Because we must revisited
Posted by preparedcitizens on October 14, 2008
King County to lay off up to 255 more workers
By Keith Ervin
Seattle Times staff reporter
Financially ailing King County will send layoff notices to as many as 255 employees today, on top of 150 jobs already eliminated.
<snip>
Without help from Olympia, the “lifeboat” programs would be halted and 135 more jobs eliminated June 30, according to the county budget office. Lifeboat programs include the Northshore public-health clinic; the White Center family-planning clinic; winter shelter for the homeless; vaccinations; and efforts to control tuberculosis, pandemic flu and sexually transmitted diseases.
the article, in it’s entirety, is located here
Imagine that. Wow! What a blow.
Seattle and King County had taken the lead as a pandemic preparedness planners. From comic books to DVDs, under the leadership of director, David Fleming, Seattle and King County led the charge.
Their website contains is a treasure chest of preparedness information.
If these types of budget cuts can happen there – they will happen here. There really is only one answer and only one response.
Citizens have to rise up to the occasion simply because we must. Our health, the health of our families, the health of members of our communities who are at risk is at stake.
The cost of reinventing the wheel – In today’s economy maybe the wheel would not have been invented.
I am not complaining about money, not in the least. In my very humble opinion, money isn’t going to be the end all and be all in the answer to pandemic preparedness. Once again, we have to rethink how we have traditionally solved our problems.
We have absolutely NO MONEY. We have had $17 dollars in our savings account for about a year now and after bills are paid $0 in checking <b>yet we go on</b>. We eat, we sleep, and we volunteer. No funds coming in but we do what we can. Perhaps if we had had money I wouldn’t be doing what I try to do, increase awareness. If money was available I may have been busy feathering our retirement nest instead. Doing what you love to do with whatever resources that you may have is a wonderful challenge.
My husbands employer forgot to pay him this week (an oversight, which will be corrected, from going from disability to front line pay). The mortgage and car insurance won’t get paid for a few weeks while this is corrected. I mention this not as a complaint – not at all. We slept well last night. When things are beyond your control, you work on them but you don’t let them order your day.
We go on because we must. We help others because we must. We volunteer because we must. There simply will be no other way to knock over this huge wall that is pandemic preparedness awareness.
When the wall finally does topple we will all realize a much brighter day as long as we do not allow the things that are challenges to our success, the bricks falling on us in the process, to knock us out of the process.
Onward and upward













