Oklahoma State Senate
OFFICE OF SENATOR JAY PAUL GUMM
Atoka, Bryan, Coal, Johnston & Marshall Counties
For Immediate Release: May 28, 2008
Sen. Jay Paul Gumm
Profile of “Nick’s Law” Opponent Reveals True
Intentions
Autistic Children “Will Be Wards of the State
in Any Case,” Peterson Says
A “puff-piece” profile of the lawmaker leading the
fight against “Nick’s Law,” the autism insurance
bill, reveals his true intentions, according to Senator Jay
Paul Gumm.
The Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs (OCPA) distributed a profile
of Rep. Ron Peterson, R-Broken Arrow. The profile lauds the lawmaker’s
“courage” for blocking even consideration of Nick’s
Law when it arrived in the House of Representatives, noting Peterson’s
defense of “free enterprise.”
“There is nothing courageous about turning your back on children
who have no voice,” said Gumm, who wrote Nick’s Law.
“Praising Rep. Peterson’s stand against Nick’s
Law for its ‘free enterprise’ implications is the moral
equivalent of praising an abortionist who destroys life just to
make a buck. This is a lame defense of an unconscionable stand.”
Despite differences between the lawmakers, Gumm said he “believed
in his heart Rep. Peterson was sincere” in saying he might
consider the measure upon completion of an “independent”
actuarial study.
“The puff-piece – inadvertently, I would suspect –
pulls the curtain back and lets us see the ‘wizard’
for what his intentions truly are,” Gumm said. “Clearly,
Rep. Peterson and those in the insurance industry to whom he is
beholden will never allow Nick’s Law to be heard. The profile
is a puff-piece that hits families with autistic children like a
sledgehammer.”
A paragraph in the profile quotes Peterson as he belittles treatment
of autistic children and implies these children are hopeless, Gumm
related. “He apparently thinks autistic children are throwaway,
a lost cause,” he said.
Peterson said in the profile that the treatment that would be covered
by Nick’s Law is clinically unproven.
“The medical profession has stated there’s no reason
to believe behavioral therapy is any more effective than anything
else,” Peterson said. “The results are described as
marginal in any case, and these individuals will be wards of the
state in any case. So you’d have the cost without any benefit,
as best we can see.”
Gumm said he was shocked at the impudence of the statement. “With
one paragraph, Rep. Peterson tells every parent of every autistic
child that their child is not worth saving, not worth even trying
to save,” he said. “I cannot imagine anyone taking so
cavalier attitude toward life; it truly is fear-provoking.”
Trying to save children from an adult life as wards of the state
and giving their families some hope are the key purposes behind
Nick’s Law, Gumm related. “Aside from the distastefulness
of an elected official apparently considering the most vulnerable
among us as throwaway, let’s look at the financial end of
it,” he said.
“These ‘wards of the state’ will cost untold
millions in taxpayer dollars. Instead of expecting health insurance
to do what families pay premiums for and help these children, Rep.
Peterson is content to pass the eventual bill to taxpayers. In the
meantime, his so-called ‘courage’ is keeping children
locked behind the walls of autism. He is wrong on both counts.”
Oklahomans will have to assert the political power they have, guaranteed
in the state Constitution, to end insurance discrimination against
autistic children. To that end, parents pressing for autism insurance
coverage have vowed to continue the fight – over the next
eight months and back at the Capitol during the 2009 legislative
session.
Gumm said the parents are the ones showing real courage. “If
OCPA, or anyone else for that matter, wants to see real courage,
simply look into the eyes of these parents,” he said.
“Real courage is speaking truth to powerful interests; real
courage is never giving up on your children. These families have
shown unwavering strength in the face of antipathy and outright
hostility. There cause is righteous, and it is my honor to stand
alongside them, come what may.”
For more information
contact:
Sen. Gumm's Office: (405) 521-5586

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