|
This op-ed was published in the San Jose Mercury News, Salt Lake Tribune, Hartford Courant, Oregonian, and other
Knight Ridder newspapers, January 2006.
There's No Such Thing as Free Viagra
As we consider our goals for the New Year, what is more important to
American taxpayers: free Viagra or providing essential food, health care and
education for our neediest families? According to our congressional leaders,
free Viagra is the priority.
This sounds like a bad joke. It isn't. Congress decided this week to
restore Medicare funding for Viagra and other erectile-dysfunction drugs at a
cost of $90 million for 2006. To do so, they had to cut other programs,
mostly for our country's most vulnerable adults and children.
Rep. Bill Thomas, R-Bakersfield, led the charge in favor of Viagra
funding, insisting that Congress keep its promise to the drug industry --
which had expected ED drugs to be reimbursed under Medicare in 2006. He
apparently thought it was unfair when, a few months ago, Congress decided to
instead use those $90 million in taxpayer money for relief efforts after
Hurricane Katrina.
In the ideal world, we would have enough federal dollars for disaster
relief, food stamps and Viagra for seniors. In the real world, however, tax
cuts and the war in Iraq have meant that billions of dollars in essential
programs have to be cut. And so, Congress decided to come to the aid of
pharmaceutical companies even if it meant harming parents who were counting
on after-school programs, pregnant women who were counting on prenatal care
and low-income families who were counting on food stamps.
Since they had already made tremendous cuts to the No Child Left Behind
education program, community colleges, and maternal and children's health
programs in earlier versions of the same funding bill, Congress chose to pay
for Medicare coverage of ED drugs by shifting $120 million in funds intended
to prepare for the flu pandemic.
That seems crazy, but it is really just smoke and mirrors. Congress
passed a different bill that provides more than $3.5 billion on pandemic flu
prevention and treatment efforts -- adding that same $3.5 billion to our
deficit for the year. So in truth, there is no Christmas miracle of genuine
savings to make up for the $90 million for Viagra and other ED drugs -- other
than cuts in health and child care programs and an increase in our national
deficit. The kids who believe in Santa now will be paying that debt for many
years to come.
How could this happen? I thought the recent public outcry against the
``bridge to nowhere'' would teach this Congress a lesson about wasteful
spending. The bridge to nowhere was a $223 million bridge that would have
connected the small town of Ketchikan on the Alaska mainland and Gravina
Island (population 50), replacing the current seven-minute ferry ride. When
federal funding for the bridge generated an avalanche of protest, the funds
were moved -- but again, it was smoke and mirrors. Rather than being used for
other essential programs, the funds were instead given as a gift to Alaska,
to use however it sees fit -- for the bridge or any other purpose. It's kind
of like a gift card for your favorite mall instead of for a specific store.
But, amazingly, the bridge disappearing act took care of the public
protest. The media and the American public lost interest in the controversy,
even though the gift of $223 million for unspecified purposes is equally
outrageous at a time when there are not enough funds for food stamps or
health care or better schools for children living in poverty.
Of course, Congress' latest gift to the companies that make ED drugs is
part of a much larger problem -- a Medicare prescription drug bill that will
cost billions, hugely benefit pharmaceutical companies and provide little
help to most seniors. The Viagra amendment just makes it more obvious how the
American public is getting treated by this Congress (fill in the Freudian
metaphor of your choice).
The message is clear: If we ignore this holiday gift to drug companies,
as we did with the $223 million gift card to Alaska, we can expect similar
gifts next Christmas. And unfortunately, these are the kinds of gifts that
can't be returned.
|