Opinion: In today’s pages: Hospital fees, banking fees and the fate of tuna
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What’s not to like about a proposed fee on California hospitals? The hospitals themselves support it, because it would bring in billions of dollars in federal funding to repay the hospitals and other health care providers for the medical care they give to poor people. The Times editorial board urges Gov. Schwarzenegger to see the logic and sign the bill to make it happen.
They call it overdraft protection, but there’s little to protect the consumer from the multibillion-dollar flow of money to banks that charge a fee over and over and over again to debit-card users whose accounts can’t cover their purchases. Often the fee is bigger than the purchase, but the customer simply doesn’t realize the account is overdrawn. The Times calls on the Federal Reserve to fix this with rules that require better consumer information, a choice for customers who don’t want the so-called protection and notification for the customer before that costly but unaffordable purchase is made.
And the board calls on Honduras to allow the return of President Manuel Zelaya -- with limited powers -- until the Nov. 29 election, though it also calls on the international community to make sure Zelaya understands he should not attempt to stay in power.
Let’s admit this openly: Tuna aren’t as awe-inspiring as whales. They don’t spout in the middle of the ocean or do a slow dive that ends with the farewell wave of a giant tail. Nonetheless, they need protection after drastic overfishing, writes Joshua Reichert of the Pew Environment Group. On the Times Op-Ed page, Reichert argues that fishing caps haven’t worked and that nothing but endangered-species status will save the Atlantic bluefin tuna.
Finally, energy journalist Richard Nemec writes that Los Angeles has been playing political musical chairs in determining leadership for the Department of Water and Power instead of hiring the experts it so desperately needs.
-- Karin Klein