Minnesota’s members of the House of Representatives are back in their home districts gauging how constituents feel about federal issues. That feedback will also include town hall meetings for a number of Congress members including Reps. Tim Walz, Collin Peterson and Michele Bachmann. Will Minnesota’s town halls get as rowdy as ones around the nation? Time will tell. Here’s what Minnesota’s Congressional delegation was up to this week.
Rep. Tim Walz toured the new Veterans Administration Community-Based Outpatient Clinic in Rochester on Monday. “This is one small part of paying back a debt that can never be paid to our veterans,” he said.
Walz hosted a kitchen-table listening session on Wednesday with constituents who have experienced severe hardships under the current health care system. “To kill health care reform is to condemn more people to the stories we just heard,” he told the media following the meeting.
Also on Wednesday, Walz joined Sen. Al Franken for a tour of St. Cloud’s VA Medical Center and held a private meeting with VA officials.
Walz has planned a two-hour town hall meeting for Thursday, Aug. 20, at Mankato East High School. Doors will open at 5:30 pm.
Rep. John Kline has been railing against No Child Left Behind in the wake of school performance numbers being released this week. “While its overall goal of ensuring children are not systematically left behind in our nation’s schools is right on target, the heavy-handed involvement of the federal government in administering the program has tied the hands of local schools and districts and prevented them from making the targeted decisions necessary to address their specific challenges,” said Kline.
Kline does not have a town hall meeting scheduled but has told the media that he is meeting with chambers of commerce and will host an education roundtable. He is also planning a telephone town hall meeting.
Rep. Erik Paulsen will be hosting a telephone town hall meeting and a get-together with various interest groups in the district.
Rep. Betty McCollum held a health care town hall in July. The Strib reports that she’s considering hosting another.
Rep. Keith Ellison, on a tour of Africa, is talking with leaders, activists and non-governmental organizations about genocide, HIV, malaria, poverty, violence against women and a host of other issues impacting the continent. On Twitter Thursday, he said he couldn’t wait to get home. “Niarobi: Mpls next. Praises! Not that I don’t love Africa. Khartoum, Darfur, Juba, Niarobi, Kisumu, Dadaab, but there’s no place like home.”
Rep. Michele Bachmann will hold a health care town hall meeting on the 27th, but details are still in the works.
Rep. Collin Peterson has scheduled a series of town hall meetings — three so far. On is on Friday in Willmar at 2 p.m. at the Kandiyohi County Health and Human Services Building. The other is Monday in Bemidji.
Rep. James Oberstar chastised states this week that have been slow in implementing their stimulus projects. “Unfortunately, a few states have fallen far behind in putting their Recovery Act highway formula funds to work. Florida has been the slowest state in utilizing its funding allocation, while Hawaii and South Carolina rank 50th and 49th respectively.”
Officials in Florida have shot back saying their projects are more complicated.
Oberstar will be touring transportation projects around the state funded by the stimulus package.
Sen. Amy Klobuchar was in New Hampshire on Monday to promote tourism. Klobuchar also addressed the growing problem of cell phones in prisons. “Inmates should not be allowed to continue to commit crimes once they are locked up. We need to stop prisoners from using smuggled cell phones to continue their illegal activities.”
Klobuchar has also been working on a 20-year-old murder case involving a Minnesota woman who was killed in New York.
Minnesota’s senior senator is renewing her fight for a passenger’s bill of rights following the Continental “nightmare flight” last Friday in Rochester, in which passengers were planebound for six hours. “I think it is long overdue. Time and time again we keep being told, ‘Oh, it’s going to be OK, you don’t need any minimum standards for passengers,’ and then something like this happens,” Klobuchar said.
Klobuchar has no town halls scheduled but will tour more then 20 Minnesota counties in the next few weeks.
Sen. Al Franken was part of a dairy farmers forum on Wednesday. While the forum was open to the public, organizers noted that the meeting would stay on topic. Franken also toured the VA in St. Cloud with Rep. Tim Walz on Wednesday.
Franken toured the Natural Resources Research Institute in Duluth on Thursday to talk about Great Lakes restoration projects.
Franken spokeswoman Jess McIntosh told the Park Rapids Enterprise that Franken will be traveling the state in coming weeks. “He’s hosting a couple of roundtables to hear from key constituencies on the health care reform debate, meeting with leaders in the agriculture community, touring the Mayo Clinic and other Minnesota businesses and institutions, and, of course, the State Fair.”














7 Comments »
Comment posted August 15, 2009 @ 9:09 pm
I guess residents of the state of Minnesota will not get a chance to tell our elected representatives what we think of 0bama’s healthcare proposal.
Comment posted August 17, 2009 @ 9:06 am
you can tell them all you want – call them or email them. Or were you just looking for a public forum to claim your 15 minutes of fame?
Comment posted August 17, 2009 @ 11:33 am
Here are Bachmann’s health-care “forum” details. Conveniently scheduled during the middle of the afternoon, and it’s a guarantee that Bachmann will take no questions.
Health Care Reform Public Forum
With special guest, Congressman Michael Burgess, M.D.
Thursday, August 27th
Doors open at 1:45 pm
Forum runs 2:45 pm to 4:00 pm
Oak-Land Junior High School
820 Manning Avenue North, Lake Elmo
Along with my special guest, Congressman Michael Burgess, who practiced medicine before coming to Congress and who sits on one of the House committees with jurisdiction over the health care reform legislation, we’ll be discussing the proposals that are making their way through Congress and hearing your thoughts on this important issue. I hope you’ll join us for this critical discussion.
Comment posted August 19, 2009 @ 9:09 am
Well thomas, apathy, which is what I am picking up from you is what got us to this godforsaken point. If you are against this socialist takeover of our country, then you need to get to any townhall on the Bamster’s Healthcare issue and speak up. It is how the left has been gaining power. We need to do likewise but better.
Comment posted August 20, 2009 @ 11:43 pm
Wake up people! Outside of Congress (who has there own royal health plan) this nebulous legislation could in the future affect your very life! Now, I’m not a fan of the insurance companies, and it is true that our present system needs improvement, this governmental takeover (or repackaged co-ops PLEASE! is the precursor to single payer governmental healthcare! Barack wants single payer…..Barney want single payer (but does’nt have the votes) …Look what the government has done to medicare and medicaid…. BROKE worse than broke owning billions…Then there is social security and the POST OFFICE! they can’t even deliver the mail …5+ Billion in debt. Canadian health care is broke….my relatives will attest to it. In Britain 64 years old and no bybass surgery….Ted Kennedy would have been dead for months. But the real question has not been addressed. If Britain and Canada is so bad, why don’t they change?…..Because if this is passed, it is almost impossible to rescind the law. Lets take it slow…Tort reform/change interstate prohibition of insurance/rescind anti trust laws to let any group of individuals get group rates. let people control the first 1-2K of their health care expenses to help eliminate the lack of motivation to save money. Let doctors create HMO’s/Look at the Mayo Clinic and Cleveland Clinic health care for their folks and see how they provide first class health care for minimum cost. Don’t let this largely manufactured issue open the door to socializewd medicine. It could kill you.
Comment posted August 25, 2009 @ 10:01 pm
Well from the looks of those schedules, they made dang sure no one can catch up to them to ask any questions regarding the ObamaCare issues. I guess this is what it looks like when run around, trying to look busy!
Comment posted August 27, 2009 @ 12:05 pm
Why is Amy K working on all these extraneous issues and not holding a Very valualble town hall meeting regarding Obama Care. OMG there is nothing more important than defeating this socialist program.
Is she sticking her head in the sand and drinking the kool aid too?
Bob Cooper
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