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Ill. health care town hall overflows

Georgia Garvey, Chicago Tribune

Issue date: 8/26/09 Section: News
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ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, Ill.-An Arlington Heights, Ill., town hall meeting on health care reform led to impassioned debate Monday afternoon, with overflow crowds chanting, carrying signs and forcing a second meeting.

U.S. Rep. Mark Kirk, a Republican from Highland Park, Ill., added the second session after about 800-on all sides of the debate_showed up to voice their opinions.

Similar town hall meetings on health care across the country in recent weeks have drawn large and vocal crowds. People at Monday's meeting alternately cheered, booed and applauded-but stayed mostly civil in the question-and-answer format. Meanwhile, those left outside during the first meeting chanted competing slogans, holding signs such as, "Tort reform, insurer choice" and "Health care for all."

Brian Dvoret of Wheeling, Ill., attended the first session and said he's unemployed and spends $1,000 a month to insure his family. Dvoret supports a public option and would like to buy into a group health plan.

"The health insurance companies are ripping us off," he said. "I'm not for saying other taxpayers need to support my bill, I don't want that. I want the ability of equal competition."

Others such as Alan Minoff of Wilmette, Ill., said they opposed the Obama administration's health care reform proposal and wanted lawmakers to slow down and reassess the plan.

"There are other programs proposed by Republicans which are very, very different ideas to reform health care," he said before the meeting. "It's not a rush."

The mostly middle-aged-and-older crowd in the first session tended to be more in favor of a public option, while a more mixed age group in the second session backed ideas such as tort reform and increasing insurer choice, two of Kirk's proposals.

Kirk said he wished more lawmakers would hold similar town halls, calling them the "voice of the American people." He also discussed his own proposal, which includes allowing people to buy insurance from providers in any state and reforming medical malpractice laws.
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