Sunday, October 17, 2010

Pat Toomey on Veterans

Pat is fully committed to making sure our soldiers and our veterans always come first.  Our veterans and soldiers risk their lives to keep our country safe and protect our freedom; they deserve the best in return.  When Pat was in Congress, he voted to make sure our veterans and their families had the resources and services they needed, including educational, counseling, and employment aid.  As your senator, Pat will commit all the resources needed to provide the personnel, training, intelligence, and equipment required to support the missions necessary to protecting our national security and our soldiers’ safety.  He will dedicate the same level of priority and support to the families of our volunteer active regulars and citizen soldiers.

Pat will make passing the Military Voting Protection Act a priority in the U.S. Senate.  This legislation will make sure our soldiers’ votes are counted in our elections.  Right now, many soldiers stationed overseas have trouble requesting absentee ballots, and have trouble submitting those ballots on time.  The Military Voting Protection Act will require the Department of Defense to lay out clear procedures for making sure our soldiers’ votes are counted.

America is the greatest country in the world and we will continue to be great if we remember that our strength and security come from our soldiers who fight to preserve our freedom.

Pat Toomey on Energy and the Environment

Pat believes that protecting our environment is critically important. But he also knows it is possible to harness America’s natural resources without doing harm to it. For example, Pat voted in the House of Representatives to allow drilling in a small part of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska.

Pat also supports allowing Americans to drill for oil in the Outer Continental Shelf and to develop the vast oil shale reserves in America’s western states. Other sources of energy include natural gas in Pennsylvania’s Marcellus Shale and the production of nuclear power. The Marcellus Shale is the largest unconventional natural gas reserve in the world and nuclear power is a low-carbon form of energy production that has been proven to be safe, inexpensive, and environmentally friendly.
These policy changes alone would go a long way towards lowering energy prices and achieving the goal of energy independence.

At the same time, Pat opposes policies that will make energy more expensive and cost Americans jobs. For this reason, he is against raising gas taxes and he opposes the recent cap-and-trade legislation that places an onerous tax on energy and, studies show, will cost thousands of jobs in Pennsylvania.

As a U.S. senator, Pat will fight for legislation that expands America’s energy independence without harming the environment, lowers the cost of energy, and protects American jobs and businesses.

Pat Toomey on Economy



Instead of encouraging businesses to hire new employees, Washington is threatening new and heavy costs and burdens on businesses. If these policies are enacted, Pennsylvania businesses won’t be able to hire new employees and may even be forced to lay off workers to survive. Instead, the government should be making it less expensive and easier for businesses to hire people. It can do this by cutting taxes and decreasing regulation. For example, if we rescind the stimulus and cut both employees’ and employers’ payroll taxes instead, every worker would see an immediate increase in their take home pay and it would be less expensive for businesses to hire new workers. If we eliminated the tax on capital gains and lowered the tax on businesses, it would make U.S. companies more competitive, and lead to major job growth.

Pat supports lower marginal income tax rates for all Americans, cutting the tax on capital gains investment, and cutting income taxes on American businesses - which suffer from the second highest corporate tax rate in the world. As a congressman, Pat never voted for a tax increase and fought for lower taxes for all Americans. In the Senate, he will fight for the lower taxes that are integral to our economic freedom and the economic prosperity this country deserves.

Pat Toomey on Health Care


Instead of giving the government more power, Pat believes the best way to lower the cost of health care is by giving choices and power to patients. One way to do that is to encourage the growth of personally owned and controlled health care. We can start by giving individuals who buy their own health insurance the same tax benefits that employers enjoy when they buy health insurance for their employees. This will make it much easier for millions of Americans to buy their own health insurance plan.

Second, we should also allow individuals and businesses to buy health insurance anywhere in the country. Currently, the law prohibits a worker in Pennsylvania from buying a health insurance plan from a neighboring state. Changing this law will give individuals access to a large array of health care options and will lower costs by forcing health insurance companies to compete with each other.

Third, Pat also believes we can lower costs dramatically by enacting comprehensive tort reform. Currently, runaway lawsuits force doctors to pay higher premiums and run up the cost of health care in this country. In addition, because of runaway lawsuits, doctors practice defensive medicine, driving up the cost of care further. In Pennsylvania, certain specialties even see doctors leaving en masse to avoid the outrageous costs forced upon them by a legal system run amok.

Fourth, we should allow small businesses and groups to join together to form association health plans to lower the cost of providing health care. We should also encourage a market for renewable health plans to help people with preexisting conditions keep their health insurance.

When Pat was in Congress he consistently voted for policies that would lower the cost of health care and give Americans more choices. We all deserve access to the world’s best health care. Pat knows this can only be accomplished by reforming the system in ways that give more control to patients and doctors - not to government and insurance.

Joe Sestak on Veterans

JOE SESTAK’S EFFORTS TO SUPPORT VETERANS

I. Awards:
Received an A+ Voting Record in 2008 from the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans for America (IAVA).

Named “2009 Congressman of the Year” by Disabled American Veterans of Philadelphia.

II. Hosts Annual Veterans Summits

2007; attended by Director, VISN 4 Medical System; Directors of the Philadelphia, Wilmington, and Coatesville VA Medical Centers; and Director, Regional Office & Insurance Center; as well as 300 Veterans and their families.

2008; attended by all of the above as well as Chairman of the House Committee on Veterans Affairs, Representative Bob Filner (CA-51), as well as more than 700 Veterans.

2009; attended by Chief of Staff of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA); Director, VISN 4 Medical System; Directors of the Philadelphia, Wilmington, and Coatesville VA Medical Centers; and Director, Regional Office & Insurance Center, as well as more than 800 Veterans.

III. Veterans Health Care

$375 million in FY2009 and $533 million in FY2010 allotted to Priority 8 Veterans: Following the 2008 7th Congressional District Veterans Summit, Chairman Filner and Congressman Sestak both submitted bills to expand the availability of health benefits to Priority 8 Veterans. This led to the inclusion of funding in the FY2009 and FY2010 Military Construction and Veterans Affairs Appropriations act allotted to Priority 8 Veterans, who had been denied vital medical resources by VA protocol since 2003.

Voted for the Largest Increase in Funding in VA history: With this increase in funding in H.R. 2764, Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008, Veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan will receive the high-quality health care, educational opportunities, and employment opportunities that our Vietnam Veterans did not.

3.   Co-Sponsored:
H.R. 1016, Veterans Health Care Budget Reform and Transparency Act of 2009: authorized appropriations for the VA up to one year in advance to more effectively care for Veterans.


H.R. 2990, Disabled Military Retiree Relief Act of 2009: temporarily allowed for concurrent receipt of retirement pay and disability pay for Veterans with less than 20 years of service and 90 or more percent disability rating.

H.R. 1211, The Women Veterans Health Care Improvement Act: targeted care toward the needs of women Veterans, especially those of Afghanistan and Iraq.
Opposed: Any plan that would force Veterans to use private health insurance to pay for treatment of service-related injuries or disabilities.

Supported Additional Legislation:
H.R. 1538, The Dignified Treatment of Wounded Warriors Act: improved the care of injured soldiers from Iraq and Afghanistan.

VA Medical Construction: authorized $2.1 billion for construction of medical     facility projects as well as medical facility leases in H.R. 1, The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

H.R. 3819, The Veterans Emergency Care Fairness Act of 2008: would have required the VA to reimburse Veterans for emergency treatment at non VA facilities.

IV. Education

Helped Pass Post-9/11 G.I. Bill: Restored full, four-year college scholarships for Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans, similar to the educational benefits available after WWII.  The VA will match any tuition grants given by participating schools to our Veterans as a provision of the Post 9/11 GI Bill.

Sponsored H.R. 3625, Higher Education Relief for U.S. Troops (HEROS): Made permanent the Secretary of Education’s authority to provide U.S. Troops called to active duty with education relief, including leeway on repaying student loans.

Established the 7th Congressional District OIF/OEF Scholarship at the Pennsylvania Institute of Technology: Offers full tuition at an institution which is part of Drexel University

Supported development of a “Young Vets Club” at Delaware County Community College:
Provided that club guest lecturers on VA benefits, employment opportunities, and IRS services
In September 2009, that group will be integrated with The Veterans Owned Business Coalition to build a network for job opportunities for young Veterans in Veteran-owned businesses.
V. Employment

Helped Pass: H.R. 4253, The Military Reservist and Veterans Small Business Reauthorization Opportunity Act: expanded small business opportunities for Veterans and helped military reservists keep their businesses afloat during and after deployment.

VI. Families

Wrote language into H.R. 5658, The Duncan Hunter National Defense Authorization Act of Fiscal Year 2009: Mandated a minimum of $5,000 per month for autistic therapy services for the children of service members.

Co-Sponsored: H.R. 5826, the Veterans’ Compensation Cost-of-Living Adjustment Act of 2008 (COLA): increased rates of compensation for those with service-connected disabilities, as well as dependency and indemnity compensation to survivors of Veterans.

Supported:
H.R. 6081, The Heroes Earnings Assistance and Relief Tax Act of 2008 (HEART Act): provided $1.2 billion in targeted tax breaks to military personnel and their families.

H.R. 2346, The 2009 Supplemental Appropriations Bill for Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and the Pandemic Flu: secured $276 million for 25 child development centers that will provide 5,000 child care spaces for military families.

VII. Homeless Veterans

1.   Supported Legislation:
H.R. 403, The Homes for Heroes Act of 2009: required the Department of Housing and Urban Development to provide at least 20,000 rental vouchers each year to homeless Veterans and creates a new supportive housing program.

H.R. 1171, The Homeless Veterans Reintegration Program Reauthorization Act of 2009: amended to provide an additional $10 million for services dedicated to homeless women and homeless Veterans with children.

VII. Supporting Our Troops

Supported Legislation:
H.R. 1585, The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008: included numerous readiness initiatives to strengthen our military and contains a 3.5% military pay raise.
H.R. 3222, The Department of Defense Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 2008: helped improve military readiness, provided the National Guard and Reserve with needed equipment, upgraded military health care, and provided additional support to military families.
H.R. 5658, The Duncan Hunter National Defense Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 2009: helped to restore military readiness, provided a 3.9% military pay raise, and contained provisions to reform military contracting.
H.R. 2346, 2009 Supplemental Appropriations for Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Pandemic Flu: provided $2.8 billion to cover identified shortfalls in military personnel accounts, gave $240 million above the president’s request for defense health and programs to support military families, including $94 million in family advocacy services.

Co-Sponsored Legislation: Department of Defense Appropriations Act for Fiscal Year 2009: Extended bonuses and special pay to members of the Armed Forces. The benefits are available for enlisted servicemen and women and encourage them to reenlist, remain on active duty, and accept certain special assignments until December 31, 2010.

VIII. Constituent Services

District Office Staff: Has worked 12 hours a day, seven days a week since January 2007 to support over 1400 individual cases for Veterans active-duty and members of the PA National Guard. An Intern was added from the Widener University Veterans Law Clinic to help manage that caseload.

SUMMARY OF FUTURE INITIATIVES

Looking forward, Joe will continue to work to:

Address the epidemics of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI), each of which afflict up to one in five of our brave service members returning from Iraq and Afghanistan:
Continue working with the medical research community on implementing mild TBI treatment.


Ensure that the arbitrary exclusion of Priority 8 veterans from VA health care coverage is completely overturned:
Many of these retired service members, while not financially destitute, nevertheless do not earn enough to cover health insurance fees.

Overhaul veteran disability compensation, which at present is hampered by a gridlocked, dual-tracked process:
Introducing legislation to unify military disability retirement benefits and VA compensation benefits under a single system administered by the VA. This legislation will ensure 180 day time limits for adjudication of initial claims, grant claimant the right to take depositions from VA doctors and other witnesses, and allow claimants to issue subpoenas.

Provide quality of life services to returning service members:
Provide adequate drug and alcohol treatment, counseling and housing for homeless or elderly veterans, continuing to work with organizations such as Give an Hour and support legislative programs such as HUD-VASH; and
Work towards solutions for the record-high divorce and suicide rates which the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan have caused amongst service members.

Joe Sestak on Energy and the Environment

JOE SESTAK’S EFFORTS TO SUPPORT THE ENVIRONMENT

A CONSISTENT RECORD

100% from PennEnvironment, a citizen-based advocacy organization.
97% from League of Conservation Voters, one of the largest environmental organizations.

ENDORSED BY CLEAN WATER ACTION
One of only six House or Senate representatives in the state to have been endorsed by the national organization working for clean, safe and affordable water.

RENEWABLE AND CLEAN ENERGY

VOTED FOR AMERICAN CLEAN ENERGY AND SECURITY ACT (ACES)
Makes possible a greener, more sustainable economy, addresses the moral imperative to reduce the human 
   impact on climate change, and restores this nation to a position of global leadership in effort to reduce worldwide 
   emissions and effects of global warming.
Invests a new $90 billion in renewables and energy efficiency by 2025

URGED HIGHER STANDARDS IN ACES
Writes letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi urging improvements to the American Clean Energy and
Security Act (ACES) by requiring a stronger Renewable Electricity Standard of at least 20% by 2020

CO-SPONSORED THE AMERICAN RENEWABLE ENERGY ACT
Requires 25% of energy generated be from renewable sources. 

SUPPORTED ADDITIONAL LEGISLATION TO:
Raise the CAFE standards for the first time in 32 years.
Extend and expand tax credits supporting alternative energy, including solar and wind.
End unnecessary subsidies to big oil companies and instead provide tax incentives to invest in clean,
renewable energy.

SUCCESSFULLY PASSED THORIUM AMENDMENTS
Thorium has the potential to provide more nuclear power with less than 1% of the waste with a significantly shorter half-life, and without the weapons proliferation concerns.

SECURED $500,000 FOR HYBRID ELECTRIC BUSES
Improves air quality in Southeastern Pennsylvania.

HOSTED THREE ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY ROUNDTABLES
Brought together District and Washington clean energy small business for a dialogue about prices, reducing dependency on oil, and expanding use of alternative energy.

SUPPORTS:
Extend the tax credits for renewable energy sources
Provides a predictable tax climate to encourage private investment and innovation.
Increase the national renewable energy standard to 20% by 2020.
Funding for research and development of renewable energy sources
Investment in advance battery technology
Enact national interconnection standards
Adopt national net metering
Ensure an educated and trained green energy workforce

GLOBAL WARMING AND CLEAN AIR

CO-SPONSORED SAFE CLIMATE ACT
Decreases emissions each year from 2010-2050 by 2% and provides regulations requiring reductions to meet
such targets.
Accelerates the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions in the United States by establishing a market driven
system of greenhouse gas tradable allowances.

CLEAN WATER

CO-SPONSORED BILLS TO PROTECT OUR WATER
Prevents exclusion of certain bodies of water from environmental protections.
Expands definition of pollutants to anything that replaces portions of waters with dry land or changes the bottom elevation of a water body, and anything discharged into water primarily to dispose of waste.

SECURED $400,000 IN FEDERAL FUNDING FOR CLEAN WATER IN DISTRICT
To separate combined sewer system so raw sewage is not released during heavy rain.

WATERSHED MANAGEMENT

SECURED $250,000 FOR REGIONAL WATERSHED MANAGEMENT PROJECT
To enhance watershed infrastructure, including work on culverts and sewers, as well as provide environmental restoration of Pennsylvania creeks.
First step of a comprehensive solution to extensive flooding and pollution, not only from companies that dump contaminants, but also from indirect runoff of pollutants.

EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS AND WATERSHED MANAGEMENT SUMMIT
Brought together federal, state, and local officials to address the serious threat of flooding in the region due to improper watershed management.

CONSERVING NATURAL RESOURCES BY

Establishing an annual park fund of $100 million, through co-sponsored National Parks Centennial Fund Act.
Protecting nearly two million acres of wilderness in eight states.
Protecting 58.5 million acres of this country’s last remaining wild national forests from new road-building and other commodity activities.
Imposing royalties on hardrock mining and mandating environmental protections.
Designating lands within Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) as wilderness and components of National Wilderness Preservation System, through co-sponsored bill.
Making permanent the enhanced tax deduction for conservation easement donations.

SUMMARY OF FUTURE INITIATIVES

Joe has and will continue to fight for clean air, clean water and responsible land use to support a secure environment. Joe supports creating a strong national renewable energy standard, extending renewable tax credits, and integrating renewable energy into the energy market. He strongly supports passage of climate change legislation that will move our economy forward, make us more efficient and globally competitive, and mitigate the severe future negative effects of climate change. Joe is working to reauthorize and improve brownfield legislation to restore the 10,000 brownfield sites in Pennsylvania; increase tax credits for land preservation; and improve how we address watershed flooding and pollution. Specifically, Joe believes we need to:

REVITALIZE AMERICA’S INFRASTRUCTURE: CREATING A 21ST CENTURY PUBLIC WORKS PROJECT
Support an Intermodal Transportation System: We must create more livable communities by better integrating transportation and development planning.
Invest in Broadband Technology: Continue to invest in the installation of broadband infrastructure so that all communities, regardless of wealth or geographical location, will have access to state of the art broadband communications.  We cannot afford to have whole sections of our country, whole communities, and economic groups without access to the channels of commerce and learning of the 21st Century.

SECURING AFFORDABLE AND DOMESTIC ENERGY THAT CREATES JOBS IN NEW CLEAN ENERGY INDUSTRIES

Renewable Power:

Establish a cap and trade program for carbon emissions: Cap carbon to create an incentive for companies to burn less oil and other fossil fuels and to encourage more carbon-free alternatives such as solar power.

Extend the tax credits for renewable energy sources: Long-term (8 year) extension of renewable energy tax credits.

Increase the national renewable energy standard to 20% by 2020 in conjunction with a strong Renewable Electricity Standard: A Renewable Electricity Standard requiring at least 20% from renewables by 2020 (with the flexibility to meet up to 3% with efficiency) together with a strong Efficiency Resource Standard.

Funding for research and development of renewable energy sources: $150 billion investment over 10 years on renewable energy and energy efficiency and support increased funding to train researchers— securing our competitiveness in the coming years.

Natural Resources:

Coal: Put in place a cap and trade system for carbon emissions; continue investment in clean coal; continue investment and require carbon capture and sequestration.

Nuclear Power: Continuation of the government/industry partnership to help validate the Nuclear Regualtory Commission’s new power plant licensing process, and to resolve technical and/or regulatory issues associated with new nuclear plant designs; Create a commission like BRAC to select long-term storage option(s) and up and down vote from Congress; Continued funding research into developing future reactor technology and design; Promote the use of Thorium following the findings from the Defense and Energy Departments.

Natural Gas:

Give local communities the added protection of the Safe Drinking Water Act, in addition to current State protections.

Encourage the development of natural gas infrastructure and use as a vehicle fuel source.

Increase investment in water infrastructure development.

Joe Sestak on Economy

To address our economic security, Joe gained membership on both the Small Business Committee- where he was elected Vice-Chairman- and the Education and Labor Committee to support and educated and skilled workforce. During his time in office he has taken the following steps to ensure economic security:

AN AGGRESSIVE ECONOMIC STIMULUS

VOTED FOR ECONOMIC RECOVERY AND REINVESTMENT ACT (ECONOMIC STIMULUS BILL)
Provided $787 billion in emergency funds for job preservation/creation to help prevent a national unemployment rate of 12%. Invested in infrastructure, energy efficiency and science, assistance to the unemployed, and State and local fiscal stabilization. Supported House bill, which provided $80 billion more to better preserve jobs before it was watered down by the Senate.

STABILIZING THE HOUSING MARKET

AUTHORED COMPREHENSIVE BILL TO REDUCE RESIDENTIAL FORECLOSURES
Addresses complications in Hope for Homeownership Program to allow greater participation and prevent more foreclosures. For example: eliminates shared appreciation provisions and 3% exit fee.

AUTHORED LEGISLATION TO EXPAND FIRST TIME HOMEBUYERS TAX CREDIT
Expands tax credit cap from $7,500 to 10% of the final sale price of a home.

SUPPORTED ADDITIONAL LEGISLATION TO:
Open the HOPE for Homeowners refinancing program to more families and insure more consumer savings through the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), to avoid many of the estimated 8.1 million additional defaults on mortgages predicted over the next four years
Outlaw predatory industry practices that contributed to the subprime lending boom
Preserve the existing supply of affordable housing for seniors, and expand seniors’ access to affordable and “reverse” mortgages
Provide mortgage refinancing assistance so that families in danger of losing their homes can refinance into lower-cost government-insured mortgages they can afford to repay
Stabilize neighborhoods by funding grants to purchase and rehabilitate foreclosed homes
Reform Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac with new regulator and creation of Affordable Housing Trust Fund, which is financed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, not the taxpayers.

STABILIZING FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS

VOTED FOR EMERGENCY ECONOMIC STABILIZATION BILLS TO ENSURE CREDIT AVAILABILITY
Allowed purchase of assets that are clogging the balance sheets of financial institutions to ensure Americans did not face the unavailability of affordable car, education, small business and other consumer loans, or a crash in the stock market, where the value of life savings, pensions, and 401K’s is lost. Taxpayers protected from costs, assisted in keeping homes through loan modification.

VOTED FOR TARP REFORM AND ACCOUNTABILITY ACT
Amended the Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP) to strengthen accountability, close loopholes, increase transparency, and require Treasury to allow smaller community firms to fairly participate.

SUPPORTED IMPLEMENTATION OF THE “FINANCIAL STABILITY PLAN
Created “Consumer and Business Lending Initiative and a Public-Private Investment Fund to encourage purchase of troubled assets; Increased Small Business and Community Bank Lending.

ASSISTANCE TO SMALL BUSINESSES

AUTHORED LEGISLATION, WHICH IS NOW LAW, SUPPORTING SMALL BUSINESS FAIRNESS IN CONTRACTING
Requires bundling analysis of federal mega-contracts to create more small business opportunities.
Requires market research to be conducted by the Department of Defense on the ability of small businesses to perform work prior to awarding contracts of more than $5 million dollars

AUTHORED BILL TO SUPPORT ENTREPRENEURSHIP
Enhances Small Business Development Centers, including Women Business Development Centers, and the Service Corps for Retired Executives (SCORE), recognizing small business create more than 70 % of all jobs and every dollar spent on these programs provides a $2.87 return to the Treasury.

AUTHORED SBA TRADE PROGRAMS ACT
To help entrepreneurs overcome dislocations due to global trends through outreach centers.

AUTHORED TRANSPARENCY LEGISLATION FOR SMALL BUSINESSES AWARDS
Allows applicant to request an explanation of why the applicant did not receive the award.

PROTECTING CONSUMERS AND JOBS BY:

SUPPORTED THE CREDIT CARD HOLDER’S BILL OF RIGHTS
Ends unfair credit practices such as retroactive interest rate hikes, double-cycle billing, and due-date gimmicks. Requires 45-days’ advance notice of interest rate, fee, and finance charges hikes.

SUPPORTED THE AUTO INDUSTRY FINANCING ACT
Authorizes and directs disbursement of bridge loans or commitments for lines of credit to eligible auto manufacturers, recognizing that the industry is linked to one out of every ten American jobs.

SUMMARY OF FUTURE INITIATIVES

Looking forward, Joe has called for a comprehensive economic plan with four key components addressing all facets of our economy:

Quickly Respond to the Current Economic Crisis:
Stabilize the economy through aggressive stimulus plan;
Stabilize the housing market through a comprehensive package;
Stabilize financial institutions through effective implementation of the Troubled Asset Relief Program
(TARP) and President Obama’s Financial Stability Plan; and
Provide liquidity to markets through effective Federal Reserve action.

Create and Retain Skilled American Jobs:
Invest in small businesses: Increase access to small business capital by securing Small Business Administration microloans; establish a mechanism for federally directed emergency small business lending to better weather economic downturns; expand federal procurement set asides for small businesses; and support a major investment (at minimum $250 million) in public-private business incubators to support entrepreneurial skills and development.
Close tax loopholes that encourage companies to ship jobs overseas and delay tax liability.
Invest in working families: support expansion and extension of middle class tax cuts (child tax credit,
marriage penalty, tax break below $250K); support expanded funding for workforce development, including Job Corps and Youth Build; secure retirement and pensions by allowing automatic enrollment in company retirement plans; provide required minimum distribution relief for seniors and temporarily eliminate penalties for emergency retirement plan withdrawals.

Restore American Innovation to Spur New Industries:
Support Major Federal Investment in New Industries: Incentivize private investment in innovative technologies and companies; expand the Small Business Innovation Program to include small business participation in federal and private projects; establish an office of angel investing to encourage micro-lending for new ideas; and expand graduate education and research programs in groundbreaking science and technology fields.
Harness Regional Strengths and Drive Public-Private Partnerships: Support public-private partnerships that capitalize on the presence of colleges and universities in our community.  Investing in these public-private-academic partnerships will turn scientific research – and, particularly, research in the life sciences and other high-tech clusters-- into innovation, which will draw new high-technology jobs to the state.

Enforce Fiscal Discipline:
Close the budget gap by reigning in long-term healthcare costs;
Make “pay-as-you-go” rules enforceable— requires Congress to offset the cost of all new spending;
Require discretionary spending caps;
Allow Bush tax cuts that exclusively benefit the top 1% to expire, while retaining and expanding middle class tax cuts.

Joe Sestak on Health Care

JOE SESTAK’S EFFORTS TO SUPPORT AMERICA’S HEALTH SECURITY

VOTED FOR THE AMERICA’S AFFORDABLE  HEALTH CHOICES ACT IN THE HOUSE  EDUCATION AND LABOR COMMITTEE
Establishes an exchange where individuals and small businesses can purchase private insurance (or a new public option) at the discounted rate large employers currently receive.
Institutes market reforms to make health insurance fairer by eliminating co-payments for preventative care and preventing insurers from discriminating against individuals with pre-existing conditions or overly favoring healthy individuals.
Establishes coverage as a shared responsibility between individuals, employers, and the government, requiring that both employers and individuals contribute to health insurance costs while requiring the federal government to ensure it is affordable for all individuals.
Provides additional funding for community based preventative efforts, to reduce the incidence of disease, especially chronic illness.
Invests in the health care workforce.

CHAIR AND FOUNDER OF THE HOUSE PEDIATRIC CANCER CAUCUS

AUTHORED/PASSED BILL EXPANDING COBRA HEALTH COVERAGE FOR UNEMPLOYED WORKERS: Extends COBRA benefits for all Americans - not limited to age or length of employment- from 18 to 24 months if an employee reaches the 18 month coverage limit within one year of bill’s passage.

AUTHORED/ PASSED LEGISLATION TO MANDATE AND FUND TREATMENT FOR AUTISM: Mandate: Revises military healthcare plan (TRICARE) to authorize treatment of autism spectrum disorders, if a health care professional determines such treatment medically necessary for a child under the age of 18.  Fund: Requires that the Department of Defense provide $36,000 in annual assistance to TRICARE registered families with children diagnosed with autism. Previous cap was $2,500 monthly.

AUTHORED/ PASSED LEGISLATION TO COMBAT POST TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER: Requires the Defense Department to conduct a study evaluating and comparing the effectiveness of programs to diagnose, treat and prevent post-traumatic stress disorder. Requires the report no later than after 18 months.

VOTED FOR CHILDREN'S HEALTH INSURANCE PROGRAM REAUTHORIZATION ACT: Provides health care for 11 million children, to finally provide cost‐effective health coverage for 4 million more children and preserve coverage for 7 million children already enrolled.

VOTED FOR FDA REGULATION OF TOBACCO: Allows the FDA to regulate advertising, marketing, and manufacturing of tobacco products, currently the leading cause of preventable death in America, responsible for about 1 in 5 deaths each year, costing $193 billion annually in health costs and lost productivity, and causing 1,000 children/day to become new, regular smokers.

VOTED FOR THE BUDGET RESOLUTION- INCLUDED SIGNIFICANT HEALTH CARE FUNDING/POLICIES:
Addresses Rising Costs — The average cost of an employer-sponsored family health insurance policy exceeded $12,000 in 2008, more than twice what it cost ten years ago. Insurance premiums have grown faster than wages, resulting in less take-home pay. The resolution includes provisions to reduce administrative costs and other inefficiencies that cause higher costs without added health benefits.
Path to Increase Coverage— The number of people without insurance grew from 38 million in 2000 to nearly 46 million in 2008 – nearly 1 out of 6 Americans. Most uninsured are in working families. Millions more are underinsured, with just bare-bones coverage that exposes them to significant financial hardship if they get sick
Improving Quality of Care — Cost and quality are closely related. Evidence shows that as much as 30 % of our total health spending, about $700 billion a year, is not producing better health. Prescription drug errors injure or kill more than 1 million Americans per year and one study found only 55% of recommended care is delivered.

CHAMPIONED THE AMERICAN RECOVERY AND REINVESTMENT ACT (ECONOMIC STIMULUS BILL):
-Provides $19 billion to accelerate adoption of Health Information Technology systems by doctors and hospitals;
Helps states avoid cutting eligibility for Medicaid and scaling back on services covered.
-Protects health care coverage for millions of Americans during this recession, by providing an estimated $87 billion over the next two years in additional federal matching funds to help states maintain their Medicaid programs in the face of massive state budget shortfalls.
-Provides $1 billion for a new Prevention and Wellness Fund.  Studies have shown that investing in prevention can lower overall health care costs by billions of dollars.
-Provides $1.1 billion for comparative effectiveness research, to help patients and doctors determine the effectiveness of different treatments and improve the quality of care.

VOTED FOR FY2008 LABOR HEALTH, AND HUMAN  SERVICES APPROPRIATIONS BILL:
-Expands health care/community health centers and enables community health centers to serve an additional 1.2 million uninsured Americans by investing 11 percent more than the previous year.
-Provides increase of $1.1 billion over 2007 – allowing NIH to support 1,400 more research grants than the President’s budget; $50 million for new state health access grants, start-up grants to states ready with plans to expand coverage to targeted groups, and $50 million for an initiative to help states provide insurance pools to support affordable insurance for almost 200,000 people who are medically high-risk.

VOTED FOR GENETIC INFORMATION NONDISCRIMINATION: Prohibits insurance companies and employers from discriminating on basis of genetic test results, removing fear that has prevented many from undergoing testing for early treatment and prevention of genetic-based diseases.

VOTED FOR STEM CELL RESEARCH ENHANCEMENT ACT OF 2007: Would have increased the number of stem cell lines that are eligible to be used in federally-funded research.

VOTED TO IMPROVE MEDICARE THROUGH LEGISLATION THAT:
-Directs the Secretary of Health and Human Services to negotiate with drug companies for lower drug prices for Medicare beneficiaries. (Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Act).
-Prevents 10% pay cut for physicians in Medicare, enhances Medicare prevention and mental health benefits, improves and extends programs for low-income beneficiaries, and increases access to care for rural seniors.

VOTED FOR THE PAUL WELLSTONE MENTAL HEALTH AND ADDICTION  EQUITY ACT: Prohibits insurers and group health plans from imposing treatment or financial limitations when they offer mental health benefits that are more restrictive from those applied to medical and surgical services.

VOTED FOR NATIONAL BREAST AND CERVICAL CANCER EARLY DETECTION PROGRAM REAUTHORIZATION:
A 5-year program that provides free and low-cost breast and cervical cancer screenings to low-income, minority, or uninsured women.

AUTHORED THE ELDER ABUSE VICTIMS ACT:
Would protect the estimated 500,000 Pennsylvanian Alzheimer patients as well as 2 million seniors from the growing epidemic of abuse, neglect and exploitation of vulnerable seniors. The bill would institute a national review of state and federal elder abuse programs and authorize increased funding for elder abuse prosecution and law enforcement departments. The Elder Abuse Victims Act was introduced by Joe Sestak in January and passed by the House in February, but has since lingered in the Senate. 

SUMMARY OF FUTURE INITIATIVES

We must ensure the passage of comprehensive health care reform legislation currently under consideration in Congress. This legislation carries out my ideals for health care reform and is a significant step toward the establishment of a health care system that functions for all Americans. Moving forward, we must do more to address the incentives in our health care system that lead to every more expensive care and encourage excessive treatment.

Reduce Health Care Costs
Include incentives for Account Care Organization (ACO) in the Health Insurance Exchange, Public Plan, Require Qualified Health Benefit Plans to contract with ACOs. Alternatively, require the public plan to contract with ACOs.
Implement Wellness Program in Medicare, Give premium and co-pay reductions to seniors who participate in chronic disease management programs and follow preventative care recommendations.
Establish Regional Accountable Care Organization reimbursement in Medicare, Provide pilot program to encourage a regional implementation of Accountable Care Organizations.

Invest In Health Care Infrastructure
Incentivize Primary Care, Increase Medicare bonus to Primary Care Physicians to 10% (from 5% in AAHCA), Maintain 50% of Stimulus bill increase in funding for National Health Services Corps, which provides tuition repayment for Primary Care.
Increase Health Care Workforce, Expand the National Health Service Corps to include additional providers and increase institutional funding of Nursing Education.
Invest in Preventative Care, Maintain 50% of new federal investment in prevention and wellness fund at CDC in the Stimulus, Increase funding for Community Health Centers.

Ensure Effective Health IT
Expand incentives for adoption, Enact bonuses Medicaid providers who implement Health IT. This would include a broader definition of provider and apply to specialties, such as pediatrics, that do not service Medicare patients.
Require interoperability as a component of “Meaningful use”, Direct the Office of the National Coordinator to establish a national standard for interoperability of Health Records by September 1st, 2010. Require the inclusion of interoperability in the definition of meaningful use of health information technology for federal technology incentives.
Provide Assistance to Small and Ancillary Providers for Health IT adoption, Establish loan guarantee program to aid smaller practices and health care providers excluded from Medicare bonuses in implementing Health IT.

   Encourage Health Research
Encourage Future Research in Pediatric Cancer, Bring leaders of Pediatric Cancer research together with congressional staff and leaders to plot course for future research efforts.
Funding for NIH and NSF, Maintain funding levels at 50% of Stimulus funding in FY2011 budgets.
Reform Patent Law to Establish Consistency for Businesses, Establish a singular process for protesting copyright violations, which will reduce uncertainty for innovator companies but preserve the rights of generic manufacturers