Showing posts with label SC Appleseed Legal Justice Center. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SC Appleseed Legal Justice Center. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Expanding healthcare to more childen....finally!

Congratulation to South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley and state Health and Human Services Director Tony Keck.  Their proposal to add an additional $29 million in the Medicaid budget for children’s healthcare appears to be a done deal both in the House and Senate.  This is a dramatic turnaround from the Mark Sanford administration.
Back in 2007 the South Carolina Small Business Chamber, S.C. Appleseed Legal Justice Center, S.C. Fair Share and AARP-SC were fighting to increase the cigarette tax in an effort to generate funding for a program to help make health insurance more affordable for small businesses and to expand the number of children eligible for Medicaid from those in families of  up to 150% of poverty to up to 200% of poverty.  The latter proposal survived and the General Assembly put about $29 million in the budget to provide healthcare services for an additional 70,000 to 100,000 children.
Governor Sanford then vetoed that part of the budget but we were successful in having that veto overridden.  The story should have ended there…but it didn’t.
The Sanford administration and his HHS director actively worked against adding these children to the Medicaid program by refusing obvious measure to let parents know about the program and throwing every roadblock they could in front of parents and organizations who tried to have the newly eligible children enrolled in the program.  Who knows where the millions set aside for the program went but it certainly wasn’t used as intended by the Legislature.
For 5 years these children went without the Medicaid for which by state law they were legally eligible. For 5 years the uncompensated healthcare these children did receive helped push insurance premiums up on individuals and small businesses.  For 5 years the working parents of these children were less productive on the job because of sick children whose illnesses could have been preventive with proper healthcare.  All of this because Governor Sanford and his Director of HHS knew better that the General Assembly and caring more about shrinking government instead of the health of our needy children and health insurance costs for the rest of us.
But while Governor Haley, Tony Keck and the Legislature appear to be all on board with funding and implementing this Medicaid expansion, they should drop their rhetoric that they are doing it because of the new federal health care law, the Affordable Care Act. 
There was no “ObamaCare” back in 2007.  This Medicaid expansion program for children was passed by a Republican House and Senate.  It is the law.  State officials need to stop blaming President Obama for a worthwhile healthcare program that we worked for and our South Carolina Legislature passed 5 years ago. 

Monday, January 17, 2011

MLK Jr. Day of Service

So what are you doing on this Martin Luther King Jr. Day of Service? If you have the day off, hopefully you have plans for how you are going to donate your time to make a difference today. If you don’t, check out your local paper and see how you can get plugged in.

Many of us are working but that doesn’t mean that we still can’t do something that will make our communities, state and nation better places. Put some creative thought into it.

As for me, I’m driving to Greenville (S C) to meet with the Greenville News editorial board to talk about why it is important that the Affordable Care Act (ACA) be successfully implemented. Sue Berkowitz (SC Appleseed Legal Justice Center) and John Ruoff (SC Fair Share) are going with me. This will be our MLK Jr. Day of Service activity.

Our organizations along with AARP-SC, the SC Public Health Institute and others have put together a comprehensive talking points document with factual information on many of the issues surrounding the ACA. It is a great reference for the debate this week in the U.S. House and for future false attacks both at the federal and state level.

So today go out and volunteer to make a difference. Tomorrow I’ll challenge you to make a difference with your telephone.

Friday, December 17, 2010

Setting the Record Straight on the Affordable Care Act

If you get confused with conflicting messages about the new health care law, you’re not alone.

The South Carolina Small Business Chamber of Commerce (SCSBCC) and other organizations want the public, media and politicians to be well-informed with accurate information.

The Affordable Care Act Implementation Initiative (the Initiative) of South Carolina has released a Talking Points guide that includes essential information and content experts for a variety of topics related to the new law.

I chaired the Information, Dissemination & Communication Working Group of the Initiative, which produced the Talking Points guide. 

The Initiative is a public-private collaboration of over 60 stakeholders from the non-profit sector, state and local government agencies, health care organizations and others. The Initiative was convened by the South Carolina Public Health Institute in cooperation with South Carolina Healthcare Voices consisting of S.C. Appleseed Legal Justice Center, S.C. Fair Share, AARP-SC and SCSBCC.

The Talking Points guide provides essential information and South Carolina contacts for numerous aspects of the ACA. The information guide and the convening partners of the Initiative can be found on the SCSBCC  web site and is also available at: http://www.scphi.org/.