Lt. gov. discusses Ohio’s future during Bowling Green visit

Written by Brian Bohnert | | bbohnert@toledofreepress.com

Lt. Gov. Mary Taylor discussed Ohio’s economic progress, as well as the future of state’s health care and small businesses during a visit to Bowling Green on July 10.

Serving as the guest speaker for Bowling Green Chamber of Commerce’s Mid-Year Meeting and Awards Program at Stone Ridge Golf Club, Taylor addressed many key issues facing Ohio voters as they approach the upcoming election, mainly job creation and the Ohio government’s economic progress.

Most of her focus was on the current health care system throughout the United States and the passage of President Obama’s health care reform. After considering whether to implement a state-run health care exchange, Taylor said Gov. Kasich and his administration have decided not to pursue the option.

“At this point, we are not going to set up a state-based exchange,” Taylor said.

Lt. Gov. Mary Taylor speaks at the Bowling Green Chamber of Commerce Mid-Year Meeting and Awards Program at Stone Ridge Golf Club. Toledo Free Press photo by Joseph Herr

The governor’s office has until Nov. 16 to inform the federal government of any plans to start its own program or leave it up to the government to do so. In implementing a state-run health care exchange, Taylor said administrative and operative costs would range from anywhere between $30 million to $40 million a year, with no direct benefit to Ohioans due to the recent upholding of the health care mandate.

“Based on all the information we have available for us today, the reports we’ve done, the information that is scant out of Washington about how we are required to comply, we have made a decision that we do not think it is in the best interest of Ohio citizens to do a state-based exchange at this point,” she said.

Not only does President Obama’s health care reform impact individual households, but it also has an effect on small businesses. Taylor said for any small business that covers its employees through health insurance, premiums could rise anywhere from 5 to 150 percent, on top of the average increases that already take place.

Speaking as the director of the Department of Insurance, Taylor also expressed concern over the state’s the insurance industry, both as a means of job creation and as a means of health security for Ohio citizens. She said Ohio’s insurance industry is the 19th largest in the world, with 216,000 direct jobs in the field, as well as 270,000 agents and brokers, making a total payroll impact of $10.3 million.

“It’s a significant industry, one that is doing very well in Ohio; but, one that we’re very interested in growing and creating more jobs in the industry,” she said.

Going hand in hand with creating more jobs, Taylor is concerned with the future generations of Americans living under the weight of the heavy fiscal changes taking place. Thinking of her own family, Taylor said it is her duty to keep the prospect of the “American Dream” alive for all Ohioans.

“I have a 21-year-old and an 18-year-old son, and I know all of the opportunities I had here in Ohio and how important I have always felt to be able to achieve whatever it is I’ve wanted to achieve,” she said. “And I can commit to you today that I will do my part every day to make sure that every future generation of Ohio will have that same opportunity that I had.”

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Health care law

HHS official discusses health care law’s impact at University of Toledo

Written by Erik Gable | | news@toledofreepress.com

The impact of the new federal health care law on small businesses was the subject of a March 1 meeting with a top official from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Kenneth Munson, Region V director for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, speaks March 1 during a meeting about new federal health care rules at the University of Toledo's Scott Park campus.

Kenneth Munson, Region V director for HHS, spoke to a group of about 20 people on the University of Toledo’s Scott Park campus about the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, which was signed into law by President Barack Obama in March 2010 and has been dubbed “Obamacare” by its opponents. Region V includes Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin.

Munson said cost is a key factor in preventing small businesses from offering health insurance to their employees, with 86 percent of the small businesses that don’t provide it saying they can’t afford the price. At the same time, he said, 72 percent of businesses that do offer coverage say paying for it is a struggle.

Some provisions already in effect

Munson said some of the health care law’s provisions have already gone into effect, including a ban on insurance companies declining to cover children’s pre-existing conditions and a prohibition against rescission, which refers to an insurance company canceling a member’s policy, often because of a problem with the information that member provided when they initially took out the policy.

Munson said one woman was dropped by her insurance company after being diagnosed with breast cancer because she hadn’t disclosed that she had once sought counseling for stress.

The rescission issue became a point of debate at the presentation.

“Weren’t the majority of these rescissions for things related to fraud?” asked John McAvoy, state coordinator for The Ohio Project, which organized last year’s Issue 3, a rejection of the health care bill’s mandate for individuals to purchase health insurance.

Munson said fraud is still against the law. In an interview with Toledo Free Press after the forum, he said a consumer who is dropped because of alleged fraud would likely appeal to state regulators, or possibly to the court system, if they believed their policy was canceled illegally.

Business owners weigh in

One business owner in the audience said the health care bill has allowed her to become insured for the first time in eight years. Cathy Allen of Marblehead, who owns a consulting business called Creative Option C, said she has systemic lupus that’s under control, but that prevented her from being able to buy a policy.

Allen said that changed when former Gov. Ted Strickland’s administration took advantage of a pool of federal money that was created to let states create high-risk pools before the new rules creating state-level health insurance exchanges go into effect.

“Because of the creation of Ohio’s high-risk pool, I’ve been able to purchase insurance,” she said.

The individual mandate is a concern for Tom Elder, owner of Seagate Roofing in Toledo. Elder said he offers health insurance and pays more than half of the premiums, but some — mainly his younger employees — choose not to take the insurance. Once the individual mandate goes into effect, he said, even those employees who don’t feel they need health insurance will be forced to purchase it.

Munson said those employees could buy insurance through the new health care exchange, but Elder said that’s unlikely — since he pays most of the premium for his employees who do opt for health insurance, he said, those who are newly required to buy a policy are much more likely to go through him than the exchange.

“Why would they go there when they can go to me and I’ll pay 70 percent?” he said.

Munson said later that although businesses that offer insurance may see more employees enrolling in their plans because of the individual mandate, there are other measures intended to reduce the overall cost. He said premium reductions should result from having a larger pool of people and from the bargaining power of a central exchange; in addition, he said, tax credits will be available for businesses that offer insurance.

“There are issues around your overall costs going up because more workers are coming in,” acknowledged Kathleen Gmeiner of Universal Health Care Action Network Ohio. But also, she said, “there are some tools to get your costs under control and keep them predictable.”

The Milliman report

A report commissioned by the state from Milliman Inc. and released in the fall projected steep premium increases for some consumers. Gmeiner acknowledged that report, but said the more dramatic increases result in part from Ohio currently having a large number of rate bands for determining premiums. The sharpest increases will be seen by a small number of people with the lowest rates, primarily healthy young men, she said.

Gmeiner said the law will result in people in that group paying more, but in more security as well.

The Milliman report projected that, before applying the tax credit intended to partially subsidize premiums, the average individual premium would increase by between 55 percent and 85 percent on top of regularly expected medical inflation, due partly to the estimated health status of individual premium payers and partly to the plans expanding to cover more services. The report also projected that small-group employer-sponsored premiums would increase by between 5 percent and 10 percent on top of inflation and that large-group employer-sponsored premiums would increase by between 3 percent and 5 percent on top of inflation.

The report estimated that after the changes, individual plans will cost between 8 percent and 12 percent more than small-group plans.

When the report was released, Lt. Gov. Mary Taylor said it showed that “Obamacare will result in bigger government, unsustainable costs and, ultimately, less consumer choice.” Supporters accused the administration of misrepresenting the report by cherry-picking data. The 159-page Milliman report can be downloaded at www.ohioexchange.ohio.gov/Documents/MillimanReport.pdf.

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State of Ohio

Ohio Auditor Taylor raps Gov. Strickland for job losses but ignores losses under Republican regimes

Written by John Michael Spinelli Toledo Free Press Ohio Statehouse News Bureau Chief | | ohionewsbureau@gmail.com

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Mary Taylor, Ohio’s auditor of State since 22006 who could become the state’s Lt. Gov. if she and her running mate John Kasich win the hearts and minds of voters in November, as some polls increasingly say is likely, laid into Gov. Strickland on Aug. 18 as an “incompetent administrator” who has allowed about 379,000 jobs to be lost in Ohio since he became governor in 2007.

Read the full story here.

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State of Ohio

Ohio Auditor Mary Taylor calls Gov. Strickland ‘incompetent administrator,’ touts new JobsOhio plan

Written by John Michael Spinelli Toledo Free Press Ohio Statehouse News Bureau Chief | | ohionewsbureau@gmail.com

COLUMBUS, Ohio — As President Obama was in Downtown Columbus on Aug. 18 attending a Democratic fundraiser for Ohio Democrats like incumbent Gov. Ted Strickland, Ohio Auditor Mary Taylor, a Republican running for Lt. Governor along side ticket topper running mate John Kasich, engaged reporters in a short conference call in which she called Strickland an “incompetent administrator” and said JobsOhio, a new non-profit proposed by her campaign to replace the state’s existing development department, would help create the jobs she said Strickland has failed to do on his watch.

Read the full story here.

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