Town meetings enligtening

Published 9:12 am Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Despite heavy rains and flooding only days before, good sized crowds turned out to talk with me at town meetings last week in Grand Bay, Dauphin Island, and west Mobile.
I was also pleased to shake hands and talk face to face with residents of Peterman, Pollard, East Brewton, Creola, McIntosh and many other communities. Four stops in Baldwin County still await me and my staff as this column goes to press.
From the road, I can tell you that residents at every point are concerned about the $15.7 trillion national debt.  Unemployment and the economy are also uppermost on many minds.  Not surprisingly, the long-term viability of Medicare and Social Security was a major concern of more than a few seniors.
As I told audiences at the West Mobile Regional Senior Center, the national debt is not a Republican or Democrat creation. It has been built brick by brick by both parties, and it will take some time to get under control. That said, in only three and a half years President Obama has increased the size of the national debt by more than any other president during the same amount of time. We simply cannot sustain the current level of federal deficit spending that the president is determined to continue.
One gentleman at a town meeting asked me what Congress is doing to address the debt problem.
The Republican-led House – which was sworn in less than two years ago – passed budgets in 2011 and 2012 to cut federal spending.  Unfortunately, no matter how hard we in the House try to rein in government, we find that we are dancing with ourselves. The Senate has not only ignored our budgets, it hasn’t passed a budget of its own in three years. While we have been successful in forcing the Senate and the president to agree to $100 billion in spending cuts, it is a mere drop in the bucket compared to what is needed.
As I shared with those who attended my town meetings in Monroeville, Atmore and elsewhere, a host of very tough decisions about the budget will likely be put off until the end of the year.  During the so-called lame duck session, which will likely occur in November and December, Congress will have to face the expiration of the 2003 “Bush tax cuts,” as well as “sequestration” – automatic cuts of $1.2 trillion in federal spending including $600 billion in defense cuts.  Washington has kicked the can down the road for years, but there is a dead end looming ahead that cannot be ignored.
If the Bush tax cuts are allowed to expire, come January 1, 2013, Americans will be saddled with $500 billion in tax increases affecting practically every household.  Sequestration will have a particularly large negative impact on our military at a time when safety and security around the globe are at a premium.
Medicare recipients will also be inconvenienced if the federal reimbursement rate for doctors providing Medicare is cut due to the expiration of the “Doc fix” provision. Many doctors have told me they may stop treating Medicare patients unless they continue to receive adequate reimbursement from Medicare.
I want to thank everyone who attended my town meetings last week and I will carry your ideas back to Washington.