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To see my thoughts about what questions still need to be answered before we pay millions for a new DPW garage, go to http://wp.me/pwOp1-7M

Email to James Timilty today re municipal health insurance reform

5/04/2011  1:06PM
Please support the reform of municipal health insurance that has already passed the House
James Timiltyjames.timilty@masenate.gov; James Timilty <matthew.moran@masenate.gov>, Michael Sullivan <mikes@medfield.net>;Kristine Trierweiler <kristinet@medfield.net>,
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Jim and Matt,

As a Town of Medfield selectman I write to ask that you support the reform of municipal health insurance that has already passed the House.  Attached is the Massachusetts Municipal Association’s letter with the detailed explanation of why it is so important to Town of Medfield, however I think you already know the reasons.  Thanks in advance.
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Dear Senator,

Skyrocketing health insurance costs have been crushing local budgets and forcing cuts in essential municipal and school services. Fortunately, relief is on the way, if you vote to support the municipal health insurance reform proposal passed overwhelmingly by the House of Representatives last week. We commend 113 representatives for recognizing the need for true reform and voting for a plan that offers powerful relief for local taxpayers and all communities.

The House plan is a strong, balanced, meaningful, and fair reform that will make a major difference for every community across the state, and we respectfully ask for your support. There are three major objectives central to reform: meaningful savings for taxpayers, speed to allow implementation in fiscal 2012, and a role (but not a veto) for labor. The House plan clearly meets all three objectives.

The reform in the House budget would simply give cities and towns the same power the state has to update co-pays and deductibles in municipal health insurance plans, saving local taxpayers $100 million in avoided health costs. As you know from your own health plans, the Commonwealth has used its authority to make unilateral adjustments in co-pays and deductibles to hold down the state’s overall costs. Communities, however, are blocked from making the same changes unless they receive permission from their municipal unions. As a recent MTF/Boston Foundation report documents, this has caused municipal health insurance costs to spiral out of control, forcing cuts in education, public safety and other vital programs and forcing the elimination of teachers, firefighters, police officers and other key employees from local budgets. The House plan would save and protect municipal union jobs, and preserve vital and essential services for the citizens of the Commonwealth, all while guaranteeing equity with state employee health benefits.

In spite of the over-the-top rhetoric from union lobbyists, the plan creates a process that would continue to give municipal unions more bargaining power over health insurance than state unions. In fact, municipal employees would benefit from the legislation in five ways: Union jobs would be protected; employee premiums would be lower; communities would establish health reimbursement accounts to offset a portion of the costs for those employees who are heavy users of the health care system; they would be guaranteed health plans at least as good or better than state employees; and their bargaining over premium contributions would be preserved.

THE SENATE VOTED FOR STRONGER PROVISIONS IN 2009
Two weeks ago, the Commonwealth won a Superior Court ruling upholding the Senate vote in the 2009 Transportation Reform Law that removed all health insurance matters from collective bargaining for state MBTA workers. In enacting the Transportation Reform Law, the Senate voted to end all bargaining over the plan design or premium share for MBTA unions and thousands of employees. In spite of loud union protests that the reform “subverts collective bargaining rights,” the Legislature and governor enacted the provision in order to save an estimated $30 million a year while giving T employees health plans that matched all other state workers. The Senate’s action in 2009 was made in the interests of all taxpayers, and was necessary to allow the MBTA to provide core services to the public. This is further proof that legislation to address the cost of employee health insurance is totally unrelated to the unfortunate developments in Wisconsin and Ohio. While the House-passed municipal health insurance provision is a powerful reform plan for cities and towns, it is much more modest than what the Senate voted for in 2009 in the transportation bill. The reform principle that benefited the state in 2009 is just as valid for cities and towns in 2011.

WHY STRONG REFORM IS NECESSARY
Total municipal aid is $416 million lower than what it was three years ago, and the Senate has already indicated that the fiscal 2012 budget will cut another $65 million. Communities are in fiscal crisis, and health insurance reform offers meaningful relief that taxpayers deserve. We cannot afford to keep the unique and special veto power that municipal unions hold over health plan features; this veto power is costing taxpayers millions of dollars a year, forcing cuts in essential municipal and school services that are crowded out by soaring health costs, and forcing the elimination of teachers, firefighters, police officers and other key employees. Without real reform, taxpayers will continue to pay millions more for health insurance than they should, which will force even more service cuts and layoffs.

The state has been able to moderate the cost of employee health benefits by implementing increases in co-pays and deductibles outside of collective bargaining, just as the federal government and private employers have done. But communities have been blocked by the Chapter 32B bargaining mandate, and are trapped in outdated plans that are too costly. When municipal leaders ask for plan design authority, the purpose is to preserve services, protect local taxpayers and prevent the elimination of more police officers, teachers, firefighters and other key workers from local budgets.

A December 2010 study by the Massachusetts Business Alliance for Education and The Boston Foundation revealed that all of the $700 million in new Chapter 70 school aid from 2000 to 2007 was consumed by rising health insurance costs, concluding that “controlling the overall cost of health care in Massachusetts is now the ultimate education issue,” because without reform every penny of new Chapter 70 aid will go to local health plans, not into the classroom.

An April 2011 report by the Massachusetts Taxpayers Foundation and The Boston Foundation concluded that municipal health plans cost taxpayers millions more than state, federal or private insurance plans because municipal unions can veto any change in the plans. The average family premium for city and town employees is 37 percent higher than the typical private-sector policy and 21 percent higher than that of state employees. The report said that the Legislature must give local officials the authority to adjust insurance plans outside of collective bargaining, and without this action “communities will be forced to make even more painful and severe cuts to education and other basic services.”

WHAT THE HOUSE PLAN WOULD DO
The House-passed plan would eliminate the double standard in state law, and give cities and towns the same power the state has to implement necessary cost savings in municipal health insurance plans, up to a point. This is a very focused and moderate proposal, offered in a spirit of compromise to find meaningful middle ground while achieving meaningful reform.

Under the bill, municipalities would notify unions of their desire to change co-pays or deductibles, or enroll in the Group Insurance Commission, and would then meet with a committee representing all municipal and school unions and retirees to discuss and review the changes. If the community and the committee reach agreement, the municipality would implement the agreed-upon plan changes and share 10 percent of the projected first-year cost savings with the employees, based on the agreement. If there is no agreement after 30 days, the municipality can move forward with the planned change, and would share 20 percent of the projected savings/avoided costs with employees and retirees in a health reimbursement account to assist heavy users of the health care system. Collective bargaining would still govern any change in the employee-employer premium share, giving municipal unions more bargaining authority than state unions. Municipalities would be able to modernize the health plan design, with a guarantee that all municipal and school employees would still have health plans that are the same or better than what state employees receive, meaning no municipal plan would have higher co-pays or deductibles than the state. Any higher co-pays or deductibles would have to be approved in collective bargaining. The bill simply gives plan design parity to cities and towns.

In short, the legislation saves taxpayers money, protects municipal union jobs, guarantees equity with state employee health benefits, and still leaves municipal unions with more bargaining power than state unions.

THE LABOR “ALTERNATIVE” IS NOT REFORM
During the House debate, labor offered an “alternative” plan that was the opposite of reform; it would actually strengthen union leverage and control over health benefits, offer taxpayers virtually no relief, and do nothing to protect municipal services and jobs. The amendment would have subjected any plan design change to coalition bargaining; required mandatory binding arbitration if an impasse is reached; guaranteed only 25 percent of the “savings” to go to communities, with 25 percent going to employees, and the remaining 50 percent subject to bargaining; blocked all further plan design changes until 2014; and placed all future negotiations over health insurance changes (any future plan design changes or any change in the employee-employer contribution share) in permanent Section 19 coalition bargaining.

In contrast to the clear reform and transparency of the House proposal, the labor-backed “alternative” and framework they announced in March and floated to House members is deficient in almost every way, and is so flawed that it would be even worse than no action at all. We ask you to oppose any language or provisions that would do the following:

• Prevent any change in municipal co-pays or deductibles in fiscal 2012 (or any other plan design feature) unless 70 percent of municipal unions agree, impose a three-year moratorium on any further health plan changes unless unions agree otherwise, or permanently impose the deeply flawed Section 19 coalition bargaining process on communities, which would allow one or two unions in a community to permanently control all health insurance matters including plan design and the premium share (Section 19 is now a local-option statute that has not worked – communities in Section 19 are pursuing home rule petitions to get out);

• Limit the guaranteed savings for taxpayers – the unions have stated that they seek 50 percent of the savings, but the entire purpose of reform is to preserve municipal and school services and protect jobs, and this provision would totally undermine reform by far too much into other employee benefit costs. Importantly, the state has shared 0 percent (none) of its plan design changes with state unions, and the House plan sets the shared savings at 10 percent to 20 percent. The problem with continuing the current system is that communities must give unaffordable concessions to get unions to agree to even modest changes – history and the facts have demonstrated this clearly;

• Impose mandatory binding arbitration over health insurance matters – mandatory binding arbitration was REPEALED BY THE VOTERS as a key part of Proposition 2½ because it is unaffordable for taxpayers (an example is the arbitrator’s decision in the Boston Fire Department case last year, granting extremely high salary increases in exchange for what should be routine drug testing). Labor would expand mandatory binding arbitration in unprecedented ways (historically, it only existed for police and fire contracts), and would give an unaccountable, unelected outside person the power to set all co-pays, deductibles, contribution percentages, health reimbursement accounts, and other benefits, essentially empowering the arbitrator to control up to 15 percent or more of a municipality’s budget.

THE CHOICE IS CLEAR
This is the time to pass a real reform plan to save taxpayers $100 million in avoided health insurance costs. The House plan protects municipal union jobs and essential services, while guaranteeing equity with state employee health benefits, and leaving municipal unions with more bargaining power than state unions. Any money that communities save through plan design will be used to preserve services and prevent more layoffs. Job protection is the ultimate benefit of plan design reform. This is a strong, balanced, meaningful, and fair reform that will make a major difference for every community across the state, and we respectfully ask for your support. The communities and taxpayers you represent are counting on strong and real reform this year. Thank you very much.

Sincerely,

Geoffrey C. Beckwith
Executive Director, MMA
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Best,
Pete
Osler L. Peterson, Attorney at Law
PETERSON | Law
580 Washington Street, Newton, MA 02458
66 North St, PO Box 358, Medfield, MA 02052
T 617.969.1500
T 617.969.1501 (direct)
M 508-359-9190
F 617.663.6008
osler.peterson@verizon.net
http://mysite.verizon.net/osler.peterson/
Medfield Information at: FB, https://medfield02052.wordpress.com/ & http://twitter.com/Medfield

Medfield’s state aid is down for FY12 by about $75K from FY11 http://ping.fm/rZF8k

Fox TV Morning News – Zip Trip planned for Medfield 6/24 – http://wp.me/pwOp1-7z

Fox 25 Morning News – Zip Trip to Medfield – 6/24

Email from Fox TV to Mike Sullivan –

I am a producer for Fox 25 Morning News.

Medfield was chosen by our viewers as one of our Zip Trip locations.

If you are not familiar with this… A Zip Trip is when our morning newscast
takes the show on the road to cities and towns around New England and
showcases everything from town history, restaurants, celebrities, etc…
live.

The date for Medfield is Friday – June 24th.

Town meeting is done & I have been listing my tasks for the Selectmen for the coming year – get me yours to add on – http://wp.me/pwOp1-7u

Monday afternoon I got this copy of the plan for the new DPW garage & I have uploaded it for all http://ping.fm/GiYze

Mass House passed bill that gives towns more control over health insurance. Rep Winslow was a yes & Rep Garlick a no. http://wp.me/pwOp1-7m

Medfield – Overrides at Town Meeting, 7 PM 4/25. Garage costs about $225/home for 20 years & operating $110 forever http://wp.me/pwOp1-7b

Massachusetts Municipal Association Alert from 4/13

HOUSE BUDGET COMMITTEE RELEASES FY 2012 BUDGET PROPOSAL

  • POWERFUL MUNICIPAL HEALTH INSURANCE REFORM INCLUDED
  • MAJOR LOCAL AID ACCOUNTS MATCH GOV’S BUDGET
  • PLEASE CALL YOUR REPRESENTATIVES TODAY
    Earlier this afternoon, the House Ways and Means Committee released their proposed fiscal 2012 state budget, which seeks to close an estimated $1.9 billion shortfall. In a major development for cities and towns, the House budget document includes a strong and powerful municipal health insurance reform proposal that would provide meaningful relief for cities and towns.

    Despite the state’s difficult fiscal condition, the House Ways and Means budget would fund the Unrestricted General Government Aid, Chapter 70, PILOT, Regional School Transportation, and Special Education Circuit Breaker accounts at the same level proposed by Governor Patrick earlier this year.

    The House is in the process of adopting an order providing that amendments to the budget must be submitted by Friday, April 15, with debate commencing on Monday, April 25. The House will finish its budget deliberations by Friday, April 29.

    PLEASE TAKE ACTION TODAY:

    CALL YOUR REPRESENTATIVES AND ASK FOR THEIR COMMITMENT TO SUPPORT THE MUNICIPAL HEALTH INSURANCE REFORM PROVISION WITH NO WEAKENING AMENDMENTS

    SEND A FOLLOW-UP LETTER TO YOUR REPRESENTATIVES (DOWNLOAD A SAMPLE BY CLICKING HERE)

    SEND A LETTER TO THE EDITOR TO YOUR LOCAL NEWSPAPERS (DOWNLOAD A SAMPLE BY CLICKING HERE)

    HOUSE LEADERS PROPOSE FULL MUNICIPAL HEALTH INSURANCE REFORM

    The MMA has strongly endorsed the municipal health insurance reform proposal included in the House Ways and Means Committee budget, and commends Speaker Robert DeLeo, Chairman Brian Dempsey, Vice Chairs Stephen Kulik and Marty Walz, the members of the House Ways and Means Committee and the Speaker’s leadership team for recognizing the need for reform, and proposing a plan that offers powerful relief for local taxpayers and all communities. (You can see a copy of the MMA’s statement by clicking here).

    The plan proposed by the Speaker and the House Ways and Means Committee offers real reform for cities, towns and taxpayers. The measure would give cities and towns the same power the state has to implement necessary cost savings changes in municipal health insurance plans outside of collective bargaining, saving local taxpayers up to $100 million. The reform proposal would also require all municipalities to enroll all eligible retirees into Medicare (in Section 44 of the HW&M budget).

    The key provisions of the reform proposal (Sections 46 and 47 of the HW&M budget) are as follows:

  • As drafted, municipalities that accept the new law would be able to modernize the design of their employee health plans outside of collective bargaining, with a guarantee that all municipal and school employees would still have health plans that are the same or better than what state employees receive, meaning no city or town could use this authority to implement higher co-pays or deductibles than the state.
  • Communities would also have the power to join the Group Insurance Commission outside of collective bargaining if they demonstrate that joining the GIC would provide greater financial relief than making plan design changes on their own.
  • Ten percent of the savings or costs avoided in the first year would be set aside to fund a health reimbursement account that would be structured based on an agreement between municipalities and their unions.
  • Cities and towns would still negotiate any change in the employee-employer premium share, giving municipal unions more bargaining authority over health insurance than state employee unions. Any new co-pays or deductibles higher than the GIC plans would have to be approved in collective bargaining. The bill simply gives plan design parity and options to cities and towns.

  • The MMA will be working with the Ways and Means Committee to advocate for the smoothest possible local acceptance mechanism. As currently written, local acceptance would be the same process as used for the original Chapter 32B, which is Mayor and Council in cities, and a referendum in towns. The committee is aware that this language is a major problem, and is committed to working with the MMA to fix the local acceptance process to ensure swift and smooth implementation in communities.

    Municipal employees would benefit from the legislation in three ways – union jobs would be protected, employee premiums would be lower, and communities would establish health reimbursement accounts to offset a portion of the costs for those employees who are heavy users of the health care system.

    Please Call Your Legislators Today And Ask For Their Commitment to Support the House Ways and Means Municipal Health Insurance Reform Proposal With NO Weakening Amendments. Key points to make are:

  • The legislation proposed by Speaker DeLeo, Chairman Dempsey and the House Ways and Means Committee saves taxpayers money, preserves essential local services, protects municipal union jobs, guarantees equity with state employee health benefits, and still leaves municipal unions with more bargaining power than state unions. This is a balanced, meaningful, fair and transparent reform that would allow cities and towns to save $100 million in avoided health insurance costs.
  • Communities are in fiscal crisis, and municipal health insurance reform offers meaningful relief that taxpayers deserve. Skyrocketing health insurance costs are forcing cuts in essential municipal and school services, and forcing the elimination of teachers, firefighters, police officers and other key employees from local budgets. Cities and towns will use this reform to provide relief for local taxpayers, protect essential services, and preserve thousands of municipal jobs.

    KEY LOCAL AID ACCOUNTS IN THE HOUSE WAYS AND MEANS BUDGET FOR FISCAL 2012

    The fiscal 2012 state budget recommendation filed by the House Ways and Means Committee would generally match the local aid numbers in the Governor’s budget filed earlier this year. Unrestricted General Government Aid would be cut by $65 million, but the state appropriation for Chapter 70 school aid would increase by $140 million.

    Preliminary Cherry Sheets for fiscal 2012 showing estimated municipal and school aid amounts based on the Governor’s and House Ways and Means budget recommendations have been posted on the Division of Local Services Web site.

    The proposed cut to the Unrestricted General Government Aid (UGGA) account, formerly Lottery and Additional Assistance, would mark the fourth year of cuts and result in a total drop of $481 million, about 37 percent, since fiscal 2008. The HW&M budget would level fund the Cherry Sheet Payment-in-Lieu-of-Taxes account at $25 million and fund the Regional School Transportation account at $40.5 million, the same level as House One and Fiscal 2011. Funding for the Police Career Incentive Pay Program would be eliminated (the program is currently funded at $5 million). The bill also includes small increases to the Charter School Reimbursement Account to fully fund the Commonwealth’s estimated obligation, and to the Regional Library Aid account.

    The Senate President announced today that the full Senate would adopt a local aid resolution tomorrow, agreeing with the proposed House local aid levels for Chapter 70 and Unrestricted General Government Aid. Full debate on all other accounts will wait until the Senate takes up the budget in late May.



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    You can also always find additional information on our website at:
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