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To: JohnM who wrote (3167)7/5/2003 11:42:44 AM
From: KonKilo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793717
 
States and cities move to resist the PATRIOT Act...this story has received little media attention, but obviously is a swelling movement.

This act was passed in such a knee-jerk fashion and contains so many traditionally un-Ameriacn ideas, that it was bound and due for scrutiny...the fact that said scrutiny is coming from state and local governments is both encouraging and chilling...will the fed gov't rethink its postions, or will they insist upon enforcing compliance?

130 U.S. Communities Saying No to Repression
Fri Jul 4,11:13 AM ET

Jim Lobe, OneWorld US

WASHINGTON, D.C., July 4 (OneWorld) - More than 130 communities with a combined population of more than 16 million people in 26 states have passed resolutions directing local police to refrain from using racial profiling, enforcing immigration laws, or participating in federal investigations that violate civil liberties, according to a new report released on the eve of this year's Fourth of July celebrations by the American Civil Liberties Union (news - web sites) (ACLU).
 

The 23-page report credits Ann Arbor, Michigan, with adopting the first resolution opposing key provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act, thus setting off a trend that shows no sign of abating.

"In my conversations with people from across the political spectrum, I hear one refrain over and over," says Laura Murphy, who heads the ACLU's Washington, D.C. legislative office. "If we give up our freedoms in the name of national security, we will have lost the war on terrorism."

"As this year's Fourth of July rolls around, we hope that this report will demonstrate to the White House, the Justice Department (news - web sites) and Congress that we must be both safe and free."

The ACLU, whose local offices played a major role in support of dozens of resolutions around the country, stressed that among the jurisdications that have taken action are a number of traditionally conservative areas of the country, such as Oklahoma City, Missoula, Montana; and Falgstaff, Arizona.

Some of the larger cities include Denver, Colorado; Oakland and San Francisco, California; Seattle, Washington; Detroit, Michigan; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and Baltimore, Maryland. Three states have also adopted measures that call for strict respect for constitutional rights: Hawaii, Alaska, and Vermont.

The report, 'Independence Day 2003: Main Street Fights the Federal Government's Insatiable Appetite for New Powers in the Post 9/11 Era,' says the burgeoning grassroots movement was launched after demands by Attorney General John Aschroft were agreed to by Congress, which, it charges, "encouraged an atmosphere of hysteria," by approving the USA PATRIOT Act in late October 2001 with little debate and few dissenting votes.

The Act included a number of controversial provisions that, in the ACLU's view, upset the balance between the citizen's privacy and political rights and the state's responsibility to ensure the security of the country.

Some of those provisions included expanding the power of the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act; approval of "sneak and peek" warrants which allow federal agents to enter private homes without notifying the owner until much later; weakening the standards for intelligence wiretaps by permitting them to be used for criminal invstigations under some circumstances; and making it easier for federal agents to obtain highly personal "business records," such as library loan records, of possible terrorist suspects.

The Act itself was followed up with a flurry of executive orders, regulations, policies and practices, such as denying the right to a fair trial for citizens and non-citizens labeled "enemy combatants" and establishing military commissions that fall short of minimum due process standards, which further eroded civil liberties protection, according to the ACLU.

On January 7, 2002, Ann Arbor became the first city in the country to pass a resolution in direct response to the PATRIOT Act and new federal policies. "We're very concerned about civil rights and the about the potential discrimination," City Councilwoman Heidi Herrell told ABC News at the time. "We spent a lot of time since September 11 making sure that the Muslim members of our community felt safe."

Denver became the second city to approve a resolution after the ACLU there discovered the existence of 3,400 secret files on social activists that had been collected by the Denver Police over several years. That resolution called for the police not to gather information on individuals' First Amendment activities unless the information related to criminal activity and the subject was suspected of engaging in criminal activity.

The movement has gathered steam. In February, 2003, alone, 22 communities passed resolutions affirming civil liberties, while the three states have all acted in the last three months.

The momentum behind the resolution movement has drawn the increasing ire of the Justice Department, according to the report. Ashcroft himself recently acknowledged public fears about the possibility for abuse of the PATRIOT Act and called on the media to help the Justice Department explain it. It has also enlisted Republican lawmakers in an effort to oppose local resolutions.

"This report just goes to show the importance of local activism," Murphy said. "Although the Attorney General and his staff have said that this movement is but a flash in the pan, the fact that they'd take the time to actively work to defeat these things speaks volumes about their political importance."

The movement has not only involved local governments. Librarians are refusing to cooperate with federal authorities, and dozens of state library associations have passed their own anti-PATRIOT Act resolutions. In Congress. Rep. Bernie Sanders of Vermont has introduced the "Freedom to Read Protection Act" which would exempt libraries and bookstores from the Act. The bill currently has 122 co-sponsors, and California Sen. Barbara Boxer has introduced a companion bill in the Senate.

"Nothing is more precious in a democracy than freedom of speech and free access to information without government intrusion," the report asserts. "The American people seem to understand that, even if Attorney General Ashcroft does not."

story.news.yahoo.com



To: JohnM who wrote (3167)7/5/2003 3:44:27 PM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793717
 
Malpractice Bill is Likely to Lose Key Senate Vote
By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG - NEW YORK TIMES

The Dems should be ashamed of themselves on this one. I hope they have to filibuster it.

WASHINGTON, July 5 - A bill that would impose strict limits on jury awards in medical malpractice cases, a central element of President Bush's plan to revamp tort law, appears headed for defeat in the Senate, but the majority leader, Bill Frist, intends to introduce the measure on Monday anyway, forcing a vote that could be used against Democrats in the next election.

The bill, similar to one the House passed in March, would limit awards for pain and suffering to $250,000.

The bill has no Democratic sponsors, and Republican leaders, including Dr. Frist and Senator Mitch McConnell, the Republican whip who will manage the bill on the floor, concede they do not have the 60 votes needed to overcome a filibuster.

"It's going to be difficult," Mr. McConnell said.

A vote could occur as early as Wednesday. But proponents say that even if they lose, as expected, the issue is not dead for this Congress.

Instead, Dr. Frist, who has made malpractice changes a signature issue, hopes the vote will force lawmakers to take a stand. That would expose them to more pressure from lobbyists, and might yield a compromise later in the year.

On Thursday, a group that opposes Dr. Frist's position called on him to remove himself from the debate because he and his family own substantial investments that would benefit from limits on medical liability. The group, the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer rights, said the family's holdings in HCA , the nation's largest for-profit hospital chain, and a subsidiary, Health Care Indemnity, the fifth-largest medical malpractice insurer, created a conflict of interest.

The broad issue of overhauling the laws governing liability in lawsuits has been a perennial dividing line between Democrats and Republicans, and because of the rising costs of medical liability insurance, this aspect of the issue has been especially potent this year.

With medical liability premiums rising and some doctors leaving their practices as a result, proponents of malpractice changes say caps on jury awards are necessary.

Doctors, insurers and business groups, all of whom contribute substantially to Republicans, are lobbying heavily for the bill.

But opponents, mainly trial lawyers and consumer groups and the Democrats they support, say the bill, modeled after a California law, would deprive malpractice victims of their day in court without solving the insurance problem.

They say the $250,000 cap is too restrictive.

"We have tried during the first six months of the year to see if we can't build a bipartisan consensus on this, and thus far have been unsuccessful," said a spokesman for Senator Frist, Bob Stevenson. He added, "We view this as a long march, and this is the beginning of it."

That march may well extend until the next election, in 2004. Some Democrats ? who complained that Dr. Frist is circumventing Senate procedure by bringing the measure up for a vote before it has been considered in committee ? said he is using the vote to generate a political issue for Republicans.

Republicans made it clear that they intended to use the vote against Democrats.

"Women are having trouble finding obstetricians to be able to deliver their babies," said Senator John Ensign, Republican of Nevada, the chief sponsor of the measure.

"In states like Nevada, doctors are leaving in droves, and that kind of scenario is repeating itself over and over around the country," Mr. Ensign said. "As voters become aware of it, I think you're going to see the change of minds of senators who may now be against it. We bring it up for a vote now, and it may cost them in the next election."

Mr. McConnell agreed. "It's important for everybody to go on record," he said. "If we don't act, I think it's a certainty that it will be an issue in next year's election."

Because most controversial legislation needs 60 votes to pass the Senate, Democrats will have at least two opportunities to defeat the measure on the Senate floor.

Under Senate procedure, they may vote to block Dr. Frist from even bringing the bill up for debate. Or they could allow debate to proceed and then signal their intention to filibuster, forcing Republicans to come up with 60 votes to halt debate.

A spokesman for Senator Tom Daschle of South Dakota, the Democratic leader, said Mr. Daschle had not decided how to proceed.

Senator Richard J. Durbin, Democrat of Illinois, said he hoped there would be a full debate, because he was developing an alternative that would offer doctors tax credits to give them some relief from insurance premiums.

Mr. Durbin said his bill would also curb the insurance industry's exemption from antitrust laws ? a move that a number of Democrats, including Senator Patrick J. Leahy of Vermont, argued would exert downward pressure on rates.

"The premiums that are being charged to doctors are outrageous and I think we need to do something," Mr. Durbin said.

With a Republican in the White House and Republicans controlling both houses of Congress, proponents of malpractice-law changes have been hopeful that this year they would finally achieve their goal.

Some now sound gloomy.

"This represents our best offer," said Kate Sullivan, director of health care policy at the United States Chamber of Commerce, adding, "My fear is if we take a vote right now and we lose the vote, then this is bad for the 108th Congress, which runs through 2004."

But officials of the American Medical Association, which made medical liability legislation its main priority in Washington, remain ? in public at least ? upbeat.

"We believe it's the best opportunity for national medical liability reform that were seeing, certainly in my lifetime, and we still remain optimistic," said Dr. Donald J. Palmisano, the association's president.

Both sides are lobbying hard. The medical association is starting an advertising campaign focused on senators opposed to the bill, and USAction, a consumer advocacy group backed by the trial lawyers, is spending more than $500,000 on a two-week advertising campaign featuring victims of medical malpractice.

"This Congress has a very bad track record of supporting powerful special interests at the expense of average Americans," said Jeff Blum, USAction's executive director. "We want to make sure that real stories of real people are in the debate on medical malpractice."

Those stories have had a powerful effect on the debate.

In February, just as the House was planning to take up its bill, a 17-year-old transplant patient, Jésica Santillán, died after doctors in North Carolina gave her a heart and lung of the wrong blood type. Opponents of the bill cited the death in arguing that a $250,000 cap for pain and suffering was too low. Critics, including some Senate Republicans, began to argue that any malpractice legislation would need an exemption for catastrophic cases.

For a time, it seemed that Republicans and Democrats might be able to broker a deal. But the lead Democrat in the negotiations, Senator Dianne Feinstein of California, dropped out when doctors' groups, including the medical association, refused to support a proposal that would limit jury awards for pain and suffering at $500,000. Dr. Palmisano, the association's president, said the group has been turning to the states.

Despite the lack of agreement and the bill's dim prospects, Senator McConnell said there was no reason to wait.

"There is substantial clamoring for a national solution to this national problem," he said, "and we think there is no time like the present to begin to deal with it."
nytimes.com