Friday, March 11, 2011
Forums on LGA and Property Taxes
House Minority Leader Paul Thissen would like to invite you to an informal roundtable discussion about LGA and how local communities might attempt to deal with potential cuts.
Northfield Roundtable DiscussionWhen: Saturday, March 12th, 2011
10:00 a.m.
Where: Northfield Community Resource Center
Human Services Wing, 222 (HS222)
1651 Jefferson Parkway
Northfield, MN 55057
( map )Guests in Attendance include:
Former Tax Chair, Rep. Ann Lenczewski and Rep. Rick Hansen
Le Sueur Roundtable Discussion
When: Saturday, March 12th, 2011
1:00 p.m.
Where: Le Sueur High School
Commons
901 Ferry Street
Le Sueur, MN 56058
( map )
Guests in Attendance include:
Former Tax Chair, Rep. Ann Lenczewski, Rep. Terry Morrow, and Rep. Kathy Brynaert
Wednesday, March 9, 2011
Onward to Health Care Reform II
Onward to Health Care Reform II
It was disappointing that the T.R. Reid event scheduled for February 23rd was cancelled. Hopefully it can be rescheduled for later this year.
Health care issues are still brewing in the MN State Legislature. We attended an information house party on Sunday, February 27th, in Savage. Senator John Marty came to discuss health care reform at the state level. He was met by an enthusiast group of people with questions and concerns.
John started the conversation with a summary of the nine principles any health care reform must include. Those interested can find these principles at: http://mnhealthplan.org/principles.html. The Minnesota Health Act was drafted to meet these principles. John Marty, as the primary author, first introduced the bill to create the Minnesota Health Plan (MHP) in the previous legislative session. It passed four committees and was endorsed by over 70 Legislators. The bill has been re-introduced this session as; Senate File SF-8 and House File HF-51. Because of the change in the makeup of the Legislature, the bills will probably not be supported in this legislative biennium. At the house party, there was much discussion about the MHP; what it covers, the cost savings and how it would be funded. It is estimated we could save 20 to 25% as a state and still cover everyone’s health care needs.
We learned that Sen. Marty has authored another bill to address concerns over the high costs to insure people in our public Medical Assistance (MA) and Minnesota Care programs through HMO’s. The bill is SF-457, the “Managed care oversight and accountability in health care program contracts requirement”.
This bill:
- Directs the Dept. of Human Services to directly administer the 95,000 new MA recipients
- Specifies that, where we continue to contract with the HMO Plans, that the bids for these contracts be truly competitive
- Demands that the Plans receiving state business keep their books using Generally Accepted Accounting Principles and undergo regular audits
This bill is in response to concerns raised in earlier health committee meetings as noted in our previous article. Let’s hope the bill has strong bipartisan support!
There is interesting news from the Connecticut state government. In January 2012, their agency that administers medical assistance to its low-income residents will eliminate using taxpayer dollars on managed care insurers. Instead, it will switch to fee-for-service for cost savings. This is similar to what John Marty’s bill is all about.
Some encouraging news has come out of Washington D.C. President Obama has endorsed a senate bill giving states flexibility in their approach to health care reform. The bill would allow states to begin implementation of reform plans starting in 2014 rather than 2017 as currently stipulated in the Affordable Care Act (ACA). These plans must meet or exceed the criteria in the ACA and would give states flexibility in their approach to health care reform.
(c)2011 Senate District 25 DFL / Steve & Joan Janusz. All rights reserved.
Note: Opinions expressed in this article are that of the authors and do not neccessarly reflect the views of the Senate District 25 DFL or DFL in general.
Monday, March 7, 2011
Senate District 25 DFL Central Committee Meeting
We're excited to announce our first Central Committee meeting of the year with special guest Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak.
All DFLers are invited to attend.
Senate District 25 DFL Central Committee Meeting
When: Saturday, March 26th, 2011
10:00 a.m. start time
Where: Lonsdale Public Library
(large meeting room)
1006 Birch Street NE
Lonsdale, MN 55046
( map )
Stay tuned for more special announcements relating to the Central Committee Meeting.
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
Special Notice
SPECIAL NOTICE:
Because of weather the T. R. Reid event scheduled for Wednesday, 2/23/2011 has been canceled and will be rescheduled. If you made a contribution to the event via the on-line registration, rest assured that it will be refunded.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011
Onward to Health Care Reform
We, Joan and Steve Janusz, have been invited to contribute to the SD 25 web site. For the past three years we have educated ourselves on our health care system focusing on accessibility and payment. It’s been quite a roller coaster ride!
There are four major conclusions we believe:
1. Health care is an issue of justice; everybody has a “right” to quality health care
2. Our present health care payment systems are very costly and we can’t sustain the increasing costs
3. To rein in the costs and pay for health care everybody must contribute to a fund, based on their ability to pay
4. To change how we pay for health care requires a grass roots movement similar to how woman’s suffrage and civil rights were won; not something for the faint of heart!
We will use the Senate District 25 DFL web site to pass on information about happenings at the State and Federal levels regarding health care reform, with an occasional dose of our own thoughts and insights.
To get started: last week we attended two state house legislative health committee meetings. Both meetings focused on Medical Assistance (MA) and Minnesota Care (MN Care) which are public plans paid by the State. The administration of these plans is primarily contracted with insurance companies (HMO’s). It was interesting to observe a less contentious setting than last year’s session.
Before the first meeting there was a mini rally in support for better transparency between the public plans and the HMO’s. This was triggered by the statements made by David Feinwachs, former General Counsel of the MN Hospital Association. David dared to point out that the $3 billion given to the HMO’s remains unaudited.
The Health and Human Services Finance committee meeting had a full room of observers which surprised the chairperson. Presentations were made by the Minnesota Medical Association (MMA), MN Department of Human Services, David Feinwachs, and a representative from the Minnesota Council of Health Plans (Blue Cross, Ucare, etc.). The committee was striving to understand the costs of the public plans to the state. It was interesting how the legislators looked to David Feinwachs several times to help interpret things being said by the other presenters. Our overall impression was the legislators were not fully accepting what the HMO’s were presenting.
The Health and Human Services Reform committee meeting followed. This meeting focused on an overview of the public plans, implementation of the Expanded Medical Assistance program, and future changes that lie ahead with the Federal Affordable Care Act (ACA). The Expanded MA program is a result from provisions in the Federal ACA. At this point the plan is to enroll the approximately 95,000 people in the Expanded MA program through the State Dept. of Human Services (DHS). Then DHS would assign each of these people to an HMO. Thus, the insurance companies would end up with all 95,000 people. Because of expressed concerns and protests that question transparency and cost, it is hoped the DHS will reconsider this approach.
We realize from listening to these committees how complicated the rules are and procedures that exist with our public state health care plans.
Finally, there is a wonderful opportunity next Wednesday to learn more about health care reform. T.R. Reid, noted journalist, who produced the PBS Frontline documentary “Sick Around the World” and written the recent book “The Healing of America” is coming to Minnesota. See the below flyer for specifics on the event. Help spread the word about the event!
(c)2011 Senate District 25 DFL / Steve & Joan Janusz. All rights reserved.
Note: Opinions expressed in this article are that of the authors and do not neccessarly reflect the views of the Senate District 25 DFL or DFL in general.
Sunday, February 13, 2011
Friday, February 11, 2011
I-TEAM: Money For Home Inspections Used To Plug Budget « CBS Minnesota
I-TEAM: Money For Home Inspections Used To Plug Budget « CBS Minnesota
This is what happens when we irresponsibly use budget shifts and cuts without any thought or reason.
This is what happens when we irresponsibly use budget shifts and cuts without any thought or reason.
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