Posted by
PoliCzar on Tuesday, January 09, 2007 2:05:44 PM
On January 8th, the AP reported something quite interesting. ‘Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger on Monday proposed extending health coverage to
California's 6.5 million uninsured residents, promising to spread the
cost among businesses, individuals, hospitals, insurers and the
government. Under Schwarzenegger's plan, all Californians would be
required to have insurance, although plans for the poorest people would
be subsidized. Businesses with 10 or more employees would have to offer
insurance to workers or pay 4 percent of their payroll into a state
fund. Smaller businesses would be exempt.’
There are so many
questions about this ‘plan’ it’s worrisome. For starters, isn’t this
similar to the plan that Hillary Clinton has talked about for years,
and is sure to be a part of her platform for her run in ’08? Yes, it
is. Looks like Arnold is moving more and more left with each decision.
Perhaps he was high on some medication after his skiing accident broke
his leg. I would advise him to make sure the pills weren’t given to him
by the California Democratic Party.
More questions about this ‘plan’:
Who determines who is too poor to afford health insurance? What is the monetary figure?
This
has not been stated. So if you make $25,000 a year do you still have to
pay? Or is it only those who make less than $15,000 a year? No numbers
were given at the time of this article.
You must also understand
that this includes a lot of illegal aliens as well, which is amazing.
Health insurance companies track their database via social security
#’s. I suppose all of the illegals who will be receiving this for free
will just make up a number. I suppose this is one way to find out who
is legal and who isn’t, right?
What if you don’t want to pay for
health insurance? Such as those people who just work the minimum to get
by and don’t really care about health insurance for example.
There
are those people who work day-labor, fast food joints, multiple
construction jobs for under the table money. This is also technically
illegal, but people do it anyway. What if they don’t want health
insurance? Under this plan, technically many people will have to pay
for it, it isn’t free. It sounds to me like the plan is to insure 1.2
million ‘poor’ people and some people for free. But then again, the
Governor’s language is not very clear. It sounds like if you are too
poor to pay or don’t want to pay for it, the state will take care of
you. So how would this stop anybody from paying in general? Why should
I pay, when my neighbor refuses to? Very confusing isn’t it?
What happens when premiums rise in the insurance industry?
Will
the 4% charged to businesses increase to 10%? 20%? Who will control
this? It is apparent that the governor is expanding the size of the
state’s government. Certainly there must be control somewhere and the
creation of a huge bureaucracy is certainly not conservative in my
book. And you can bet insurance companies will have contingency plans
for these fees. Those people who can afford it will be paying much more
in the long run.
Why aren’t they concentrating on the corruption
in many hospitals, with over-billing and crazy fees on their patients
first before mandating health care for all? Simply charging hospitals
4% will not stop them from increasing fees.
What exactly is covered under the health care plan from the Gov?
Everything?
There are no more co-pays? Prescription drugs are now free? Not so!
There is no way that doctors will work without receiving the office
co-pay. And I’m sure the pharmaceutical companies would be interested
in knowing how much of a discount people will receive on their meds.
As
we can see there are a lot of unanswered questions. Although the
governor means well and his idea, on the surface, seems like it would
help alot of people. His decision on how to pay for this, however, is
certainly not a fiscally responsible one.
California Republicans
reacted "Imposing a new jobs tax on employers of any size and expanding
costly government mandates is the wrong approach," Assembly Republican
leader Mike Villines said in a statement, predicting the proposal would
"devastate our economy."
The people who can afford the system
ultimately will suffer increased costs in the end. There are too many
questions with too few answers. The governor should rethink this
‘socialist plan’.