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Rep. Moeller to Lead Local Human Rights Workshop

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Neighbor Posts

Rep. Anna Moeller will explain the new wage equity law and other important protections with the Human Rights Commission.

By Cassie Calloway, Neighbor
|
Rep. Moeller to Lead Local Human Rights Workshop

ELGIN — You have a constitutional right to be protected from discrimination. You’re protected under a new state law to receive an equal wage regardless of your gender.

These and other important issues will be addressed Thursday, Oct. 3, at 7 p.m., at the Gail Borden Public Library in Elgin through a Human Rights Workshop hosted by state Rep. Anna Moeller, D-Elgin.

Rep. Moeller will be joined by Commissioners Manuel Barbosa and Steve Andersson from the Illinois Human Rights Commission to explain new state law protections and how they affect your rights at home and in the workplace. The presentation will be offered in both English and Spanish. The event is free.

Moeller will discuss her extensive work on the state’s new Equal Pay Act, barring employers from discriminating against lower-paid workers by asking for their salary history in interviews for jobs.

"Fairness and freedom from discrimination are basic, unalienable human rights. Yet many times, we are put in situations in everyday life where we may have been wronged, but simply do not know what to do about it," Moeller said. "This Human Rights Workshop will help all area residents, landlords and business owners understand our new laws and ensure we are treating people equally and without discrimination."

Questions? Contact Rep. Moeller’s district office at 847-841-7130 or staterepmoeller@gmail.com.

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September 26, 2019 at 10:20AM

State lawmakers seek to cap insulin prices, argue that rising prices put lives at risk

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SPRINGFIELD — Ten years ago, Megan Blair was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes.

“I remember standing at the pharmacy counter with my mom,” she said. “When the pharmacist rang up the prescription, he let us know that the 30-day supply of insulin that I needed would be about $800. I looked at my mom and my mom looked at me.”

Blair, who is now 27 and lives in Harristown, about eight miles west of Decatur, is one of an estimated 1.3 million people in Illinois coping with diabetes, as well as the high cost of keeping it under control.

“Come to find out that the fact that I was diagnosed as a Type 1 insulin-dependent person wouldn’t be the hardest battle I would have to face the rest of my life,” she said. “Trying to make a living, have a family and learn how to come up with $800 a month on insulin to keep me alive would actually be the biggest challenge of my life.”

Blair spoke Tuesday at a news conference in Springfield surrounded by Democratic state lawmakers who are pushing for a bill that would bring down the out-of-pocket cost for insulin for many, but not all, diabetes patients in Illinois.

“The cost of insulin clearly is breaking families that we represent,” said state Sen. Andy Manar, D-Bunker Hill, one of the main sponsors of a bill that would cap the out-of-pocket cost of insulin at $100 for a 30-day supply.

“Ultimately what has to happen is our Congress and our president have to act on the runaway cost of pharmaceutical drugs,” Manar said. “Senate Bill 667 (Amendment 1), we hope, addresses an issue immediately in Illinois and serves as a stepping stone to a larger reform.”

Manar and fellow-Democrat Rep. Will Guzzardi, of Chicago, introduced the language of the bill in late May, and they hope to see it passed during the upcoming veto session that begins Oct. 28.

The bill comes on the heels of unsuccessful attempts during the regular spring session to impose even tighter controls on the cost of prescription drugs across the board in Illinois, proposals that met stiff opposition from the pharmaceutical industry.

The new bill, Manar said, focuses exclusively on insulin because of the scope of the problem and the number of people it affects.

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Citing figures from the Health Care Cost Institute, Manar said the average price of insulin in the United States nearly doubled between 2012 and 2016, rising to 25 cents per unit. For someone using an average amount of 60 units per day, that translates to an increase from $7.80 a day to $15 a day.

That’s a significantly higher cost than what people in other countries pay for the same drug. Manar noted that a single vial of one common form of insulin, Humalog, costs $20 in Japan and $31.60 in Canada. But in the United States, it costs $135.50, in large part because drug costs are subsidized in countries that have national health insurance systems.

“Insulin isn’t optional,” said Rep. Sue Scherer, D-Decatur. “It’s life-or-death for people, and it is so totally unfair that people are having to choose between insulin and food for themselves or their family.”

Blair said she is among many diabetes patients who routinely ration their insulin doses, taking less than the recommended dose, in order to stretch out their supply, something that often results in subsequent hospitalization.

“And not just the easy trip to the emergency room,” she said. “It usually ended up with a two- or three-day stay in the (intensive care unit).”

Leroy Jordan, 77, of Springfield, said he also struggles with the cost of insulin to treat his Type 1 diabetes. He said he was a grown adult when he was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes, also known as juvenile, or insulin-dependent diabetes, a form of the disease that usually appears during childhood but which can develop later in life.

“This cost thing is just terrible,” he said. “When youngsters are born with diabetes, we that have it later in life kind of say, ‘Oh boy, I’m very fortunate.’ But it’s killing us too.”

Senate Bill 667 would not lower the cost of insulin for all patients in Illinois. It would apply only to those on publicly-funded health plans — primarily Medicare, Medicaid and the state employee health plan. Supporters of the bill were not immediately able to say how many people that would cover, but it would not cover people on private employer-based health plans because those are regulated under federal law.

In a statement, Tiffany Haverly, spokesperson for the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America, a group that lobbies for the pharmaceutical industry, did not comment specifically on the bill. But she said the industry sympathizes with patients struggling to afford their medications and that support is available in the form of discounts and rebates to those who cannot afford their drugs.

“In addition to supporting commonsense solutions to lower Illinoisans’ out-of-pocket costs, PhRMA recently launched a new tool — the Medicine Assistance Tool, or MAT — to connect eligible patients with over 900 public and private assistance programs,” she said. “We encourage any patient struggling to afford their medicines to visit mat.org to see what resources might be available to them.”

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September 17, 2019 at 06:05PM

State Rep. Lance Yednock’s opioid summit seeks solutions to opioid crisis

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OTTAWA — State Rep. Lance Yednock (D-Ottawa) hosted his first Opioid Advisory Committee meeting with members of law enforcement and local community activists to bring forth solutions to the ongoing epidemic.

“I am grateful that advocates from across the Illinois Valley joined me in this meeting to fight back against the ongoing opioid crisis,” Yednock said. “There is no silver bullet that will end this epidemic and it will require everyone to pitch in their ideas to help our community take control of opioid abuse.”

Yednock’s first meeting of his Opioid Advisory Committee brought together local experts and advocates to bring forward solutions to ending the opioid crisis.

At the meeting, Yednock highlighted legislation he supported like House Bill 2222, which would provide emergency first responders with real-time information on opioid overdoses, and House Resolution 58, which asks the Illinois Department of Public Health to develop and adopt new guidelines for the prescription of opioid prescription drugs.

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August 28, 2019 at 06:45AM

Bristow measure to support hearing-impaired people in healthcare facilities

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Legislation passed by state Rep. Monica Bristow (D-Alton) that would require hospitals and other healthcare facilities to make efforts to have closed captioning on televisions activated to help individuals with hearing loss was signed into law last week.

“Many individuals who have hearing loss often face added challenges when trying to enjoy television while in a hospital or healthcare facility because the closed captioning feature is not always being activated, or being turned on and off,” Bristow said. “This legislation would require that facilities ensure that closed captioning is activated. This issue was brought to me by Angela Botz, Community Outreach Coordinator & ILS-Deaf Services and the IMPACT Center for Independent Living, and I want to thank her and everyone at IMPACT for their work and advocacy in removing barriers for people with disabilities and helping them live independent lives.”

House Bill 3468 requires televisions in hospitals and healthcare facilities to make reasonable efforts to have closed captioning activated at all times to better accommodate those who are hearing-impaired. This would apply to common areas used by the public, like a waiting or recreation room, and in patients’ rooms. Since most televisions already have closed captioning and there is no requirement to immediately replace ones without closed captioning, there are no additional costs for providers under this legislation.

“Our mission has been to improve the lives of people with disabilities and make the world more accessible and accepting,” said Cathy Contarino, executive director at IMPACT. “With this legislation we are ensuring that individuals who have hearing loss are still able to enjoy television while in healthcare centers and facilities in Illinois or while visiting a loved one, and we appreciate Rep. Bristow’s work in ensuring this legislation became law.”

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August 15, 2019 at 04:12PM

St. Rep. to hold meetings on opioid addiction problem

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St. Rep. Lance Yednock says he’s arranging for a meeting of people who can advocate for a solution to the opioid addiction problem. He’s calling it the Opioid Advisory Committee. Then Yednock plans to have more meetings that the public can attend. The Ottawa Democrat says tackling the drug problem is one way to build a stronger Illinois.

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August 12, 2019 at 03:46PM

Local legislators discuss Reproductive Health Act, abortion

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Politics & Government

Local legislators discuss Reproductive Health Act, abortion

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State Rep. Katie Stuart, D-Edwardsville, and state Rep. Blaine Wilhour, R-Beecher City, discuss the recently passed Reproductive Health Act, and the issue of abortion rights.

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June 7, 2019 at 09:03PM

New caucus as auditor whacks DCFS

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We’ll never know how close State Rep. Anna Moeller (D-Elgin) came to being another Semaj Crosby, A.J. Freund, or Ta’naja Barnes.

“I was exposed to opiates in the womb from my birth mother,” Moeller told a Statehouse news conference. “The state took me away and placed me in the care of my loving grandparents.”

Moeller is now a co-chair of the newly-formed Illinois House Child Welfare Reform Caucus. The bipartisan group of representatives hopes to finally get the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services turned around.

State Rep. Mary Flowers (D-Chicago), a lawmaker of more than thirty years’ tenure, says it’s only gotten worse over those years.

“We are the cause that a lot of families are split up,” she said. “We are the cause that a lot of families are on alcohol and drugs. We are the cause that a lot of families have to work three part-time jobs and then still come home and take care of their children.”

And a man who says he is a survivor of abuse, James McIntyre, said, “We left families alone. We left families stranded. We let that kid know that his voice does not matter.” McIntyre is co-founder of the Illinois chapter of the Foster Care Alumni Association of America.

McIntyre added that abuse and neglect crosses all racial, income, and religious lines.

The new caucus was announced the same day as an auditor general’s report which said calls to the DCFS hotline went to voicemail and were not returned for a week; and that caseworkers are overloaded to illegal levels.

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May 7, 2019 at 07:05PM

Rep. Yednock acts to raise awareness of veteran suicide

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SPRINGFIELD — To bring attention to the recent epidemic of suicide among veterans, state Rep. Lance Yednock, D-Ottawa, is sponsoring a resolution that supports veterans who may be facing mental illness. It also requests the state create a memorial for veterans who have been lost due to suicide.

“As the son of a United States Marine, I know that the physical and mental scars suffered abroad by our bravest citizens are often brought back home and can last forever,” Yednock said.

“That’s why we need to make it clear to our veterans that we support them in many ways, not just with words, but with action. As a state, we should both honor our fallen heroes and do everything we can to support future and current veterans who may face mental illness by providing the services and support that they deserve.”

Many veterans returning from active duty experience physical and psychological ailments. In 2016, the suicide rate for veterans was 1.5 times greater than non-veterans and accounted for 14 percent of all adult suicide deaths in the U.S, even though only 8 percent of the population has served in the military. In 2016, 162 veterans died by suicide in Illinois.

House Resolution 168 states support for veterans currently struggling with mental illness and suicidal thoughts and pays tribute to veterans who have lost their lives to suicide. HR 168 encourages the state of Illinois to create a memorial for veterans who have died of suicide to be included at Oak Ridge Cemetery in Springfield, where other war memorials commemorate Illinois’ veterans.

“It’s important to establish a memorial to honor our veterans who have been lost to suicide, because they are still very much casualties of war,” Yednock said.

“By having a physical memorial erected here in Illinois, we not only pay tribute to them, but future generations can learn about one of the many real world consequences of military intervention abroad. As state representative, I am committed to supporting our veterans and ensuring that they have available access to the quality services and care that they need.”

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May 3, 2019 at 06:55AM

Toddler’s Death Inspires Water Heater Legislation

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An Illinois toddler died nine years ago after suffering third degree burns from bathwater. The Illinois House last week approved legislation to make sure it doesn’t happen again.

The measure would require all new water heaters be equipped with a safety valve.

It was introduced in honor of Mikayla King. Her mother, Jennifer King, recounted the event to lawmakers last month.

“Sheets of skin were falling off of her legs,” King said. “The skin looked like a sock hanging from her foot. My sweet little 18-month-old baby girl had third degree burns from less than 3 seconds in the bath water.”

Mikayla spent two months in the hospital before she died. During that time, she underwent 19 surgeries. An infection caused her right leg to be amputated below the knee. She was on so many medications that the doctors put her on kidney dialysis. Eventually, her heart gave out.

The Kings temporarily lost custody of their remaining three children while the Department of Children and Family Services investigated Mikayla’s death. They determined it was an accident.

In 2011, the Kings filed a product-liability suit against Whirlpool, the manufacturer of their water heater.

During the trial, King said, experts testified that 2,000 people suffer severe scald injuries each year, despite the fact that safety technology has been available for more than 30 years.

But the safety feature was only offered on their high-end water heater models.

“I was so angry when I heard that the people most affected by these injuries are our most vulnerable: children, elderly and people with different abilities,” King said. “And they still made the choice to continue this practice which allows them to be hurt and worse.”

A police investigation found the bathwater that killed Mikayla reached 138 degrees. A Whirlpool engineer told the court they couldn’t tell what temperature the water heater was set to because of a phenomenon called stacking, which allows a 30 degree difference between the temperature set and how hot the water actually is.

The safety valve mandate in “Mikayla’s Law” would ensure tap water doesn’t exceed 120 degrees — hot enough to kill legionella bacteria, but not so hot it causes injury when touched.

King said it’s the equivalent of requiring seat belts in a car.

“Thousands upon thousands of people are injured every year because of scald burns that could be prevented by technology that has been around for 30 years — technology that does not cost much in comparison to the value of people’s lives or the millions of dollars in medical costs in each year to treat these scald injuries,” she said.

The legislation is House Bill 2627.

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via NPR Illinois

April 19, 2019 at 06:54AM

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