50 at Greenfield Peace Rally

In Greenfield about 50 people attended a rally to call for a ceasefire in Gaza. The organizers have web sites at www.traprock.org and www.jvp.org. The rally was on February 10.

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In Brattleboro on February 27 there will be a rally to protest the school board's decision last month to stop investigating alleged sexual abuse by school employees. The rally will be outside 107 Atwood Street from 5 p.m. until 7 p.m., during the nearby school board meeting at the same time, one of the organizers told the Valley Post. For more information click:

https://valleypost.org/2024/01/26/rallies-abortion-rights-affordable-hou...

Then scroll down to the essay by Diana Whitney.

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In a voice phone interview on February 14, a spokesperson for Massachusetts state senator Patricia Jehlen told the Valley Post that a bill to improve nursing homes is in the senate ways and means committee. The bill passed the House unanimously last year. Jehlen is chair of the elder affairs committee. The Boston Globe editorial board wrote, “Both Tara Gregorio, president of the Massachusetts Senior Care Association, which represents nursing homes, and Tim Foley, executive vice president of 1199SEIU, which represents nursing home workers, praised the bill’s focus on increasing accountability, transparency, and oversight while also addressing pressing workforce challenges.”

In July 2023, the Valley Post published a special investigation on nursing homes. It reads:

In the U.S., in general, rich people don't go to nursing homes. Same with prison. But for the rest of us, a nursing home is likely to be the place we spend the last months of our lives. The town of Killington, Vermont is 50 miles from Brattleboro as the crow flies. Killington doesn't have a nursing home, so most Killington people go to nursing homes in nearby Rutland, Vermont. The Gables and the Pines are two of the biggest. Neither responded to phone calls and emails seeking comment for this article, which compares nursing homes in Europe and the United States.

All of the nursing homes in Rutland are part of national chains. Middle class people pay about $12,000 a month for a private room, until their money runs out. Then they get to keep the room. If you don't have $12,000 a month to spend when you first need a nursing home, you will probably get a shared room. (A two-year contract is the norm, paid upfront.) In Rutland, about 20 percent of people in nursing homes have a private room.

In Europe, everyone gets a private room.

In the U.S., nursing home patients who abuse drugs or alcohol, or refuse to take prescribed medicine, are kicked out and often end up in homeless shelters. To get on Medicare you need to spend all your money, including any pension or assets. There's a five-year “look back.”

U.S. News and World Report says Middlebury is one of the best colleges in the U.S. Middlebury sociology professor Jamie McCallum told the Valley Post in a voice phone interview, “The epicenter of the Coronavirus in the U.S. was nursing homes. That wasn't the case in Europe. You've got to wonder why. It's likely because labor protections are different. You should talk to Mark Bergfeld.”

Bergfeld told the Valley Post in a voice phone interview, “In Italy, Spain and other European countries, even if a nursing home is non-union, under the law, they need to pay the union wage.”

Unionization rates in Europe dwarf those of the U.S. That's true at nursing homes, and in every other industry. Bergfeld works for a union that has a web site at UniGlobalUnion.org. He lives in Belgium, a country of 12 million that borders Germany. In general, workers make more money when they join a union. Most employers do everything possible to prevent their workers from organizing, according to a study by Cornell professor Kate Bronfenbrenner.

In Europe, every citizen gets a private room when they need a nursing home, regardless of how much money they have, Bergfeld said.

AARP's Vermont chapter declined to comment for this article. The most recent tax form that's publicly available for AARP, the national group, is from 2019 and says the group had assets of $1.5 billion. AARP has around 2,000 employees. The CEO made $1.3 million in 2019. AARP did not respond to an email seeking comment. Calling the number on their web site during regular business hours resulted in a long hold time with bad music and no way to leave voicemail.

Speaking of U.S. nursing homes in 2020, Betsy McCaughey told the New York Times, “They’re death pits."

She's a former lieutenant governor of New York who founded the Committee to Reduce Infection Deaths, an education campaign aimed at stopping hospital-acquired infections. McCaughey said U.S. nursing homes were overwhelmed before Covid. They were already crowded and understaffed. Covid produced "carnage” in nursing homes, she said. (source: NYT, April 17, 2020, "Coronavirus Claims at Least 6900 Nursing Home Deaths in US" by Farah Stockman, et al.)

Middlebury professor McCallum's 2022 book is “Essential: How the Pandemic Transformed the Long Struggle for Worker Justice.”

On May 2 in France, unions said they would strike June 6 to protest the government's plan to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64. Beginning in January 2023, more than a million French workers went on strike over this issue. The subsequent police crackdown was criticized by the Council of Europe. Founded in 1949, the Council has 46 member states, with a population of about 700 million people.

Comments

correction

In the article on nursing homes the allusion is made to getting on Medicare after spending down all assets and pension benefits. I believe you mean to say "getting on MEDICAID" and I understand that assets do not include one's home which can be transferred to an individual's estate beneficiaries.
Thanks for the coverage of this critically important topic--as with hospitals, nursing homes have fallen prey to neoliberalism's cruel focus on "profits, not people:".

Thanks for writing!

Thanks for writing!

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