Posted on 04/14/2010 3:30:20 AM PDT by Son House
Friday, Walz toured Austin, talking with local business owners about their concerns regarding health care reform, regulatory agencies, availability of credit, pork barrel spending, energy and the cap-and-trade strategy, which allows facilities to buy and sell pollution credits in order to meet a national limit on greenhouse gas emissions.
Walz stopped by Jims SuperFresh Produce, 2101 Fourth St. NW, Donkers Appliance, 1107 First Ave. SW and Medicap Pharmacy, 1109 W. Oakland Ave., to talk with business owners before making his way to Main Streets Town Center for a roundtable discussion Friday morning.
Much of discussion was focused Friday on health care reform, with corporate manager of regulatory affairs for Hormel, Mark Roberts discussing the negative effect of resulting taxable subsidies on the companys post-retirement benefits.
Right now were trying to understand what the cost will be, he told Walz. It will put us at an economic disadvantage, compared to businesses that dont offer this.
Walz said he was hearing more positive responses on the legislation from small business owners.
Im optimistic on this. We can still change whats bad and keep the good, he said.
Financial regulation was also discussed, as US Bank President Dick Boerger voiced frustration with inability of community banks to lend because of tight regulations.
Weve got to get credit moving into community banks, and into rural areas, Walz responded.
Tim Carroll, of Cedar River Horse Logging, discussed pending stringent trucking regulations.
Ive been in business 19 years, and this will take me out, he said.
Other concerns brought up included immigration, to which Walz argued the burden of verifying citizenship should not fall on cities or employers but rather that the government needs a new process.
We, as a country, can do better on this... law and order is OK, Walz said.
Dr. Zigang Dong of the Hormel Institute spent his turn to talk on thanking Congress for its $1.5 million in support of the institute.
This is very important for us to continue to grow, Dong said, explained the funding allows for state of the art research equipment and attracts world renowned scientists to Austin.
Walz concluded by saying he visited Austin to explain the implications of health care reform and bring any concerns notably financial back to Washington.
We didnt do a great job of getting the information out, and we need to do that now, he said of health care details.
Ive been in business 19 years, and this will take me out, he said.
Ive been in business 19 years, and this will take me out, he said.”
The Ivy League sophomores running DC aren’t about to let a peasant logger talk them out of their implementation of nirvana for all of our betterment.
So now the dems want to find out what devastation they’ve wrought? I say FU you to anyone who supports or voted for this POS legislation. The Pro=American people should vote every single one of these mini-dictators out of office!
Well those “ivy league” folks are going to “hear” from the “peasants” come November!
That's funny, they seemed perfectly happy to use individual's health care problems to force socialized medicine down all of our throats. I guess individuals only matter when they advance socialism.
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