Politics
Small Business Owners Invited to Roundtable Discussion - Framingham, Nov 19
Roundtable Discussion with the
Joint Committee on Community Development and Small Business
This is a great opportunity for MetroWest small businesses to voice their opinions, challenges and suggestions directly to the committee on which Representative Dykema serves.
November 19, 2009
4:00 pm
Memorial Building
150 Concord St.
Framingham, MA 01702
For more information, contact leah.robins@state.ma.us in Rep. Dykema’s office or kate.souza@state.ma.us with the Committee on Community Development & Small Business.
Eldridge Appointed Chair of Water Commission by Governor Patrick
Legislature Passes Bill to Improve Benefits for Veterans
Legislature Passes Bill to Improve Benefits for Veterans
Includes Eldridge Voting Rights Proposal for Servicemembers
BOSTON – The Legislature on Tuesday gave final approval to legislation to enhance and protect benefits of Massachusetts’ veterans and servicemembers. Included in that bill, An Act to Provide Benefits for Veterans and Servicemembers, are improvements in voting rights for servicemembers originally championed in theFreedom to Vote Act, filed by Senator Jamie Eldridge (D-Acton) earlier this year.
“I’m pleased that the Veterans Bill included something I’ve been fighting for: changes to our absentee voting system to make it much easier for men and women serving in the military to vote. Too often, our cumbersome system has prevented many of our soldiers overseas from having their vote counted. This bill will help ensure that those who are protecting our democracy also have the opportunity to participate in it,” said Eldridge.
The legislation, which was signed into law by Governor Deval Patrick at a Veteran’s Day ceremony on Wednesday, also makes improvements in access to veterans’ services, employment and benefits.
The legislation:
• Allows Massachusetts residents serving overseas to receive and return absentee ballots via electronic means for federal, state and local preliminary, primary and general elections;
• Directs the Executive Office of Health and Human Services to study the Commonwealth’s current capacity to provide health care services to veterans, and assess the feasibility of expanding capacity at current soldiers’ homes or establishing additional soldiers’ homes;
• Authorizes state licensing boards to draft regulations exempting honorably-discharged veterans from requirements or credits towards licensure based on skills accumulated during their military service;
• Includes a preference in the General Laws for service-disabled veterans for public works projects;
• Amends the current Welcome Home Bill bonus program, where service members are currently able to obtain a $1,000 bonus for a single overseas deployment, to allow servicemembers who are deployed on multiple tours to apply for up to 50 percent of the bonus upon each subsequent return. This additional benefit will only be allowed while current funds remain available;
• Creates a Medal of Liberty for the governor to award to family members of servicemembers killed in action or who died of wounds received in action;
• Allows city and town clerks to provide the list of veterans to the Executive Office of Veteran Affairs and to local veterans’ service officers; And,
• Establishes a veterans’ hall of fame council to study the feasibility of establishing a veterans’ hall of fame in the Commonwealth.
“Our veterans and servicemembers make the selfless decision to stand between us and danger, and it is our job to recognize, remember and support their efforts,” Senate President Therese Murray (D-Plymouth) said. “This legislation will allow the Commonwealth to ensure that veterans’ and servicemembers’ rights are protected, service is acknowledged and benefits are accessible.”
Senator Kenneth Donnelly (D-Arlington), Senate chairman of the Joint Committee on Veterans and Federal Affairs, said: “This legislation provides a set of new benefits to active servicemembers and veterans, and it is especially appropriate that at this time of year we acknowledge their service to our country. The bill will honor families of servicemembers killed in action, make it easier for active duty members to engage in the electoral process while serving, and add disabled veterans as a group for preference in public works projects. This bill speaks to the invaluable service of the men and women of the armed forces. We are a grateful commonwealth.”
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A Day to Thank Our Veterans - by Rep. Dykema
A Day to Thank Our Veterans
Whether your schedule finds you working, doing errands or enjoying a day with family, please make the time to thank a veteran on Veteran’s Day.
This Veteran’s Day, take a moment to reflect on our daily freedoms and remember the men and women willing sacrifice everything to protect them. Today we’re reminded that the American ideals we celebrate on the 4th of July are only possible because of those who risk all to defend them.
One of the most important ways to thank our veterans is by providing support and opportunity when they return home. As a member of the Joint Committee on Veterans and Federal Affairs, I was proud to represent our district and join my colleagues last week to pass legislation to do just that. The legislation will create opportunity for returning veterans by giving disabled veteran-owned businesses a leg up in competing for state contracts. It will make some military training transferable for state certification requirements. The legislation also creates a Commonwealth Medal of Liberty to honor Massachusetts service members killed in action. There is plenty of work to be done to fulfill our duty to veterans, but this legislation is an important step forward. Its passage honors Massachusetts veterans of every generation.
From the war of our independence to today’s wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Commonwealth’s soldiers have answered the call to protect us and our liberties. They and their families continue to make enormous sacrifices on our behalf and today we express our gratitude and our thanks.
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State Representative Carolyn Dykema represents the towns of Holliston, Hopkinton, Medway (pct. 1), Southborough (pct. 2 & 3) and Westborough (pct. 2).
Polito's 2009 Annual Patriotic Rally a Success!
POLITO’S ANNUAL PATRIOTIC RALLY A SUCCESS!
BOSTON – Representative Karyn E. Polito, R-Shrewsbury hosted her annual Patriotic Rally to “Celebrate America” at Indian Meadows Country Club in Westborough on November 5th. Over four hundred people attended the event, featuring a performance by the Shrewsbury Acapella Choir. Representative Polito recognized the winners of her Annual Essay Contest “Defining the American Dream”, and honored several influential members of the community for their commanding presence and generosity.
This year’s essay contest winners, who ranged from third graders to senior citizens from both Shrewsbury and Westborough, included Kristin Lenehan, Samuel Brownstein, Christopher Stephenson, Anthony Shea, Arielle Sigel, Elena Perkins, Georgia Eisenmann, Nelson Pang, Sarah Donovan, and Paul M. Horrigan. Essay winners read their essays aloud and received a cash prize from the Representative.
Polito also presented her annual Good Neighbor and Inspirational Leader awards, honoring the tremendous achievements and civic engagement of local community members. Cathy Vitale of and Joe Gianeti, both of Shrewsbury, were both recognized as Inspirational Leaders for their individual triumphs over health concerns, and Frank DeSiata Jr, Recreation Director of Westborough, was honored with the Good Neighbor award.
“This year we shared a thoroughly uplifting evening amongst family and friends, where we celebrated inspirational individuals from our community for their goodwill and kind hearts. We reflected on the values that hold us together: hard work, optimism, patriotism, and appreciating the truly meaningful life,” said Representative Polito. “I was so impressed with the interpretations of the American Dream we heard from the essay participants this year too, and it was very special for me to be able to recognize these impressive thinkers and citizens of our great nation.”



For further information please contact Kaitlyn Sprague at Representative Polito’s State House office at 617-722-2230 or Kaitlyn.sprague@state.ma.us.
Polito Holds Office Hours - Nov 2009
POLITO HOLDS OFFICE HOURS
Boston – Representative Karyn E. Polito, R-Shrewsbury, will be holding office hours on Friday, November 13th in Shrewsbury and Westborough. She will be at the Shrewsbury Senior Center from 9:00 AM to 10:30AM, and at the Westborough Senior Center from 11:00AM to 12:00PM.
For current information, please visit www.karynpolito.com.
~end~
A Patient’s Perspective: Why Health Care Should Be a Right by Jamie Eldridge
By State Senator Jamie Eldridge
5-Nov-2009
On the morning of October 7th, 2009, I suffered a one-minute seizure that broke many of the bones in my back, strained my spine, and tore my right shoulder out of its socket. Given the seriousness of the injuries that I sustained, I was rushed to Mass. General Hospital.
I don’t remember any of the above -- but I do remember that once I was conscious, I was relieved to be at MGH, because I knew that I’d be getting arguably the best medical care in the world to fix my injuries.
The reason I had access to this care was because I am lucky enough to have comprehensive health care through my job, which would cover the three surgeries, extended care, and rehab necessary for me to recover from my injuries. It is impossible to overstate what peace of mind this gave me, my family and loved ones.
But what about those patients at MGH, and across the country, who don’t have health insurance as comprehensive as mine, or health insurance at all? What peace of mind is there for their families at an incredibly difficult time?
As I lay in bed, knowing that I was lucky enough to have excellent health insurance that would cover my treatment, I couldn’t help but think over and over about those who weren’t so lucky. How many of my fellow patients already realized that because of their poor health care coverage, their lives would never again be the same?
After two weeks at MGH, I was transferred to the Spaulding Rehabilitation Center. One day while resting in bed from physical therapy, I overheard a young, permanently disabled man hanging out in the hallway inform a fellow patient that he was being discharged a week early from Spaulding. It wasn’t that his therapy team had decided he was ready to go to the next level – it was that his insurance company had determined that they would not pay for any further comprehensive therapy at Spaulding. He was headed home, and he really wasn’t sure what he would be able to do to improve his current physical limitations.
When I spoke with one of my nurses about this reality, she told me how things had changed in health care over her twenty-three years at Spaulding. When she first started, a patient with such injuries could stay for 9 to 12 month. Today, insurance companies push for an early discharge, or simply include in their policies a cut-off date for paying for such services.
As an elected official, I’ve heard many stories like this before. But being there at the rehabilitation center as a patient myself, and observing the cruel realities of the American health care system right before my eyes, really drove the point home. How is it that in the richest country in the world, this is how our health care system works?
I’ve been a strong proponent of a “Medicare for All” health care system since first joining the Massachusetts Legislature seven years ago. I believe a single-payer system like this will best achieve the health care reform goals that many of us share, from providing health care coverage for the uninsured to improving coverage for current health insurance members, reducing health care costs, and simplifying the country’s health care delivery system.
But over the past month, as I have been focused on health care as a patient, rather than just as an elected official, I’ve become more and more convinced that any health care reform we make – single payer or otherwise – must start with the agreement that access to quality health care should be a right in this country.
There is a basic quality of care we all deserve when we are sick or injured. Yet without establishing health care as a right, there is no guarantee that every other Massachusetts citizen would be treated like I have been. In fact, absent government intervention, there are strong market, financial, and societal incentives that make it highly likely that no basic standard of treatment will exist. After all, that young disabled man was being denied proper treatment for no other reason than to save his health insurance company money.
As a society, we all benefit when individual members have access to quality health care. In my case, had I not received the right treatment within a relatively short amount of time, my life would have been changed dramatically, limiting my ability to be the most productive citizen that I could possibly be, and my ability to contribute to society and lead a happy life. It’s the same for anyone else in a similar situation.
Until we define health care as a right, there will continue to be Americans like those I have met over the past month, whose lives will be irreversibly thrown off-track by an accident or illness, whose financial insecurity will lead to greater physical problems, whose lives will be changed forever because they lacked access to quality health care.
I can think of few other instances of government action that would have as dramatic an impact on people’s lives as establishing a right to health care, or that would more positively impact every community in the country.
Visit Senator Eldridge’s website at www.senatoreldridge.com. You can contact also contact him at 617-722-1120, or via email at James.Eldridge@state.ma.us.
- Polito Announces Annual Patriotic Rally
- Polito Holds Office Hours (Nov 13 2009)
- McGovern email "Join my Telephone Town Hall"
- Representative Dykema Addresses Massachusetts Grange Convention
- Statement of Rep. Polito on Governor's Announced Budget Cuts
- Polito Launches New Blog to Encourage Citizen Input and Discussion
- Representative Dykema to Hold Office Hours (Nov 2009)
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