Who Else Might Like Medicare for All? Retired Coal Miners Who Just Had Their Health Benefits Ripped Away
On Friday, a ruling by a federal bankruptcy judge in Texas showed why retired coal miners led to believe their health benefits would be with them for life were wrong and at least one advocate for Medicare for All noted that this is just one more reason why a healthcare system that includes everyone and excludes nobody would be a lifeline for workers which capitalism has pulled the rug out from under.
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“Another reason for #MedicareForAll – healthcare for retired coal miners.” —Michael Lighty, Sanders Institute Fellow
As the Casper Star-Tribune in Wyoming reported over the weekend, retired union members who worked at the local Kemmerer coal mine in Lincoln Country, Wyoming “likely lost their company health benefits” after Judge David R. Jones of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Houston ruled that the Westmoreland Coal Co.—now up for auction under bankruptcy proceedings—could eliminate retirement health care and a union contract in order to sell the mine.
According to the Star-Tribune:
That billionaire is Virginia businessman Tom Clarke, who said that while he recognizes the nullification of the coal miners’ health package and union contract is “painful,” it’s necessary for the sale to be worthwhile to an investor like him.
“It’s a story,” admitted Clarke, “of Wall Street versus the average person that fully expected after putting in a lifetime of work at the mine (that) they were going to have a certain pension and a certain health package.”
And even though Clarke recognized that a retired coal miner’s body has taken a beating from his career—”When you are 55, you feel like you are 70,” he said—the healthcare benefits are simply too expensive to continue. “We can’t afford that,” Clarke said, “nor could anybody else.”
It’s nothing new. Coal miners—who Republican lawmakers have used as pawns in their political battles for years—have repeatedly been sold out when their pensions or healthcare become a liability for mine owners or investors. As Common Dreams reported in 2016, Republicans—led by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell—refused to allow a bill to protect miners’ pensions receive a vote in the Senate. “We’re dying like flies,” said Billy Smith, a coal miner for 39 years said at the time, as he put the onus on McConnell and his fellow Republicans.
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