For more than ten years, one small but effective government program has united Republicans and Democrats.
The Roman Reed Spinal Cord Injury Research Act of 1999 was twice renewed with nearly unanimous votes from both sides of the aisle.
But-- there is no money.
AB 190 is the non-partisan, non-tax answer...
WHY CALIFORNIA REPUBLICANS CAN (and Democrats)SHOULD SUPPORT AB 190 (Wieckowski, D-Fremont)
By Don C. Reed
AB 190 is a creative funding mechanism for the California spinal cord injury research program—which virtually ALL Republican legislators (and Democrats too) have supported for over a decade.
California’s spinal cord injury research program was established by the Roman Reed Spinal Cord Injury Research Act of 1999, named after my paralyzed son. Small but effective, “Roman’s law” has been twice renewed by near-unanimous majorities. In 2004 it earned every legislator’s vote except one; in 2009 it received every vote on both sides of the aisle.
Administered by the University of California system, the Roman Reed program is headquartered at UC Irvine.
Times being what they are, however, there is no tax money for it.
AB 190, a non-tax measure, would provide funding to continue the successful program.
Here are five reasons why AB 190 should be approved.
1. AB 190 is fiscally prudent, with zero tax impact; the spinal cord injury research program it supports will be funded by a modest ($3) fine on traffic violations, similar to state programs in Kentucky, South Carolina, and other states. This is an appropriate nexus of funding, because car crash is a major cause of spinal cord injury paralysis.
2. AB 190 is NOT “another stem cell program”. Of 151 projects funded in the ten years of the program’s existence, only nine (9) involved stem cells: five adult, four embryonic (using President Bush’s approved stem cell lines). Since 2008, no stem cell projects have been funded.
3. AB 190 supports a research program that is revenue positive: for its investment of $14.6 million dollars over ten years, a return of nearly $64 million ($63, 867, 216) was realized in add-on grants from the National Institutes of Health and other sources: new money for California.
4. AB 190 strongly supports biomedicine, one of the mainstays of the modern California economy, already our number two industry, and vital to our state’s recovery.
5. Even the smallest improvement in a paralyzed person’s life benefits taxpayers. Due to the staggering costs of paralysis (averaging $775,000 in the first year alone) most patients end up on Medi-Cal and Medicare. Recovering the use of arm muscles, for example, might allow a paralyzed person to drive, increasing his/her independence, and lowering attendant costs.
Important: a misunderstanding has arisen that AB 190 funds would go to the Roman Reed Foundation. This is not correct. The Roman Reed Foundation is a private entity which raises funds for paralysis research, primarily through sporting events. It has no connection to Assembly Bill 190.
Want to help? Consider a FAX or a phone call to the two Republicans on the Public Safety Committee which will be voting on the issue, probably next Tuesday.
Vice Chair Steve Knight, phone 916-319-2036, FAX 916-319-2136
Assemblymember Curt Hagman, phone 916-319-2060, FAX 916-319-2160
For more information, go to www.stemcellbattles.com