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Seniors “Outraged” By Budget Proposals

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Monday, June 27, 2011   

CHARLESTON, W.Va. - Republicans in Congress are again floating proposals to cut or privatize Social Security but, as with similar plans for Medicare, that's provoking anger from senior citizens.

Ed Coyle, executive director of the Alliance For Retired Americans, says the organization's members are furious.

"Our phones have been ringing off the hook, and they're outraged. They're willing to go to the mat on stopping these cuts in Social Security. They're as angry now about this as I've ever seen them."

Coyle says the outrage follows a similar reaction from seniors to a proposal to privatize Medicare. He says America has a responsibility to ensure health care for older citizens, and seniors are reacting because they know that, without that guarantee, they're vulnerable.

"They look around the table in the living room. All of these people including themselves are living on a shoestring now. And they get sick or they have to spend a few days in the hospital, you're talking about people being wiped out."

According to federal figures, West Virginia has one of the highest rates of reliance on Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security in the country.

The consumer group Families USA projects that proposed Medicaid cuts could cost the state as many as 10,000 health industry jobs.

West Virginia Alliance For Seniors president Sterling Ball says slashing any of the programs would cause job losses.

"It boils down to reduction of benefits for the seniors. It would be devastating on the economy. It would take out the purchasing power that seniors would have."

Ed Coyle says there are good ways to strengthen the programs, such as lifting the cap on income subject to Social Security taxes. He says Medicare should negotiate for lower drug prices the way the Veterans Administration does.

"The price differences that you get, when you look at what a veteran's paying for a prescription and what a person who's not a vet is paying for a prescription, is two-to-one, sometimes three-to-one."

Some Republicans want to cut Social Security to reduce the deficit, but Coyle points out that Social Security is funded separately from the rest of government, so it is not actually adding to the deficit. The Congressional Budget Office projects the program to be fully funded for the next quarter century.

The Families USA report is at familiesusa2.org




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