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Drug Initiative Would Help Not Only the Poor

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In “Drug Firms’ $50-Million California Prescription” (Golden State, July 25), Michael Hiltzik writes that Proposition 78 “would set up a prescription discount program for elderly residents and families earning less than 150% of the federal poverty level. (The benchmark would be $58,050 for a family of four.)”

His dollar figure is correct, but this is in fact 300% of the federal poverty level. According to the Census Bureau, median income for families of four in California is $67,814.

Thus the competing prescription drug initiative sponsored by organized labor in Proposition 79 -- with a threshold of 400% of the poverty level, or $77,400 -- reaches well beyond poor and low-income people to include those earning 14% more than the average Californian. This would be an unprecedented new entitlement and one that raises serious questions about the proper limits of state government in our healthcare market.

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David Gollaher

President

and Chief Executive

California

Healthcare Institute

La Jolla

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