Dear fellow advocates-
Here at
U2FP, we
have good news and bad news. The bad news first-Yet again, the CDRPA
did not pass into law. The good news? It came closer than we knew was
possible, once upon a time. More good news, there is still a chance for
passage; the fight is not yet over.
When we first started pushing for legislation to fund research for
a cure for paralysis, we were rookies. In our innocence, we thought
legislation was a pretty basic process. Introduce the bill and get it
out of the committees that look it over. Get a majority of the House of
Representatives to support it, and then repeat in the Senate. The
President would sign it as a formality, and voila, we'd be ready for
our next mission.
Since then, we've seen the CDRPA killed in committee. We've seen it
pass committees and the House, to be held in the dead of the very last
night. This session we learned that one Senator, Tom Coburn of OK, can
hold 90 bills! We've seen tricks we never knew existed.
Monday, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) brought the CDRPA
together with 33 other bills to the Senate floor for a vote as the
Advancing America's Priorities Act,
ironically known unofficially as the Coburn Omnibus Bill. Passage was a
long shot, requiring 60% of the U.S. Senate to agree to postpone their
August recess, as well as crucial debate on a desperately-needed energy
policy.
In spite of a unforgettable display by Sen. Reid, the motion to
bring the Coburn Omnibus up for a vote was defeated, 52-40. Sadly, the
voting went almost straight down party lines. It was a tragic display
of partisanship replacing thoughtful government.
And yet...Paralysis legislation was mentioned dozens of times.
The sense that paralysis research is a priority was palpable. If the
CDRPA had come to a vote on its own, it would have passed. This was
stated publicly by several respected Senators.
Remember when the paralysis community seemed to be invisible? Those
old days are behind us. We hope you'll keep up the hard work of
advocacy during the August recess, when your Senators are in your home
state. There was misinformation spread during the Omnibus debates.
Senator Coburn proclaimed the CDRPA to be a bill to put the Reeve name
on some buildings. We need to get the correct information out there.
Don't get distracted by minutiae. Investing in paralysis cures is
fiscally responsible. Paralysis costs the US $14 billion per year.
Paralysis research is closer then ever before to delivery of tangible
curative therapies. Such therapies ultimately will significantly reduce
the costs of paralysis in many more ways than monetary.
The CDRPA is not an appropriations bill. We're not asking to
increase the budget, we're asking for a piece of the budget that
already exists.
Click
here
to see if your Senator voted YES last week on the Coburn Omnibus, and
supported you and the CDRPA. August is the time to show up in your
Senator's District office. If he stood up for you, thank him.
Remember
Senator Reid's words to his colleagues:
"You
go and see someone in a wheelchair, and you tell them: "I had the
chance to do something about that, but I decided we would wait until
next year. A year is not so important. You are only in a wheelchair for
a limited period of time--perhaps your life.""
Look them in the eye. Make sure they get a good look at you. Tell
them a paralysis cure IS a priority for you, or for your loved one, and
you wonder why it's not for them.
You have the right, maybe the obligation, to let them know you're
paying attention to this sort of thing. You might also contact
Senator Tom Coburn's office and ask why he held S. 1183, the CDRPA. A call to Senators
Reid and
Harkin,
thanking them for their support, would be well placed. If you are
concerned about the charade that led to this defeat, write a letter to
your editor or get an article in your local paper.
It's election year for many of these legislators. They'll be paying
attention. We pay them to represent us. It's up to us to see that they
do!
Sincerely,
Your friends at
Unite 2 Fight Paralysis