Think That Casting a Ballot Isn’t Worth Your Time? Here’s Why You Must Make a Trip to the Voting Booth

Despite the pre-election tsunami of pandering political ads, canvassers and online banter about the candidates and initiatives on your local ballots, only about 40 percent of all eligible voters in the United States submit their ballots during the midterms (down from about 60 percent during presidential elections, according to the United States Elections Project).
Since every seat in the U.S. House of Representatives is up for grabs — along with approximately one-third of all Senate seats, dozens of governorships, and countless state and local legislative positions — it’s critical that you cast your vote for the most qualified individuals to serve in those posts. Here’s why.
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This Senator Has a Plan to Fight America’s Looming Physician Shortage

New Mexico, like many states, is seeing signs of the looming nationwide physician shortage. All but one county is facing a serious gap between the need for primary care physicians and available local doctors. Experts estimate that more than 1,400 doctors are currently practicing in the state, more than 200 short of what they need, and obstacles like the cost of med school are in the way. Especially with New Mexico’s expansive rural population, it’s a major problem. That’s why U.S. Senator Mark Udall is out to fix it, and offer a nationwide solution at the same time. Along with Senator Martin Heinrich, Udall introduced the Increasing Primary Care Access Act, which aims to improve training programs and hold the medical education system more accountable, all the in name of increasing access to healthcare. The goal of the bill is to equip the education system with the tools to serve the demand for newly trained doctors, including five specific programs:

  • Centers of excellence that focus on primary care in med schools
  • Incentive programs to encourage med students to choose residencies in primary care
  • Reauthorization for the Teacher Health Center program, to create community care centers that can host primary care residents
  • Committing graduate medical education funds to areas experiencing primary care provider shortages
  • Funding workforce analysis centers to improve residencies in underserved areas.

Meanwhile, Senator Dean Heller of Nevada has joined Udall in introducing another bill, focusing specifically on healthcare access for rural veterans. Meaning there’s still hope before America’s physician shortage gets out of hand.

This Is What the Path to Citizenship Really Looks Like

One of the criticisms of the immigration reform bill making it’s way through Congress is that it’s going to give amnesty to illegal immigrants. Makes getting citizenship sound easy, doesn’t it? Maybe this graphic will help you get a better idea of what “amnesty” really means. Immigrants have to be continuously employed for 10 years, they don’t get benefits and they must pay more than $2,000. That’s a lot of hurdles to jump over.