"But the public is not going to offer broad support until there is a broad understanding of what is being considered," he said. "We should not rush something through."



Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.

Text Only
Nation
  • EGYPT.jpg Egyptians in US already looking toward the future

    Waves of celebration rippled out of Egypt and washed onto America's shores Friday, with Egyptian-Americans already looking to the future after the departure of President Hosni Mubarak and his three decades of authoritarian rule.

    February 11, 2011 1 Photo

  • Pulitzers handed out When the Pulitzer board handed out the most important prizes in journalism, The New York Times and The Washington Post topped the list of winners— and finalists — as usual.

    April 13, 2010

  • Mine Explosion Crews re-enter W.Va. mine to recover 9 bodies Searchers went back inside a wrecked West Virginia coal mine Monday to pull out more bodies as federal investigators prepared to launch their probe of the explosion that killed 29 men in the worst U.S. coal mining disaster since 1970.

    April 12, 2010 1 Photo

  • Mine Explosion Churchgoers honor 29 dead miners _ and profession A pair of tall black boots and a lunch pail sat near the altar Sunday at the New Life Assembly church, a memorial to the 29 men killed in the worst U.S. mining disaster since 1970 and a thank-you to those who make their living inside the mountains.

    April 11, 2010 1 Photo

  • Mine Explosion 4 missing W.Va. miners dead; final toll at 29 Rescue workers found four bodies deep in a West Virginia coal mine, dashing the fading hopes of finding more survivors of a violent explosion that claimed 29 lives, making it the worst U.S. mining disaster in a generation.

    April 10, 2010 3 Photos

  • Stevens Obama promises quick court replacement for Stevens The retirement of John Paul Stevens, the Supreme Court's leading liberal but a justice who also could find conservative allies, will set off an election-year political battle over President Barack Obama's second high court pick.

    April 9, 2010 1 Photo

  • Mine Explosion Funerals begin for victims of W.Va. mine blast As grieving relatives began burying some of the 25 coal miners killed in a massive underground explosion, crews prepared to go back into the mine Friday despite increasingly slim odds of finding survivors.

    April 9, 2010 1 Photo

  • Mine Explosion Smoke, fear of fire push rescuers from W.Va. mine Rescue teams trekked far enough into a ruined coal mine early Friday to see that no one had used a chamber where four missing miners could have sought refuge, further dimming hopes of anyone else surviving an explosion that killed 25.

    April 9, 2010 1 Photo

  • Mine Explosion Search on again for WV coal mine blast survivors Rescue workers clinging to the slimmest of hope pushed deep into a shattered coal mine early Friday, trying to get far enough to finally resolve whether four miners somehow survived an explosion that killed 25.

    April 9, 2010 1 Photo

  • Mine Explosion Gases force crews to abandon W.Va. mine rescue Dangerous gases forced rescue crews to abandon the search Thursday for four coal miners missing since an explosion killed 25 colleagues in the worst U.S. mining disaster in more than two decades.

    April 8, 2010 1 Photo

Featured Ads
Seasonal Content
AP Video
Man Killed in Courthouse Shootout Video of Ga. Man Who Killed Girl Released Air Force Airlines: Leaders Get Polished Service Ga Girl Fights Off Kidnapper at Walmart Nevada Highway Patrol, City Settle Beating Case White House Attacks Romney on Birth Control Homs Bombardment Continues, Global Outcry Grows Mo. Teen Gets Life Sentence for Killing Girl, 9 Lower-hassle Screening to Be Tested at Airports Raw Video: Dog Rescued From Icy Colo. Water Helmet Camera Captures Calif. Fire Rescue Worker Tells 911: Powell 'exploded the House' Triple Win: Santorum Takes Minn., Mo., Colo. Injured Marine Inspired by Homecoming No Rape Charges Against Son of NYPD Commissioner Egypt's Ruling Generals Play Risky Game With US Former Komen Exec Defends Funding Cut Skip the Coffee Cup and Inhale Your Caffeine Fix Calif. Gay Marriage Ban Ruled Unconstitutional Jury Selection for Ex-UVa Athlete Enters 2nd Day
Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com
Hyperlocal Search
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide
Popular Searches
Powered by Local.com
SEC Zone