Editor’s note: Paul Coalson, of Joplin, has received a response from President Barack Obama after sending him a letter expressing his views on health care reform. The following is the letter from Coalson and the response from the president.
It is my belief that our governor, Jay Nixon, of Missouri, is one of the very few officials who is taking very appropriate actions in starting actions to help correct one of many problems leading to the present dilemma. He is make the very tough decisions of reducing expenses by curtailing expenditures — many of them will affect programs somewhat beneficial to many people. This action may not need to be permanent elimination, but should trigger a complete reevaluation and strong oversight and review. More of these expenditures, from my own knowledge, are going to people who make very little effort to provide for themselves.
As to affordable health care. We as individuals are responsible for our families’ welfare. The federal government is not responsible to provide this. Neither should they be allowed to set the standards — if so, only in a very narrow way.
Already this effort has caused my insurance carrier to inform me that my premium will increase by $1,365 while at the same time reduce my benefits by a very substantial amount. This is not affordable insurance.
Competition among the insurance companies should have a dramatic effect in reducing rates. Executive salaries are justifiably high, however, they should not be allowed to make excessive charges to the consumer to accomplish this end.
Finally, our economy should recover so long as no segment such as health care usurps our freedom to make our own decisions without federal mandates.
I am personally concerned with the many pages of the proposed bill and the rush to get it passed. It is too important to rush into law. I am confident that a mistake here will have a devastating effect on the Democratic Party and in particular, every American citizen.
Paul Coalson
Joplin
Obama response
Thank you for contacting me. I have heard from countless Americans struggling to afford health insurance and health professionals striving to provide care. I appreciate your perspective. There is broad consensus among the American people on the need for affordable, high-quality health care. The rising cost of health care is the most pressing financial challenge for families and for our nation, and controlling this cost is essential to bringing down the federal deficits we inherited. Now is the time to move forward and I am committed to getting health care reform done this year.
Since I took office, we have done more to advance the cause of health care reform than we have in the previous decade. In February, I signed H.R. 2 to provide coverage for millions of children through the Children’s Health Insurance Program. I also signed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act to make key investments in computerized medical records and preventive services.
Looking forward, we will take additional steps to lower costs, expand coverage and improve the quality of health care. My 2010 budget makes a major down payment on health care reform, funded by implementing efficiencies in government health care spending and restoring a sense of fairness and balance to our tax code. There are tough choices to be made, and I will bring businesses and workers, health care providers and patients, and Democrats and Republicans together to recreate a system that delivers better care and puts the nation on a much sounder long-term fiscal path. To learn more about my agenda and share a personal story, please join me online at: www.healthreform.gov. For further information on health care and assistance that may be available to you, you may call 1-800-FEDINFO or visit: www.usa.gov.
I share the sense of urgency that millions of Americans have voiced. I watched as my ailing mother struggled with stacks of insurance forms in the last moments of her life. This is not who we are as a nation; together, we will fix it.
Barack Obama
Washington, D.C.
Columns
Jason Eberhart-Phillips, guest columnist: A mistake could have a devastating effect
- Columns
-
-
Federal stimulus money allows Cherokee County to buy foreclosed houses
COLUMBUS, Kan. — A grant through the federal stimulus program will allow the Cherokee County Commission to buy three foreclosed houses from a county bank.
Nancy Lamb, deputy emergency management director for the county, provided information Monday about that grant and other grants on which she has been working. - Guest column, Allen Shirley: Copy a winning example Last October, I published a column in The Joplin Globe documenting three failed attempts involving the states of Maine, Massachusetts and Tennessee and their efforts to implement “Obamacare” in their states.
-
Anson burlingame, guest columnist: Living within our means
“Mainly, we are going to have to live within our means and be very careful.”
That is the most resounding sound bite I have heard from a politician in a long time. If only that sentiment can grow and resonate, politically, to turn the tide of incessant and extraordinarily dangerous growth beyond our means in government. - Jim Stone, guest columnist: Paranoia shouldn’t impede freedom The afternoon of Dec. 30 brought news that eight American CIA agents and four Canadian soldiers at Forward Operating Base Chapman in Afghanistan had been killed by a suicide bomber.
- Dan Ray, guest columnist: Bills can still be terminated We still have an opportunity to terminate the health care bills that have been passed in the Senate and the House.
-
Dave Woods: Global warming fires up debate
on Adams doesn’t believe in global warming.
I have to say, when it’s 3 degrees below zero outside in Joplin and we’re headed for our third week without a thaw, global warming theory is a tough concept to wrap my head around. -
Jack Kaminsky, guest columnist: Remembering a ‘classic’
Last week Editor Carol Stark asked me to write something about my dad and the Kaminsky Classic, the annual Joplin High School basketball tournament which ended on Saturday.
Even as I started writing, I began crying, and have had tears in my eyes all day. - Carol Stark: We all need someone’s hand to hold I was always a nervous little kid and while others my age went through life without a care, I held back, imagining that the worst was about to happen.
- Dave Woods: Harsh note sounds over parade trip By the time you read this column, the Tournament of Roses Parade in Pasadena, Calif., will only be a memory.
- Bob Steere, guest columnist: Still looking for some answers Don Ray’s frustration in obtaining answers from his leaders in Congress (Globe, Dec. 22) is certainly shared by this letter sender.
- More Columns Headlines
-
Federal stimulus money allows Cherokee County to buy foreclosed houses
COLUMBUS, Kan. — A grant through the federal stimulus program will allow the Cherokee County Commission to buy three foreclosed houses from a county bank.







