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Obama Warns Of 'Massive Layoffs Of Teachers, Police, And Firefighters'

Obama

First Posted: 06/13/10 11:39 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 05:45 PM ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- If Chuck Lacasse had gotten his pink slip four days earlier, Uncle Sam would have covered most of his family's health insurance while he looked for a new job.

But Congress allowed emergency health care assistance for unemployed workers to expire May 31, and seems unwilling to renew it despite pleas from President Barack Obama.

On Saturday night, the White House released a letter Obama sent to congressional leaders of both parties asking for nearly $50 billion in emergency aid to state and local governments to fend off "massive layoffs of teachers, police and firefighters" and to prevent a possible double-dip recession.

"We are at a critical juncture on our nation's path to economic recovery," the president warned. "It is essential that we continue to explore additional measures to spur job creation and build momentum toward recovery, even as we establish a path to long-term fiscal discipline. At this critical moment, we cannot afford to slide backwards just as our recovery is taking hold."

In an interview with the Washington Post, White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel "said the letter is intended to settle the growing debate over the opposing priorities of job creation and deficit reduction and 'where you put your thumb on the scale.'"

Not three months after lawmakers passed his $1 trillion insurance overhaul, Obama is facing a rare defeat on health care at the hands of his own divided Democrats. So-called "moderates" have rebelled against adding billions more to the deficit in a treacherous election year.

"The same Congress that spent all this political capital trying to get people health insurance is going to take a crucial benefit away from unemployed people," said Andrew Stettner, deputy director of the National Employment Law Project, which advocates for the unemployed.

On June 4, Lacasse lost his job as advertising director for a company that makes nutritional supplements. He'll soon have to pay the entire $1,500 monthly premium to keep his family covered under his former employer's health insurance plan.

Until May 31, under Obama's economic stimulus law, the government provided a 65 percent subsidy. That would have lowered his cost to $525.

"This really isn't about welfare," said Lacasse, 40. "It's about buying people some time. In a position as specialized as mine, it would have been nice to know that I had some time to look for the right job." He lives near Green Bay, Wis., with his wife and two children.

Democratic Sens. Bob Casey of Pennsylvania and Sherrod Brown of Ohio have introduced a measure that would allow the program to continue helping people who get laid off through Nov. 30. That would cover Lacasse.

The lawmakers, who are seeking a vote this coming week, want to attach their nearly $7 billion provision to must-pass legislation that would extend unemployment benefits and make changes in dozens of federal programs. But a similar proposal was dropped from the House-passed bill, and Senate Democratic leaders also omitted it from their version.

"I'm concerned about it," said Washington Sen. Patty Murray, a member of the Democratic leadership. "There will be people who fall through the cracks."

Under a 1980s law known as COBRA, laid-off workers generally can stay on their former employers health plan for up to 18 months, provided they pay the full premium plus a small administrative charge. But with family premiums averaging about $13,500, the cost is prohibitive for most people.

That changed under the 2009 stimulus bill and subsequent expansions, which provided a 65 percent federal subsidy for up to 15 months. Workers laid off through May 31 can qualify for the benefit through their former employer.

"It has been a significant program and it has helped many middle-class families to keep their health insurance at a time when maintaining health insurance was difficult because of the high rate of job loss," said Alan Krueger, the Treasury Department's chief economist. Official statistics on how many people were helped have yet to be compiled, but Krueger estimates that as many as one-third of eligible unemployed workers enrolled in subsidized coverage.

Melanie Miller, 34, who suffers from debilitating neurological problems, said the COBRA program allowed her to maintain her independence after losing her ad agency job. "Without the subsidy, I probably would have had to move back and live in my mother's house in the basement," said Miller, an artist who lives in Philadelphia.

With the unemployment rate hovering just under 10 percent and with 15 million people looking for work, advocates say it's premature to withdraw assistance.

"We're recovering, but we haven't recovered fully," said Casey. "Now is not the time to pull up the ladder on people who are hanging on, in some cases to the last rung."

Some conservative Democrats, however, say they don't understand why the government should subsidize workers who lose jobs with employer coverage and not others who are equally deserving - for example self-employed people priced out of the private market.

"You're paying 65 percent of (one) family's health care costs, but the neighbor next door, there's no help for," said Rep. Dennis Cardoza, D-Calif. "So we're picking and choosing. There's an inequality there between our constituents." Not to mention that Congress has treated the program as emergency spending, adding its cost to the deficit.

In Marietta, Ohio, boiler operator Neil Davis is facing the loss of his job as the coal-burning power plant he works at prepares to shut down for good. Davis, 33, has marketable skills but he's unsure how quickly he'll be able to find comparable work. His wife is a stay-at-home mom raising two elementary-age children.

"Being able to have coverage at an affordable rate, we wouldn't be afraid to take the kids to the doctor if they get sick," said Davis. "The economy might be getting better some place, but I don't know where at."

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- If Chuck Lacasse had gotten his pink slip four days earlier, Uncle Sam would have covered most of his family's health insurance while he looked for a new job. But Congress allowe...
WASHINGTON (AP) -- If Chuck Lacasse had gotten his pink slip four days earlier, Uncle Sam would have covered most of his family's health insurance while he looked for a new job. But Congress allowe...
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08:26 PM on 06/24/2010
You'd almost expect there would be riots in the streets, citizens demanding accountability from the government...never going to happen. We've been enslaved by technology and the only wimper
heard is the sound of the keyboard.
08:16 AM on 06/22/2010
What did you do with the $800 billion stimulus bucko?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aDelphinium
Occupy with heart
09:28 AM on 06/16/2010
More bad news: Oakland is laying off a couple of hundred cops. Wha's a couple more homicides?
The Fremont Unified School District is cutting out Science(!) for grades K-6, as well as music and sports. Science!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aDelphinium
Occupy with heart
09:23 AM on 06/16/2010
Wow. Does this article have the most post of all time? It's beating out SP.
I just saw the headline and it made me want to scream.
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09:16 AM on 06/16/2010
It looks like Dr. Kevorkian has the solution to the nation's healthcare crisis. Its just that Kevorkian was before his time. In the future, taxpayer money will build a high bridge over a field of burning oil as a solution to healthcare, saving trillions, and as an added bonus, Big Oil can make some serious coin supplying fuel to burn the carcasses of lame Americans. The bridge could be self-funded by charging those in healthcare dire straights $100 a head to gain access to the healthcare bridge. They could even call the bridges "Compassionate Conservative Healthcare Bridges" because when there is no money for healthcare, the most compassionate thing that can be done is let people end their own suffering. Jumpers could even wrap themselves in an American flag and jump for patriotism, or as an act of supreme patriotism, jumpers could forgo the US flag and opt instead for the FOX News flag. God Bless the United States of Halliburton, er I mean America... or am I being redundant?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaliGrown78
WORLD CLASS SMART A$$
09:52 AM on 06/16/2010
You're not being redundant, sadly you're being right...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CaliGrown78
WORLD CLASS SMART A$$
08:20 AM on 06/16/2010
God forbid we end these neverending wars & spend that money right here in our own country on our own people, that would just be too much like right *sigh*
12:38 AM on 06/16/2010
How about we reenact taxing the few people who make a mansion full of money at previous levels prior to Reaganomics and the succesive spiral down of taxes for the wealthiest.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
barnybilt
11:48 PM on 06/15/2010
GEE! That's what this guy used most of the Recovery act for is to give to the States to keep those kind of people from being laid off. So He is admitting His own program didn't work.
He wasn't worried then about the people who made up the other 9% unemployed, only those people.
He hasn't proposed one thing to put the Country back to work, only ways to buy time for some.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KristinNoelle
11:47 PM on 06/15/2010
GET HEALTH COSTS UNDER CONTROL!!! Unless this is the backbone of any policy, we are merely delaying the inevitable collapse of the system.
11:06 PM on 06/15/2010
Congress has been too busy bailing out Wall Street and continuing a pointless war; meanwhile, 100,000 teachers nationwide have been laid off. So many of us were told that teachers would be needed, that it was a noble profession, and we heard the call. Late in life, I chose to return to school, amassing thousands of dollars in debt I can never repay; and, when I finally got my foot in the door, I was laid off after my first year. Most of the districts are cutting or hiring from within, and I can't afford to move. I'll lose my health insurance by the end of summer. Time to start over again, again.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
JacksonD
12:51 AM on 06/16/2010
So strange. I was helping someone with their FAFSA the other day and there are additional monies/benefits if one is going to go into teaching. Why? There won't be any jobs in that profession if this keeps up.

Sorry about what happened to you and hope that things get better - keep your chin up!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aDelphinium
Occupy with heart
09:26 AM on 06/16/2010
I'm in a similar position as a substitute teacher (including special ed) & teacher's aide.
Whatever I can find. But now with all the cutbacks, laid-off teachers get first dibs, teachers in general aren't take time off. Summer school no longer includes classes for students who need remedial help (especially HS students who must pass an exit exam to graduate). Summer school is only for Special Ed students. It's heartbreaking, and it's only going to get worse. I was working for the Census, then got laid-off from that.
10:10 PM on 06/15/2010
tell obama to streamline institutions to tests trough , not tragging its feet
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Pretrib
The borrower becomes the lender's slave.
07:49 PM on 06/15/2010
The Cloward-Piven strategy may really apply to this administration. The coincidences of this administrations actions-inactions in "emergencies" have brought this country to the brink of financial ruin, weakened our military, corrupted the division of responsibilities between the Executive and Legislative branches, violated the rights of individual investors in the auto industries to give payback to unions, all while taking advantage of "national emergencies". The Cloward-Piven Strategy purpose, named for two Leftist sociology professors, is to bring about the demise of capitalism by overloading the system. Making people desperate and dependent on the government. Cloward-Piven's goals are served by aliens flooding across the border, filling jails, emergency rooms, welfare rolls, and the mortgage crisis. Cloward and Piven helped create ACORN, which helped pressure banks to implement the lending policies that precipitated that crisis. The oil spill in the Gulf could destroy the fishing and tourist industries in that region, shut down oil drilling, raise the price of oil and food, bringing more Americans to a financial breaking point and dependent on government programs. Anything that puts a greater strain on government services advances the goals of Cloward-Piven. The more desperate the American people become, the better this administration likes it. It gets them closer to assuming total and complete control of every aspect of our lives.

Lest you conclude this is fear mongering, you should know that Cloward and Piven were on the stage with 0bama at the Inauguration.
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09:45 PM on 06/15/2010
"And as of now, the Cloward-Piven strategy is most often used to put two classes of people on the tea party's enemies list: those who work for the Obama administration and those who work to increase the political power of poor people of color. "

Commondreams.com
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kennethhdeome
Why can't both sides be wrong?
12:20 AM on 06/16/2010
Gee, Pretrib, I guess we'd better go back to deregulating profitability and invading foreign nations. That way we can get all those lazy poor people to work after corporate America ruins the economy with unmitigated greed. But what jobs will be available to the poor, you ask? Well, military service, of course.

The only thing this American is desperate for is for people like you to realize any extreme is destructive to a nation based not only in the balance of powers, but balance between individual rights and responsibilities. You condemn the present administration because liberals overspend on domestic social programs, but have you ever spoken against conservative policies?

And exactly how is it we got to the position of so many emerging emergencies? Let’s play Glen Beck:

Since 1901 we’ve had 64 years of Republican leadership, or 58.7 %. Since the end of the Vietnam War in 1973, or if you like, the first gas shortage, we’ve had some 24 years of Republicans, or 64.8 %.

Tell me which of those Presidents didn’t strain the system ? We don’t even have to discuss Richard Nixon, or his V.P. turned president, what’s his name? Ronald Reagan spent all our money and all his time committing numerous felonies fighting communism, which he called a national imperative (but not a “national emergency”). Bush Sr. got us into Somalia after spending American lives and money defending Kuwaiti oil and its owners. And George Jr., well he was a national emergency.
12:35 AM on 06/16/2010
*waves sparklers in support*

Amen.
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05:05 AM on 06/16/2010
Hah! Points for the Jr. take down!
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
hollybork
07:48 PM on 06/15/2010
Nearly 200 comments on this article reflecting the disbelief of Huffpo posters to the screwed up priorities of our Republic. So many of us had hoped to move this society away from war and the idiotic waste it entails since we were teenagers. What happened, my friends?
08:21 AM on 06/22/2010
We elected a speech reader with no leadership skills, who had never run anything as complex as a lemomade stand ---- and let him try to run the country.

What did you think would happen??
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
hollybork
10:24 AM on 06/22/2010
You are right. Fanned. Sadly, sadly, I have to admit the executive ability thing wasn't there. He does not like to get his hands dirty, and he goes with the most direct path rather than taking a difficult path so he can get along. He is smart but without creativity. He is principled, but he compromises below where he should in the end. He is intimidated by people who know things he doesn't know, and doesn't trust his own ethics and intuition to guide him in what is right.

He has neither the judgment nor connections to put the right people in jobs that would help him reach to accomplish his progressive campaign promises and his agenda. Now it looks like we never knew what his real agenda was. I thought it was ending war, universal healthcare, getting a handle on carbon emissions, reforming wallstreet and building a new green energy economy. I was wrong, I think.....
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pizzmoe
Bio Hazard!
07:00 PM on 06/15/2010
Of, course. It would be silly to cut the Pentagon budget or stop kickbacks to oil companies.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
JacksonD
12:52 AM on 06/16/2010
Perish the thought.
06:29 PM on 06/15/2010
City of Irvine spent $100 million on Fire Dept budget, no structural fires.
What an annual waste.
Time to downsize.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
duckfan00
Après nous le deluge
06:53 PM on 06/15/2010
Township of Edison,NJ has 35 senior police officers making over 150K with most averaging 100k...common sense says you can not keep this up.....forget about the pension entitlements.....
06:53 PM on 06/15/2010
Firemen do more than put out fires. They are emergeny responders, emergency medical providers and resue personel.