McDonalds May Drop Health Coverage Due to Obamacare

Gunner

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Obama said if you like your insurance carrier you can keep it. With that being said, what happens if your employer drops your coverage and dumps you onto the dole? If he is so smart he didn't see this coming? It's cheaper to pay the fine than pay for coverage. So in the end the big bad corporations many of you want to stick it to get to save more money. That means more obscene profits!!!!!!
In the end it hurts those it was designed to help. What if they liked their coverage?

http://online.wsj.com/home-page


By JANET ADAMY

McDonald's Corp. has warned federal regulators that it could drop its health insurance plan for nearly 30,000 hourly restaurant workers unless regulators waive a new requirement of the U.S. health overhaul.

The move is one of the clearest indications that new rules may disrupt workers' health plans as the law ripples through the real world.

Trade groups representing restaurants and retailers say low-wage employers might halt their coverage if the government doesn't loosen a requirement for "mini-med" plans, which offer limited benefits to some 1.4 million Americans.

The requirement concerns the percentage of premiums that must be spent on benefits.

View Full Image

Noah Rabinowitz for The Wall Street Journal
McDonald's says the new health law threatens coverage for many workers, like these in Times Square.

While many restaurants don't offer health coverage, McDonald's provides mini-med plans for workers at 10,500 U.S. locations, most of them franchised. A single worker can pay $14 a week for a plan that caps annual benefits at $2,000, or about $32 a week to get coverage up to $10,000 a year.

Last week, a senior McDonald's official informed the Department of Health and Human Services that the restaurant chain's insurer won't meet a 2011 requirement to spend at least 80% to 85% of its premium revenue on medical care.

McDonald's and trade groups say the percentage, called a medical loss ratio, is unrealistic for mini-med plans because of high administrative costs owing to frequent worker turnover, combined with relatively low spending on claims.

Democrats who drafted the health law wanted the requirement to prevent insurers from spending too much on executive salaries, marketing and other costs that they said don't directly help patients.

McDonald's move is the latest indication of possible unintended consequences from the health overhaul. Dozens of companies have taken charges against earnings—totaling more than $1 billion—over a tax change in prescription-drug benefits for retirees.

More recently, insurers have proposed a round of double-digit premium increases and said new coverage mandates in the law are partly to blame. HHS has criticized the proposed increases as unwarranted.

Democrats, looking toward midterm elections in which the health overhaul is an issue, say it already has stopped insurance practices they call abusive, has given rebates to seniors with high out-of-pocket prescription costs and has allowed parents to keep children on their insurance plans until they turn 26.


McDonald's, in a memo to federal officials, said "it would be economically prohibitive for our carrier to continue offering" the mini-med plan unless it got an exemption from the requirement to spend 80% to 85% of premiums on benefits. Officials said McDonald's would probably have to hit the 85% figure, which applies to larger group plans. Its insurer, BCS Insurance Group of Oak Brook Terrace, Ill., declined to comment.

McDonald's didn't disclose what the plan's current medical loss ratio was.

The issue of limited-benefit plans has also hit colleges, which face the same 80-to-85% requirement beginning next year.

"Having to drop our current mini-med offering would represent a huge disruption to our 29,500 participants," said McDonald's memo, which was reviewed by The Wall Street Journal. "It would deny our people this current benefit that positively impacts their lives and protects their health—and would leave many without an affordable, comparably designed alternative until 2014."

The health law expands Medicaid and offers large subsidies to lower-income people to buy coverage, but those provisions don't kick in until 2014.

Federal officials say there's no guarantee they can grant mini-med carriers a waiver. They say the answer may not come by November, when many employers require employees to sign up for the coming year's benefits.

The government is waiting for the association of state insurance commissioners to draft recommendations. The head of the association's health-insurance committee, Kansas Insurance Commissioner Sandy Praeger, said she doesn't think these types of mini-med plans deserve an exemption.

"If they are sold as comprehensive coverage, we expect them to meet the same [medical-loss ratio] standards as other health plans," she said.

Without Coverage

Some options for low-wage workers if they don't get health insurance on the job

Under current system:

May be eligible for Medicaid, the federal-state program for the poor, especially families with children
Can purchase private insurance on individual market, but premiums are likely to be too costly n Hospital emergency rooms must treat all comers without regard to ability to pay.
Some 1,200 federally funded community health centers offer low-cost basic care.
Starting in 2014 under health overhaul:

Everyone with income up to 133% of federal poverty level will be eligible for Medicaid. (Poverty level for individual is $10,830 in 2010.)
People with income between 133% and 400% of poverty level will be eligible for subsidized health insurance. Premiums are capped at 2% of income for those at the lowest end of that scale and 9.5% of income at the highest end.
Additional $11 billion spent on community health centers
Steven Larsen, the HHS official who received McDonald's email memo, said the department doesn't want employers to drop coverage over the law. The agency says it has already given the carrier for McDonald's and others the chance to seek exemption from new annual limits on benefit payouts.

Insurers say dozens of other employers could find themselves in the same situation as McDonald's. Aetna Inc., one of the largest sellers of mini-med plans, provides the plans to Home Depot Inc., Disney Worldwide Services, CVS Caremark Corp., Staples Inc. and Blockbuster Inc., among others, according to an Aetna client list obtained by the Journal. Aetna also covers AmeriCorps teaching-program sponsors, who are required by law to make health coverage available.

Aetna declined to comment; it has previously indicated that the requirement could hurt its limited benefit plans.

"There is not any issuer of limited benefit coverage that could meet the enhanced MLR standards," said Neil Trautwein, a vice president at the National Retail Federation, using the abbreviation for medical loss ratio.

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A spokeswoman for McDonald's said it would look for other insurance options if it couldn't get the waiver. The company's chief people officer for the U.S., Steve Russell, said, "McDonald's will continue to be committed to providing competitive pay and benefits."

The chain has offered a limited benefits plan for more than 10 years. The current version provides outpatient, inpatient, preventive-care and prescription-drug coverage. McDonald's says 85% of participants have less than $5,000 in medical expenses a year.

The new rules at issue apply only to fully insured health plans and not those where the employer absorbs the risk and directly pays out medical claims. The rules wouldn't affect Wal-Mart Stores Inc., for instance, because it is self-insured.

Benefit consultants anticipate that, by 2014, most employers will stop offering mini-med plans. Such plans likely wouldn't meet the definition of adequate coverage for full-time workers. Under the law, midsize and large employers that fail to offer such coverage will have to pay a fine.

Until 2014, workers on mini-med plans would have few affordable alternatives for coverage. According to a survey by the Restaurant Opportunities Centers United, workers without health insurance were three times as likely to visit the emergency room without being able to pay as their counterparts with health insurance.

"The packages maybe could be better, but for a start, they're quite good," said Jerry Newman, a professor at State University of New York at Buffalo, who worked under cover at McDonald's to write "My Secret Life on the McJob." He added: "For those who didn't have health insurance through their spouse, it was a life saver."

Write to Janet Adamy at janet.adamy@wsj.com
 
They drop insurance, the workers sign up for Medicaid (single payer) with low administrative costs.

I rather deal with the Medicaid than private insurance, win win for the workers.
 
I'd send the FDA and the USDA after their ass. Every franchise..

Fuck them ever since they fucked up the fries when they stopped using LARD
 
I think y'all missing the big picture. If one employer is doing this *a major one I might add*, what's to say that a bigger employer would not take the same road. This is about to be a shit sandwich the Middle Class will have to devour once again....
 
They won't do it. McDonalds is about families and this would fuck them up across the board. One of those fucked up republicans on the McDonalds board is trying asking to go out of business in the US. Besides you need health coverage just to eat that shit.

-VG
 
<font size="5"><Center>
McDonald's Denies WSJ Report
That It Will Drop Health Care Plan</font size></center>



ABC News
By DANIEL ARNALL
and HUMA KHAN
Sept. 30, 2010


<font size="3">McDonald's and the Obama administration are firing back at a report that the fast food giant is considering dropping its "mini-med" health insurance for hourly workers, even as the National Association of Insurance Commissioners said it won't ask for an exemption for such plans. </font size>


"Mini-med" plans, which provide limited coverage at minimal employee cost, came into the spotlight after the Wall Street Journal reported today that McDonald's is planning to drop them because of the new health care law.

The Journal reviewed a memo by McDonald's asking federal officials to determine if their most basic health insurance plans can be exempted from the medical loss ratio (MLR) requirements of the new health care law.

The law requires that 80-85 percent of the premiums received go directly to patient care, not to other expenses like overhead, executive salaries or dividends for shareholders.


McDonald's said the company has no plans to drop the "mini-med" plan.

<font size="3"><center>"Media reports stating that we plan to drop health care coverage
for our employees are completely false,"
said Steve Russell, a senior
vice president and head of human resources for McDonald's, in a
written response to the article. "These reports are purely
speculative and misleading."
</font size></center>

That sentiment was echoed by Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius today.

"The McDonald's story is flat-out wrong, and I am sorry that they were not more accurate in their reporting," Sebelius said at a reporters' breakfast organized by the Christian Science Monitor. "The medical loss ratio issue is one that isn't even settled. ... We have assured the folks at McDonald's and others that as soon as we have a regulation that has a process in it, we will begin those discussions."

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Nearly 30,000 McDonald's employees currently participate in the plan, which provides a maximum of $2,000 to $10,000 a year in basic medical coverage at a cost of $14 to $32 a week, according to the company. Home Depot, Disney, Blockbuster, Staples and other big retail chains with large populations of hourly employees offer similar plans.

The McDonald's plan, according to the report, has higher overhead costs because it provides insurance to a highly transient population of hourly workers in its restaurants and would not likely meet the minimum ratio requirements of the new law.

HHS guidelines on the medical loss ratio will be based on a report issued by the NAIC, due at the end of the year. Today, the NAIC said that "mini-med" plans will be subject to new medical loss ratio regulations and the group has no plans to ask for an exemption for those.

"Mini-med plans that are sold as stand-alone coverage -- and are not supplemental to a comprehensive plan -- will be subject to the MLR requirement, and we have no plans to ask HHS for a specific exemption on their behalf. If they are sold as comprehensive coverage, we expect them to meet the same MLR standards as other health plans," Kansas Insurance Commissioner and chair of the NAIC Health Insurance Committee Sandy Praeger said in a statement to ABC News.

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi's office also came to the defense of the new law, saying in a statement that, "Under the law, workers and businesses will have access to affordable health coverage choices and we are moving toward a system where more of the premiums will go to provide benefits instead of paying for insurance companies' administrative costs."

Medical loss ratio guidelines -- the ratio of medical expenses to administrative spending -- have not been issued yet but the new law sets new stricter guidelines that raise the percentage of the premium dollar that should go to medical care rather than administrative costs and profits. Some "mini-med" plans are eligible for waivers.

The new limits are due to go into effect in January.

Republicans today painted the report as another support for their argument that the health care law should be repealed.

Speaking at the American Enterprise Institute, House Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio, promised to repeal what he called the monstrosity of a health care bill if Republicans gain majority of the House after the mid-term elections.

"If you believe, as I do, that Obamacare will ruin the best health care delivery system in the world, and, as I do, believe it will bankrupt our country, we've made it clear we want a repeal of Obamacare and to replace it with common sense reforms that will bring down the cost of health insurance," Boehner said. "When I say we're going to do everything to make sure that this law does not go into effect, I mean that we will do everything. Is that clear?"


ABC News' Devin Dwyer, Ben Krolowitz and Brian Hartman contributed to this report.

http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/Heal...eport-drop-health-care-plan/story?id=11764596
 
<font size="3">
I'll help him out: </font size>


Republicans today painted the report as another support for their argument that the health care law should be repealed.

Speaking at the American Enterprise Institute, House Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio, promised to repeal what he called the monstrosity of a health care bill if Republicans gain majority of the House after the mid-term elections.

"If you believe, as I do, that Obamacare will ruin the best health care delivery system in the world, and, as I do, believe it will bankrupt our country, we've made it clear we want a repeal of Obamacare and to replace it with common sense reforms that will bring down the cost of health insurance," Boehner said. <SPAN style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffff00">"When I say we're going to do everything to make sure that this law does not go into effect, I mean that we will do everything. Is that clear?"</span>
 
I think y'all missing the big picture. If one employer is doing this *a major one I might add*, what's to say that a bigger employer would not take the same road. This is about to be a shit sandwich the Middle Class will have to devour once again....


dunce-778614.jpg
 
Dave this is coming. What reason do you think businesses are not hiring? CEO's like to know their costs. Yes, I saw the update later on that evening. Hopefully the GOP will unfund that crap.


What reason do you think businesses are not hiring?

The same reason the party of NO is blocking virtually everything in congress. To tear down the country so the corporatist fascists can get their filthy asses back in power.

I saw the update later on that evening
:lol:

You can't make this shit up!

Stick your finger in a light socket!
 
Dave this is coming. What reason do you think businesses are not hiring? CEO's like to know their costs. Yes, I saw the update later on that evening. Hopefully the GOP will unfund that crap.

Uncertainty of the market. I'm doubting that there is some questions about how health insurance reform will affect them but if people were buying, companies would be hiring. Although, now that they've learned the can get the same amount of work out of fewer workers, the hiring will probably continue to be slow.
You can't count on the GOP, they're running on health care reform benefits without saying how they would pay for it.
 
Dave this is coming. What reason do you think businesses are not hiring? CEO's like to know their costs. Yes, I saw the update later on that evening. Hopefully the GOP will unfund that crap.

Busines is not hiring because they have limited access to credit, causing them to hoard cash.
 
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