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5 posts from April 2011

April 20, 2011

On Earth Day, Green Entrepreneurism is Alive and Well

In preparation for Earth Day on today's MOMocrats MOMochat radio show, Cynematic and I recounted our visit to last week's Go Green Expo in Los Angeles, and how encouraging it is to see the green sector of the economy beginning to flourish. We both were especially impressed with the range of green entrepreneurs represented there, especially those that were headed by women.

As promised, here are links to some of the businesses we mentioned on the show:

Linda Loudermilk Designs - Sustainable, organic, socially conscious... and fashionable, too.

Linda Loudermilk

Children's Clothes by Fuzzy Green Monster Fuzzy Green Monster at Go Green Expo
Poster of Jersey Shore's "The Situation," endorser of The Green Garmento reusable dry cleaning bag. The Green Garmento at Go Green Expo

One of favorite products - as moms - was Wrap-N-Mat - a nifty, reusable  food wrap that replaces plastic sandwich bags. Naturally, this product was invented by a mother of four, who is the company's CEO.

Wrap-n-Mat at Go Green Expo 119_1861
Designer LED Lights from Viribright. Viribright LED Lights at Go Green Expo
Los Angeles area residents can hire Farmscape Gardens to design and maintain their own urban farms. The enterprise's staff of professional horticulturists also works with local schools. Farmscape Gardens at Go Green Expo

There were more exciting products and services on display at the Go Green Expo, and we hope to focus on more of them on a future MOMochat show.

April 07, 2011

Five Reasons Debbie Wasserman Schultz Will Rock the DNC

Debbie Wasserman Schultz

Guys have been running the Democratic National Committee for the past two and a half decades. The last time a woman was in charge of the nationwide Democratic show, we hadn't yet heard Bill Clinton deny that he'd had a relationship with "that woman."

Takes you back, doesn't it?

That's all about to change as Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz stands ready to move into one of the most important roles in her party -- the chair of the Democratic National Committee. So what can we expect from her? Business as usual or is she going to show the Dems a path to electoral victory in 2012 they haven't thought about yet? As she takes the helm as the Democrat's chief fundraiser and strategist, it's fair to ask, especially if you're not from her home state of Florida, why Debbie? Here are just five good reasons we can assume that Wasserman Schultz is the perfect woman for the job:

Continue reading "Five Reasons Debbie Wasserman Schultz Will Rock the DNC" »

April 06, 2011

Guest Post from Senator Kirsten Gillibrand: Congratulations, Debbie!

We spent a little time on this morning's MOMocrats MOMochat radio show exulting about yesterday's announcement of Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL) as the Democratic National Committee's new chair. She's a smart politician, an expert communicator -- and a working mom, who almost makes it all look easy... even when it's not (as when she fought cancer a few years back, seemingly without missing a beat). We're delighted with the appointment... as is her friend (another of our MOMocrat girl crushes!), Senator Kirsten Gillibrand:

Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz I was thrilled to learn yesterday that President Obama has chosen my good friend, Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz, to be the next Chair of the Democratic National Committee.

Not only is Debbie a wonderful person and a strong progressive champion, but she has been such an advocate for women and a true mentor to me. It's so important for women who are interested in running for office to have role models and Debbie has served as that for me and so many new female members of Congress.

Debbie will be only the third woman ever to chair the DNC. It's so important that more women rise to positions of power so our points of view and our interests are front and center. As a young mother who ran for Congress and has risen up the ranks of the party, Debbie embodies that and I know the DNC will benefit greatly by having her as chair.

Debbie has spent 20 years of her life serving the people of Florida. Since 2004, she's represented Florida's 20th Congressional district with unparalleled passion, energy and conviction. Debbie truly sees her role as a public servant as a personal and moral commitment to making a difference for the families she represents.

She's done incredible things for her district, her state and this country as a whole and I can't wait to see what she will do for our party.

I hope you'll join me in wishing Debbie congratulations. Please sign the attached card and I'll make sure to get all your well wishes to her.

Thanks for sending your congratulations to Debbie! This is such an important time for Democrats and I can't think of anyone I'd rather have leading the charge.

 

April 05, 2011

FY2012 Budget Battle: The Opening Salvo

This morning Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) released a template for the FY2012 Budget Resolution. If The Path to Prosperity is, as the GOP promises, the road to restoring America's promise I encourage you to think about another road.

Children-car

That is a picture taken during the Dirty Thirties, when our breadbasket crumbled. In the early 30s people turned their faces west. They did find work in California, though mostly as migrant laborers, picking fruit and harvesting lettuce. A few years later FDR would begin his New Deal of recovery, relief, and reform. Three decades on, the Great Society programs would reinforce our social safety net.

Mr. Ryan's budget doesn't even take pains to pretend to leave the safety net in place. Instead, he places all of us in the cradle of laissez-faire economics. The cradle metaphor isn't misplaced here, as it is children who are likely to suffer the most in Mr. Ryan's economic vision.

Food Aid

Mr. Ryan would turn the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly known as Food Stamps) into a block grant (more on that in a minute). In 2015, when the economy is once again hale and hearty, benefits will be contingent on either holding a job or enrolling in job training.

This is replay of the 1994-5 debate on welfare reform, which required women to go to work. In general, I have no objection to requiring able-bodied adults to work given proper support. That means child care subsidies, food aid to cover the transition from cash assistance to full employment, transportation and housing subsidies, and so on. If we truly want women – and it is mostly women – to be self-sustaining, we must offer educational opportunities that end in a skilled job with family-supporting wages. How does Mr. Ryan intend to enforce a work or training requirement when very young children are in the home? Or if we have a double-dip recession and unemployment remains high?

Does Mr. Ryan not know that many food aid recipients are employed? They have minimum or low-wage jobs and, assuming a family of three, make less than $1,526 per month -- a couple grand more a year than a full-time, minimum wage worker would earn. Does he not know that increasing numbers of retirees -- again mostly women without pensions and with low Social Security benefits -– rely on SNAP? Will he require the elderly to work? And what about our service men and women who use food aid to make ends meet? Will they too have to get better jobs?

Medicaid

Medicaid is the health insurance program for America's poorest and most needy. The majority of beneficiaries are children and the elderly. I know that will surprise many, who think of it simply as program for the very poor. But Medicaid is much more restrictive than many imagine.

In general, states are only required to cover children (including those in foster care), pregnant women, low-income disabled persons, low-income adults with dependent children, and the elderly who have exhausted their savings and are in nursing homes. Childless adults, even those with incomes far below the poverty line are not automatically eligible for Medicaid.

Mr. Ryan, and Republicans in general, have argued that Medicaid is too expensive. Yes, it is expensive precisely because it is the payer of last resort. Children on Medicaid receive EPSDT services, aimed at preventing health problems. Children on Medicaid are sometimes medically complex and receive SSI income for extreme low birth weight or other serious maladies. Medicaid recipients under 22 or over 65 may be eligible via the need for inpatient mental health care. Elderly in a nursing home who have run through all their savings become eligible; Medicare doesn't cover long-term care. Medicaid is expensive precisely because it operates as a safety net and covers services unavailable via private insurance or Medicare.

Mr. Ryan argues about Medicaid's quality of care, pointing out that the health outcomes of beneficiaries is poor. He must have skipped the public health literature for the last decade or so. Medicaid beneficiaries are poor. Many rely on food aid and while I've save you a retread of Michael Pollan, our agricultural policies mean that healthier food is often more expensive. They are more likely to live in areas with high lead levels. More likely to live in areas too remote or unsafe to exercise. More likely to suffer stress. I recommend he look into the social determinants of health before commenting on Medicaid outcomes. Medicaid is not magic. It cannot heal all comers and then offer a ride home on a unicorn; it is limited medical benefit for people who have concomitant health challenges and outcomes to match.

Yes, Medicaid is straining states' budget and yes, reimbursement is too low to attract enough providers, particularly specialists. But block granting doesn't automatically solve those problems, nor does it solve the GOP favorite claims of fraud, waste and abuse. It just gives states the ability to hold the purse strings.

Mr. Ryan and almost every other R want to convert federal entitlement programs like Medicaid and Medicare to block grants. Block grants are Beltway-speak for bucket of money. Entitlement programs like Medicaid impose requirements and limits on the states to receive money (Rs call this bureaucracy). Do the limits impinge upon states' flexibility? Yes of course. Which is why the federal government allows demonstration projects and waivers – Section 1115, 1915(b) or (c) or some combination thereof, 1915(i). There are optional coverage services to be included or waived.

To simply gut the Medicaid rules that have guaranteed coverage for the most vulnerable citizens and instead hand governors a check is wrong. Mr. Ryan may decry the social safety net, thinking it is becoming a “hammock, lulling able-bodied citizens into lives of complacency and dependency” but I wonder how that image squares with the reality of Medicaid: a child, a pregnant woman, a bed-bound senior, or a disabled adult.

There are other changes in the budget. Ending Medicare for those under 55. Lowering corporate taxes from 35% to 25%. (I'd support that one, if it meant companies actually paid federal taxes.) Cutting federal workers salaries and benefits.

Mr Ryan may pretend that his budget represents some grand vision for America's future. But in truth it is the plan of someone who read too much Horatio Alger and Ayn Rand, of someone who has never lived in Section 8 housing, of someone who does not know hunger, of someone who never had to take their kids to mall to get warm in the winter, of someone who enjoys their comfortable, government-provided chair atop the House Budget Committee.

This Week's MOMochat: Election 2012 and The Ryan Budget

Campaign 2012 has officially begun - Are You In?

Donna Schwartz Mills, Cynematic and Jaelithe Judy talk about the official launch of the President's re-election campaign and the relative lack of enthusiasm from the liberal wing of the party...

...especially in light of the radical budget proposal revealed this week by GOP House Budget Committee Chair Paul Ryan, which would gut Medicare and Medicaid -- finally fulfilling a longtime goal of the John Birch Society and other extremists on the right. All we can say is that the Koch Brothers are getting their money's worth on their investment in the 2010 elections.

Fortunately, we've got Melissa Schober to help us make sense of it all. She'll be posting her analysis of the Ryan proposal here and is also making time to appear on MOMochat this week.

MOMocrat Melissa has worked in and around the Beltway for the past decade, beginning her career with NARAL, moving on to become a public health advocate. An apparent glutton for punishment, she lived through health care reform only to take a job working with a mid-Atlantic state's Medicaid program.

 A mom to an almost 3 year old, she is perpetually short on sleep.

Melissa contributes to the MOMocrats as an individual and the views she expresses here and on our show are her own.

Listen here Wednesday, April 6: 12:00 Noon Eastern/11:00 AM Central/9:00 AM Pacific.

Got something to say? We'll be talking live calls at  (347) 945-6465.

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