West Va. Chamber of Commerce Plays Dirty With Health Care Reform

| Fri Nov. 20, 2009 10:46 AM PST

The West Virginia Chamber of Commerce is playing dirty with health care reform. It's pressuring its homestate Democratic senators, Robert Byrd and Jay Rockefeller, to block health care legislation unless the Obama administration ends what the Chamber calls a "war on coal."

The Obama administration and Congress have waged "a growing campaign against the mining and use of coal," said West Virginia Chamber President Steve Roberts in a press release. He cited both the administration's efforts to cut carbon emissions via climate legislation, as well as its tougher enforcement of environmental standards for mining practices. "This needs to end before irreparable damage sets in," Roberts threatened. "It seems counterintuitive to ask taxpayers in this country to pour money and take on a trillion dollars in future debt to expand health care coverage and benefits while at the same time the Obama administration and Congress are working to destroy jobs, eliminate good health care benefits and hurt people's well-being."

Coal, however, does not "improve the health and well-being" of either miners or local residents. Coal mining, combustion, and disposal can cause serious health problems, including black lung, asthma, and mercury pollution, to name a few. And the number of coal-related jobs is on the decline in West Virginia and the rest of the country, in part because coal has laid off workers after mechanizing much of its operations. There are fewer than half as many jobs in the coal sector now as there were in the early '80s, according to the Energy Information Administration. There are now more jobs in the wind industry than in mining.

A third of non-elderly West Virginians were uninsured at some point in 2007-2008—most of them for six months or more. Yet the state's Chamber wants its congressional delegation to block legislation that would provide those residents with access to health care. "Votes to advance national health care reform are at razor-thin margins in both houses of Congress," Roberts concludes. "West Virginia’s congressional delegation needs to use this time—and their clout and seniority—to get this anti-coal situation stopped."

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Kate Sheppard covers energy and environmental politics in Mother Jones' Washington bureau. For more of her stories, click here. She Tweets here.

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Comments

Such tactics are so low...

Any of the efforts that attempt to manipulate health reform for non health reasons show a very serious disrespect for the lives of the population. Absolutely jobs are important, but efforts to compromise health reform in order to advance personal and business agendas are lower than low.

Isn't this like the good

Isn't this like the good senator from Louisiana selling her soul for a few pieces of silver?

hmmm

may be your right or may be not

I too have health insurance

I too have health insurance and ’strongly’ support the recent health care legislation. As well, mining has recently been implicated to be a significant (statistically) contributor to reduced health and well-being among coalfield residents. So, while Chamber is correct in its assertion that poverty is associated with poor health, so is coal mining. What we should work toward is ensuring both are given much deserved attention.

West Va. Chamber of Commerce Plays Dirty With Health Care Reform

Big coal is the one waging war on the environment and by extrapolation on humanity.

A war of bad health.

they need the help

,I found some kinds of gucci shoes i love most they are

healthcare

Who do you think "the chamber of commerce" represents, the public or big corporations". The "chamber" is after ONLY TWO THINGs, their monetary gain and their continued reign of power. What these fools don't realize is that they have to have customers to buy their products. Today it is to easy for them to gain a monopoly over other competitors and then they are invincible. The oil and coal industry will not produce a clean products ON THEIR OWN. Solar energy is clean and requires a one time manufacture cost, not an ongoing pollution expelling source of power. The problem is "they" never figured out HOW to charge for the sun's power. When they do then we will have all the solar power we need.
As for the health care bill being held hostage by devious evil people, I believe the health care industry didn't pay enough to ALL our elected politicians. They signaled out only a few to give thousands to, they should pay EVERYONE the same. I would like to see ANY COMPANY CONTRIBUTING TO A MEMBER OF CONGRESS SHOULD HAVE TO GIVE THE SAME AMOUNT TO ALL THE MEMBERS, NO EXCEPTIONS.

True and think how much

True and think how much energy would be generated if all the strip malls and big box stores especially in the South and Southwest were equipped with solar panels. It would cause less draw on the grid in the hot months and provide electricity to sell back to the power companies as well as create jobs doing maintenance.

Isn't this like the good

Isn't this like the good senator from Louisiana selling her soul for a few pieces of silver?

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