LETTERS for the January 31 issue
Hospital project a financial mess
A recent article in The Maui News provided an update on the long overdue West Maui Hospital. It does not look good.
When construction on the ground work started a few years ago, we were all led to believe we would have a hospital shortly. Imagine the surprise when the groundwork was completed and construction came to a grinding halt. Turned out that was all they had money for.
The article states other medical organizations have been contacted and attempts at municipal bond issues have been tried without success. And, we now find that the vaunted Newport Hospital Corp. is a mom and pop operation without the credit standing needed to fund the project to completion.
One of the medical organizations contacted was Kaiser. The only way they’ll be interested is if their very successful clinic in Lahaina needs to expand further. Staffing is also an issue.
Specialists are in short supply, and it’s already hard to recruit doctors and other professional staff to Maui Memorial Medical Center. Salaries can be as high as 250 percent over what doctors are paid on the Mainland to offset the higher Hawaii cost of living.
The money literally sunk into the ground for grading and onsite infrastructure would have been better spent establishing and maintaining a National Guard Aviation Company at the West Maui Civic Center to transport critical patients to MMMC. Citizen soldier pilots love to fly and could be scheduled for 24-hour coverage.
It’s well past time for everyone involved with this project to take a deep breath and get a reality check.
MIKE SOWERS, Medford, Oregon
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Watch out for the new airport speed bumps
Warning: The new Kahului Airport has three new speed bumps.
Hit these at 25 MPH, the posted speed limit, and you can eject yourself from a convertible.
For a hard roof vehicle, you might hit the roof.
Take these on at your own risk, like 5-10 MPH.
You have been warned.
BRIAN EGAN, Lahaina
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Government shutdown expands the ranks of the “underwater nation”
As the government shutdown drags on, the image of federal workers lining up at food pantries has dramatized just how many workers live financially close to the edge.
By one estimate, almost 80 percent of U.S. workers live paycheck to paycheck. Miss one check and you’re taking a second look at what’s in the back of the pantry cupboard.
From federal prison guards in small towns to airline safety inspectors in major cities, the partial government shutdown has forced 800,000 federal workers – and many contractors, too – to survive without a paycheck.
The shutdown is a Trump-made disaster, with an estimated 420,000 “essential workers” required to show up for work without a paycheck. They have full-time responsibilities, which makes finding another part-time job nearly impossible.
Another 380,000 federal workers have been furloughed, including Coast Guard employees that are being encouraged to take on babysitting gigs and organize garage sales. They saw their last paycheck on Dec. 22 and are scrambling to pay rent, mortgages, alimony and credit card bills, let alone the groceries.
The average federal employee isn’t wealthy, taking home a weekly paycheck of $500, according to the American Federation of Government Employees, the union representing affected workers.
The vulnerability they feel isn’t unusual. A majority of the U.S. population is living with very little by way of a savings cushion.
One troubling indicator is the rising ranks of “underwater nation” – households with zero or negative wealth. These families have no savings reserves; they owe more than they own.
The percentage of U.S. households that are “underwater” increased from 15.5 percent in 1983 to 21.2 percent today. This experience cuts across race but is more frequent in African American and Latino households, including over 32 percent of Latino families and 37 percent of African American families.
The next 20 percent of all U.S. households have positive net worth, but not much. Four in ten families couldn’t come up with $400 cash if they needed it for an emergency, according to the Federal Reserve.
African American families are especially vulnerable to economic downturns or delayed paychecks.
Since 1983, the median wealth for a U.S. family has gone down 3 percent, adjusting for inflation. Over the same period, the median wealth for an African American family declined a devastating 50 percent, according to Dreams Deferred, a new study for the Institute for Policy Studies. (Meanwhile, the number of households with $10 million or more skyrocketed by 856 percent.)
Unemployment may be low, but it masks a precarious and insecure population. At the root of the problem is growing inequality.
Wages for half the population have been stagnant for over four decades, while expenses such as health care, housing and other basic necessities have risen. Many families still haven’t fully recovered from the economic meltdown a decade ago.
After going up steadily since World War II, homeownership rates have been falling since 2004. And as with income, homeownership is also heavily skewed towards white families. While the national homeownership rate has virtually remained unchanged between 1983 and 2016, 72 percent of white families owned their home, compared to just 44 percent of African American families.
Latino homeownership increased by nearly 40 percent over that time, but it still remains far below the rate for whites, at just 45 percent.
If the partial government shutdown continues for “months or years,” as President Trump threatens, there will be even more stress and hardship on our nation’s most vulnerable families. The bigger challenge is how to ensure our economy enables more people to save and build wealth.
Make no mistake: parts of our economy were on “shutdown” long before the government.
CHUCK COLLINS, OtherWords.org