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Home · Articles · News · Rogue of the Week · Oregon School Boards Association
July 27th, 2005 WW Editorial Staff | Rogue of the Week
 

Oregon School Boards Association

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In playwriting, "the fifth business" refers to a character who, though not a prominent hero or villain, is essential to the plot's final outcome.

So it is that with the tragicomedic drama of this year's Legislature coming to a close, we recognize the quiet but crucial role of this week's Rogue: the Oregon School Boards Association.

To set the stage, consider that Oregon schools rank nationally near the biggest in average class size and the lowest in school days. And a tentative deal announced Monday in Salem that sets the state's K-12 education budget at $5.24 billion falls below what schools advocates say is needed to maintain even the woeful status quo.

The numbers in those negotiations might have been higher, except the influential OSBA came out earlier this year for a plan by House Speaker Karen Minnis-for even less funding for schools.

The position of Minnis, a conservative Republican averse to additional spending, is not surprising. But why would a key pillar of the education lobby sign on?

Here's one likely reason: OSBA makes more than $2 million a year, some 60 percent of its budget, by selling health insurance to individual school districts-and a bill pushed by Sen. Ryan Deckert and Kulongoski would take that business away. So OSBA has joined forces with Minnis to block the Deckert-Kulongoski plan.

Reports done in Pennsylvania, Minnesota and Michigan, as well as here in Oregon, have backed the Kulongoski-Deckert approach, which would set up an agency to save up to $100 million a year by eliminating school districts' administrative duplication and hefty brokerage fees.

OSBA claims those studies are all flawed. And the group's lobbyist, John Marshall, denies any quid pro quo. In discussions with the speaker, he told the Rogue Desk, such a deal was not "either implied or inferred."

It appears, then, that Deckert is doing Marshall a favor, because if OSBA were not in the insurance business, no one would suspect its motives-or question its role behind the scenes.

 
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07.27.2005 at 09:00 Reply
More Rogues and a SolutionYou're on the right track here. But you still have a ways to go. The Kulongoski-Deckert approach focuses merely on public school employees. It does not address the greater and far more important issue of affordable health care for ALL Oregonians and a twenty percent decrease in health care costs for ALL public institutions in Oregon. So, not only does the OSBA deserve the Rogue award so do Kulongoski, Deckert and the entire Oregon legislature. All of them have failed to address the larger problem and they have ignored the solution which is the Oregon Community Health Care Bill [see below].The Oregon Community Health Care Bill will be at the focal point, the center of gravity, the touchstone for every serious conversation on public health care in Oregon for the foreseeable future.The Oregon Community Health Care Bill is NOT a partisan nor regional bill. Greens, Independents, Republicans, Democrats, Urbans, Rurals, Suburbans et. al. are all welcome and invited to support this health care legislation intended to benefit every Oregonian.The war to win affordable health care for every Oregonian and reduce the cost of health care to every public institution in Oregon by twenty percent begins in ernest on October 29, 2005 from 1-3 PM at the Historic Kenton Firehouse in Portland. On that day sixty Oregonians will gather to participate in the Oregon Community Health Care Bill Forum. For details go here: http://www.goodgrowthnw.org/OctoberForum.html*Oregon Community Health Care BillWhereas every Oregonian should have the right to affordable health care,Therefore be it resolved that the following revisions are made to the Oregon Health Plan:1. The Oregon Health Plan shall allow state, county, regional and municipal governments as well as all public educational institutions in the state of Oregon to pay to enroll their employees.2. Governments and Public Educational Institutions shall pay 80% of the premium paid in 2004 for an individual covered by their previous health insurance providers times the number of individuals covered for the first year of membership. The individual rate shall be determined by dividing the total amount paid for health insurance in 2004 divided by the number of individuals covered in each public entity in 2004. [Total number of employees times 2.5 shall be an acceptable default if precise numbers are unavailable.] The 80% rate shall continue until such time as a government or public educational institution formally requests an increase or decrease in the rate for that entity. A majority of paying member organizations of the Oregon Health Plan shall agree to the proposed increase or decrease before it can become the effective new rate for the requesting jurisdiction. It shall be the goal, over a period of time, to achieve equity of individual payments among all participating organizations.3. The Oregon Health Plan shall allow any person who has been a registered voter in Oregon for at least one year to pay to become a member. 18 year olds registering for the first time are automatically accepted. All children 17 and under are automatically qualified provided they are the dependents of at least one adult in the household who is a registered member of the Oregon Health Plan. The cost to join will be determined by a sliding scale based on taxable income and number of dependent children 17 and under. 4. The Oregon Health Plan shall allow Oregon businesses to enroll their employees provided that each employee submitted for enrollment meets the standards for individual enrollment mentioned in section 3 above.5. The Oregon Health Plan shall not allow smokers to join. This includes government sponsored as well as individual applicants. However, the Oregon Health Plan shall respond to every Oregonian that asks for help to quit smoking. A special non-member category shall be established to support smokers who want to quit. The cost to participate in this program will be determined by a sliding scale based on taxable income. A limited list of medical procedures intended specifically to enable a patient to stop smoking shall be the only medical procedures available to Oregonians who are smokers, that is those who smoke an average of five or more cigarettes per day. Upon certification by a physician that an individual has successfully quit smoking for one year that person may apply for membership in the Oregon Health Plan. Serious penalties shall be imposed upon those who are untruthful about their smoking habits when making application to the Oregon Health Plan or at any time they are a member.6. The legislature shall budget for 2006 a payment into the Oregon Health Plan fund of $75,000,000 plus the amount contributed in 2004. An additional $5,000,000 shall be added to this budget item each year until the amount equals the total of all payments made by participating members.7. The legislature shall transfer into the Oregon Health Plan fund all revenues in excess of the 2% state revenue forecast thereby eliminating the so called Oregon kicker.8. The Oregon Health Plan shall be the exclusive health plan for a) The governor and every employee in the executive branch of state government under his authority, b) Every employee of the judicial branch of state government c) Every member of the state legislature and all of their staffs.9. Allowing for procedures specific to male and female anatomies, everyone enrolled shall have exactly the same benefits. No exceptions.10. Payments by governments and individuals into the Oregon Health Plan shall remain in an Oregon Health Plan account which shall be the source of payments to physicians, hospitals etc. for allowable procedures.11. Oregon Health Plan financial managers may only invest in low risk financial instruments with a prudent amount of available capital. All investments shall be made only in Oregon.12. The Oregon Health Plan may be administered by contract with a private business or by a state government agency depending on which is deemed more likely to deliver the most cost effective high quality service to Oregonians.13. Every two years the number of procedures covered by the Oregon Health Plan shall be reevaluated and shall include more or fewer procedures from the existing list as determined by the amount of money available in the Oregon Health Plan fund to pay for them. It is the goal of the Oregon Health Plan to annually spend on benefits what it annually receives in revenues.14. Mental health, dental, optometrical, chiropractic and acupuncture shall be included in potential procedures of the Oregon Health Plan especially those of a preventative nature.15. Every five years the list and rankings of procedures shall be reevaluated.16. Every listed procedure shall have a capped price. Members may seek medical care from any licensed health care provider in the United States of America. Members who choose health care providers that charge less than the capped price for any procedure shall receive a credit toward their health plan premium valued at the difference. Members choosing health care providers charging more than the capped price must make up the difference themselves. Every bill sent to the Oregon Health Plan for payment must be signed by the member involved in the medical procedure appearing on the invoice before payment can be made.17. Health care providers licensed by the state of Oregon shall accept Oregon Health Plan patients for approved procedures.18. Patients that choose to participate shall have the opportunity to critique the care given by their health care providers directly into an online database. 10% of the health care providers with the highest patient satisfaction ratings per year will receive a $10,000 cash incentive bonus. A minimum number of 300 votes or 60% of a health care provider's patients will be required to qualify. 19. No member of the Oregon Health Plan may sue a health care provider for malpractice of a procedure allowed under the Oregon Health Plan without the express approval of five members of a nine member committee established for the specific purpose of determining the legitimacy or frivolousness of the proposed legal action. That committee shall be comprised of five permanent members serving four year terms namely, two retired judges, two retired physicians and the governor. The remaining four shall be chosen at random from the Oregon legislature each quarter prior to that quarter's meeting.Richard EllmyerPresident, MacSolutions Inc. - A Macintosh computer consulting business providing web hosting for artists and very small businesses.Writer/Publisher - Oregon Health Watcher commentary* - Published on the Internet* and distributed to 6000 readers interested in public health care policy in Oregon.Portland, Oregon* http://www.goodgrowthnw.org/health.html—Richard Ellmyer

 

02.15.2006 at 10:00 Reply
Oregon School Boards Association Gee I wish I could afford health care. We are a middle class family, who lost our coverage after 911, due to a slow in my self-employed husband's business. Looking into it recently, its close to 1,000 dollars-a-month for our family of six with a huge deductable. My husband gave me the blue cross plan to look at. Needless to say, I passed because it's beyond our means. Between the government employees and the Oregon Health many middle class families just do without health insurance. When you think about, is it fair? No! Come to find out life is pretty unfair we are just victims circumstance. Whenever people get something for nothing or next to nothing it's usually those who have to work hard for their coverage that flip the bill for those who pay nothing or next to nothing. I think everybody should pay for their own health insurance cost, and just pay the teachers more money. This way people won't be running to the doctor for every little thing. I haven't been to a doctor in seven years for a check up. We don't go unless we are really feeling bad like broken bones. That's about it. I notice my government employee friends get free dental, and braces for their kids too. We had to pay 5,000 dollars for our daughter's beautiful smile. It must be nice to put braces on the whole family while some women can't even afford basic physicals in fear that if something went wrong we'd lose our homes or worse yet our lives, because we don't have insurance to pay for the medical care.—D. Sutton

 

 
 

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