NEWS RELEASE Admiral Joe Sestak Discusses Support for American Families & Their Health Care Sestak Continues to Walk in the Shoes of Other Pennsylvanians FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE For more information contact: Danielle Lynch 610-505-5861 danielle.lynch@joesestak.com March 23, 2015 LIGONIER, PA – Admiral Joe Sestak discussed his support for Pennsylvanian families, their health care and the Affordable Care Act (ACA) on the fifth anniversary of the law’s enactment Monday and then walked 11 miles through Westmoreland County. Joe discussing health care security at an event in Ligonier, PA. Earlier this month, Joe began his walk on the New Jersey border in Philadelphia and will end it 422 miles later when he arrives at the border with Ohio. When Joe kicked off his campaign, he said America is about “We the People,” and that — as Scout recalls in To Kill a Mockingbird — “You never really know a man until you stand in his shoes and walk around in them.” Therefore, over the next week, Joe will walk in the shoes of Pennsylvanians he meets along his walk. Joe entered politics because his own daughter had brain cancer. He was elected to Congress in a Republican district and he worked for health security for all families – not just his own. Joe championed the ACA, the most significant health care reform legislation in over a decade ensuring access to affordable, quality health care for all Americans, and making health insurance more affordable for individuals and small businesses that have it by establishing a fair, competitive marketplace for health insurance. The ACA ensured all Americans, including nearly 8 million uninsured rural Americans under the age of 65, got access to affordable health care services such as 1 blood pressure and cholesterol screenings, mammograms, wellness visits, diabetes and colorectal cancer screenings. In Pennsylvania, the ACA has helped 700,000 Pennsylvanian children with preexisting conditions. It has allowed young adults to stay on their parents’ health insurance until the age of 26. Northwestern Pennsylvania—including Westmoreland and Allegheny counties—was listed as the top second least expensive health insurance market in America last year. The ACA has helped rein in costs. In the four years since the ACA was passed, the per capita cost of health care rose at half the rate of the preceding eight years, at 3 percent compared to over 6 percent. That’s the slowest cost increase in 50 years. Average premiums in the health care exchanges are 4 percent lower than average premiums for similar employer-sponsored coverage. Plans offered through the Small Business Health Options Program (SHOP) exchanges have premiums 7 percent less expensive than plans sold off the marketplace. The ACA also has helped senior citizens. Through rebates and discounts to close the “donut hole” gap in Medicare prescription drug coverage, over 8 million seniors and people with disabilities have saved $12 billion since 2010 – that’s an average of $1,500 per person. For seniors on a fixed income, every dollar of these extra savings has meaning. The ACA also has added 13 years to the life of the Medicare trust fund, which will now be solvent through 2030 compared to the 2017 estimate before the ACA was passed. Medicare has a new lease on life because the ACA has kept costs down. Reducing the number of uninsured Americans is crucial because the cost to our economy of underinsurance and the uninsured is estimated by the Institute of Medicine to be between $65 and $130 billion annually. According to estimates from Gallup, the Urban Institute, and RAND Corp., somewhere between 8 million and 11 million people gained coverage from the end of summer 2013 through the end of spring 2014, far surpassing Congressional Budget Office enrollment forecasts. As a result, the uninsured rate has fallen from roughly 20 percent to about 14 percent. That means that roughly one in four people who were uninsured before the first enrollment period now have coverage, with untapped potential still remaining. Additionally, the ACA has helped women. It provides free preventive screenings for women; increases services such as pre-natal care for pregnant women; and ensures women with pre-existing conditions are not denied coverage. In addition to helping women through his vote on the ACA, Joe also co-sponsored and passed legislation requiring health plans to cover a minimum hospital stay of two days for mastectomies and other breast cancer treatments. Sen. Toomey, R-Pa., on the other hand, may say that he cares about Pennsylvanians’ health care but he then votes the opposite way back in Washington, D.C. He has supported nearly 30 bills that would dismantle the ACA. When Sen. Toomey was a Congressman from 1999-2005, he did nothing to help 160 Pennsylvanians who were losing their health insurance daily. In a nutshell, Toomey wants to repeal all the progress our nation has made through health care reform in the ACA. Toomey has voted to end preventive screenings that are offered to senior citizens and women through the ACA. The ACA also has reduced the health care workforce shortage by providing incentives to doctors that work in rural communities, such as scholarships, loan repayments, and Medicare payment 2 incentives. Joe’s campaign is about accountable leadership that serves “We the People.” He believes the biggest deficit in America today is the “trust deficit” and is running to restore Americans’ lost trust in their political leaders by being accountable to serve those whose shoes public servants should be walking in. That is why Joe looks forward to walking alongside Pennsylvanians as he works to restore the American Dream. There are too many in the U.S. Senate who believe you are on your own, and our present Senator—who votes against veterans, women, senior citizens, and our children, as well as small business owners on a consistent basis—is not the answer for restoring the American Dream. “We must restore trust in our leaders,” Joe said. “Now more than ever, the governmental leaders’ role must be accountability for restoring the alliance of rugged individualism and common enterprise so that ‘We the People’ can take back the Dream.” 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Born and raised in Delaware County, former 3-star Admiral Joe Sestak served in the Navy for 31 years. He served as a Congressman for Pennsylvania’s 7th Congressional District from 2007-2011. As a Congressman, Joe served on both the Armed Services and Education & Labor Committees, and was Vice Chairman of the Small Business Committee. According to the office of the House Historian, Joe is the highest-ranking former military officer ever to serve in the U.S. House of Representatives. As an Admiral, he led a series of operational commands at sea, including Commander of an aircraft carrier battle group of 30 U.S. and allied ships with over 15,000 sailors and 100 aircraft that conducted operations in Afghanistan and Iraq. After 9/11, Joe was the first Director of “Deep Blue,” the Navy’s anti-terrorism unit that established strategic and operations policies for the “Global War on Terrorism.” He served as President Clinton’s Director for Defense Policy at the National Security Council in the White House, and also as the Deputy Chief of Naval Operations responsible for development of the Navy’s five-year $350 billion warfare requirements. He holds a Ph.D. in Political Economy and Government from Harvard University. Joe most recently taught courses on Ethical Leadership and on Restoring the American Dream at Carnegie Mellon University and Cheyney University, and was the General Omar N. Bradley Chair in Strategic Leadership, a joint faculty appointment at the United States Army War College, Dickinson College, and the Penn State University Dickinson School of Law and School of International Affairs. He also remains active in foreign affairs, education, disaster response, small businesses, energy and the environment, and health care, among other issues, through a variety of non-profits and other organizations, including the U.S Department of State. 14
© Copyright 2024