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Visalia
Times - Delta
March 10, 2001
Plan to insure
children garners widespread support
The Associated Press.
SAN JOSE - A program to use tobacco settlement money
to provide every child in Santa Clara County with health care has
garnered an overwhelming response -- especially from other local
governments wishing to do the same, proponents say.
The Santa Clara County Children's Health Initiative is designed
to let parents know which local, state and federal health insurance
programs their children qualify for and to make up for any coverage
gaps left by those programs.
"We have had interest from all over the country from people
that would like to copy this program," said Kevin Malone, a
community organizer for People Acting in Community Together, a faith-based
group that helped organize the program. "As far as we know,
there's nothing like this one."
The Rev. Rex Police, a member of the San Diego Organizing Project
that is trying to get a similar initiative in that county, told
a story of his experience with health care at a news conference
yesterday marking the official start of the Santa Clara program.
Three years ago, Police's 1-month-old grandson was found to have
a hole in his heart, and because the boy's mother had taken a 3-month
leave from work after giving birth, their insurance had lapsed.
The hospital refused to operate on the boy without insurance, but
Police said his wife camped out in the hospital for two weeks to
get them to agree to perform the lifesaving surgery. The boy now
is fine.
"I hope our (county) supervisors in San Diego can see that
the supervisors here have stepped up to the plate," Police
said.
The initiative officially starts Sunday, but more than 5,000 children
already have been signed up in the past two month. That exceeds
the initiative's projection of signing up 500 children a month.
San Jose resident Irma Perez, a mother of two, learned of the intiative
through a teacher at her children's school and will sign up for
the program Sunday. Her two daughters, 9 and 5, have been without
health insurance for at least six months because her husband changed
jobs, and his new job does not offer health insurance.
"Thank God, up to now, they haven't gotten sick," she
said in Spanish. "In this country, the cost of health care
is very expensive."
The initiative is expected to cost $14 million a year and can cover
kids in families making up to three times the federal proverty level,
meaning a family of four that makes almost $52,000 is eligible.
Proponents have said that's important in an area known for its high
cost of living.
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