When health care access is a legal puzzle

 


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CLIMATE CASH: State Rep. Mark Cusack, co-chair of the Joint Committee on Telecommunications, Utilities, and Energy, received $4,100 in contributions on Wednesday – much of which came from lobbyists representing the state’s energy interests – as his sweeping energy bill advances in the State House. Jordan Wolman has more. 


GATHER INFORMATION BEFORE SUPPORTING THESE CHANGES! 

IT WILL STOP SUCCESSFUL PROGRAMS TO MOVE FORWARD TO 

IMPROVE THE ENVIRONMENT & REDUCE CONSUMPTION.

NOT ONLY HAS THESE PROGRAMS CREATED JOBS, BUT ALSO 

PUT ENERGY SAVINGS IN PEOPLE'S POCKETS!


OPINION: The proposed energy bill “is essentially a fossil fuel industry wish list,” write Cindy Luppi, the national field director for Clean Water Action; Kyle Murray, director of state program implementation at Acadia Center; Caitlin Peale Sloan, the Conservation Law Foundation’s vice president for Massachusetts; and John Walkey, director of climate justice and waterfront initiatives at GreenRoots. We still have five years to hit our 2030 targets, they say, and legislators must reject this proposal and recommit to a future built on affordability, innovation, and climate responsibility.  

November 17, 2025

By CommonWealth Beacon Staff

Thirty years in, the non-profit health care access-focused law firm Health Law Advocates has no shortage of individual and systemic crises on its plate. 

On the monthly Health or Consequences episode of The Codcast, John McDonough of the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health and Paul Hattis of the Lown Institute talked with Matt Selig, the executive director of Health Law Advocates about the day-to-day work of its 42 staff members and the “devastating” series of federal policy changes rolled out over the last year. 

Health Law Advocates represents about 1,500 people a year free of charge, Selig said. The group was created in 1995 by lawyer and advocate Steve Rosenfeld, inspired by his time volunteering to take calls on the Healthcare for All helpline. 

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“A lot of people were calling about problems accessing healthcare, but they were actually legal issues, because the client's rights were being violated,” Selig said. “But there was a gap, because there was no place that he could really refer them to for legal representation, because most of the callers couldn't afford an attorney,” but they still made slightly too much to be eligible for legal help from groups who handle people on public benefits.  

Now in their 30th year and fielding thousands of calls every year, Selig said, Health Law Advocates check that potential clients are people who live in Massachusetts, make up to three times the federal poverty level, and have a healthcare access problem that staff can help them address. The income guidelines this year cover clients who make $46,950 as a single person or about $96,000 for a household of four. 

Their bread-and-butter work is includes medical debt problems or health insurance issues like problems qualifying for general enrollment or getting care to cover a specific service. Access to mental health care for young people is another broad area of focus, which involves representing families on issues in schools and special education programs, getting insurance coverage, services through state agencies, and advocacy in the juvenile justice system “where way too many kids with untreated mental illness end up,” Selig said. 

One example of their mental health work Selig offered involved a 4-year-old English language learner. The young girl can get physical when she becomes overwhelmed, he said, and had trouble coping when her preschool routine was disrupted. Once, she reacted badly to a change and pushed another student, “and when the dad came, she was surrounded by a group of, like, five adults yelling at her,” Selig said. 

Calls from the school became routine, with the parents told to pick their child up multiple days a week.  

“The little girl's mom tried advocating with the school, to provide some services that could address these very clear emotional challenges that the 4-year-old was having,” Selig said. “But the school did not provide any support services whatsoever, and eventually, another incident led to the little girl being removed from the school for three days.” 

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Health Law Advocates got involved after the suspension and made sure that if behavior problems occurred, the school would determine if it was related to her emotional disability. The child was able to stay in that preschool with these news systems in place until the legal group helped her family transition her to a new school. 

The non-profit has also worked to push state systems like MassHealth to improve care access. 

“Most of our policy advocacy involves improving the nitty-gritty of public policy,” Selig said. “The regulations and other policies and practices in the weeds that really affect access to healthcare as much, or sometimes even more, than statutes themselves, and are also easier to change.” 

During the episode, Selig, McDonough, and Hattis discuss the history and capacity of Health Law Advocates (3:00), their focus on children’s mental health and the worsening landscape of medical debt (20:00), and the risk to Massachusetts health care systems from federal policy shifts (28:45). 

AUDIT: Auditor Diana DiZoglio’s crusade to subject both the Legislature and governor’s office to the state’s public records law is turning to a familiar tactic: Go to the voters. And she’s putting her own muscle behind the effort, too. Chris Lisinski has more. 

EVs: Massachusetts needs to triple its rate of deployment of electric vehicle chargers through 2030 to meet its climate commitments, but a pair of delays are further hampering that push. Jordan Wolman has details.  

MATERNAL HEALTH: Mercy Medical Center in Springfield announced that it plans to temporarily halt maternity and newborn services starting December 8, sparking fears the hospital will be next in a decade-long statewide trend of maternity unit closures in a region where labor and delivery options have already dwindled. Hallie Claflin has more. 

OPINION: Chris Oates, founder of Legislata, tested AI by asking who he should vote for in last week’s local elections in Somerville. What he discovered left him worried about democracy.  

POLITICS: The Taiwanese government paid thousands of dollars to fly New England lawmakers to Taiwan for a multi-day visit this month that included a stay at a five-star hotel in Taipei and meetings with top officials, according to an ethics filing and legislators who took part in the trip. (WBUR) 

IMPRESSIVE ARTICLE!

LAW ENFORCEMENT: In New Bedford, a textbook example of how body cameras can work in practice – protecting officers from baseless claims and holding officers accountable if they are engaging in misconduct. (The New Bedford Light

ELECTIONS: After a ballot recount in the Fall River mayoral race, Mayor Paul Coogan retained his seat with 5848 votes to challenger Gabriel "Boomer" Amaral's 5629 votes. (The Herald News – paywall) 

ELECTIONS: In January, 250 years after Abigail Adams penned her famous letter urging her husband to “remember the ladies,” the first women-majority city council in Quincy's long history will take the oath of office. (The Patriot Ledger – paywall) 

BEACON HILL: Senate President Karen Spilka talks ICE raids, the state’s “rainy day” fund, cannabis, and Beacon Hill transparency. (GBH News) 

 
 
 
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