Paul Waldman lays it all out in this rundown in the American Prospect: what we should watch for as the House and the Senate attempt to wheel and deal and merge their bills.
This part in particular should be of great interest to UFCW and other union members who are furious (and rightly so) at the unfair so-called "Cadillac plan" tax in the Senate bill:
Funding: This may be the stickiest difference between the two bills. The House version raises a substantial chunk of the needed revenue by imposing a 5.4 percent surtax on incomes over $500,000, or $1 million for couples. Meanwhile, the Senate bill raises revenue through an excise tax on "Cadillac plans." Many wonks believe the tax will put downward pressure on spending by making these expensive plans less appealing, but there's still concern that the tax could hit many middle-class people. The conference could just split the difference, implementing versions of both taxes.
The holidays must be a tough time of year for those separated from their loved ones by military service. But America’s largest retailer is making our soldiers holidays just a little bleaker – by unreasonably and substantially marking up prices to ship to APO and FPO addresses.
On a $120 purchase, Walmart.com charged $10.35 to ship to an APO address, compared with $2.10 to a stateside address. For most items, Amazon.com charged the same to ship to an APO address as a stateside address. And Target offered shipping on a $120 purchase to an APO address for less than to a stateside address.
That’s an almost 5x increase in shipping costs, even though they cost the shipper exactly the same as shipping domestically.That's Department of Defense policy--shipping to an APO/FPO address costs the same as shipping to New York--because DOD picks up the rest of the tab.
It certainly seems like Walmart is overcharging our service men and women overseas just to make a buck. And that's just not right.
All of us at the UFCW would like to thank our service men and women for their service, especially those overseas during these holidays. We wish them a safe and speedy return to their families, and a holiday spent at home next year.
Adding to the growing body of research exposing the flaws in the Senate health bill, the Center for Economic Policy Research released a report this morning hammering the effectiveness of the Free-Rider provision.
Final health care reform legislation should include employer responsibility provisions that are consistent with the principle of shared responsibility and do not create perverse incentives and free rider problems. The House bill passes this test; the Senate bill does not.
The report supports the findings of the UFCW report released last week that found the Free Rider provision would incentivize companies shifting from full to part-time workers and would not hold employers accountable for their part in ensuring workers have access to quality coverage.
Joe Hansen and Eliseo Medina have a joint post up on The Huffington Post, explaining why real immigration reform will help get our economy back on track, and why reform helps all workers.
Senate, what on earth is up with the Free-Rider provision in the health care bill?
In the spirit of an encouraging friend offering constructive criticism on decisions that could lead to potentially harmful and unintended consequences (like the time in college when my roommate wanted to sink her life-savings into an industrial dump truck on eBay), we think it is about time to sit down, put the kettle on, and have a heart-to-heart.
In a nutshell, the Free-Rider provision states that employers who don’t offer good coverage pay a fine if their workers qualify for subsidies to buy coverage in the insurance exchange.
Now for the problems:
Companies don’t have to pay fines for part-time workers
Companies don’t have to pay fines for workers eligible for Medicaid
Companies only have to pay a fine for workers receiving subsidies to buy coverage the insurance exchange.
The standard for “good coverage” that an employer must offer to avoid paying fines is ridiculously low.
Problem #1: Say you are the owner of Spend-A-Lot Stores and you need to cut costs. Health care is a huge expenditure for you, but you find that if you shift more workers to part-time, you can avoid having to pay for good benefits without having to pay fines. Your arch-nemesis, Fantabulousamazing, Inc. believes in investing in its workers and does offer good health plans. Now responsible Fantabulousamazing is at a disadvantage to your unscrupulous business practices, thus defeating the entire purpose of the provision.
Not only that, but workers in the community who were barely getting by on the wages at Spend-A-Lot now can’t get enough hours to pay the bills and are stuck without access to health care.
Problem #2: If workers qualify for Medicaid, Spend-A-Lot doesn’t have to pay fines for not providing good coverage because the workers won’t be buying insurance in the exchange.
Increase the number of workers on Medicaid = decrease health care costs = keep wages low enough for workers to qualify = further erode the middle class jobs offered by Spend-A-Lot.
Problem #3: By hiring workers who would not qualify for subsidies on the exchange, Spend-A-Lot can reduce the amount of fines incurred by not offering quality health coverage.
Workers not eligible for Medicaid who also do not qualify for subsidies would include those who are covered under their parents plans, older workers eligible for Medicare, and married workers whose spouses offer adequate health plans.
Thus, counterintuitively, a “free rider” provision would penalize—and thus disincentivize—employers from hiring workers eligible for premium subsidies: low- and moderate-income individuals. This is a great concern for single mothers in particular, who could be penalized as less attractive hires.
Problem #4: If Spend-A-Lot offers really terrible coverage to workers, the definition of adequate coverage in the provision is so loose that a large share of the burden for health care costs can still remain on the workers while Spend-A-Lot doesn’t have to pay any fines at all. Now workers are left unable to qualify in the exchange and with coverage that will stick them with huge medical bills that they can’t afford.
On Tuesday, we released a report examining the impact of the provision on Walmart workers. Granted, we are not fans of Walmart in general because of its history of poor behavior when it comes to workers, but it also happens to be the largest private employer in the U.S.
The results? To maximize profits, the provision creates the incentive for Walmart to shift to part-time and to keep wages low and workers dependent on public programs. If a bad actor as big as Walmart can slip through the loopholes, what does that say about the bill’s ability to bring down health costs nationwide?
Wall Street Journal columnist James B. Stewart did a little informal comparison shopping to see which online retailers perform best when it comes to price and selection. Amazon came in first, eBay second, and Walmart a trailing third.
Looks like Walmart has a long when to go when it comes to competing online.
A new study released by the UFCW examines the Senate health care reform bill, and finds that a provision meant to hold corporations accountable actually encourages companies to duck their fair share of the costs of health care reform.
The report examines the Senate bill by looking at its impact on America’s largest and most irresponsible private employer--Walmart. As written, the employer responsibility provision--"Free Rider"--would provide no overall health care cost savings because it would:
Incentivize the hiring of a largely part-time workforce, and encourage reducing workers’ hours as a way to eliminate company responsibility for health care costs
Force low-income Walmart employees into high-deductible, company-provided insurance.
Make few, if any, Walmart employees eligible for tax credits to purchase better insurance through the health insurance exchange.
Continue Walmart’s dependence on federal and state subsidies for Medicaid for its employees, and encourage Walmart to have even more employees dependent on Medicaid.
Provide little or no incentive for Walmart to provide better care to its workers.
These findings have galvanized a broad coalition of working families and their supporters to call on Senators to fix the flawed provision of the bill to ensure that President Barack Obama achieves his goal of quality, affordable health care for every Americans.
And concerned organizations that have signed on to a comprehensive ad campaign include the Communications Workers of America, the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, the United Auto Workers, the United Farm Workers, USAction, and the United Steelworkers. Beginning with full page ads in Capitol Hill publications and a national Web presence, the group will roll out print ads across the country over the next few weeks.
The findings of this report put a bright light on just how critical employer responsibility is to health care reform. With much of America’s job growth expected to be in retail over the next few years, it is clear that not including strong employer responsibility provisions will result in a part-time workforce dependent on already overburdened state programs for health care.
We know, we know. The Zhu Zhu pet is the Cabbage Patch Kid of 2009. But guess what? The cute little hamster is potentially full of harmful chemicals--and it's made in China. Instead, why not contribute to America's economic recovery and buy safe toys made right here in the U.S. by UFCW members? The best part about buying these union-made toys? Unlike a mechanical hamster, these games are time-tested classics--so your kids will continue to enjoy them long after the holiday decorations come down.
Some of the great UFCW-made games you can give this holiday season:
Battleship Candyland Chutes and Ladders Clue Connect 4 Guess Who Hi Ho Cherry-O Life Memory Games Monopoly Monopoly Here & Now Electronic Edition Mouse Trap Operation Pictionary Risk Barrel of Monkeys Scattergories Sorry! Scrabble Taboo Trouble Twister Yahtzee Pictureka
United Food and Commercial Workers International Union President Joe Hansen will proudly represent the 1.3 million UFCW members at the White House jobs summit tomorrow.
President Obama is convening the gathering of nearly 100 key industry, union and economic leaders to explore ways to slow the loss of jobs and quicken the pace of job creation at a time when the nation’s jobless rate is at 10.2 percent, its highest point since 1983.
With one million members in the private retail sector of the economy, President Hansen will be discussing the importance of food aid assistance for unemployed Americans as well as increasing lending opportunities to retailers to expand quality food access to underserved communities.For millions of workers in communities across the country, supermarket jobs are stable, quality jobs.
President Hansen on the jobs summit:
President Obama inherited one of the most challenging economic situations in modern history.I am proud to work with him to find solutions that will get people back to work, make sure unemployed workers have the support they need to stay healthy and that responsible employers have access to resources to stay afloat while we rebuild the economy.
Boy, now we know the Goldman Sachs crew is expecting the apocalypse. First they stock up on flu vaccines--and now they're arming themselves Universal Horror-style, torch-wielding populist mobs?
Jason Lefkowitz at CTW has a very, very funny piece on this over here. I stole this awesome graphic from him, too.
ALSO: John Vandeventer at SEIU also has a great piece up on this--and apparently has excellent Photoshop skillz like Jason.