Matt Denn - Lieutenant Governor



Archive for April, 2008

Lt. Governor candidate announces a plan to improve the environment for kids

Monday, April 21st, 2008

WILM 1450 AM, April 21, 2008

Matt Denn calls for strict regulation of air pollutants and and cleaning up lead paint: The Democratic candidate says the state should refuse to negotiate down its air emission standards with Conectiv’s Wilmington power plant. It should strickly hold power plants in Dover and Millsboro to their agreements to reduce their pollution emissions in future years.

“We need to draw a line in the sand when it comes to these dangerous emissions that have such a devastating impact on our kids, and if that means going to court to defend our stance then so be it.”

Denn says 55-percent of the nitrogen oxide, 74-percent of the sulfur dioxide and 77-percent of mercury come from those three stations.

If elected, Denn says, he’ll also target lead based paint. He would do so, in part, by encourage stricter enforcement of laws requiring propety owners to eliminate lead based paint.

The paint can affect the brain, kidneys and bone marrow in children and result in learning disabilities and behavioral problems.

Measure would ban increasing car insurance for firefighters

Monday, April 21st, 2008

Delaware State News, April 17, 2008

DOVER — Insurance compa­nies would be banned from rais­ing the auto insurance rates of policyholders or dropping their policies because they are volun­teer firefighters and ambulance company members under legisla­tion introduced Wednesday.

“It is unacceptable to me that these selfless volunteers could be penalized by their insurance companies. That’s what this bill is designed to prevent,” said Sen­ate Majority Whip Sen. Patricia M. Blevins, D-Elsmere, who is spon­soring Senate Bill 239.

Insurance Commissioner Mat­thew P. Denn said he has heard of a Sussex County firefighter who was told that his auto insurance policy was going to be canceled because he used his personal car to respond to fire calls.

“Firefighters are concerned that this could be a recurring problem and we want to make sure it doesn’t happen again,” Mr. Denn said. “The least we can do for these guys is make sure when they’re putting their lives on the line, we keep insurance companies from raising their rates or canceling their policies.”

Sen. Bruce C. Ennis, D-Smyrna, said he has seen several incidents over the years in which firefi ght­ers have had their insurance rates increased or policies terminated.

“Usually with fire police or fire chiefs, they use their personal ve­hicles to respond, and if they’re in an accident, even if it’s not their fault, (the insurance company) tries to raise their rates,” Sen. En­nis said.

A section of state code pro­hibits insurance companies from increasing premiums for firefight­ers, police officers or ambulance squad members if they are in­volved in an accident while re­sponding to an emergency in “an authorized emergency vehicle.”

Sen. Ennis noted that SB 239 would be broader, covering per­sonal vehicles and addressing the issue of canceling policies.

The Delaware Volunteer Fire­men’s Association, which repre­sents the more than 60 volunteer fire companies throughout the state, supports the measure.

“What this legislation does is prevent insurance companies from intimidating fire service per­sonnel from performing a very valuable service,” said DVFA pres­ident Ron Marvel.

Insurance Company Targets Vol. Firefighters, Denn Looks to Stop It

Monday, April 21st, 2008

WILM 1450 AM, April 16, 2008

The Delaware Insurance Commissioner’s Office asks several State Lawmakers to get behind a proposal that would prohibit insurance companies from raising car insurance rates of volunteer firefighters and first responders. State Insurance Commissioner Matt Denn felt it was necessary to take action after hearing from a firefighter.

“We had a situation come up in Georgetown a few months ago where a volunteer firefighter was told his policy was going to be non-renewed simply because he was a volunteer firefighter. It wasn’t because of any particular accident or anything else, but that just viewed it a violation of his policy terms that he was responding to the fire house is his car. We just don’t think that was acceptable. When the firefighters asked us if we would produce some legislation that made that type of practice illegal we were happy to do it.” Denn says, volunteer firefighters are sacrificing their time and lives for society.

State Senator Patricia Blevins and State Representative, Biff Lee are among the lawmakers who are sponsoring the proposed law.

Denn Announces Plans To Protect Children from Environmental Hazards

Monday, April 21st, 2008

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 21, 2008

Strict and unyielding regulation of air pollutants and a focus on cleaning up lead paint are the environmental issues affecting children that Matt Denn will take on as Delaware’s next Lieutenant Governor, Denn announced Monday.

Denn, a Democrat, said that controlling nitrogen oxide, sulfur dioxide and mercury in the air means reducing the amount of those hazardous substances emitted by the state’s three major power plants in Millsboro, Dover and Wilmington. Particularly, he said, the state must refuse to negotiate down its air emission standards with Conectiv’s Wilmington power plant, and strictly hold the Dover and Millsboro plants to agreements to reduce their pollution emissions in future years.

“NRG’s agreement allows it to petition the courts to revise the pollution limits it agreed to if it thinks that circumstances prevent it from complying,” Denn said. “If I am elected Lieutenant Governor, I will urge the executive branch of government to enforce the state’s new emission regulations as written against Conectiv’s Wilmington power plant, and to enforce the agreements with the Indian River and Dover plants as written even if those plants seek to get out of them. Going forward, we need to draw a line in the sand when it comes to these dangerous emissions that have such a devastating impact on our kids, and if that means going to court to defend our stance then so be it.”

Denn, the current Insurance Commissioner, cited as an example of his tough approach his willingness to go to court with insurance companies that objected to a 2005 regulation protecting homeowners from having their policies cancelled.

Also Monday, Denn said he would target lead-based paint, which can affect the brain, kidneys, and bone marrow in children and result in learning disabilities and behavioral problems. Denn said he would encourage stricter enforcement of laws requiring property owners to eliminate lead-based paint.

“Our goal, very simply, should be to eliminate lead paint on exposed surfaces in Delaware homes,” Denn said.

Denn’s environmental goals were endorsed Monday by Bill Zak, a member of Citizens for Clean Power, and Mark Brunswick of the A. Philip Randolph Institute of Delaware.

“The kind of tight regulation and oversight that Matt Denn is advocating is greatly needed and long overdue. I applaud his focus on this critical issue,” Zak said.

“Matt Denn has put forth proposals which will make a cleaner environment for all Delawareans, demonstrate an understanding between some elements of our environment and health conditions and, most importantly, further ensure the safety of our children” Brunswick said.

“These measures to improve the health of Delaware children by protecting their environment are the smart thing to do, because they will save enormous health costs down the road,” Denn said. “ But more importantly, they are the right thing to do, because we have a moral obligation to care for our children.”

What Do Matt Denn and Langston Hughes Have in Common?

Monday, April 21st, 2008

One of the many events I stopped in on this weekend was a college fair that Ezion Fair Baptist church in Wilmington put on for its members and their high school age children.  It was great to see the church putting on a program like this for its members.  And so my sermon today will be on the subject of churches and synagogues.

As you know if you have plowed through my self-congratulatory biography, I got my start in Delaware doing free legal work out of the basements of churches, homeless shelters, and senior centers in Delaware.  I have seen firsthand how many of our churches and synagogues serve as an anchor for their communities and their members, and when I am elected I hope to work closely with them in my campaign to help Delaware’s children.  There is a lot more that government can and should do to help kids in our state, but government is not the entire solution, and our churches can be a big part of the rest.

One example: I have already said that as Lieutenant Governor, I would embark on a campaign to recruit more foster parents for our state.  The foster parents we have are doing a great job, but we just don’t have enough of them, and we are burdening foster parents with more kids than they can handle and foster kids with placements that are less than ideal because we don’t have enough choices.   When I am elected, the first place I will be going to ask more people to step up for our foster kids will be the churches and synagogues of our state.

One of the recruiters at the Ezion Fair Baptist event mentioned that Langston Hughes was an alum of his university.  It reminded me of a Langston Hughes poem called “The Dream Keeper” that I have used in speeches from time to time:

Bring me all of your dreams/You dreamers/Bring me all of your/Heart melodies/That I may wrap them/In a blue cloud-cloth/Away from the too-rough fingers/Of the world.

Not a bad way to start a new week.

Finding a cure for the cost of care

Sunday, April 20th, 2008

Affordable coverage for all Delawareans: Can it be done?

The News Journal, March 30, 2008

John Flaherty didn’t go to the emergency room, even though he knew he’d separated his shoulder.

Former press secretary for Sen. Joe Biden, he was riding his bike along U.S. 202 a few years ago when he hit the curb and fell to the ground. Medical bills for a similar injury in 1982 totaled more than $5,000.

“This time, I just kind of diagnosed myself and healed myself,” said Flaherty, 57, who quit his state job in 1995 to become an independent lobbyist. Strapped for cash, he rolled the dice and dropped his health insurance.

“It was a risk I took,” said Flaherty, who almost passed out after the wreck but rode home using one arm to steer. He wore a sling for two months and now is aware of “some creakiness” in the injured shoulder.

“I could have some disease and not know it,” said Flaherty, of Wilmington. “But I’m pretty optimistic. My father’s 90 years old. I think I’m pretty healthy.”

Toni Muncey and her family weren’t as willing to gamble.

With three children — the youngest an infant — the Hockessin mother returned to work full time this winter for one reason: health insurance.

“It was a constant fear,” said Toni, whose husband owns a small business and can’t afford health insurance — for himself or his employees. When Toni left her job at a bank last year to have the baby, the family had no coverage. For a full year, the two older girls, ages 10 and 13, weren’t allowed to go roller-skating with their classmates.

“Because if they fell and broke something, it would cost thousands of dollars in doctors’ bills,” said Toni, whose new job offers a solid family health plan that kicked in Jan. 1.

“When we were counting down” on New Year’s Eve, she said, “it was like, hooray! We have health coverage now!”

Roughly 106,000 people in Delaware are still waiting to celebrate. Uninsured, their access to health care is limited, making them less likely to visit a doctor when an illness surfaces and more likely to visit the emergency room later, when symptoms have worsened.

As Election Day 2008 nears, people are talking about a Delaware where everyone has access to affordable health care, where providers emphasize preventative care and management of chronic illnesses. A place where hospitals wouldn’t spend tens of millions in a single year on charity care, passing along some of those costs to insured patients.

A place where premiums for employer-sponsored health insurance wouldn’t rise twice as much as workers’ wages. The average premium for family coverage in 2007 was $12,106, with workers contributing about $3,281 each from their paychecks.

A place where 50-year-old Edward Long wouldn’t have to sit at home with a failing liver, waiting, without health insurance, to die.

“I have worked and paid taxes all of my adult life with the belief that my government would be there for me if and when I needed help,” said Long, who worked as a mechanic for NuCar Connections in New Castle for almost 30 years before he had to quit in 2005.

Diagnosed with end-stage liver disease, he went through scores of medical tests at Einstein Health Care Network in Philadelphia while on a Cobra health plan, then Medicaid, to prepare for a lifesaving liver transplant. Then he learned his Social Security disability — barely more than $800 a month — disqualified him from receiving Medicaid.

Delaware has no high-risk insurance pool for patients as ill as Long, and no private company would insure him.

“Right now, I feel like someone has a gun to my head and I am just waiting for the trigger to be pulled,” Long wrote in a Feb. 23 e-mail to Delaware Insurance Commissioner Matt Denn. For months, Long has written and called state and federal officials, pleading for help.

So far, no one has offered a solution.

A hot topic in elections

Changes appear to be on the horizon. Presidential candidates from both parties are talking about reforming the system, with Democrats Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama proposing different forms of universal health care, and Republican John McCain backing market-driven reforms that emphasize competition and personal responsibility.

In a recent Commonwealth Fund survey, most participants said health care reform will be “very important” or “somewhat important” when they head to the polls this fall.

At the state level, too, momentum is gathering. Gubernatorial candidates have unveiled plans for reform, and earlier this month, about 50 people rallied outside Legislative Hall in Dover, urging lawmakers to do something about the growing numbers of uninsured people and the rising costs of health care.

“It’s kind of hard to go through the day and not hear some complaint about insurance,” said Dr. David Hack, director of Tiny Steps, a St. Francis Hospital program that provides care to uninsured mothers. “Big bills. That’s usually what they come in grumbling about. … We just have to revamp the system. It’s a bigger issue than just putting a patch on it, which is what they’ve been doing for years.”

While Washington grapples with the big picture, small states like Delaware have an opportunity to tread new ground, said economist Lynn Etheredge of the Health Insurance Reform Project at George Washington University. He is considered a moderate in health policy circles.

“When all the legislators know everyone else they’re working with, when they’ve worked together for years, it’s somewhat easier for them to communicate and work through their differences,” Etheredge said. “A lot of the leading reformer states tend to be the smaller states.”

But so far, the First State hasn’t done any trailblazing. Health care bills proposed in the Delaware Legislature have been stalled by some of the same arguments that have paralyzed national reform efforts for decades.

Senate Bill 6, for example, easily passed the Democratic-controlled Senate but was bogged down in the Republican-controlled House. That bill would create a statewide health insurance pool aimed at making health insurance more affordable by requiring private insurers to offer lower-cost coverage to workers at small companies and to individuals who make $50,000 or less. Supporters estimate the plan would cost between $12 million and $13 million a year and cover as many as 36,000 Delawareans who are either uninsured or struggling to pay for coverage.

Lobbying for fairer rates

Delays are a matter of life and death to someone like Long, who, because of his progressing liver disease, can barely climb the stairs to his second-floor apartment. Denn, Delaware’s insurance commissioner, tried to explain the stalemate to him in a Feb. 19 e-mail.

“I also am frustrated with the state’s not acting on the bills I have proposed,” wrote Denn, who supports Senate Bill 37, which would allow the commissioner’s office to turn down excessive health insurance rates. Delaware is one of only 10 states in the country that does not regulate health insurance rates for either families or small businesses.

“I probably spend 20 [percent] to 25 percent of my time traveling around the state trying to get groups to help me lobby the Legislature to enact and fund these bills,” Denn wrote.

A more powerful lobby opposes him, however — the health insurance industry. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Delaware, the state’s largest insurer, has published a White Paper that lists several criticisms of Senate Bill 6. Pool participants, the paper claims, would be exempt from the rating and underwriting rules established under state law for the small-employer market. By doing so, a disproportionate number of people with costly health care needs would enroll in the pool, leading to a rapid rise in the money spent on each person insured through the pool. The company points to pools in other states that have collapsed because of weak support.

Blue Cross, which earned more than $457.7 million in 2007, also opposes the type of single-payer system proposed in Senate Bill 177, which would provide coverage through a nongovernment-run health care program for all current and future Delawareans.

“We do not believe it is in the best interest of the insured population to disrupt the system that is in place,” the insurance company said in a prepared statement.

About 87.5 percent of Delawareans have some type of health insurance, compared with 84.2 percent nationally.

Advocates of a single-payer system believe it would provide medical care for the scores of people who fall between the cracks because they don’t qualify for public assistance, such as Medicaid or Medicare, but cannot afford private insurance. By taking care of those people, the system would reduce the costs that hospitals incur providing charity care for those who cannot pay, and free doctors from mountains of insurance-related paperwork.

“A lot of hackles come up,” said George Turner, a member of the Delaware Alliance for Health Care Reform, which sponsored the March 13 “Affordable Health Care Coverage for All” rally in Dover. Several of the 50 or so participants carried signs supporting the single-payer bill. “There’s such a stigma about socialized medicine. The perception of the public is that it’s a lot of long lines and less quality coverage.”

As an alternative, many Delaware Republicans are backing a bill that would require health insurers to offer a “skinny” policy that would be free of all state mandates. The bill also would tinker with the insurance code to help lower the cost of premiums. Tax credits would be given to small-business owners, ranging from $1,000 to $1,500.

That bill also includes an insurance pool to make coverage available to those who currently cannot obtain it. Senate Bill 146, which Denn helped design, is aimed at covering up to 36,000 people at an annual cost of $13 million. The Joint Finance Committee set aside $1 million in the budget for the Democrat-backed bill in this fiscal year. The bill passed the Senate but died in the House.

A nationwide push

With horns locked in Legislative Hall, some of Delaware’s top business and nonprofit leaders have been looking beyond the state line for ideas about how to fix what’s wrong here.

Through the Delaware Public Policy Institute, several dozen stakeholders from across the political spectrum gathered for daylong sessions twice last year, studying reforms other states are trying.

As of February, a dozen states were moving toward comprehensive reform and three had enacted it — Maine, Massachusetts and Vermont, according to the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured.

Both the Vermont and Massachusetts plans involve a mandate — meaning residents are required to obtain health care coverage, either through their employers or a newly established state-run program. Lower-income individuals receive a subsidy. The cornerstone of the Massachusetts plan, launched last year, is a “connector” mechanism to promote consumer choice. Individuals can shop for and buy coverage from competing health insurers. More than 300,000 previously uninsured individuals had obtained health insurance as of February 2008.

In Delaware, some are leery of mandatory health coverage.

“I didn’t believe they could make you do something like that,” said John Filasky, a Middletown farmer, who dropped his health insurance almost 15 years ago because he couldn’t afford it. He and his wife, Cindi, pay out of pocket for regular visits to the doctor and dentist, hoping to avoid a health catastrophe.

Connecticut’s proposed plan would provide affordable health care coverage to uninsured adults, ages 19 to 64, of all incomes, who do not have health insurance through an employer. The plan would offer a state-defined benefit package and premium subsidies based on a sliding scale. Approved by the Legislature, that program is slated to start in July.

So far, reform for most states has been costly.

In Massachusetts, officials say the costs to the state will be higher than the $869 million proposed just two months ago. Pennsylvania’s proposed plan to cover 270,000 people — about one-fifth of its uninsured population — by 2012-13 has a price tag of $1.1 billion. The state expects to pay for it through a combination of monthly premiums, federal Medicaid dollars, tobacco settlement money and money from its medical malpractice insurance fund.

California’s Senate in January rejected a $14.9 billion proposal to cover almost all of its 6.6 million uninsured, saying the state’s already in the red.

“Covering more people requires more revenue,” George Washington University’s Etheredge said. “It is more difficult, but there’s also going to be more need and more people losing health care coverage.”

The Delaware Public Policy group wasn’t ready to commit to comprehensive reform. In its “Small State, Big Opportunity: Taking Action for the Uninsured” report released earlier this month, the group proposes incremental reforms, with a focus on raising awareness about existing programs.

Last year, Delaware had to return about $3 million of the $10 million it received in federal aid because there weren’t enough young people signed up for the State Children’s Health Insurance Program. The program covers millions of children up to age 19 who can’t get coverage through their parents’ job-based insurance and whose families make too much to qualify for Medicaid.

In the months ahead, the DPPI group, supported by a $500,000 grant from pharmaceutical giant AstraZeneca, will try to connect Delaware’s uninsured with an expansive — but disconnected — safety net that already exists.

More than 500 doctors have been recruited over the last 15 years, for example, to offer pro bono care for the uninsured through the Volunteer Initiative Program, administered by the Medical Society of Delaware.

“Nobody wants half their practice to be uninsured patients because you’d never be able to make a living,” said Dr. James Gill, director of Delaware Valley Health Outcomes Research, which investigates health care policy.

He has studied the state’s Community Healthcare Access Program, also known as CHAP, and found that it improves health by providing the uninsured access to doctors, medical specialists and other health resources. The program is funded with Delaware Tobacco Settlement Funds through the Delaware Health Care Commission.

“This program allows for distribution of the uninsured among the physicians,” said Gill, who believes that CHAP and the Volunteer Initiative Program (VIP) can grow, but aren’t sustainable solutions to the health care crisis.

Federally qualified health centers such as Henrietta Johnson Medical Center in Wilmington and La Red Health Center in Georgetown offer care for free or at reduced costs to the uninsured or underinsured. But hospitals bear the brunt of the burden.

Steps toward caring for uninsured

The increasing costs of charity care and bad debt has created “almost a crisis for hospitals,” said Julie Topkis-Scanlan, senior vice president of external affairs and marketing at St. Francis, a Catholic hospital in Wilmington that operates several programs for the uninsured or underinsured. The hospital provided about $4 million in charity care in 2007, and wrote off another $16 million in bad debt, or unpaid bills.

“I think we’re making a dent because it saves in emergency care costs,” said Topkis-Scanlan, who helps raise funds for Tiny Steps and the St. Clare Medical Outreach Program, which sends a van into Wilmington neighborhoods several days a week. Physicians at Tiny Steps treated about 600 mothers last year, and more than 4,000 people received treatment at the van.

“It keeps them from getting critical,” Topkis-Scanlan said. “In a more perfect world, I think maybe we would have a special off-site clinic that would predominantly take these patients 24-7.”

Christiana Care redirects thousands of uninsured patients from emergency rooms at Christiana Hospital and Wilmington Hospital to the Wilmington Hospital Health Center, where patients pay on a sliding scale based on their income. Someone who is uninsured and is getting a tooth pulled, for example, may be charged only about $40 at the center’s Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery and Hospital Dentistry. It could cost about $200 to 300 at a private practice. Root-canal treatment at the hospital ranges from $130 to $235 compared with private practice fees in the range of $950-$1,150.

Almost 100 volunteer dentists come from the community to work in the dental department.

“Some dentists come in after their practice closes,” said Dr. Edwin Granite, the department chair. “They’ll end their workday at 6 and come here and work until 10 p.m.”

Each year, the center handles about 67,500 patient visits. Wilmington resident Joanne Caputo called her dental care at Wilmington Hospital Health Center “a gift from God.”

For two years, she lived with intense pain in her jaw, but because she was underinsured, she couldn’t afford a root canal, which can cost up to $2,000 out-of-pocket.

“Through a series of financial catastrophes, dental insurance was the last thing on my list,” said Caputo, who recently turned 65 and now is covered by Medicare. “They did really comprehensive work to make sure my whole mouth was healthy.”

For thousands of others, though, help hasn’t been as forthcoming.

Mike Mansfield had to file for bankruptcy because of his rising debt, primarily because of his medical bills.

“If I had insurance through a business, I could’ve kept paying something,” said Mansfield, 36, of New Castle, who was paying about $500 a month on medical bills from his earnings as a car mechanic.

When he was in his 20s, Mansfield was injured several times, once in a motorcycle accident that severed his pinkie. Later, an injury from another car accident — not his fault — forced him to go on disability for five years. By the time he filed for bankruptcy in June 2005, he owed $52,000 — more than half from medical bills. He’s now living with his mother.

“A lot of us are one accident away from losing everything,” said Mansfield’s lawyer, Cynthia Carroll, who has seen a growing number of clients file bankruptcy because of medical bills.

Long, the 50-year-old with liver disease, filed bankruptcy last year after going through most of his 401(k) savings to pay medical and living expenses. Until a couple of weeks ago, he spent hours every day on the computer, researching possibilities for funding a transplant.

He lost hope March 12, after receiving another discouraging e-mail from a public official.

“I’ve given up the fight,” said Long, whose belly is the size of a basketball because his liver won’t pump out fluids.

Health care reforms might be on the way, but Long doesn’t expect to live to see them.

Shocking News

Friday, April 18th, 2008

Mark your calendar for Saturday, June 7th, 2008. Because that, my friends, is the day that I will announce that I am running to be Delaware’s next Lieutenant Governor.

I know, I know—it is shocking news. Here you had thought that I was racing madly up and down the state in order to avoid having to engage in the more challenging issues facing me at home, such as trying to explain to Adam why he has to use the toilet when Lenny (the dog) doesn’t. And now you come to find out that I am running for Lieutenant Governor.

The truth is that the official three-county announcement tour is a time-honored Delaware tradition. It usually comes long after most insiders know you are running, but for many Delawareans who don’t scrutinize the newspaper every single day, the significant coverage that the press gives the announcement tour is the first time that they find out (a) that you are running and (b) why you are running. So it is a big deal.

I am actually kind of looking forward to this three-county tour. Generating attendance for my 2004 three-county Insurance Commissioner announcement tour was a challenge—the invitation said something along the lines of “Come Hear Some Guy You Don’t Know Announce His Candidacy for an Office You Never Cared About Before.” But in the last three and a half years, we have profoundly changed the Insurance Commissioner’s Office, and people know how important it is. And I would like to think that as a result, a lot more people know who I am and what I am about.

Mrs. Denn will be there, the Denn boys will be there, I suspect that even Lenny will be there. You won’t want to miss it.

The Flight of the Caliber

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

About six weeks ago, while I was driving down Washington Street in Wilmington after speaking to a civic association, a charming young lady from Pennsylvania apparently said to herself “hey, it’s been a slow night, I think I’ll run a stop sign without slowing down and see what happens.” Approximately one second later she found her car embedded in the driver’s side door of my beloved Ford Focus station wagon. She totaled my car, but amazingly neither one of us was hurt.

You will be pleased to know that in the finest tradition of our country’s credo that all men are equal under the law, my experience with the other driver’s insurance company was just as miserable as anyone else’s would have been. But after a few weeks of squabbling, they paid me what my car was worth, and today I am going to pick up the replacement: a used Dodge Caliber station wagon. Why the Dodge Caliber? Because after being T-boned by an inattentive driver and walking away from it, I decided that I wanted the safest American car that the Denn household budget could reasonably afford, and apparently you can drive a Dodge Caliber off a cliff without hurting yourself too much. I bid a fond farewell to the Focus at the auto body shop last week, recovering among other things the “Curious George Goes to the Ice Cream Store” book that the Newark Library had been threatening to kneecap me over.

The Caliber’s maiden voyage will be down to Dover to a press conference with Delaware’s volunteer firefighters, where we will unveil a bill designed to keep auto insurance companies from canceling the policies of volunteer firefighters and ambulance crew members simply because they are volunteers who use their cars to get to the station when a call comes in. Not because they hit anyone on the way to the station, mind you, but simply because they are firefighters. Some of you are saying to yourselves “why do you need such a bill, no insurance company would ever do something like that.” Guess again. It happened just a few months ago, and even though I got that situation reversed, the firefighters asked if we could put something in the law to ensure that it didn’t happen again. It is the least we can do for our emergeny responders.

We Interrupt This Tuesday Morning…

Monday, April 14th, 2008

to report that I was endorsed by another local Democratic Party committee last night. This time, it was the 27th district committee, located deep in the heart of Bear. The good people of Bear have my thanks and gratitude.

Bruce Springsteen, Biscuits, and…Oh Yes, The Campaign

Monday, April 14th, 2008

Well, I have to say that the highlight of my weekend was the demonstration that my sons Adam and Zach (age three, for those of you new to the campaign web site) gave my wife last night of Bruce Springsteen’s patented running knee slide, which they had just learned from watching a YouTube video of ‘70s-era Bruce singing “Thunder Road” on stage. A close second was the giant biscuit that we made on Saturday morning, and that Adam is modeling here. It was leftover dough from a batch of non-mutant biscuits we made; what is frightening is that he actually ate most of it.

As for the campaign, that’s not going so bad either. I was all over this weekend—visiting teachers at the annual DSEA conference in Dover, stopping in at the 23rd Representative District’s annual spaghetti dinner in Newark, visiting the Wilmington Police/Fire basketball game, meeting with a committee person in Bear, stopping in at the New Castle County Progressive Democrats/Stonewall Democrats reception….But the visit that will stick most in my mind was one I had on Friday night with a group of adoptive parents who wanted to talk about their concerns with the state’s child welfare system. These parents are absolutely extraordinary people—they have taken in kids who they knew were likely to have serious challenges, many of them straight from the foster care system, loved them and struggled with them, and made huge sacrifices so that their kids could have a chance to succeed. As you probably know (or, if you don’t, you should click through the web site some more), the kids of this state are the focus of my campaign. These adoptive parents are heroes, and we should be doing whatever we can to help them and our many foster families provide for the kids that they have stepped up and taken in.

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