Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Screw The Military--300% In Health Care Premiums

It is very interesting that the one major job of government, military defense, would be one of the first major victims in this race to the bottom! Why is this? Could it be that they know the military will not riot in the streets or picket the White House?


Making the military pay more for their insurance is the wrong place to be cutting expenses. These people put their lives on the line each and every day whether they are stateside or overseas. Isn't it our responsibility to pay for their care both during their service and afterward? 


Not only are they being made to pay more, but the percentage increases over 300% is atrocious. Why are the increases so draconian? You could argue that they could not replace their health plan with something in the market, yet that is the intent of the proposal. To drive them into the health care exchanges that have not even been set up yet!


Many of our servicemen (especially the lower ranking members) end up living on food stamps and other government programs, is this right?. Should we be proud that those tasked with protecting us from foreign enemies are made to subside on help from the government? We say no!


In this country, there is a tradition that the military is subservient to  civilian leadership. That is wonderful. However, one wonders if this abuse will lead to some in the military to taking the situation into their own hands? Could it happen? We do hope not, however, there is a chance and something like this outrageous treatment could be the "straw that breaks the back."


And one last thought, if there is such a need to cut spending (which we do understand) why does not the Administration (Congress and all administrative departments, also) start with trimming its staff and benefits and start leading rather than believing they are "deserving" of all the goodies they get?


Conservative Tom



TRASHING TRICARE

OBAMA TO CUT HEALTHCARE BENEFITS FOR ACTIVE DUTY AND RETIRED US MILITARY

AP Images
AP Images
The Obama administration’s proposed defense budget calls for military families and retirees to pay sharply more for their healthcare, while leaving unionized civilian defense workers’ benefits untouched. The proposal is causing a major rift within the Pentagon, according to U.S. officials. Several congressional aides suggested the move is designed to increase the enrollment in Obamacare’s state-run insurance exchanges.
The disparity in treatment between civilian and uniformed personnel is causing a backlash within the military that could undermine recruitment and retention.
The proposed increases in health care payments by service members, which must be approved by Congress, are part of the Pentagon’s $487 billion cut in spending. It seeks to save $1.8 billion from the Tricare medical system in the fiscal 2013 budget, and $12.9 billion by 2017.
Many in Congress are opposing the proposed changes, which would require the passage of new legislation before being put in place.
“We shouldn’t ask our military to pay our bills when we aren’t willing to impose a similar hardship on the rest of the population,” Rep. Howard “Buck” McKeon, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee and a Republican from California, said in a statement to the Washington Free Beacon. “We can’t keep asking those who have given so much to give that much more.”
Administration officials told Congress that one goal of the increased fees is to force military retirees to reduce their involvement in Tricare and eventually opt out of the program in favor of alternatives established by the 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, aka Obamacare.
“When they talked to us, they did mention the option of healthcare exchanges under Obamacare. So it’s in their mind,” said a congressional aide involved in the issue.
Military personnel from several of the armed services voiced their opposition to a means-tested tier system for Tricare, prompting Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Martin Dempsey to issue a statement Feb. 21.
Dempsey said the military is making tough choices in cutting defense spending. In addition to the $487 billion over 10 years, the Pentagon is facing automatic cuts that could push the total reductions to $1 trillion.
“I want those of you who serve and who have served to know that we’ve heard your concerns, in particular your concern about the tiered enrollment fee structure for Tricare in retirement,” Dempsey said. “You have our commitment that we will continue to review our health care system to make it as responsive, as affordable, and as equitable as possible.”
Under the new plan, the Pentagon would get the bulk of its savings by targeting under-65 and Medicare-eligible military retirees through a tiered increase in annual Tricare premiums that will be based on yearly retirement pay.
Significantly, the plan calls for increases between 30 percent to 78 percent in Tricare annual premiums for the first year. After that, the plan will impose five-year increases ranging from 94 percent to 345 percent—more than 3 times current levels.
According to congressional assessments, a retired Army colonel with a family currently paying $460 a year for health care will pay $2,048.
The new plan hits active duty personnel by increasing co-payments for pharmaceuticals and eliminating incentives for using generic drugs.
The changes are worrying some in the Pentagon who fear it will severely impact efforts to recruit and maintain a high-quality all-volunteer military force. Such benefits have been a key tool for recruiting qualified people and keeping them in uniform.
“Would you stay with a car insurance company that raised your premiums by 345 percent in five years? Probably not,” said the congressional aide. “Would anybody accept their taxes being raised 345 percent in five years? Probably not.”
A second congressional aide said the administration’s approach to the cuts shows a double standard that hurts the military.
“We all recognize that we are in a time of austerity,” this aide said. “But defense has made up to this point 50 percent of deficit reduction cuts that we agreed to, but is only 20 percent of the budget.”
The administration is asking troops to get by without the equipment and force levels needed for global missions. “And now they are going to them again and asking them to pay more for their health care when you’ve held the civilian workforce at DoD and across the federal government virtually harmless in all of these cuts. And it just doesn’t seem fair,” the second aide said.
Spokesmen for the Defense Department and the Joint Chiefs of Staff did not respond to requests for comment on the Tricare increases.
The massive increases beginning next year appear timed to avoid upsetting military voters in a presidential election year, critics of the plan say.
Additionally, the critics said leaving civilian workers’ benefits unchanged while hitting the military reflect the administration’s effort to court labor unions, as government unions are the only segment of organized labor that has increased in recent years.
As part of the increased healthcare costs, the Pentagon also will impose an annual fee for a program called Tricare for Life, a new program that all military retirees automatically must join at age 65. Currently, to enroll in Tricare for Life, retirees pay the equivalent of a monthly Medicare premium.
Under the proposed Pentagon plan, retirees will be hit with an additional annual enrollment fee on top of the monthly premium.
Congressional aides said that despite unanimous support among the military chiefs for the current healthcare changes, some senior officials in the Pentagon are opposing the reforms, in particular the tiered system of healthcare.
“It doesn’t matter what the benefit is, whether it’s commissary, PX, or healthcare, or whatever … under the rationale that if you raise your hand and sign up to serve, you earn a base set of benefits, and it should have nothing to do with your rank when you served, and how much you’re making when you retire,” the first aide said.
Military service organizations are opposing the healthcare changes and say the Pentagon is “means-testing” benefits for service personnel as if they were a social program, and not something earned with 20 or more years of military service.
Retired Navy Capt. Kathryn M. Beasley, of the Military Officers Association of America, said the Military Coalition, 32 military service and veterans groups with an estimated 5 million members, is fighting the proposed healthcare increases, specifically the use of mean-testing for cost increases.
“We think it’s absolutely wrong,” Beasley told the Free Beacon. “This is a breach of faith” for both the active duty and retiree communities.
Congressional hearings are set for next month.
The Veterans of Foreign Wars on Feb. 23 called on all military personnel and the veterans’ community to block the healthcare increases.
“There is no military personnel issue more sacrosanct than pay and benefits,” said Richard L. DeNoyer, head of the 2 million-member VFW. “Any proposal that negatively impacts any quality of life program must be defeated, and that’s why the VFW is asking everyone to join the fight and send a united voice to Congress.”
Senior Air Force leaders are expected to be asked about the health care cost increases during a House Armed Services Committee hearing scheduled for Tuesday.
Congress must pass all the proposed changes into law, as last year’s defense authorization bill preemptively limited how much the Pentagon could increase some Tricare fees, while other fees already were limited in law.
Tricare for Life, Tricare Prime, and Tricare Standard increases must be approved, as well as some of the pharmacy fee increases, congressional aides said.
Current law limits Tricare fee increases to cost of living increases in retirement pay.

6 comments:

  1. One additional comment that is appropriate and should have been included. Obama and his minions indicated that it was returning servicemen, ex-servicemen and other patriots who were the enemy and not Islamic radicals.

    Remember what he said in San Francisco that it is those of us who love our guns and our religions that were the problem.

    Sorry, we are the solution and he is the problem. Remember this when you vote in November!

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  2. "Obama and his minions indicated that it was returning servicemen, ex-servicemen and other patriots who were the enemy and not Islamic radicals."

    Cite the speech and the date where Obama said this. I will fact-check it for you.

    Here are the other 18 ways to cut the defense budget by $1.2 trillion over the next 10 years..


    http://www.downsizinggovernment.org/defense/cut_military_spending

    --David

    P.S. I would be interested to hear your thoughts on the Michigan primary results.

    ReplyDelete
  3. David, here is one posting to clarify my statements on military returnees.

    http://americaswatchtower.com/2009/04/14/homeland-security-classifies-returning-us-veterans-as-potential-terrorist-threat/

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  4. Regarding the Michigan votes. They came out a bit different than I had thought they would. Romney won because Santorum encouraged Democrats to vote for him and that really got under a lot of peoples skins. It might also have made some who were considering the senator, to vote for Romney instead. That was a bone headed idea.

    Newt did not really campaign in Michigan but I was surprised that he was stomped by Ron Paul who came in a fairly strong third even though he only in the last couple days spent time here.

    When I wrote my article a couple weeks ago thinking Santorum would win, barely, I did not expect him to pull the "Democrats vote for me" lever. Additionally, although I am strong on social issues, that should not be the topic of this years campaign which has to be the economy. So he diverged from the real message and a friend told me he thought he had "gone a bit weird."

    So now it is onto Super Tuesday. Newt should do better in the South. Santorum might have seen the best days in the mirror, unless he gets back on message. Ron Paul will continue to pull 15% of the vote, we do not suspect there will be much more than that.

    The campaign at this moment, which could change any time, is definitely Romney's to lose.

    One last comment: Everyone in the media says that Romney barely won his home state. Yes, he was born here and lived here for a while, but he has not lived here for 40 plus years. In fact, he says that his favorite team used to be the Tigers but after living in Boston for 40 years, now it is the Boston Red Sox.

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  5. Thanks. Some interesting observations there. I think Santorum may have gone a bit "over the top" with his statements on religion and college education. He already had the social conservative vote, so why go overboard with it? He needs to get back to jobs and the economy.

    As for Super Tuesday, I will be watching for the results in Georgia and Tennessee. Georgia is a "must" for Gingrich, or else he loses what is left of his credibility, and his billionaire buddy may stop funding him. Tennessee will tell us whether Romney is actually over the hump. If he loses in Georgia, Tennessee, and Ohio, that will slow his momentum. The hardcore conservatives such as yourself will vote for him vs. Obama, of course, but not with the same enthusiasm.

    For the 2016 presidential election (assuming Romney loses this time), the Tea Party conservatives need to settle on ONE candidate early to put up against the Republican Establishment candidate who will come in with all the support and Wall Street money. I don't know. Maybe they should have their own nominating convention before the main primary. Call is a "pre-primary primary" at CPAC and hold it around November, 2015. If they had done that this time, Romney would not have a chance. The Santorum/Gingrich votes would have beaten him. Even now, I think Santorum would have a chance of winning if Gingrich would drop out.

    --David

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  6. This is relevant for the police actions against U.S. Marines who have joined Occupy Wall Street. Congress just passed this horrible Defense Authorization Act hat gives the president the authority to arrest U.S. citizens and hold them indefinitely without trial as suspected "domestic terrorists" just as if they were al-Qaeda affiliates.

    http://www.debatepolitics.com/conspiracy-theories/115140-ndaa-2012-and-military-veterans.html

    In my fact-checking I have not yet seen any evidence that veterans are joining extremists groups in disproportionate numbers, and until Homeland Security can come up with some data, they should not be issuing "warnings" about it. It is bad enough that these men and women had to go for years to Iraq. Now they come home and have this hanging over them as they try to find employment. I can appreciate the outrage.

    --David

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