Subscribe to The Jewish Standard free weekly newsletter

 
font size: +
 

Jewish groups join national debate on health-care reform

 
 
 
image
Rep. Steve Rothman (D-9) answers questions on health-care reform at an Aug. 13 town hall meeting at Hackensack High School attended by 750 people. Carrie GiddIns

Legislators and lobbyists working to push through President Obama’s health-care reforms have sought out the faith community as a voice of moral urgency.

Indeed, the contentious debate over health-care reform facing the country appears to have united Jewish advocacy organizations. While individuals within the Jewish community may not universally accept Obama’s push for reform, the Jewish organizational world is mostly unified in support, said Steve Gutow, president of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, the umbrella group for the nation’s Jewish Community Relations Councils.

“Social justice is a Jewish imperative,” said Nancy Ratzan, president of the National Council for Jewish Women, during a telephone interview on Monday. “Access to basic health care for everyone, I think, is understood today as a fundamental social-justice issue. The Jewish community is very engaged and very inspired by this opportunity to change policy to ensure that kind of justice for everybody, so it’s not just those who can afford it.”

NCJW has voiced its support for the public health-care option, a part of the reform proposals that has elicited accusations of socialism from its detractors. Under the proposal, a government health plan would be available in an open exchange with private insurance companies. The idea, say supporters, is to increase competition among providers while giving customers access to the best rates. Opponents charge that private companies would not be able to compete with a government-backed plan and the exchange would damage competition.

“The purpose of this reform bill is essentially to try to reduce those costs for everyone,” said New Jersey’s Rep. Frank Pallone (D-6) during a conference call with reporters last month. The health exchange, he added, “becomes like a large group plan and there’s competition. We expect the costs of premiums to go down overall.”

image
National Council of Jewish Women president Nancy Ratzan

In a move that angered the more liberal members of his party earlier this week, Obama began to back away from the public option, saying it is not the centerpiece of his reform package and compromise is possible.

NCJW’s goal in promoting reform is to ensure affordability and accessibility to health care for everybody, Ratzan said, pointing out that the high cost of health care makes it inaccessible to many people, including a large percentage of women and single mothers. Those who do not receive coverage through their employers often do not have viable options, she added.

“We still believe that the public option is a critical and strong piece of reform that is needed to ensure one of the fundamental purposes of this reform — to ensure accessibility and affordability and inclusion,” Ratzan said. “We believe the public option provides that balance and that access.”

JCPA’s Gutow praised the public option as a means of increasing competition among insurance companies but added that it is too early for advocacy groups to make it a centerpiece of their work. JCPA’s goal is to see a plan of action that makes health care affordable and accessible, he said. Whether the public health exchange that Pallone touted last month makes it into the final package will not determine JCPA’s support, Gutow said.

“It’s a great option but it’s not the only option,” he said.

As The Jewish Standard went to press on Wednesday, Obama was scheduled to address thousands of members of various religious communities during a conference call organized by a coalition of faith groups called 40 Days for Health Reform. Among the sponsoring organizations were the Jewish Council on Public Affairs and the Reform movement’s Religious Action Center.

Katie Paris, a member of Faith in Public Life, one of the organizations behind Wednesday’s conference call, said the faith community has an important role to play in promoting reform.

“Unlike a lobby group in Washington, clergy are real local leaders,” she said. “We want to put the focus back on real people, real leaders. They’re on the front line of this crisis.”

image
Katie Paris is a member of Faith in Public Life, one of the organizations behind Wednesday’s conference call with President Obama and members of America’s religious communities.

In his d’var Torah this past Shabbat, Rabbi Neal Borovitz of Temple Avodat Shalom in River Edge lamented the disrespectful behavior displayed at recent congressional forums around the country to promote reform. He stressed the importance of respectful communication with elected officials, even when in disagreement.

Rep. Steve Rothman (D-9), who could not be reached for comment, completed a series of town hall meetings around the area last week. Attendees told the Standard Rothman faced heckling, insults, and accusations during the 10 meetings, which altogether drew more than 3,500 people.

In a future sermon, Borovitz wrote in an e-mail to the Standard, he plans to speak on the need to ensure that any legislation that comes out of the current debate establishes health care as a right of every citizen and that all Americans have the right and responsibility to make their own health-care decisions.

“The responsibility of a community to care for the sick and the autonomy of individuals to make their own decisions are both Jewish values that I believe it is my right and responsibility as a rabbi to teach and promote,” Borovitz wrote.

The Reform movement has made health-care reform one of its central issues in recent years. During the movement’s biennial convention in 2007, Rabbi Eric Yoffie, president of the Union for Reform Judaism, said, “We live in a country with a pitifully inadequate health insurance system that causes horrors every day so tragic that they could rip the heart out of a stone.”

Barbara Weinstein, legislative director of the movement’s Religious Action Center, said the movement has been encouraging its congregations across the country to get involved in the debate. Many people still have misconceptions about the proposals in Washington, she said, stressing the need for more education.

“Our main focus is ensuring that we get health-care reform that provides the health-care coverage that all Americans need and deserve and that we are not the only Western democracy that doesn’t make sure all its citizens have access to health insurance,” she said.

“The role the faith community plays is bringing the moral imperative to get this done,” she added. “It is no longer acceptable to have 90 million Americans without health insurance.”

According to Rabbi Randall Mark of Cong. Shomrei Torah in Wayne, who is president of the North Jersey Board of Rabbis, health-care reform has been on the agenda of the Conservative movement’s Rabbinical Assembly and the Reform movement’s Central Conference of American Rabbis. A 2002 R.A. resolution called for the government to increase funding for health care for the poor and to expand programs for children’s benefits. In 2008, the R.A. called on the government to set up an affordable health-care system for all Americans.

image
Barbara Weinstein is the legislative director of the Reform movement’s Religious Action Center.

United Jewish Communities, the umbrella organization of North America’s federation system, has made the incorporation of long-term care within health-care reform one of its top priorities. Included among the proposals is the Community Living Assistance Services and Supports Act, a provision in the reform bill currently in the Senate that would create a voluntary disability insurance program for adults with long-term needs and alleviate pressure on the Medicaid program. According to the legislation, eligible enrollees who need assistance performing common daily activities — such as dressing, bathing, and eating — would receive cash benefits to pay for support services in a community setting.

“We feel that the CLASS Act initiative will put in motion a program that our communities feel would be a monumental first step in how they are going to care for the baby boomer generation and beyond,” said Jonathan Westin, UJC’s assistant director of Legislative Affairs.

The act was included in the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee legislation, one of two Senate health-care bills under discussion. The second Senate bill, which will be reported out of the Finance Committee, has not yet been introduced. Recently, the House added the CLASS Act to its legislation. Westin credited New Jersey’s State Association of Jewish Federations and its members for taking an active role with UJC in ensuring that the legislation is included.

“We’re going to stay focused on that as our priority,” said Jacob Toporek, executive director of the State Association. “There’s a good consensus within the Jewish community for [the legislation.]”

Toporek and Westin both noted that the legislation received a positive reception from the Congressional Budget Office. The CBO last month estimated that the CLASS Act would reduce the health-care overhaul by $59 billion from 2010 to 2019.

Hadassah, which is a member of several coalitions promoting reform, is taking a wait-and-see attitude on the reform bills now in Washington. While two bills are waiting in committee in the House, political observers expect the bill under review by the Senate’s Committee on Finance to play a major part of any reform.

“Everybody in Washington is waiting for the Senate finance committee bill,” said Marla Gilson, director of Hadassah’s Washington Action Office. “That’s the bill that’s really going to drive this train.”

She noted that Obama’s appearance last weekend in Montana was not a coincidence. Montana is the home of Sen. Max Baucus, chair of the Senate Committee on Finance.

image
U.S. Rep. Scott Garrett

During a meeting last month with Obama, Gilson said she brought up Israel’s health-care system, which she said has had a successful national health insurance plan for its entire existence. She pointed to Israel’s high life expectancy and the low per capita costs of the system. A member of Obama’s staff, she said, asked her for more information following the meeting.

“Because Hadassah established the public health system in Israel before the establishment of the state, because we have that expertise and that interest, we’ve been trying to show that Israel is a good role model for the United States,” she said.

While Congress is in recess, the president’s legislative allies have been holding town hall forums across the country. While all members of Congress recognize the need for health-care reform, the president’s plans have received icy receptions from many in the Republican Party.

“There’s certainly a need for a reform of the system, I don’t think anybody at all would ever dispute that,” Rep. Scott Garrett told the Standard last month during a phone interview. “The question is how to achieve that and how to achieve that in a way that you do not come up with any unintended consequences.”

Such consequences, according to Garrett, include fewer opportunities for people in their health-care choices — when selecting doctors and other providers, for example — and the creation of medical rationing because of a shortage of physicians to meet the demand from large numbers of newly insured patients. Another danger, Garrett suggested, is that people may lose their health care through their employers.

Obama’s health-care plan has “real fundamental problems,” Garrett said, adding that it is “more of the same of what we’ve had.”

On the other side of the aisle, proponents of the president’s push for reform have chastised detractors.

“Americans all across the country are participating in the debate on how best to reform our broken health care system,” Sen. Frank R. Lautenberg (D-N.J.) said in a statement to the Standard on Wednesday. “I am disappointed by the use of misinformation by some to put politics ahead of progress, but remain confident that Congress and the president will enact changes that ensure everyone will have access to quality, affordable, and stable health care.”

 

More on: Jewish groups join national debate on health-care reform

 

Is the turbulent health-care debate bad for the Jews?

When U.S. Rep. Travis Childers announced several months ago that he was headed to Israel, the trip was billed as an opportunity to boost economic development. But by the time the Mississippi Democrat arrived earlier this month, the trip suddenly became a flash point in one local corner of the nation’s increasingly bitter health-care debate.

Alan Lange, the founder of the Mississippi political and legal Website Y’all Politics, didn’t like that Childers was spending part of the congressional recess out of town instead of at home talking to constituents about health care reform. So on Aug. 9 he posted a video to YouTube slamming the congressman.

With “Hava Nagila” playing in the background, the video highlighted Childers’ recent comment that he would like to talk to constituents about health care — “If they’re civil.” The words “Go make some new friends” then appeared on the screen, followed by a photo of an Orthodox Jew in Israel as the narrator said, “Tell ‘em we said ‘hi.’” Next came the words “And grab a souvenir yarmulke” and a picture of a yarmulke emblazoned with “Obama ‘08.” The video ended with the words “Come on back home, Travis.”

 
 

Among Jewish groups, only GOPers slamming Dems’ health-care plans

WASHINGTON – Even as polls and heated rhetoric suggest opposition to Democratic health-care reforms is mounting, Jewish organizational support appears to be holding steady.

Only one group — the Republican Jewish Coalition — is voicing opposition. The RJC has been urging its members to oppose Democrat-backed health-care legislation, sending out an action alert last week warning that the measures, which the group dubs “Obamacare,” will result in massive spending and debt and widespread loss of jobs and healthcare coverage. In its alert, the RJC warned that Obama’s plan will result in a “government takeover of health care.”

However vigorous RJC’s opposition, it appears to represent the lone voice among Jewish organizations speaking out against Obama’s plan. Liberal groups, including the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism and the National Jewish Democratic Council, have been staunch supporters of health care reform. Both have taken to the Internet in recent days, creating Websites advocating comprehensive health care reform.

 
 
 
 

 

.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) posted 20 Aug 2009 at 11:02 PM

Okay if you won’t have any clinical skills or any managerial/administration skills, just what will you do? You’ll have a lot of knowledge but nothing to do with it.

.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) posted 19 Sep 2009 at 08:07 PM

We still believe that the public option is a critical and strong piece of reform that is needed to ensure one of the fundamental purposes of this reform to ensure accessibility and affordability and inclusion.

.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) posted 15 Nov 2009 at 06:51 AM

There’s certainly a need for a reform of the system, I don’t think anybody at all would ever dispute that.The question is how to achieve that and how to achieve that in a way that you do not come up with any unintended consequences.

.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) posted 08 Jan 2010 at 01:27 PM

NCJW’s goal in promoting reform is to ensure affordability and accessibility to health care for everybody.Sounds really good to me.

 

Add a Comment

Name:

Email:

Location:

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Please enter the word you see in the image below:


Auto-login on future visits

Show my name in the online users list

Forgot your password?

 

Kidney donor

My children should see what it means to be a Jew

Need a babysitter, a ride to Manhattan, or a kosher used barbecue grill? TeaneckShuls, a moderated listserv connecting people in the northern New Jersey area, can help you find what you need. Need a kidney? TeaneckShuls can help as well. Ruthie Levi, a moderator for the listserv, reports that “as a result of an e-mail posting on this list for someone seeking a kidney donation, Rabbi Ephraim Simon of Chabad Teaneck has … successfully donated his own kidney.”

“It’s not like I woke up one morning and wanted to donate a kidney,” said Simon, who serves as the Chabad rabbi in Teaneck. “My own children, ages 2 to 14, are my first priority.” He recounted how a woman named Chaya Lipshutz had been posting for years on TeaneckShuls about people who needed kidney donors. “I would read them, and sigh, and go on with my day. I have nine little children and it was not something I would envision doing.” However, one such posting touched him deeply. “In August 2008, [Lipshutz] had a post of a 12-year-old girl — how could I let a 12-year-old girl die? I have a daughter who is 12.”

 

Woodstock

The Jewish connection

This week marks the 40th anniversary of the historic Woodstock Music Festival, which attracted perhaps as many as a half-million, mostly young, concertgoers. The peaceful behavior of festival-goers gave, and still gives, Woodstock the aura of being the tangible affirmation of the “peace and love” ethos of the ’60s hippie “counterculture.” The “good vibes” were preserved for posterity by the best concert film of the ’60s.

As I recall from Hebrew school, the Torah likes the number 40 — 40 years in the desert and so on. So, I guess it is appropriate, on this anniversary, to explore Woodstock’s many Jewish connections.

Let’s put on a show

 

Jewish groups join national debate on health-care reform

Legislators and lobbyists working to push through President Obama’s health-care reforms have sought out the faith community as a voice of moral urgency.

Indeed, the contentious debate over health-care reform facing the country appears to have united Jewish advocacy organizations. While individuals within the Jewish community may not universally accept Obama’s push for reform, the Jewish organizational world is mostly unified in support, said Steve Gutow, president of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, the umbrella group for the nation’s Jewish Community Relations Councils.

“Social justice is a Jewish imperative,” said Nancy Ratzan, president of the National Council for Jewish Women, during a telephone interview on Monday. “Access to basic health care for everyone, I think, is understood today as a fundamental social-justice issue. The Jewish community is very engaged and very inspired by this opportunity to change policy to ensure that kind of justice for everybody, so it’s not just those who can afford it.”

 

RECENTLYADDED

Local students get into the act

image
Yavneh student Leora Hyman in a play by Sam Shepard.

Elliot Prager, principal of the Moriah School in Englewood, is a firm believer in “multiple intelligences.”

“Some children are outstanding in math and sports,” he said, “while others have a real talent in the arts.”

With that in mind, two years ago Prager sought out Matt Okin, director of the Englewood-based Black Box Studios, which provides collaborative theater workshops in local schools.

Some 30 students now participate in Moriah’s middle-school theater program, which is run as an afterschool club.

“They love it,” said Prager. “The proof of their receptiveness is that kids who participated in the first half [of the year] in both years have all come back for the second half.”

 

Ahavath Torah begins new chapter,  celebrates its past

Unity is the underlying theme for the formal dedication of Cong. Ahavath Torah’s two-story, 60,000-square-foot synagogue complex, planned for the first weekend in March and culminating in the shul’s annual dinner honoring Rabbi Shmuel and Barbara Goldin.

Yeshiva University President Richard Joel is scheduled to join the Englewood congregation that Shabbat as scholar in residence during services as well as at a Friday night Oneg Shabbat and Saturday afternoon seudah shlishit. A festive Shabbat morning service is to be led by Cantor Chaim Muhlbauer, with Joel delivering remarks to the community.

 

Ahavath Torah begins new chapter,  celebrates its past

Rabbi reflects on synagogue’s growth

Rabbi Shmuel Goldin, religious leader of Englewood’s Ahavath Torah for some 26 years, attributes the synagogue’s growth and longevity to “good fortune, proximity to New York, a lovely area, and a sense of openness” toward people striving to lead Orthodox lives.

“A good deal of our character was set by the way it started,” said Goldin.

The rabbi, together with his wife, Barbara, will be honored on March 5 and 6 for their years of service to the congregation.

Describing the synagogue’s founders as “a group of people committed to Orthodox Judaism,” Goldin noted that they also were open to recognizing that they themselves were not always themselves ‘there.’”

 

 

S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31