Citizen Agenda: A Report For Members Of Florida PIRG
FloridaPIRG.ORG HOW YOU CAN HELP MEMBERSHIP

Product Safety

Product Safety Bill Passes In Congress
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RECALLS PROMPT ACTION—Florida PIRG-backed product safety legislation passed through Congress in March. Our toy safety research and advocacy made it possible.

Our work to fix the frayed product safety net came to fruition this past spring, resulting in more funding and authority for  the agency charged with protecting consumers from unsafe products.

In December, the House passed the Consumer Product Safety Modernization Act, which would permanently increase funding and staff for the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), reduce lead in children’s toys, and establish new testing requirements for products.

We saw it as a strong first step, but called on Florida’s  congressional delegation to add parts of the Senate bill, which gives the CPSC greater enforcement authority, requires public disclosure of important product hazard information, and levies larger fines for companies.

Then, in March, the Senate’s version of the same bill passed. We thank Sens. Bill Nelson and Mel Martinez, and all 22 members of Florida’s House delegation, for supporting the bill.”

Grassroots Pressure

When independent inspectors found that a Fisher-Price toy blood pressure cuff contained seven to nine times the legal lead limits, Fisher-Price, which is owned by Mattel, agreed to recall the toy—but only in Illinois!

We quickly alerted our members via e-mail. Thousands responded, asking the company to recall the dangerous toy everywhere it was sold. They also asked the company to sign on to our corporate safety challenge—a promise to test all toys rigorously and ban dangerous chemicals from products. So far, Fisher-Price and Mattel haven’t signed on. Yet their stubborn resistance to change has provided more ammunition for our efforts in Congress.

Affordable Health Care

Calling For Fairness and Efficiency In Health Care

Each year, billions of health care dollars vanish into a black hole of waste, inefficiency and fraud. Meanwhile, the number of uninsured Floridians rises dramatically each year, and the cost of health care premiums is rising at twice the rate of inflation. Until we can ensure that every Floridian has access to quality health care, we must work to lower costs.

During the 2008 legislative session, Florida PIRG has focused our work on requiring hospitals to disclose the prices of common procedures. “Hospitals are notorious for overcharging the uninsured and underinsured. They do not have to lower their prices to compete with other medical providers because that information is kept secret. We’re working to change that,” said Florida PIRG’s consumer advocate, Brad Ashwell.

Unfortunately, this is not enough to solve all of our health care problems. That is why Florida PIRG is working on a number of other policies aimed at ensuring that everyone has access to affordable, quality health care. We are also working to expose medical fraud, prohibit hospitals from billing for preventable errors, cap the amount that hospitals can charge the uninsured, and discourage tobacco use.

Florida PIRG
Citizen Agenda
Summer 2008
Vol. 24, No. 2


MEMBER Action
MEDICAL COSTS
Please urge Florida legislators to make medical price information available to the public.  Visit the action center.
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To Our Members

Between partisan attack ads, election machine errors, disenfranchisement of voters and candidate coffers full of large campaign contributions, there is plenty of cause for disgust with the political process.