By Donna Smith
Progressive Democrats of America, Colorado member
November 27, 2007, New Orleans, LA
The SiCKO Cure Road Show rolled into New Orleans on Saturday, and the road show team immediately joined a meeting of local activists fighting the demolition of thousands of public housing units. Though some relatively powerful groups oppose the loss of some 3,900 public housing units, the demolitions will begin on December 4 unless an unexpected court ruling or an even more unlikely change of heart occurs to halt the tearing down of this vital housing for low income residents of the area.
Many people believe that the rebuilding of New Orleans includes a significant shifting of resources and effort toward private ownership and operation of formerly public facilities and services. Charity Hospital, which, prior to Katrina, provided vital health care and out-patient services to more than 500,000 people annually has never reopened. If those displaced by Katrina are ever to return to their homes in New Orleans, and if the city is ever to rebuild the full richness of its character and its people, the gutting of those places and services that allow societal diversity-race, class and otherwise-must be halted.
The road show has the mission of bringing the message of HR676, single-payer universal health care (The National Health Insurance Act), to the people of the area, and the issues of homelessness and lack of public facilities serving the poor and uninsured often go hand-in-hand with a lack of access to health care and other issues surrounding poverty. Donna Smith, who appears in ‘SiCKO,’ is on the road show team, and it also includes Liv Boykins, special assistant to Rep. John Conyers of Michigan, Julia Atkins of Florida, Joe Friendly of New York City and Bill Hill of Tucson. The team pulled into New Orleans after visiting cities in Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama and Mississippi.
More than two years ago, Hurricane Katrina and the levy breaches that followed claimed the lives of thousands in New Orleans as a horrified world watched. Though the FEMA debacle and the ‘Heckuva job Brownie’ moments made us all ashamed of the U.S. government’s response to the disaster, the continued failure of the local, state and federal government responses now cry out for more than shame and outrage-and most especially for action.
Brad Ott of New Orleans leads The Committee for the Reopening of Charity Hospital, and he explained after the viewing of SiCKO on Saturday evening at the Ashe’ Cultural Arts Center that one of the group’s efforts will be to bring a class action legal case on behalf of those who now find themselves unable to access health care and who were formerly patients at Charity Hospital. Ott is looking for plaintiffs in the case and urges those who may be interested to contact him.
Additional efforts to stop the demolition of public housing continue as well. For more information on that effort in new Orleans, click here.
The SiCKO Cure National Road Show team pushes off for Tallahasee next, and for more information on the tour and its stops please visit healthcare-now.org. The road show is being co-sponsored by Healthcare-Now, the California Nurses Association, Physicians for a National Health Program, and other groups along the way.
Join Donna Smith and other PDA healthcare activists in the PDA Healthcare for All/Single Payer Healthcare Issue Organizing Team. Contact Diane@pdamerica.org.