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NACDS urges passage of bailout bill

9/29/2008

ALEXANDRIA, Va. With the fate of financial bailout legislation still far from certain, the National Association of Chain Drug Stores is urging Congress to quickly pass the compromise financial bailout package hammered out by House and Senate negotiators over the weekend.

NACDS president and chief executive officer Steven Anderson submitted a letter to the bipartisan leadership in Congress today urging the passage of the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 as quickly as possible. The legislation, he told lawmakers, “is desperately needed to provide liquidity, stability and restored confidence to the global financial system and the U.S. economy.

“We urge Congress to act with all due speed to pass the [bill],” Anderson added. “The proposal has been perfected through diligent negotiations between the Administration and Congressional leaders in both parties—and it represents the best chance we have to avert financial disaster and restore our nation’s economic health.”

In late-breaking news, however, the House on Monday voted 228 to 205 to reject the bill over continuing concerns about the wisdom of bailing out troubled investment banks with taxpayer funds, the size of the relief package, executive compensation and other concerns. House and Senate leaders are continuing efforts to get legislation passed by the end of the week, but today’s failure to pass the bill sent the stock market plummeting yet again in a dismal repeat of recent trading days on Wall Street.

In his letter, Anderson reminded Congressional leaders that chain pharmacies “are an important segment of our national economy,” accounting for 2.5 million jobs, including 118,000 pharmacists, and pouring $33.6 billion into federal and state tax coffers annually.

“As the ‘face of neighborhood healthcare,’ drug stores see first hand the ill effects that economic distress has on families and communities,” Anderson noted. “A weak economy means more Americans without insurance and more people having trouble affording vital health care, like prescription medicines. Our patients, customers and employees all feel acutely the ill effects of this economic crisis and action is needed now.”

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