Porterville Recorder

Dialysis companies spend $111 million to kill ballot measure

- By SOPHIA BOLLAG

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Dialysis companies have contribute­d an extraordin­ary $111 million and counting to defeat a California ballot initiative that would cap their profits, the most any one side has spent on a U.S. ballot issue since at least 2002.

A $5 million donation from this week from dialysis provider Fresenius Medical Care pushed the anti-propositio­n 8 campaign's total past the $109 million pharmaceut­ical companies spent two years ago to defeat a measure limiting prescripti­on drug costs. More than $70 million has been spent on television and radio ads as well as consulting services in the last two months.

When corporate profits are at stake, campaign spending often balloons, said Kati Phillips of California Common Cause, which advocates campaign finance reform.

"Health care measures are expensive," she said. "There's a lot of money to be made off of sick people."

Dialysis companies make roughly $3 billion in annual profits from their California operations, according to nonpartisa­n Legislativ­e Analyst's Office.

For weeks, anti-propositio­n 8 ads have blanketed the California airwaves and feature dialysis patients saying passage could lead to clinic closures that endanger their lives. Dialysis providers say the measure is actually a tactic to pressure the companies to let workers unionize.

"We will spend what is necessary to protect patients from this dangerous and irresponsi­ble ballot measure," said Kathy Fairbanks, spokeswoma­n for the anti-propositio­n 8 campaign.

The campaign supporting the measure, led by the Service Employees Internatio­nal Unionunite­d Healthcare Workers West, has raised $18 million. Supporters say passage will ensure dialysis companies put patients before profits.

"These are huge corporatio­ns that have not been accountabl­e to consumers — the patients," campaign spokesman Sean Wherley said.

An Associated Press analysis found the campaign to defeat Propositio­n 8 is the most expensive effort on one side of a ballot measure anywhere in the country since the 2002 election, the earliest cycle for which data is available online. The AP reviewed California campaign finance records filed with the secretary of state and data compiled by the nonprofits Maplight and National Institute on Money in Politics, the leading authoritie­s on ballot measure spending.

Data from the National Institute on Money in Politics shows the most costly ballot measures in the country are in California, the nation's most populous state where reaching voters through political ads is very expensive.

The state keeps paper records prior to the 2002 election cycle in its archives. The secretary of state's office doesn't have reports on which campaigns were most expensive prior to that cycle, spokesman Sam Mahood said. Because of inflation, it's unlikely any surpassed $111 million.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY RICH PEDRONCELL­I ?? In this photo taken Monday, Sept. 24, 2018, Adrian Perez undergoes dialysis at a Davita Kidney Care clinic in Sacramento, Calif.
AP PHOTO BY RICH PEDRONCELL­I In this photo taken Monday, Sept. 24, 2018, Adrian Perez undergoes dialysis at a Davita Kidney Care clinic in Sacramento, Calif.

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