[Congressional Record Volume 155, Number 110 (Tuesday, July 21, 2009)]
[Senate]
[Page S7771]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                           HEALTH CARE REFORM

  Mrs. MURRAY. Mr. President, 3 weeks ago I sent a letter to families 
across my home State of Washington asking for their help as we reform 
our broken health care system. I told them I wanted to pass a plan that 
protects existing coverage when it is good, improves it when it is not, 
and guarantees care for the millions who have none. I asked them to 
share their stories with me and ideas about how to make this vision a 
reality. I told them that I know health care is a very personal issue, 
but also that personal stories have the power to change minds and 
transform debates. The response to my request has been simply 
overwhelming.
  I wish to share some of the stories that have been pouring into my 
office--over 5,000 so far--because they underscore not only the 
desperate need to fix our broken health care system but also the dire 
necessity to get it done this year.
  For too many families today, health care reform can't wait. I wish to 
share a story from a letter I received from Rita from Seattle who sent 
me a story about her sister Janet. Janet was unemployed and had lost 
her health insurance when her throat began to hurt one day back in 
2004. She paid out of her own pocket to visit a health clinic and was 
sent home with antibiotics. Well, weeks later, she was still in a lot 
of pain and finally managed to get an appointment with a specialist, 
but she was told she had to wait 6 weeks more to come in to get help. 
Only after begging them for an appointment was she seen by the 
specialist 3 days later and was told that the pain she had been living 
with was in the late stages of an aggressive form of throat cancer. 
Janet died not long after that. It was a death that would have been 
prevented had she been able to see a specialist earlier.
  Janet is not alone. A woman by the name of Kathleen from Puyallup, 
WA, sent in a story about her friend Kelly. Kelly had just been laid 
off from work when she came down with what she thought was the flu. She 
didn't have any health insurance because she had been laid off from her 
job and she couldn't afford to go to the doctor, so she waited. Two 
weeks later she felt even worse, so she finally made an appointment to 
go in for a checkup. Kelly never made it to the doctor. Her 7-year-old 
son found her dead on the couch on the morning she was supposed to go 
in. She died from an untreated ovarian cyst. Because Kelly didn't have 
health insurance, that little boy no longer has a mother.
  I think the fact that these stories are possible in the greatest and 
richest country in the world is simply shameful. No son should lose a 
mother simply because she can't afford care. No family should have to 
watch a loved one suffer because insurance companies instead of doctors 
are making the decisions. That is why we so badly need to reform our 
health care system this year.
  Our country has been working on this issue for over 60 years and we 
have spent months and months this session alone working to put together 
a reform package that works for all Americans. We have had over 6 
months of hearings. We went through over 50 hours of public markups. We 
debated over 200 amendments. So when I hear some of my colleagues from 
across the aisle saying we should slow down, saying we should take more 
time, or that we are trying to reform health care too fast, and when I 
see some of them shrugging off every attempt we have made at engaging 
them and bringing them into the process, I think of Kelly and I think 
of Janet and I think of all of the families out there right now with 
sick husbands or sick wives or sick kids. I think of all the small 
business owners I have talked to who can't cover their employees. I 
think of the people who have coverage, but are worried about losing it 
today in this uncertain economy. I think about all the working 
Americans who are paying a hidden tax today in the form of rising 
premiums in order to cover those Americans who don't have access to 
care. As a mother and as a Senator, I say enough is enough.
  Yesterday we heard some pretty ugly and blatant rhetoric. One Member 
of the Senate who wants to protect the status quo, who doesn't want to 
make any changes, said: ``If we're able to stop Obama on this, it will 
be his Waterloo. It will break him.''
  That is playing games with real lives in order to score cheap 
political points. Bucking health care reform isn't going to break the 
President of the United States. It will break American families. It 
will break American businesses. It is going to break the bank.
  Americans deserve better. The families of Janet and Kelly and the 
thousands of others who have written me deserve better. We can't play 
politics with what is most important to our Nation's families--the 
health of their loved ones.
  They say justice delayed is justice denied. Well, health care delayed 
is often health care denied. It was denied to Kelly, it was denied to 
Janet, and it gets denied to more Americans every single day we wait.
  I call on all of our colleagues here in the Senate to work with us to 
rise above partisanship. We have a good plan right now. We are working 
to listen and bring everybody in and make it better. It will rein in 
the costs with the goal of lowering them across the long term. It will 
make sure all Americans have high quality, affordable coverage.
  This issue is not going to go away if we don't do anything. It is not 
going to get better or easier if we wait. In fact, today, costs are 
rising at an unsustainable rate for those who do have insurance and 
more and more Americans are losing their insurance every day.
  We have been talking about reforming the health care system for a 
very long time. I go home to my home State of Washington every weekend, 
and I am asked often now if it is the right time to tackle health care 
reform. In these difficult and challenging economic times when people 
are worried about paying their bills, worried about losing their jobs, 
worried about what is coming around the corner, they ask me if we are 
biting off more than we can chew. I tell them: This is exactly the time 
we need to act. Premiums are rising three times faster than wages 
today. Every day, 14,000 more Americans lose their health insurance. In 
these already difficult times, I don't want to add losing health 
insurance to the list of concerns our families have to deal with every 
day.
  We know the current system is unsustainable. Even those people with 
good coverage today are faced with massive costs and rising premiums. 
That is why tackling this problem now has to be part of our long-term 
economic recovery program.
  Without health care reform, family budgets are going to continue to 
be strapped, more Americans are going to lose their care, and we are 
going to hear more stories like Janet and Kelly. I hope we can put 
aside the partisan rhetoric, I hope we can put aside the talk of: Slow 
this down; it is too fast. This issue is imperative, and I urge my 
colleagues to act.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois.

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