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to GoodJobs
David Cay Johnston, Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist, September 23, 2009
*GOP Favors Public Option for Property, Not People*
Atop
the front page of the New York Times today is a color photo of Georgia
homes flooded up to their rafters, an image that illustrates how when
it comes to insurance our Congress applies two standards, separate and
unequal, one for property and a lesser one for people.
Unlike people without health insurance, homeowners have access to public option flood insurance.
Even
those who fail to take personal responsibility to buy insurance to
protect their property can get benefits, thanks in good part to
politicians who are leading opponents of public option healthcare.
Consider the example of Trent Lott of Mississippi, who was that state's senior senator when Hurricane Katrina
hit in 2005, flooding his home looking out on the Gulf. Lott had not
exercised personal responsibility by taking out flood insurance even
though it was available from the federal government at low cost. He did
have private insurance, but his insurer refused to pay much of the
claim, saying it was not wind damage (which was covered by the policy),
but water damage (which was excluded).
Weeks later Lott introduced Senate Bill 1936, which would have authorized retroactive flood insurance. The idea came from Representative Gene Taylor,
a Democrat who represented the Mississippi Gulf Coast, which should
remind us that when there is voter demand for reform, and campaign
contributions are not the driving force, the parties have worked
together.
Lott's bill would have let flood victims pay 10 years of flood insurance premiums
after-the-fact plus a 5 percent late payment penalty. Since this storm
was rated a once in 500 years occurrence, even 10 years of premiums
would not come close to covering the real costs, meaning a taxpayer
subsidy was built into the Lott bill.
Instead of being laughed
at by his fellow Republicans for promoting socialism, the concept of
retroactive relief was warmly embraced, although not the idea for
retroactive insurance. Instead the government went with handouts.
Senator Thad Cochran, also a Mississippi Republican and at the time chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee,
was key to getting taxpayer benefits for flooded property, according to
Taylor's staff. The benefits were issued and expanded twice, a total
of about $18 billion in all, Taylor's staff estimated.