4A - Thursday, March 6, 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 74c i Iictian E3at Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@umich.edu ANDREW GROSSMAN EDITOR IN CHIEF GARY GRACA EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR GABE NELSON MANAGING EDITOR Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. The Daily's public editor, Paul H. Johnson, acts as the readers' representative and takes a critical look at coverage and contentin every section of the paper. Readers are encouraged to contact the public editor with questions and comments. He can be reached at publiceditor@umich.edu. Health assurance MSA pushes for health insurance mandate;'U'should act t is burdensome enough when college students suffer from serious or sudden health problems. It's downright devastat- ing when they are forced to drop out of school because of the lofty medical bills. To remedy situations like this and reduce the rising costs of student health care, the Michigan Student Assem- bly is urging administrators to consider the merits of requiring all University students to carry health insurance. If the Univer- sity (which has been receptive to the idea) finds a suitable plan, it's imperative that it enacts this policy. feel like our kindergartners are sitting there like sifting ducks." - Arizona state Sen. Karen Johnson, a Republican, talking last week about her bill to allow concealed weapons on public school property, as reported yesterday by The New York Times. CHRIS KOSLOWSKIIOUT T)PASTURE Do you think we would be Honost to blog Do you think the movie finnier if we constantly made Juno was fy? hippop-culture references? Forshi, Big Mac. We need more Thundercatsup u (Sure, I laughed. Yes I do. That Diablo Cody n this homeskillet. S s a 7ni1s *t g Wen the goodfight gets greedy Although the University has considered the idea of mandating health insurance coverage for several years, MSA's resolu- tion last month hopes to light a fire under the University. Citing rising premiums, one of the most promising ways of lowering health care costs is requiringstudents to get coverage through the University's student insurance plan. The resolution requests that the University consider ways to reduce health care costs for students present its findings before school starts this fall. The University is responding enthusiastically to the charge. There are two ways to do this. Require all students to buy the University's student health care plan or prove that they have insurance. The second option means that students covered by their parents would not have to buy insurance but those who weren't would have it. The overall point, though, is to make sure that all students are covered, which should be the goal - one that many universities, public an4private,have-already-- done successfully. While the University offers a plan to stu- dents already, this coverage is too expensive for many students to afford. The annual premium for a domestic student costs more than $2,100 - up from an actual cost of $621 for the same plan in 1998. However, MSA's resolution notes that the premium for international students is much cheaper at $81 per month. One reason may be that all international students are required to buy insurance, unless they prove their current coverage meets the University's standards. The logic is simple: As more people sign on with the same insurance plan, average costs are typically reduced because total cost is dispersed across more people. Many of the University's uninsured stu- dents are not uninsured by choice - they simply can't afford the coverage. While requiring insurance would also increase the cost of attending the University because it would be an attendance cost, those costs could be offset for lower income students with financial aid. But the cost would be small compared to the potential cost of sick- ness or injury. The University should - and hopefully does - value the health and finances of its students. The health care mandate works to protect both. In light of the federal govern- ment's failure to provide citizens with access to affordable medical coverage, this plan could also serve as a model of a universal health care system that works. It could set an example to other organizations consid- ering similar plans. The University should send a strong message that it believes that access to basic health care is a fundamental right. It is that important. hen members of the Writ- ers Guild of America hit the streets on Nov. 5 during strike negotiations with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Pro- ducers, their pur- pose was more than just to fight for a more profitable and updated contract. Sure, they wantedT their contract to THERESA include fair compen- KENNELLY' sation for DVD sales and new media. But WGA members also seemed to want to show their grubby bosses that they deserved respect, especially when they brought the entire movie and television business to a grinding halt by refus- ing to write all-important scripts. The WGA fought what Los Angeles Times writer Patrick Goldstein, and many others called "the good fight." On a smaller and less glamorous scale, some University employees are engaged in their own contract negotia- tions that seem to be about more than just creating a fairer contract with more appropriate pay. GEO's demands are becoming more about power and respect than the organization would like to admit. In case you have ignored your grad- uate student instructors talking about it, bypassed the fliers or missed the "grade-in for visibility" in Angell Hall last month, the Graduate Employees' Organization needs to form a new contract with the University. The group determines employment terms for those graduate student who seem to do most of the teaching here. What has become a triennial event, new contract negotiations have kicked off a series of bargaining sessions and could lead to a GSI walkout, like they did for one day in 2005. While GEO would likely reject any similarity to the WGA and its contract negotiations, because GEO's demands are more about getting basic employee benefits than esteem or clout at the University, it's hard to say that GEO's negotiations don'thave aself-righteous quality. I have heard the way many GEO members talk abouttheir position at the University and their pomposity is unmistakable. The self-righteous attitude is some- what justified. They are right to want compensation for the hard work they putintothe University, especiallywhen you buytheir argument thatUniversity administrators undervalue them. But then again, WGA argued that its writers were being overworked and underappreciated, too. This then begs the question of the GEO's negotiations with the University: Is GEO really fighting a needed fight for academics? Looking at GEO's strike platform, it appears like the group is fighting for a noblecause. Itwants apayincreasethat aligns its members' salaries with the minimal livable income for Ann Arbor residents, which means a 9 percent increase in the next year and 3 percent increases for the two years after that. The group also wants better benefits for graduate student parents, includ- ing extended leave time and increased child care subsidies. GEO is also ask- ing that the GSI health care plan cover mental health care. I would really like to support GEO and its new contract platforms. I have listened to GSIs plead their case to the Daily's editorial board multiple times. I paid attention when GSIs and lec- turers discussed contract problems in March 2005. I didn't cross picket lines when classes were cancelled. Heck, I even helped coordinate a student protest freshman year when a certain LSA department was mis- treating some GSIs. I have listened, and Ihave acted. But I don't think I can anymore. I think it's time that GSIs value all of the benefits they do get from the Univer- sity and how much better off they are than millions of graduate students and teacher assistants around the country. Few of them seem to realize it. They are, first and foremost, stu- dents, and many of them aren't even that good at instructing. And as far as I can infer from my exponentially increasing tuition payments, money doesn't grow on Ann Arbor trees for the Universityto pick. I know it shouldn't be about me or the University's money constraints. It should be about the University own- ing up to its own standards and giving back to the people it makes do most of the dirty work. It should be about aca- demics getting the credit they deserve for theirresearch and instructing. It's just hard to ignore how GEO magically comes up with so many demands everythree years. How many moreneedyrequests cantheyarguefor and be willing to strike over? How GEO might be taking it a bit too far It would be undemocratic and irre- sponsible to say that GEO should just accept the University's contract terms and offers. It would be equally irre- sponsible to deny GEO's demands saying its members ought to accept poverty when they choose to be an aca- demic and wait to start a family until after they get out of graduate school. By no means should GEO give up the fight completely. But GEO needs to take a lesson from its own playbook and start appreciat- ing how much GSIs are already appre- ciated as employees. GEO is really only losing respectability every time it demands more of it at the contract bar- gaining table because it is displayingits own greediness. And this is why GEO is no longer fighting the good fight. Theresa Kennelly is an associate editorial page editor. She can be reached at thenelly@umich.edu. 4 a KATE TRUESDELL L V The doctor is (way) out 4 '0 Like most people, Jose Lejarraga wasn't looking forward to going to the dentist for a root canal. Unlike most people, he wasn't just put-off by the funny smells and goose bump raising whir of the dentist's drill: He also had to worry about checking his bags and getting through security. Lejarraga, 27, is a visiting researcher in the University's Ross School of Business. Suffer- ing from a toothache a few months ago, he was told he would need a root canal. After investi- gating the costs of such a procedure, Lejarraga realized it would be less expensive to fly all the way back to his native Argentina for a week, undergo the procedure and fly back rather than use his University-purchased insurance and America's health care system. As an international research associate recently residing in Spain, he was required to have insurance that met the University's requirements before coming here to study. According to Lejarraga, most European health insurance, like the coverage provided by his employer in Spain, was not deemed adequate. He was "encouraged" to purchase the University's policy through The Chicker- ing Group. He says his insurance costs about $90 per month, far more than he would have to pay in either Spain or Argentina. He soon learned that despite the extra cost, this plan was not really sufficient to cover his needs. "They push you to do (insurance through) the school so you expect it's going to be great," Lejarraga said. "Because of this you don't think about it, you just assume it's covered. You are paying so much in comparison. You expect that you are getting premium stuff." What he got instead didn't include even the most basic dental coverage. When den- tal distress struck, Lejarraga was forced to pay $75 for a 30-minute appointment with an undergraduate student at the Universi- ty's School of Dentistry. Although instruc- tors oversaw the student, Lejarraga said his dentist-in-training "wasn't exactly gentle." Lejarraga said he chose the University because he heard it was the least-expensive treatment option available. The scenario only got worse after his initial visit. Told that he needed a root canal, he was given a number of less-than-appealing treat- ment options. He could have the procedure done here, which would require suffering for one month until he could receive treatment and cost him roughly $4,500. Or he was told the tooth could be removed and then he could waituntilhe returned to Spain at the end ofthe semester to have an artificial tooth implanted. Lastly, he was offered the choice of simply taking antibiotics for three months until he finished his research period, an option that would prevent infection but afford no guaran- tee that his pain would be quelled. Lejarragaultimately invented his ownsolu- tion. He purchased a round-trip plane ticket to Argentina for $860 and paid approximately $150 for immediate dental service. This was roughly onefourth of what he would have had to pay here. He also received faster treatment. Lejarraga's experience with the American health care system and University-provided insurance left some strong impressions on him. Health care in America, he explained, is "only accessible to a small portion of the popu- lation," a population that hangs students and people from other countries - especially less wealthy ones - out to dry. "I would describe it as unfair overall," he said. And he has some pretty strong ideas about what the University could be doing better. One thing the University should do that it's not doing is warn people who come from outside and don't know about this system, he said. "A situation like this can mess up your whole stay here." Kate Truesdell is an LSA senior and a member of the Daily's editorial board. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: Emad Ansari, Harun Buljina, Anindya Bhadra, Kevin Bunkley, Ben Caleca, Satyajeet Deshmukh, Milly Dick, Mike Eber, Emmarie Huetteman, Theresa Kennelly, Emily Michels, Arikia Millikan, Kate Peabody, Robert Soave, lmran Syed, Neil Tambe, Matt Trecha, Kate Truesdell, Radhika Upadhyaya, Rachel Van Gilder, Rachel Wagner, Patrick Zabawa. DEFEND AFFIRMATIVE ACTION PARTY VEP I Leading our generation A great shift is occurring in our tive action threate: nation. The outcome of the national underrepresented1 election is still months away, and mentto the token le yet something much greater has 40 years ago. already changed: us. Our genera- This unaccepta tion is gleaming with.optimism and already occurred excitement. where top publict For the millions of young people become hovels o asserting political demands for the ment for the few u first time, what began as opposition minority studentsv to the war in Iraq has grown into a them. We cannot a declaration of hope for becoming pen at the Universi a nation no longer separated along of a young generati lines of gender and race. It took only away with the old s a few months for our generation to Our generation brush aside old notions that once speak for our ow seemed invincible. Yesterday's view was that a fundamental change for the better would have to wait until some indefinite point in the future; ARIELA STEIF today's view is that such a change is possible now. And all of this happened while our elders were still droning on about the apathy of the youngergeneration and the dim prospects for humanity. This swift change of views has arrived at an important moment for the University. Our campus needs a change of direction, too. The Uni- versity has been moving backwards since it began implementing the state ban on race- and gender-based affirmative action over a year ago. This was against the interests of the majority of the student body and the younger generation as a whole. While our generation has dis- tinguished itself for breaking the 407 racial and gender barriers to the U.S. presidency, our campus is experiencing a fortification of those barriers against minorities and women gaining a college degree. The enforcement of Michigan's ban on race- and gender-based affirma- ns to drive down minority enroll- evels that existed ble setback has in California, universities have f hostile treat- anderrepresented who gain entry to llow this to hap- ty, not in the face on so eager to do ocial divisions. needs a voice to vn interests and aspirations. Our demands for prog- ress need to be heard beyond the vote tallies in primaries and cau- cuses - we need to be heard here and now. In this state. On this cam- pus. Everywhere. We need our own leaders, and we need to be leaders. That is why the Defend Affirmative Action Party exists. We are the lead- ers of our generation. Liana Mulholland is School of Art and Design graduate student. Kate Stenvig is a School of Education graduate student. They are MSA Rackham representatives. Maricruz Lopez is an LSA junior. SEND LETTERS TO: TOTHEDAILY@UMICH.EDU Making logical leaps about Clinton's impact accept woman oi crafted for them.' Following this if Obama doesn' America hasn't ev utside the place society has logic, I can conclude that t win the nomination, then volved enough to accept black of power. Further, women sition of power in America, he House Nancy Pelosi, Sec- ndoleeza Rice and Michigan nholm to name a few. 3.q. v 9Al TO THE DAILY: men in positions I was slightly disgusted by the Arikia have reached pos Millikan's column Tuesday about how Hill- U.S. Speaker of tE ary Clinton is challenging traditional gender retary of State Co roles (Give this bitch a chance, 03/04/2008). Gov. Jennifer Gra She stated if Clinton does not win the Ohio and Texas primaries then she will "take it Zain Allarakhia as evidence that this country isn't evolved to LSA sophomore a