Other News
Apr 25, 2025: New Daily Service Schedule, Growing Ridership & Other Insights on County’s Pilot Transport Services
Apr 24, 2025: Building and Land Use Permits, Long-Range Planning Projects, & Staff Recruitments: DCD Leadership Provides Spring Update
Apr 4, 2025: 2025 Comp Plan Update: Transportation Element, Plan Intro, & Administration Piece Ready for Review
Mar 19, 2025: San Juan County Establishes Interim Inter-Island Transportation Services as RFP Process Continues
Mar 7, 2025: 2025 Comp Plan Update: Climate Element and Draft Official Map Amendments Available for Review
Mar 6, 2025: Governor Ferguson announces plan to restore Washington State Ferries to full service by this summer
Mar 4, 2025: Public Meeting: Land Bank Using Prescribed Fires to Manage Wildfire Risks & Restore Ecosystems
Feb 19, 2025: San Juan County Seeks Proposals from Transportation Service Providers for Pilot Project
Feb 12, 2025: Call for Candidates: Three-Day Special Filing Period for Lopez Metropolitan Park District Commissioners
Jan 19, 2025: Four districts, six unions, three PTAs, and county leadership all agree: legislators must take action to fully fund education no
Dec 19, 2024: San Juan County Parks and Fair Announces New Camping Software; Delaying Reservation Availability
Dec 10, 2024: County Council Considers Extending Agreement with Lopez Solid Waste to Allow for More Collaboration
Dec 5, 2024: San Juan County to Consider Updated Interlocal Agreement with Lopez Solid Waste Disposal District
Dec 2, 2024: San Juan County Council Sets Public Hearing for Cultural Access Sales Tax at Dec. 10 Meeting
Nov 25, 2024: San Juan County Celebrates Completion of Lopez Skate Park and Calls for Inaugural Skaters
Nov 7, 2024: How Has Extreme Weather Impacted You? Participate in the County’s Climate Resilience Planning Effort
Nov 1, 2024: UPDATE: Sea Wall Repairs Temporarily Close MacKaye Harbor Dock and Boat Ramp on Lopez Island
Oct 22, 2024: DRAFT North Shore Preserve Stewardship and Management Plan Now Open for Public Comment
Oct 21, 2024: Reminder: You’re Invited to Attend Open Houses for the 2025 Comp Plan Update This Fall
Oct 1, 2024: LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS OF THE SAN JUANS SPONSORS OCTOBER COUNTY COUNCIL VOTER FORUMS ON SJI, ORCAS, AND LOPEZ
Sep 24, 2024: County Hosts Community Meeting on Lopez Island to Discuss Public Safety during Hunting Season
Sep 24, 2024: SJC Reviews Shoreline Habitat & Infrastructure Adaptation Strategies in the face of Sea Level Rise
Sep 23, 2024: DRAFT Watmough Bay Preserve Stewardship and Management Plan Now Open for Public Comment
Aug 29, 2024: San Juan County’s Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, & Belonging Survey Sets Baseline for Ongoing Change
Aug 27, 2024: 2024 San Juan County WSU Master Gardeners Gardening Workshop Series, October 15-24, 2024
Aug 27, 2024: County Representatives Discuss Solutions to Ferry Service Disruptions with Governor Inslee
Aug 21, 2024: County Council’s Request to Governor for Relief from Ferry Service Disruptions Not Fulfilled
Aug 20, 2024: San Juan County Certifies Primary Election Results & Celebrates Highest Primary Turnout in Years
Aug 13, 2024: WSF Commits Additional Crews to Interisland Route to Ensure Service During County Fair Week
Aug 13, 2024: Ferry Data from Staff and Local Partners Shapes Council Request for ‘Executive Relief’ From WA State
Aug 5, 2024: The Orcas Island Chamber Music Festival returns to Lopez for its 27th Summer Concert Season
May 2, 2024: WA State Governor and Assistant Secretary of WSF Talk Ferry Service & Solar Power with SJC Officials
Apr 11, 2024: Community Meeting: Sea Level Rise Adaptation for Outer Bay and Agate Beach Areas on Lopez Island
Mar 11, 2024: Queers in Unexpected Places: Searching for (and Finding) Gender and Sexual Non-Conformity in the Rural and Early PNW
Mar 7, 2024: DRAFT Richardson Marsh Preserve Stewardship and Management Plan Now Open for Public Comment
Dec 5, 2023: County Council Member Jane Fuller and Senator Liz Lovelett to Host Public Meeting on Lopez
Nov 3, 2023: County and Town Send Open Letter to State Officials Regarding Impacts of Poor Ferry Service
Sep 29, 2023: Conservation Land Bank Announces Special Meeting to Discuss Watmough Bay Preserve Addition
Sep 14, 2023: The mobile dental van is coming to Lopez! // ¡La camioneta dental móvil ya llega a López!
Aug 22, 2023: San Juan County Adopts 32-Hour Work Week in the Name of Fiscal Health, Recruitment, and Islander Wellness
May 25, 2023: Recap of Lopez Neighborhood Meeting Regarding the Relocation of Public Works Facilities
May 23, 2023: District 3 Councilmember Jane Fuller Opens Office on Lopez and Hosts Community Conversation
Apr 17, 2023: Give Lopez Starts April 17th - A two week fundraiser benefiting 15 Lopez Island Non-Profits
Sep 22, 2022: Interim Watmough Preserve Addition Stewardship and Management Plan Now Open for Public Comment
We need Medicare For All
Jul 5, 2022
By Jason Call
Strengthening the ACA is not enough.
More than 330,000 lives lost in the U.S. during the pandemic could have been prevented - if we had universal health care.
That stunning revelation, from a study conducted by the National Academy of Science and published in Scientific American, also revealed that a single-payer health care system would have saved at least $105.6 billion in pandemic costs alone. In fact, universal health care would save as much as $438 billion annually in a non-pandemic year.
When I see these numbers, it makes me furious. So many lives taken by corporate greed. So many families driven to bankruptcy by medical bills. All to serve the profits of a handful of giant multinational corporations.
I know this firsthand because I lost my mother to the greed of the insurance industry.
My mother had gone in for a routine, but urgent, operation. On the day she was due to be discharged, she knew something was wrong and pleaded for another night of observation. But the insurance company would only pay for a single night in the hospital, so her doctor had no choice. The resulting complications ended up taking her life.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports there are 31.2 million people in the United States who have no health insurance. According to the Washington State Insurance Commissioner’s Office, 430,000 of those people live in our state.
Just as a quick comparison, the number of people with no health insurance in the UK, France, Germany, Spain, Mexico, Brazil, Chile, Australia, Canada, Israel … even Russia and China ... is zero.
The United States is, in fact, the only nation in the developed world that does not guarantee universal health care coverage, and for most countries that guarantee universal coverage, it is free as a right of citizenship or residence. Most of the roughly 30 countries that don’t guarantee health care are in Africa, and include the poorest countries in the world like Somalia and Sudan, and other non-African countries like Afghanistan, Syria and Haiti; countries whose governments are war-torn and unstable.
The United States is the wealthiest nation in the history of the world, and there is no valid reason we can't guarantee health care for all.
Last February, the Congressional Budget Office released a report that showed a single-payer (government insurance) program like Medicare For All can provide higher payments to providers than current Medicare while saving money through preventive care and eliminating unnecessary middlemen.
We can ensure everyone has health care that includes coverages that are often left out of private health plans, such as dental, hearing, vision, long-term care and mental health care. A federal single-payer program will also save states money, as Medicaid - a program that states contribute to - would be replaced with a better system that covers everyone.
What we have as a health care system now is unacceptable and immoral. When, in the 2008 presidential race, Sarah Palin spoke of government insurance as "death panels," this was the first Big Lie. You and I know that private health insurance companies are the real death panels. They decide who goes into medical bankruptcy, and who dies because they won’t authorize care - just like they did to my mom.
While the Affordable Care Act was an improvement on health care in some areas, the fact remains that no other developed country has this ridiculous tangle of private insurance networks, requiring untold billing labor hours and untold stress for people with insurance wondering if doctor-recommended tests, procedures, therapies and medications are going to be covered.
Ask anyone who works in medical billing about the nightmare of dealing with insurance companies who dedicate entire departments to deny claims. It hurts providers - the doctors, nurses, specialists and therapists that provide care. And of course, it hurts the people who need health care - which is all of us - and can't afford to be hit with a surprise bill of thousands of dollars.
Even though we must oppose Direct Contracting Entities and the new goal of some to fully privatize Medicare and Medicaid through ACO Reach, it's time we face facts: private, for-profit insurance is, at its core, an inherently failed model for health care delivery.
Its purpose is not to deliver health care, it is to make money for CEOs and shareholders. It is an exclusionary product. It wants to keep the good risks and exclude the bad risks. The bad risks are people who are sick and need medical care - your friends, your family, maybe even you.
The fiscal case for universal health care is indisputable. But this is more important than money to me.
I believe health care is a human right. I’ve been fighting for single-payer for more than a decade, and I’m not going to stop fighting until we get it.
It saves us money. It leaves no one behind. And most importantly, it is the right and moral thing to do.
Jason Call is a Marysville Democrat who is a candidate for the Second District seat currently held by U.S. Rep. Rick Larsen of Everett.
That stunning revelation, from a study conducted by the National Academy of Science and published in Scientific American, also revealed that a single-payer health care system would have saved at least $105.6 billion in pandemic costs alone. In fact, universal health care would save as much as $438 billion annually in a non-pandemic year.
When I see these numbers, it makes me furious. So many lives taken by corporate greed. So many families driven to bankruptcy by medical bills. All to serve the profits of a handful of giant multinational corporations.
I know this firsthand because I lost my mother to the greed of the insurance industry.
My mother had gone in for a routine, but urgent, operation. On the day she was due to be discharged, she knew something was wrong and pleaded for another night of observation. But the insurance company would only pay for a single night in the hospital, so her doctor had no choice. The resulting complications ended up taking her life.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports there are 31.2 million people in the United States who have no health insurance. According to the Washington State Insurance Commissioner’s Office, 430,000 of those people live in our state.
Just as a quick comparison, the number of people with no health insurance in the UK, France, Germany, Spain, Mexico, Brazil, Chile, Australia, Canada, Israel … even Russia and China ... is zero.
The United States is, in fact, the only nation in the developed world that does not guarantee universal health care coverage, and for most countries that guarantee universal coverage, it is free as a right of citizenship or residence. Most of the roughly 30 countries that don’t guarantee health care are in Africa, and include the poorest countries in the world like Somalia and Sudan, and other non-African countries like Afghanistan, Syria and Haiti; countries whose governments are war-torn and unstable.
The United States is the wealthiest nation in the history of the world, and there is no valid reason we can't guarantee health care for all.
Last February, the Congressional Budget Office released a report that showed a single-payer (government insurance) program like Medicare For All can provide higher payments to providers than current Medicare while saving money through preventive care and eliminating unnecessary middlemen.
We can ensure everyone has health care that includes coverages that are often left out of private health plans, such as dental, hearing, vision, long-term care and mental health care. A federal single-payer program will also save states money, as Medicaid - a program that states contribute to - would be replaced with a better system that covers everyone.
What we have as a health care system now is unacceptable and immoral. When, in the 2008 presidential race, Sarah Palin spoke of government insurance as "death panels," this was the first Big Lie. You and I know that private health insurance companies are the real death panels. They decide who goes into medical bankruptcy, and who dies because they won’t authorize care - just like they did to my mom.
While the Affordable Care Act was an improvement on health care in some areas, the fact remains that no other developed country has this ridiculous tangle of private insurance networks, requiring untold billing labor hours and untold stress for people with insurance wondering if doctor-recommended tests, procedures, therapies and medications are going to be covered.
Ask anyone who works in medical billing about the nightmare of dealing with insurance companies who dedicate entire departments to deny claims. It hurts providers - the doctors, nurses, specialists and therapists that provide care. And of course, it hurts the people who need health care - which is all of us - and can't afford to be hit with a surprise bill of thousands of dollars.
Even though we must oppose Direct Contracting Entities and the new goal of some to fully privatize Medicare and Medicaid through ACO Reach, it's time we face facts: private, for-profit insurance is, at its core, an inherently failed model for health care delivery.
Its purpose is not to deliver health care, it is to make money for CEOs and shareholders. It is an exclusionary product. It wants to keep the good risks and exclude the bad risks. The bad risks are people who are sick and need medical care - your friends, your family, maybe even you.
The fiscal case for universal health care is indisputable. But this is more important than money to me.
I believe health care is a human right. I’ve been fighting for single-payer for more than a decade, and I’m not going to stop fighting until we get it.
It saves us money. It leaves no one behind. And most importantly, it is the right and moral thing to do.
Jason Call is a Marysville Democrat who is a candidate for the Second District seat currently held by U.S. Rep. Rick Larsen of Everett.