Mississippi Votes to Protect Women, Defeats Legal “Personhood” for Zygotes

These are three sets of interviews on Initiative 26 –the so-called “personhood” initiative on the Mississippi ballot–that WLOX TV 13, the ABC affiliate on the Mississippi Gulf Coast, conducted and aired between October 29, 2011, and November 8, 2011. All of the interviewees are local Mississippians.

By the way, all the Mardi Gras beads were compliments of me (Ana Maria) to share with everyone as we celebrated this decisive electoral victory for valuing women, our access to the full range of reproductive health care, and our right to make those decisions with our families who love us, our health care providers, and our faith.

Thank you to everyone everywhere who made this 60-40 vote a reality! If this can happen in Mississippi, it can happen everywhere. :)

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Personhood protester: “I’m proud to be from this state”

By Elizabeth Vowell – WLOX TV 13 (ABC Affiliate, Biloxi, Miss.) November 9, 2011

SOUTH MISSISSIPPI (WLOX) -It’s a deceivingly simple phrase: “Should the term “person” be defined to include every human being from the moment of fertilization, cloning, or the equivalent thereof?”After months of heated campaigns and arguments, the resounding answer is, “No.”"I am absolutely elated. Mississippians from across the state came forth and they protected women and their families,” said Anna Maria Rosato who was against Initiative 26.

Initiative 26 is the brainchild of the Personhood Movement which began in Colorado.  There it was repeatedly shot down. It initially saw a large amount of support as it moved to Mississippi.  However, the vague language of the initiative, raised questions in the minds of voters.

“The more we talked to Mississippians, the more they understood the implications of this, the more that people said, ‘I’m going to vote no,’” said Al Harrist who protested the initiative.

As elections approached, the “Vote No” movement grew stronger through grass roots campaigning.

“When I first heard that Initiative 26 was coming to Mississippi and the consequences it could have for women and children in our state, it frightened me to death. So much, that I became active,” said Harrist.

“I am thrilled, again, that Mississippians saw through the veneer and went to the heart of matter,” said Rosato. “The heart of the matter is that life’s personal matters, decisions are between us and our families, our doctors and our faith.”

Both gubernatorial candidates backed the initiative, and the Republican Governor-elect Phil Bryant says the issue is far from settled.

“I think we have to go back and say what our opportunity is here: to end abortion on demand in Mississippi. We’re going to work again to try to do that,” said Bryant.

Those against the Personhood Movement say they will continue to stand their ground.

“It’s something that we always have to keep in mind, but Mississippi values puts the health of women and families first, and I think we will always go back to that and I’m proud to be from this state for that reason,” said Harrist.

Personhood initiatives are also working their way through about half a dozen other states.

Copyright 2011 WLOX. All rights reserved.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

South MS clergy speak out against Personhood Amendment

By Trang Pham-Bui – WLOX TV 13 (ABC affiliate), November 7, 2011

BILOXI, MS (WLOX) – Those who oppose the Personhood Amendment made an election eve push in Biloxi. On Monday, four religious leaders from Biloxi and Gulfport spoke out against the initiative at a news conference at DeMiller Hall. They told voters that they can be pro-life and still vote ‘no’ on Initiative 26.

“It’s too extreme. Twenty six threatens women’s lives,” said the Rev. Carol Burnett, a United Methodist Church leader.

Burnett was among the clergy members who spoke out against Initiative 26, which would declare that life begins at fertilization. More than two dozen people attended the news conference held by Mississippians for Healthy Families and the Steps Coalition.

“Twenty six would force victims of rape and incest to carry pregnancies caused by their criminal attackers. Twenty six would make some forms of contraceptives, our best strategy against abortion, illegal,” said Burnett.

“This initiative applies chains of bondage to physicians who would hope to act in the best interest of their patients,” said the Rev. Lashaundra Smith, a Christian Church-Disciples of Christ leader.

The Rev. Melanie Lemburg told a powerful story about counseling a woman whose special needs daughter was raped and had to terminate her pregnancy.

“If we allow the government to be responsible for these most intimate decisions and issues, then we people of faith are giving away the opportunity to decide what may be the only merciful option in the sea of bad options,” said Lemburg, an Episcopal Church leader.

Another religious leader told voters that they have free will and should not let fear affect their decision.

“Nothing should cause us to believe that God is going to come into the booth and strike us down if we vote a certain way,” said the Rev. Denise Donnell, a United Methodist Church leader. “I encourage you to be educated, to be faithful, to be strong and courageous as you cast your vote.”

“They wanted people to understand that you can be faithful and vote ‘no’ against Initiative 26,” said Ana Maria Rosato, a spokeswoman for Mississippians for Healthy Families. “As long as people continue to feel this way and go to the polls, we hope to be victorious tomorrow.”

Others at the news conference agreed, saying that more people will oppose the initiative once they do their research on the issue.

Posted in reproductive healthcare | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Mississippi voters to decide when life begins

By Paul Murphy – WWL TV – New Orleans, November 7, 2011

NEW ORLEANS — It is election eve in Mississippi, where a controversial anti-abortion measure is on the ballot.

The so called “personhood amendment” allows voters to decide when life begins.

If it passes, the measure would change the definition of a person in the state constitution to include all human beings from the moment of fertilization or cloning.

Libby Garcia from Day Star Ministries in Bay St. Louis supports the amendment.

“Even though this law may not be totally perfect, it is so much better than slaughtering hundreds of thousands and millions of babies in the womb,” said Garcia.

Under the Mississippi proposal, a fertilized egg would have the same legal rights as a newborn baby.

Opponent Ana Maria Rosato said there would be unintended consequences if the amendment passes.

“It will criminalize birth control,” said Rosato. “It will criminalize in vitro fertilization. It will criminalize being able to take care of ectopic pregnancies.”

Jo Ann Hille from Our Lady of the Gulf Angels Ministry said the amendment supports the notion that abortion under any circumstance is murder.

“It respects the right to life that God’s commandment was ‘Thou shalt not kill,” said Hille.

Monday, an opposition group called Mississippians for Healthy Families gathered in Biloxi to voice concern over what it calls far-reaching and dangerous consequences for women’s health.

“The bill will prevent doctors from being able to make educated decisions on a case by case basis even in the situations when a mother could be at risk of dying because of the position of the child,” said Rev. Lashaundra Smith from the New Generation Christian Church in Moss Point.

“The mother’s womb is supposed to be safest place for a baby and it’s become a very dangerous place,” said Garcia.

“Just as someone’s faith is something that is complex, so is making decisions about whether or not to have a child and that should really be up to family,” said Smith.

The vote on the personhood amendment in Mississippi could have national implications.

Right now there are nine other states considering similar initiatives. The amendment has already failed twice in Colorado.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Port? Jobs? Housing? The Chicken, the Egg, and Scarcity Mentality . . . Again

by Ana Maria

Along with the blazing hot sun here along the Mississippi Gulf Coast, the debate over whether to fund lower income housing or to fund the repair and expansion of the local port has been heating up like nobody’s business.

There’s something fundamentally wrong, though with the way that this debate has been framed. It smacks of the scarcity mentality, and I myself have fallen prey to it. Whether to provide funding for housing or for job creation falsely pits against each other two important aspects of rebuilding our Gulf Coast community. We need both housing and jobs.

The truth is we need the port to be rebuilt. We need the good paying jobs with good benefits that the port itself can provide. And, we need those jobs now.

We also need the spin off businesses that come from rebuilding and reopening a robust port. Besides, the port is part of the economic engine not only for the Mississippi Gulf Coast but also for the entire state of Mississippi.

Housing advocates may ask this question.

What’s the point of investing in the port if the workers needed to construct it then to operate it have no place to live because housing is scarce?

Port advocates may ask this one.

What’s the point of having plenty of housing for anyone who wishes to live here if the economy is so anemic that good paying jobs with benefits are few and far between?

Chicken, egg, chicken, egg. It’s still the same old scarcity argument.

Now, we’re not the only area in the nation that grapples with the issues of economic and housing development.

Out in Silicon Valley, Calif., where I used to live, housing—particularly affordable housing—remains a constant need. South of San Jose, the tenth largest city in the nation, remains a large and undeveloped area called Coyote Valley. Plenty of plans over the years have created what will surely be one of the most beautifully planned areas in the nation. State of the art public transportation corridors with neighborhood parks, grocery shopping, and heath care offices nestled around various housing configurations—condos, apartments, large/small single family homes, and the like.

Developing this fabulous community is intended to provide plenty of much needed housing with nearby jobs all of which will offload traffic from the rest of the horrifically congested area.

The development trigger for Coyote Valley? Jobs. Thousands of jobs. How can businesses build if its going to require its employees to travel two or more hours round trip EVERY DAY. So round and round the discussion continues. Jobs, housing, jobs, housing. Meanwhile improving the area’s housing situation remains a distant mirage, and traffic continues to clog every artery in the area anyway.

It’s the age-old “chicken or the egg” argument.

But here along the Mississippi Gulf Coast, we can’t afford to wait years for either our jobs or housing needs to be resolved.

We can choose to advocate for both, and we can do so vociferously. Leaders on each side of these important post-Katrina rebuilding efforts can and should push for both simultaneously. They can embrace the other side while advocating their own position.

Port advocates can say, “We need the port funding. This is an important economic recovery issue for the Gulf Coast business community and the families depending on the port for jobs. Of course, we also need the housing crisis to be solved NOW. Where are our workers going to house themselves and their families? We can take care of our families’ job and housing needs. Let’s do both together.”

Housing advocates can say, “We the housing funding for low income and rental housing here along the Gulf Coast. Of course, those families that want to return to living here will also need good paying jobs with benefits. Where will these families find work? Katrina devastated businesses and housing alike. Rebuilding of the port is an important part of our economic recovery. We can take care of our families’ job and housing needs. Let’s do both together.”

How powerful that would be. The animosity could begin to dissipate. We can reach across the aisle, find the common ground, and become stronger advocates for our collective recovery.

Buying into the idea that one must take precedence over the other isn’t helpful. We need the good paying jobs that the port provides and the spin off businesses that will come as a result of the construction and subsequent operation of the port.

We need affordable housing for rent and for lower income families.

We simply need both.

Anyway, isn’t ours the most wealthy, most powerful, most generous nation in the world? We can do it all. This is the United States of America.

As we act like we can do it all, as we talk in terms of expecting that we will do both simultaneously, we’ll surprise ourselves at the political will and the resources that can begin to flow our way.

© 2008 Ana Maria Rosato. All rights reserved.

Posted in Uncategorized | 16 Comments

More dead flowers: From Florida to New York–With Love, Big Insurance

by Ana Maria

Last week was a banner one for homeowners all over the country. Nope, I’m not talking about the mortgage crisis which is bad enough. I’m talking about the other financial crisis that has yet to catch national attention: homeowner’s insurance policies with prices skyrocketing out of control . . . or being canceled.

Yet, property & casualty insurance costs for home and business owners have skyrocketed out of control hitting lower and middle income families with a powerful financial punch to their pocketbook whether they live inside Katrina Land or out.

In a post-Valentine’s Day gift to its homeowner customers, State Farm delivered dead flowers to its customers in Florida and New York. Yes, you read that correctly: New York. As in Long Island, New York.

Florida: State Farm Dumps Coastal Homeowners

New York: State Farm defends decision to terminate LI homeowner policies

This past Sunday, the Times-Picayune—a New Orleans paper—ran an article whose contents packed another heart-wrenching punch.

At Their Limit: As local homeowners insurance rates continue to rise, the elderly and others on limited incomes are fighting to keep their finances afloat

Talk with any two-income income family around here, and the fight is all the same. Skyrocketing premiums for less coverage while dropping wind coverage which forces policy holders into the expensive state government wind pool.

One friend of mine got home from work the other day to find that the family’s home owner’s insurance bill increased by $500 a year—and the company is only covering fire and theft! They are expecting to learn that their state government wind insurance policy will rise, too. This is in addition to the nearly $2,000 rise in premiums last year.

The 55% of Americans who live within 50 miles of the nation’s coastline need wind damage coverage on their homeowners’ insurance.

Whatever is happening here inside Katrina Land–from the denial of wind-related claims to the exorbitant and extortion-like premiums to being dropped as customers without cause–will eventually spread to the rest of the nation. We’d like to spare the nation’s families the incredible injustice and financial rip-off that we’ve experienced.

In yet another post-Valentine’s Day gift, Big Insurance delivered dead flowers to those of us living inside—or trying to return to our hometowns in—Katrina Land. The card on the dead flowers essentially read as follows:

Yo, baby: No new insurance policies & dropping you long time, loyal customers at renewal time. C’ ya! – Big Insurance [Read Katrina Families, Dead Flowers, and Big Insurance]

Huh? Well, how else can Big Insurance protect tens of billions of dollars in annual profit flow to their boards of directors?! It’s the only “insurance” about which these two-fisted greedy gutted goons apparently care. Remember the industry booked $108 billion in profit the year of Katrina and the year after.

By canceling homeowner policies or raising their premiums to exorbitant rates, it appears that members of the Big Insurance Brotherhood are essentially telegraphing that they want out of the wind insurance business. This is not the case.

What Big Insurance wants is to cherry pick from among homeowners those for whom it will drop coverage versus those it will require to pay almost extortion-like premiums . . . all the while employing various tactics to deny us payment on legitimate wind-related claims. Embedded in the fine print, Big Insurance inserts its “concurrent causation clause” into its contracts. In essence, this clause says that they won’t pay for any wind damage if so much as a drop of water caused any damage to our property.

Clearly agents wouldn’t sell very much if they actually mentioned this when making their pitch to us. From what was stated at the Insurance Reform Town Hall meeting last August here in my home town, agents didn’t know about this ridiculous clause that would deprive homeowners of the very protection for which they were paying premiums in the first place. To hear this commentary on how Big Insurance kept their agents and their customers in the dark, see video below.

Congressman Gene Taylor explains in down-to-earth language the problem that this insurance “gotcha “clause creates for America’s homeowners.

To solve this horrible position that Big Insurance has placed America’s homeowners, Taylor sponsored the multiple peril insurance legislation to permit those homeowners who are eligible to purchase our nation’s flood insurance to have the option of buying wind coverage. The result is that the homeowner would have one policy for both wind and flood—something that the private insurance companies have chosen not to offer for the last 40 years.

Last September, Taylor’s bill passed overwhelmingly and with bi-partisan support in the U.S. House of Representatives. When Democratic Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi became elected as Speaker of the House, she implemented the fiscally responsible PAYGO rule: pay as you go. Any legislation with a price tag attached to it must pay for itself. What this means for the multiple peril insurance legislation is that the rates for the wind insurance will pay for the costs of the coverage. Thank you, Congresswoman Pelosi for the return of fiscal responsibility! The bill went to the U.S. Senate where it now awaits action.

While the U.S. Senate wonders what to do about this mounting homeowner crisis, homeowners all over the nation are wondering what they are going to do about skyrocketing property insurance that is eating away like a cancer on their household’s budget.

What needs doing is rather straightforward. The U.S. Senate should simply listen to the two U.S. Senators from Louisiana and the one from New York who are championing this important bread-and-butter issue: Senators Mary Landrieu (D-LA), David Vitter (R-LA), and Chuck Schumer (D-NY). All three support Taylor’s multiple peril insurance legislation.

While many homeowners are raising hell with their individual insurance companies, we can all raise some political hell where it will do some collective good. For today’s political hell raising activity, let’s call our two U.S. Senate offices and ask them to follow the lead of Senators Landrieu, Vitter, and Schumer.

On his re-election campaign website, Congressman Gene Taylor has a unique call-to-action piece specific to this insurance crisis that is crippling his constituents’ recovery inside the Katrina-ravaged region. [To watch Mississippi Gulf Coast business leaders discussing Big Insurance's negative impact on Katrina recovery, click here.]

Taylor’s website requests the following.

Please, contact your two U.S. Senators. Simply ask each U.S. Senator to become a partner with us and support Insurance Reform. Specifically, ask each of your U.S. Senators to pass legislation in the U.S. Senate that is similar to what the House of Representatives passed in H.R. 3121, which reauthorized the National Flood Insurance Program and included flood insurance customers an option to have one policy for both wind and water.

The site provides a phone script to use and a link to obtain the phone numbers of our two U.S. Senators. Taylor also provides a link through which to share the phone script page with friends and family throughout the nation. Good stuff.

Taylor’s campaign website also hosts a fantastic compilation of news articles, editorials, and videos on how insurance reform is critical to Katrina families’ ability to rebuild their homes and communities and how the homeowner insurance crisis continues to spread throughout the nation’s coastal states. Click here for his Insurance Reform page.

From sea to shining sea, Big Insurance is dropping coverage, dropping customers, and skyrocketing premiums. Reading through all the articles on Taylor’s campaign website makes us realize that the homeowner crisis is beyond just that of the current mortgage crisis. We can begin to solve the homeowner insurance crisis through letting our fingers do the walking and our mouths do the talking to our Senators. We did not create this crisis. Solving it, though, rests in our hands.

Return to A.M. in the Morning! Home

Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Comments

About ToxicTrailers.com

ToxicTrailers.com is dedicated to providing information about formaldehyde poisoning in FEMA trailers and RVs sold to the general public. Eighty eight percent of FEMA trailers tested by Sierra Club were over safe limits for formaldehyde, and EPA tests showed average levels three times over the limit. Please e-mail stories@toxictrailers.com if you think you are having problems with formaldehyde.


For more information, click here.

Return to A.M. in the Morning! Home

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Baria’s insurance bills getting chilly reception in Jackson

By Dwayne Bremer
Feb 15, 2008

One of state Sen. David Baria’s major campaign pledges was to help reform the way Mississippi conducts business with insurance companies.
Upon taking office in January, Baria promptly introduced seven bills which he said would help reform the system.
Unfortunately, there is now a very strong chance none of his bills will even make it to the Senate floor for consideration, he said.

Baria said Friday he was told by Insurance Committee Chairman Eugene Clark his bills will not make it out of the committee stage–which has a deadline of Tuesday for presenting bills to the full Senate.

If a bill is not submitted by the deadline, then it cannot be reviewed again until the next term in 2009.

“It’s very frustrating,” Baria said. “It is two and a half years after Katrina. The people on the Gulf Coast are suffering with the insurance situation. I think another year of waiting will only prolong the suffering.”

Baria said there is nothing in all of his bills which will in any way adversely affect the rest of the home-owners in the state. In fact, the bills will potentially help all Mississippi home owners, he said.

Some of Baria’s ideas include giving credits or better rates for homes which are constructed with techniques which reduce the amount of potential loss; putting the burden of proof on the insurer; defining certain concurrent causation exclusions as unfair; disallowing the commissioner of insurance from receiving “gifts” from insurance companies; setting limits on the reasons for cancellation; requiring explanations of claim denials; and requiring that insurance companies cannot deny coverage on the basis of credit reports.

One of the concurrent causation exclusions Baria said he is fighting hard to eliminate is an exclusion policy which allows for insurance companies to be exempt from coverage when wind causes damage which in turn results in rain water damage, but the home also has surge damage.

Baria said he has garnered a lot of support from his Democratic colleagues in the Senate.

“They are very receptive,” he said. “They want to help the Coast. They would like to have a chance to vote on these issues.”

Baria said Clark, a Republican from Hollindale told him Thursday that the reason why the bills are not being brought from committee is because Clark said he is new to insurance issues and he wanted more time to study the situation. Baria said the people of the Gulf Coast are tired of waiting.

“My folks cannot wait any longer, it’s been two years,” he said.

Return to A.M. in the Morning! Home

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Katrina Families, Dead Flowers, and Big Insurance

by Ana Maria

The day after Valentine’s, Big Insurance delivered Katrina’s families a bunch of dead roses. Big Insurance announced that it is refusing to sell us new homeowner policies here inside Mississippi’s Katrina-ravaged Gulf Coast region. Adding insult to injury, Big Insurance also informed us that it might not renew wind policies of its loyal customers either. The equivalent of more dead flowers.

Next up in this string of bad news, we learned that the government’s wind pool insurance —the state’s insurer of last resort—is increasing the rates for those customers. Yes, those wind pool customers are the ones whom Big Insurance discarded.

Let’s look at Big Insurance’s impact on one South Mississippi resident, Mr. Rex Chastain, who is retired military.

Chastain had hoped for some insurance relief in 2008, but instead finds his family “insurance poor.”

Hurricane Katrina forced the Chastains, along with thousands of other South Mississippi residents, into the state wind pool, where residential rates jumped 90 percent in 2006. The wind pool is the insurer of last resort for 36,000 South Mississippians, who must carry a separate private policy to cover fire, theft and liability.

The Chastains’ total homeowner insurance bill jumped 147 percent.

Geeze, Louise! How in the living heck are we to rebuild our homes, businesses, and communities if we can’t purchase affordable property insurance? This bad news means that our recovery stops. The end. We cannot pass go nor collect $200.

Of course, would that Mississippi to be aggressive in its approach to protecting its humble people against the Insurance CEOs to whom I fondly refer as two-fisted greedy gutted goons in Gucci suits. Unfortunately Mississippi’s State Insurance Commissioner Mike Chaney sounds just like his predecessor, George Dale, whom voters rejected last year for being in the back pocket of Big Insurance. Here’s Chaney’s reaction to the bad news for Katrina recovery.

“If they quit writing wind for existing customers, that’s really going to put more pressure on the economy,” said Chaney, who added that he is working to keep private carriers in the six southernmost counties and bring in new business.

How long did it take Chaney to memorize and spit out that George Dale talking point?!

How could other communities in any other part of our nation that would be able to thrive if these same financial straight jacket conditions were imposed on their homeowners and developers?

If this were the end of it, today’s bad news would be just awful. But today’s news gusts keep picking up speed where Katrina recovery is concerned. In the Mississippi State Senate, Katrina insurance bills may die without vote. Well isn’t that just ducky! We’re sitting here some 30 months after Katrina blew through with her zealous hurricane force winds and we have a bunch of blow hards in the state senate huffing and puffing a bunch of hot air zealously guarding the status quo.

Down here on the Mississippi Gulf Coast, the status quo means Katrina families cannot rebuild their homes, businesses, and communities. The status quo means that even the already r-e-a-l-l-y . . . s—-l—-o—-w pace of recovery simply stops. How exasperating!

Add to this madness the ridiculous building codes that FEMA is imposing primarily in one tiny area of the Katrina ravaged-Mississippi Gulf Coast of Bay St. Louis, the hometown of Congressman Gene Taylor. Seems to me that this smells more like political revenge because Taylor is hell-bent on creating affordable home owner’s insurance for his constituents and for rest of the 55% of Americans who live within 50 miles of our nation’s beautiful coast lines.

“Populations and built environments in coastal watersheds are growing rapidly, with 55 percent of the U.S. population already living within 50 miles of the coast.”

To make this a more toxic recipe for ruining opportunity for recovery, let’s remember that Governor Haley Barbour wants to swipe more Katrina funds to build a road for a Toyota plant. If Mr. Barbour likes roads so much, perhaps he should drive himself down here and plop a squat for a few days listening to one after another Mississippian talk about the tremendous hardship of life here some 30 months after Katrina. Housing, insurance preventing house building, insurance preventing business reopening, housing costs, did I mention the insurance crisis?

Last, but not least, in the Katrina rebuilding madness is the latest from FEMA on its formaldehyde-filled trailers.

“FEMA first received complaints about health problems and high formaldehyde levels nearly two years ago,” said Rep. Gene Taylor, D-Miss. “If FEMA would have taken the complaints seriously from the very beginning, this issue could have been resolved already… They must now act swiftly to find adequate housing for those living in trailers across Mississippi and Louisiana, instead of at the pace they moved when first receiving complaints.”

Today’s rash of bad news makes it so obvious that Katrina recovery here in South Mississippi is intimately tied to our ability to obtain affordable insurance for our homes and businesses. The solution is now awaiting action in the U.S. Senate.

As you may recall, the U.S. House of Representatives passed overwhelmingly and with bi-partisan support Congressman Gene Taylor’s Muliple Peril Insurance Legislation (H.R. 3121). That bill permits homeowners who are eligible for and purchase flood insurance the option to buy wind coverage as well. As with all bills since Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) took the reigns of Speaker of the House, this bill includes a provision to require that the bill’s cost pays for itself. This is fiscally responsible and sound.

We now need to contact our two U.S. Senators to ask each to support, to push, to take the lead on this critical legislation so that we can get the post-Katrina recovery moving. Click here to Become a Partner in Insurance Reform!

This is where you will find a phone script you can use. Of course, you will also find a link to the phone numbers for each of your two U.S. Senators. When you are finished, please use the link provided after the phone script to contact all of your friends, family, and colleagues around the nation to ask them to join in our effort to help pass this critical Katrina recovery legislation.

Our phone calls from all over the nation—even our voice mails—can stir up these much needed hurricane force winds of change. This is how we create the resources that those of us inside the Katrina-ravaged region need for that vibrant recovery we desire. Who’d have ever thought that real insurance reform would be the new chocolate and flowers?!

© 2008 Ana Maria Rosato. All rights reserved.
Return to A.M. in the Morning! Home

Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Comments

Rep. Taylor Comments on Officials’ Findings on Formaldehyde in FEMA Trailers

FEMA should have addressed concerns in the beginning

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Rep. Gene Taylor released a statement today about the recent findings by federal health officials that confirm toxic levels of formaldehyde in FEMA trailers and suggest occupants be moved immediately.

“FEMA first received complaints about health problems and high formaldehyde levels nearly two years ago,” Rep. Taylor said. “If FEMA would have taken the complaints seriously from the very beginning, this issue could have been resolved already. I requested that FEMA and the Center for Disease Control conduct a detailed study a year ago, and the results are just being released today. They must now act swiftly to find adequate housing for those living in trailers across Mississippi and Louisiana, instead of at the pace they moved when first receiving complaints.”

Return to A.M. in the Morning! Home

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment