Thursday, September 10, 2009 
Approve Referendum 71

I spent 90 minutes phonebanking for Approve 71 after work today. I called voters who had already been identified as leaning progressive and asked them to vote APPROVE on Referendum 71 in November.

Under the recent Domestic Partnership law (SB 5688 aka the “everything but marriage bill”), registered domestic partners (same-sex couples and opposite-sex couples with at least one partner over age 62), and married couples, are now treated equally under the law in all parts of Washington state.

The Religious Right objected and put together an initiative which scraped together just enough signatures to be on the ballot. They'll be voting to REJECT the bill, which would overturn domestic partnerships in this state.

Civil rights should not be subject to a vote. It's important not to have a repeat of last year's Proposition 8 debacle in California. It's important to me personally and I'm putting time and money into the campaign.

If you want to join the effort, sign up at Approve71.org, and become a fan on Facebook.

Phonebanking will take place regularly in Seattle and other locations. In Seattle, it's happening at the Equal Rights Washington offices at 7th & Columbia, beside the freeway offramp. If you have a laptop with Skype, bring it along.

See you there.

posted on Friday, September 11, 2009 6:39:12 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Wednesday, September 09, 2009 
Paying Bills

Paying bills always makes me grumpy. More than just the drain on my wallet, it's also the sheer hassle and tedium.

I think it was last year that I finally switched over to using electronic billpay. (I'm not always an early adopter.) The hassle is less and I seldom write checks now.

I'd like to know why electronic payments take days, not milliseconds, to clear. More predatory bank practices, no doubt.

I wrote several checks tonight. For months I had been putting off renewing my membership in various do-gooder organizations like the ACLU, the EFF, and GLAAD. Some I wrote checks to, others I used their online forms.

I'm going to be getting a couple of dozen checks in the next few weeks. I'm the treasurer of Freely Speaking Toastmasters and our semi-annual dues are due at World HQ on October 1st. We had to raise our club dues by $5, as we moved our meeting location and now have to pay rent.

posted on Wednesday, September 09, 2009 7:47:18 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Tuesday, September 08, 2009 
Bad Debts
Title: Bad Debts
Author: Peter Temple
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Quercus
Copyright: 1996
Pages: 319
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 7 September, 2009

Jack Irish is a one-time lawyer who makes a living doing odd jobs—investigations, racehorse handicapping, cabinet making—in Melbourne. A former client, who went to jail years ago while Jack had crawled into a bottle, tries to reach Jack and promptly turns up dead. Jack starts looking and what he finds isn't pretty: corruption all the way up into the state government.

Jack isn't stupid, but he is naïve and out of his depth for much of the book. Temple combines the Australian backdrop, social commentary, a decent plot, and interesting characters to make a good book.

posted on Wednesday, September 09, 2009 6:25:46 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Monday, September 07, 2009 
Dracula in London
Title: Dracula in London
Editor: P.N. Elrod
Rating: 3 stars out of 5
Publisher: Ace
Copyright: 2001
Pages: 248
Keywords: horror
Reading period: 2–6 September, 2009

In Bram Stoker's 1897 novel, Dracula relocates from Transylvania to London. Asking themselves, what would Dracula have done in London before he was killed by Van Helsing, 18 authors wrote unconnected short stories. Dracula meets the Prince of Wales, he is observed by the servants, he terrorizes Aleister Crowley and Charles Fort and Ellen Terry, he even takes the lead in the Pirates of Penzance.

The stories are uneven. None is outstanding.

posted on Monday, September 07, 2009 7:42:32 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Sunday, September 06, 2009 
AIDS Walk 2009

I held my annual fundraising barbecue for the AIDS Walk today. Actually, the weather was so wet this morning that we cooked and ate inside.

I am happy to report that thanks to the generosity of my sponsors, I have raised $982 of my original goal of $1000. With three weeks left until the walk, I am predicting success in reaching my goal.

posted on Monday, September 07, 2009 6:55:26 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Saturday, September 05, 2009 
Dress the Beauty on the Art Car

On the First Thursday of every month, there's an Art Walk around Seattle's Pioneer Square. All the art galleries stay open late and thousands of people wander around looking at the art.

It's a shame then that in the four years that I've worked in Pioneer Square, I've only Art Walked a handful of times. Maura and Joseph joined us on Thursday and we spent a pleasant couple of hours talking and wandering around, mostly through the Tashiro-Kaplan building. Muhsin was supposed to come too, but couldn't find parking as the Seahawks played a pre-season game.

There are other First Thursday events: many of the museums are free after 5pm. The Seattle Art Museum, the Science Fiction Museum and the Experience Music Project, and the Museum of Flight all are.

posted on Sunday, September 06, 2009 5:26:12 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Friday, September 04, 2009 
Larrabee State Park on Chuckanut Drive

Chuckanut Drive is one of Washington State's best yet least-known scenic drives. Take I-5 north from Seattle for 70 miles. Just past Burlington, exit on to state route 11. The highway heads northwest towards the coast across the fertile floodplain of the Skagit valley. For nine miles, you drive past farms and fields. Then the road rises at the coast, changing character instantly.

Now you're driving along the rocky, forested shoulder of the Chuckanut mountains. One hundred feet below as you drive along the twisty, shady road, you can catch glimpses of the waters of Samish Bay through the trees. If you look closely, you may see the train tracks, practically at water's edge. Look out across the bay and you can see the San Juan islands and, behind them, Vancouver Island.

There are a handful of viewpoints. Stop, get out, look around. There are oyster beds below, though it's hard to tell.

When you get to Larrabee State Park, turn down into it. Walk under the train tracks and go down to the rocky promontories and along the beach. Stop at Cove Road and go down to the boat slip and watch the kayakers.

A few miles further along Chuckanut Drive and you'll reach Fairhaven, a small brick town built in the 1880s. Once a fishing village, it now has retirees and restaurants and stores. Fairhaven has been absorbed into the nearby city of Bellingham, but it retains its own character.

South of Bellingham, I-5 runs through the rocky forest along Lake Samish, on the east side of the Chuckanut mountains. It's the most scenic part of I-5 in all of Washington state.

We made the trip just that this afternoon. The photos are at Flickr.

posted on Friday, September 04, 2009 7:26:25 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Thursday, September 03, 2009 
Cozi. Family Life. Simplified

This afternoon, I invited 200 friends, family, and acquaintances to the Reilly & Bartholomew Family Journal. The Journal is the feature that we've been working on at Cozi for several months. It's a lightweight blog that's really easy to set up and post to, with straightforward privacy controls.

More importantly, though, I invited those people to use Cozi for themselves.

I'm inviting you to read the Family Journal that Emma and I set up at Cozi. It's a way of letting our friends and relatives keep up with us. If you see a story you like, add a smile. We hope you enjoy it!

I'm also inviting you to start using Cozi for yourselves.

Cozi is the Seattle startup where I've worked for the last two years as a developer. Our motto is "Family Life. Simplified." We provide a set of free tools that help busy families reduce the friction in their lives.

We have a shared Calender, color-coded for each member of the family. Keep track of your appointments and the kids' appointments; have an automatic reminder sent to you by email or as a text message; import shared calendars from other sites, including your kids' schools; synchronize the calendar with Microsoft Outlook; print out a month's appointments; and more.

Keep track of your Shopping Lists and To-do Lists. Get the lists sent to your phone as a text or read out aloud to you. Access the shopping lists and calendar from the browser in your mobile phone.

The Journal is an easy place to jot down memories with photos. You can keep those memories private, you can send particular stories to friends, or you can share the journal with all your friends.

See http://www.cozi.com/Why-Use-Cozi.htm to get started.

One favor, please. Even if Cozi's not right for you, please mention us to your friends. We may be right for them.

(Some of these features only work in the U.S. Sorry. We're small, we have to concentrate on our primary market.)

Thanks, /George Reilly

PS. To those of you I haven't been in touch with for a while, get in touch.

Oddly, this is the first such mail that I've sent to more than a small number of people in my two years at Cozi. At first, it was because I didn't think that Cozi was really ready to tout widely. Then I let it slide.

We released a monthly newsletter feature today, which sent out an email of all the August stories from shared journals. This was a good opportunity to tell everyone. The product is polished and genuinely useful.

Not much feedback so far.

posted on Thursday, September 03, 2009 7:12:59 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Wednesday, September 02, 2009 
Hermit's Peak
Title: Hermit's Peak
Author: Michael McGarrity
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Pocket Books
Copyright: 1999
Pages: 351
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 31 August–1 September, 2009

Kevin Kerney, deputy chief of the New Mexico State Police, has just inherited a high-country ranch, where he finds a dismembered skeleton.

An old-school police procedural (by a real cop) with believable characters and a not implausible plot. The prose is a little clumsy, but the story pulled me along.

posted on Thursday, September 03, 2009 6:40:19 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Tuesday, September 01, 2009 
Wolfnight
Title: Wolfnight
Author: Nicolas Freeling
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Vintage
Copyright: 1982
Pages: 200
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 24–30 August, 2009

Inspector Henri Castang of the Police Judiciare investigates the apparent kidnapping of a politician's mistress and discovers a far-right conspiracy.

Written in Freeling's characteristic idiosyncratic style, this is as much a meditation on corruption and compromise as it is a police procedural.

posted on Wednesday, September 02, 2009 6:59:57 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Monday, August 31, 2009 
Approve Referendum 71

Approve Referendum 71. If you're eligible to vote in Washington state in November, remember this: Approve Referendum 71.

On May 18, 2009, Governor Gregoire signed Senate Bill 5688, aka the “everything but marriage bill” or the Domestic Partnership Law, a law ensuring that all Washington families are treated the same, with the same protections, the same rights, and the same obligations as their neighbors. Under this law, registered domestic partners (same-sex couples and opposite-sex couples with at least one partner over age 62), and married couples, are treated equally under the law in all parts of the state.

Key rights and obligations in the law include:

  • Death benefits for the partners of police and firefighters killed in the line of duty.
  • Pension benefits for the partners of teachers and other public employees.
  • Victims' rights, including the right to receive notifications and benefits allowances.
  • The right to use sick leave to care for a seriously ill partner.
  • The right to workers' compensation benefits if a partner is killed in the course of employment.
  • The right to receive unemployment benefits if an employee must leave a job to care for a seriously ill partner.
  • The right to adopt a partner's child without paying for a home study.

The areas covered by the law include labor and employment law; pensions, survivor and other public employee benefits; family law; insurance rights; higher education; banks, financial institutions and loan agencies; creditors' rights and business licenses.

Opponents of the domestic partnership law are seeking to repeal it. Referendum 71 would ask voters whether the law should be approved or rejected. A vote to "APPROVE" keeps the law so that all families will have these protections in all parts of the state.

The Religious Right promptly put together a ballot initiative to strike down the new DP law. They gathered signatures, but submitted barely enough to qualify. For the last few weeks, the office of the Secretary of State has been verifying the initiative signatures. It was too close to tell one way or another whether they would pass. Today, they limped past the threshold of 120,577 verified signatures with a margin of about 900.

Final certification is expected on Wednesday by the Secretary of State. Barring a successful challenge by Washington Families Standing Together, Referendum 71 will be on the ballot in November.

Putting rights up for a vote is indecent. Stripping citizens of hard-won rights is fundamentally unfair.

Please spread the word. Tell everyone to Approve Referendum 71.

The wording is confusing but remember that you're voting to affirm the recently passed law.

I expect this to be a difficult battle. The Religious Right is well-funded and well-organized, they're already fired up and angry about everything Obama does, and liberal turnout tends to be down in odd-numbered years.

If you can spare some money, please make a donation to WAFST.

By the way, don't assume that you're correctly registered to vote. Please check that you're currently registered. Check that your friends are registered too.

Approve Referendum 71, for fairness.

posted on Monday, August 31, 2009 8:46:38 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Sunday, August 30, 2009 
AIDS Walk 2009

This year is the 23rd anniversary of the Seattle AIDS Walk. A whole generation has passed since the Northwest AIDS Walk began. AIDS used to be the unstoppable disease that killed much of a generation of gay men.

AIDS is still a serious problem, but the development of antiretroviral drugs in the Nineties means that people with HIV are living longer, healthier lives than before. More than 1.5 million Americans are now living with HIV/AIDS: 9,000 of them in King County. 40,000 people are infected every year, and most new infections are among African-Americans. The U.S. is getting off relatively lightly: about one-quarter of the adults in southern Africa have HIV!

The Lifelong AIDS Alliance provides a variety of services to those living with HIV/AIDS in Washington State. LLAA cooks 190,000 fresh meals each year, helps 3500 people, provides case management for 1200 people, provides 1400 people with health insurance support, packs 45,000 grocery bags, and distributes condoms and safe-sex information to high-risk populations.

Donations to the Lifelong AIDS Alliance are down significantly so far in 2009, while the need for their services has grown in this perilous economy. This year's goal is to raise $750,000 and recruit more than 4000 walkers.

I've walked in the AIDS Walk every year since 1992 and I've raised thousands of dollars for AIDS. Please help me raise money again for this year's walk on Saturday, September 26th. I aim to raise at least $1000.

You can sponsor me by going to http://www.georgevreilly.com/aidswalk. I'm also the captain of the Freely Speaking Toastmasters team. We'd love to have you join us or sponsor us.

Note: Emma and I are having a fundraising barbecue on Sunday, September 6th, noon to 6pm. Email me for more details.

I thank you, the Lifelong AIDS Alliance thanks you, and the people you'll be helping thank you.

posted on Monday, August 31, 2009 3:07:10 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Saturday, August 29, 2009 
ZAR: Zero Assumption Recovery

I had about 60 apparently corrupted photos on a CompactFlash card this evening. It might have been due to Lightroom going berserk, but it was more likely from my pulling the card reader out of the computer without ejecting it first.

The photos wouldn't show up under Mac, Linux, or Windows. I tried to chkdsk the card under Windows, which complained about a “raw” disk. That led me to ZAR, the Zero Assumption Recovery toolkit. The evaluation copy retrieved the photos very nicely. Whew!

posted on Saturday, August 29, 2009 8:32:37 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Wednesday, August 26, 2009 
Das Barbecü
Title: Das Barbecü
Rating: 4 stars out of 5

Das Barbecü is Wagner's Ring Cycle transplanted to Texas for comic effect. We saw it at Seattle's ACT Theatre tonight. The Ring Cycle is currently playing at the Seattle Opera, who commissioned Das Barbecü in 1991.

I'm no opera buff and certainly no Wagnerian. After sitting through four hours of Tristan und Isolde years ago—Ach du lieber Gott! Mein Arsch! Meinen Ohren!—I told Emma that my limit for opera was two-and-a-half hours. I have never seen any part of the Ring Cycle and had only cursory knowledge of the story, and it detracted not one whit from my enjoyment of Das Barbecü.

Wagner might have recognized his plot, refracted through a Texan prism, but not the music. This is a musical with a country flavor, not an opera. The plot is preposterous, of course: Dallas meets D&D. Blame Wagner.

The cast—two men and three women, quick-change artists all—play a multiplicity of parts. They sing, they dance, they have great comic timing, and they brought the house to their feet.

Recommended.

posted on Wednesday, August 26, 2009 7:24:00 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Tuesday, August 25, 2009 
Ted Kennedy

Ted Kennedy died tonight, at the age of 77, after a year-long battle with brain cancer. He was, according to Wikipedia, the third-longest-serving senator of all time, elected in 1962, as soon as he became eligible at 30.

He was a great liberal and he accomplished much. He will be remembered for much more than being the youngest brother of Jack and Bobby Kennedy.

posted on Tuesday, August 25, 2009 7:06:00 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Monday, August 24, 2009 
XKCD's Tech Support Cheat Sheet

To my tech supportees:

XKCD's Tech Support Cheat Sheet nails it! This is essentially what I'm doing when I sit down at your computer and dig you out of your latest hole.

If only you'd make some more intelligent guesses for yourself, you might be able to solve more of your problems.

But it's not quite that simple.

You probably don't understand very much about what you're doing. I have enormous depth and breadth of experience which informs my investigation. I am—no false modesty here—a master of debugging. The extra context helps me hone in on a solution more often than not.

Still, do give the flowchart a shot. Being able to solve your own problems is very empowering.

posted on Tuesday, August 25, 2009 6:53:25 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Sunday, August 23, 2009 
The Letter of Marque
Title: The Letter of Marque
Author: Patrick O'Brian
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: W.W. Norton
Copyright: 1988
Pages: 336
Keywords: historical fiction
Reading period: 22–23 August, 2009

Jack Aubrey was disgraced in The Reverse of the Medal. He is now a civilian privateer, bitter at having been framed. Two extraordinary actions do much to recommend him to the general public and make him wealthy, and by the end of this book, it seems certain that he will soon be restored to the Navy List. Stephen Maturin's own fortunes improve as he effects a reconciliation with his wife.

The Letter of Marque is the twelfth novel in the Aubrey-Maturin series. O'Brian once again writes a convincing seafaring Jane Austen novel. The naval lingo is dense and impenetrable, but no matter: it adds texture and color. The naval engagements are exciting, the voyages, richly described. Jack Aubrey, heartstruck, is at his lowest ebb. Stephen Maturin is much concerned for his friend. The humor is subtle, coming to the fore when each man is out of his element, Jack on land, Stephen at sea.

Recommended.

posted on Monday, August 24, 2009 6:36:20 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Saturday, August 22, 2009 
Goosefoot
Title: Goosefoot
Author: Patrick McGinley
Rating: 3 stars out of 5
Publisher: Penguin
Copyright: 1982
Pages: 251
Keywords: fiction
Reading period: 21–22 August, 2009

Patricia Teeling wants to experience more of life than farming and university, and moves to Dublin to be a science teacher. She quickly finds herself adrift, belonging no more in her country home yet not of the city. She is soon drawn to the married Englishman who lives downstairs. His wife is murdered after she receives obscene telephone calls. Then an attractive man with a limp—dubbed the Goosefoot—appears.

While the author has an enviable command of English, I found his characters to be tiresome and inscrutable yet unaccountably eloquent. Patricia is improbably untouched by the brutal murder of her downstairs neighbor.

Later filmed as The Fantasist, which I dimly remember seeing when it came out and not liking much.

Not recommended.

posted on Sunday, August 23, 2009 4:58:38 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Friday, August 21, 2009 
SanDisk Ultra II SDHC 4GB card

Before we left on our trip, I picked up a pair of 4GB SD cards for my point-and-shoot Canon Elph. I brought my Linux netbook along, which has a built-in SD card reader, and the cards worked fine with that.

But they didn't work at all in any of the external card readers that I have, and I had to resort to a USB cable to transfer photos from the camera to my other computers.

Wikipedia discusses compatibility issues with 2GB and larger SD cards, which is initially what I thought the problem was. On looking more closely at the cards, I see that they're the newer SDHC cards. The card readers were all a few years old and must have preceded the SDHC standard.

I spent $7.99 on a new card reader this evening, which supports SDHC and most of the other small card formats.

posted on Friday, August 21, 2009 8:23:03 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Thursday, August 20, 2009 
A Coffin for Two
Title: A Coffin for Two
Author: Quintin Jardine
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Headline
Copyright: 1997
Pages: 310
Keywords: crime
Reading period: 16–20 August, 2009

When we were in Spain in July, we visited the Dalí museum in Figueres. The museum is Salvador Dalí's monument to himself; he spent his latter years building it. The guided tour was well worth the money. I came away believing that Dalí was both enormously talented and full of shit.

The next day, purely by chance, we passed a sign for Gala's castle at Pubol while driving around in the countryside. We spent half the morning looking around the castle that Dalí had bought for Gala, his wife and muse. It's a small castle in a village that they renovated. The deal was that Gala lived there and Salvador could only visit when she invited him.

Several years ago, I had read A Coffin for Two whose climactic scene takes place in Gala's castle. I re-read it, now that I've seen many of the locations of the book.

Osbert Blackstone and his girlfriend Primavera Phillips are Scottish investigators who are flush with cash after an earlier case. They buy themselves an apartment on the Costa Brava and settle in. To stop themselves going to seed, Oz and Prim take on a few enquiries, and are asked to authenticate a previously undiscovered Dalí painting that was dubiously acquired.

The plot relies too much on coincidence and the denouement is ludicrous but inspired. That aside, I thought it was well-written and entertaining and I found Oz and Prim both likeable and believable.

posted on Friday, August 21, 2009 6:12:16 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Wednesday, August 19, 2009 
Senator Patty Murray at Cozi

Senator Patty Murray visited us at Cozi this morning. She was there to hear from small business people about healthcare reform and she met with half-a-dozen local small business owners, including our CEO, Robbie Cape. I sat in on the meeting as an observer to take photos.

We heard a number of stories.

Jason runs a record store. When they decided to insure all of their employees, it meant that everyone had to take a pay cut. One guy didn't want to take part, but Jason convinced him. Weeks later, that guy broke his arm and ended up in the emergency room. Not long after, the same guy had another accident. Later he said that he'd have been completely broke without the insurance.

Debbie runs a restaurant on Capitol Hill. She said that she was ashamed to admit that she couldn't afford to offer health insurance to all her employees—her margins are too low. Debbie's insurance broker told that her premiums are higher because she's in the wrong zipcode—lots of HIV-positive people on Capitol Hill—and because she has a 60-year-old employee.

Jason's self-employed girlfriend became pregnant. They had to search hard to find a policy that did not consider pregnancy to be a pre-existing condition!

Will has a self-employed friend who is a healthcare exile. His friend has been unable to find health insurance in the US as he has diabetes. Instead, he and his family live in France where they're enjoying the French system.

Robbie firmly believes that it's important to have great healthcare for all his employees and their families. But this raises his costs and places him at a competitive disadvantage.

Karen is in her early sixties and has adult onset diabetes. She has insurance by the skin of her teeth, some grandfathered coverage. If she lost that, it would cost $500 to cover her, another $500 for her husband, and another $500 for her medicine. $1500 is almost the cost of her mortgage. She's trying to take care of herself and hang on for Medicare.

Robbie was galled that Cozi's insurance costs are going up by 25–35% every year. Small businesses have no leverage to negotiate with the insurers.

Patty talked for a while about the work that her HELP committee has been doing. They've passed a bill out of committee, but the Finance Committee is still at work on their own bill. Under the public option, her bill reimburses half of the cost of the premiums to companies with fewer than 50 employees.

The public option would spread the risk across a much larger pool, which should help drive down costs. Those of us who have insurance now are paying about $1000 each to cover the costs of catastrophic care for the nearly 50 million who are uninsured.

There was unanimous agreement that the current system is unsustainable and becoming ever more unaffordable. All present were in favor of the public option.

Patty is having a number of small meetings. She feels that they're more productive than town halls. I can only agree. She said that her office is getting constant calls from both sides.

Patty posed briefly for group photos, before leaving for her next meeting.

There was more, but that's all I can dredge up from memory at this late hour.

Afterwards, we posted an innocuous update to the CoziFamily fan page, “WA State Sen Patty Murray just stopped by our office to talk about small biz perspectives health care reform. With more than eight of us in the room, there was UNANIMOUS support for a public option!” A firestorm immediately broke out in the comments. Our very own townhall :(

(Why Cozi? Back in June, a handful of us, including my colleagues Will and Mira and I, met with our representatives to push for the public option. We got an enthusiastic reception from Patty Murray's office; less so from Maria Cantwell's staff. A couple of weeks later, our group put on a rally outside the Federal building where both senators have their Seattle offices. Then Robbie was asked to make a statement for a press release from Patty, which led to his being asked to host this meeting.)

Update: Robbie's take

posted on Wednesday, August 19, 2009 7:43:21 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Tuesday, August 18, 2009 

Barney Frank Confronts Woman at Town Hall

Those town halls are getting uglier.

A dozen gun-toting paranoid guys walking around at Obama's town hall in Arizona yesterday, some of them with ties to the violent Viper Militia.

In the video above, Barney Frank takes a question from some woman who's comparing Obama to a Nazi and tells her she's talking “vile, contemptible nonsense”.

I hope it's not going to escalate into outright violence.

posted on Wednesday, August 19, 2009 6:16:47 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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