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  #1  
Old 07-03-2012, 06:43 PM
Riot's Avatar
Riot Riot is offline
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Posts: 14,153
Default People who will be denied #ACA benefits by their governors

Attention, residents of:

Georgia
Wisconsin
Iowa
South Dakota
Kansas
Louisiana
Florida
South Carolina
Indiana
New Jersey

Your House of Representatives, your Senate, your President, and your Supreme Court has given you an expansion of healthcare in your state under the Affordable Care Act.

While every other Republican-lead state will, of course, follow the law to help their citizens, your governor has personally decided he's not gonna let you get the healthcare you are now legally entitled to, that everyone else in the country will be getting.

Sorry. Sucks for you

http://thinkprogress.org/health/2012...ans-uninsured/
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  #2  
Old 07-03-2012, 06:58 PM
paulo537 paulo537 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Riot View Post
Attention, residents of:

Georgia
Wisconsin
Iowa
South Dakota
Kansas
Louisiana
Florida
South Carolina
Indiana
New Jersey

Your House of Representatives, your Senate, your President, and your Supreme Court has given you an expansion of healthcare in your state under the Affordable Care Act.

While every other Republican-lead state will, of course, follow the law to help their citizens, your governor has personally decided he's not gonna let you get the healthcare you are now legally entitled to, that everyone else in the country will be getting.

Sorry. Sucks for you

http://thinkprogress.org/health/2012...ans-uninsured/
The law does nothing to "get you healthcare."

The law reforms insurance and healthcare financing. That should have come to you through you dozens of posts.


When you need a break from teacing here, study a little about the tendency for Health Insurer profitability to run in interesting cycles in terms of profit and loss.

Should the people in those single-payor state feel good about what will happen when the state take a loss , say 2-3 years in a row? It happens.
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  #3  
Old 07-03-2012, 07:05 PM
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Riot Riot is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by paulo537 View Post
The law does nothing to "get you healthcare."
Actually, yes, the law indeed expands the eligibility for Medicaid. Which is exactly what these governors are refusing to extend to the class of eligible citizens.

Which means that although these citizens were indeed given access to healthcare by the ACA Medicaid expansion, these governors have decided they don't get it.

Quote:
The law reforms insurance and healthcare financing. That should have come to you through you dozens of posts.
You might want to read up on the law a little more, so you can learn what else it does.

Quote:
Should the people in those single-payor state feel good about what will happen when the state take a loss , say 2-3 years in a row? It happens.
See, I just have to laugh when some get on their high horse, but are facing the horses azz. You might want to realize that the term is "single-payer", not single payor. A payor is the person who writes the check. The system is "single-payer". Yes, the person who writes the check would be the "payor".

Quote:
Should the people in those single-payor state feel good about what will happen when the state take a loss , say 2-3 years in a row? It happens.
The states are not paying completely for the first five years of coverage, are they? If states cannot administer the program to run without loss over the initial five years of test program, financed by the federal government, they can adjust it. Don't you think? Why would that be any valid reason to not implement the program? A program proven already to work in Mass?
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Old 07-03-2012, 07:32 PM
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Rileyoriley Rileyoriley is offline
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Location: The Snowy Woods
Posts: 4,484
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Yes, it's working so well for the "working poor" in Massachusetts.






Open enrollment for Health Insurance
July 1st through August 15th

Updated: Monday, 02 Jul 2012, 8:52 PM EDT
Published : Monday, 02 Jul 2012, 5:44 PM EDT

* Ryan Walsh

FLORENCE, Mass. (WWLP) - The Supreme Court's ruling on health care continues to dominate the headlines.

Massachusetts began its health care reform law six years ago. Open enrollment for health insurance begins on Monday and there are still close to four-hundred thousand uninsured people in Massachusetts.

"It seems to me as what kind of health insurance plan someone selects is a really critical, critical decision", says Leslie Laurie, the President and CEO of Tapestry Health.

For first timers it can be tricky and if you aren't insured, you could owe the IRS money.

"There is a penalty it is a dollar penalty and it is based upon how much you earn", says Tax Attorney Paul Mancinone.

If you make less than $16,000 you do not get penalized. Make more than that, you could owe anywhere from $19 a month, up to $101 dollars a month if you make $33,000 or more.

"Potentially husband and wife... so we have seen penalties as high as $2400 dollars", says Mancinone.

Having a plan could help you avoid tax penalties, but picking the wrong plan could end up costing you more money in the long-run."

"The individual mandate requires people to have insurance, but in order to meet that mandate some can only afford health insurance where a deductible is thousands and thousands of dollars", says Laurie.

Massachusetts does have the lowest percentage of uninsured people in the United States and it had the 7th lowest percentage before the law was implemented. Researchers at the Harvard Medical School revealed in a study that most of the uninsured in Massachusetts are the working poor.

"While we celebrate the fact that all of us in Massachusetts have access to health insurance that doesn't necessarily translate into the important care that individuals need", says Laurie.

The state's health insurance website is mahealthconnector.org.

The open enrollment period is from July 1st through August 15th.

If you don't have health insurance and want to try to avoid paying tax penalties. Mancinone recommends appeal it. "You can appeal, in order to appeal, you have to make sure your tax return does not show the penalty, if your tax return does show the penalty it becomes a collection matter with the Department of Revenue, because you admitted to owing the penalty. It gives you an opportunity to have your case heard, if it's as high as $2400 in the balance and there are extenuating circumstances, why volunteer the penalty. Try to have your issue addressed and hope for the best with the Commonwealth."



All content © Copyright 2000 - 2012 – LIN Television Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
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  #5  
Old 07-03-2012, 07:34 PM
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Riot Riot is offline
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Mass is working very well. Thousands have been insured and now get health care that could not before it was implemented. You might listen to Mass ex-gov. Mitt Romney, who has spoken for years on how well it's worked in detail, and how it's a model for the entire country to follow.

If there are problems that develop, you change your laws to adjust to them as it goes. Here's a good discussion of the pros and cons of the Mass law http://www.startribune.com/lifestyle...161248535.html
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Old 07-04-2012, 09:59 AM
Clip-Clop Clip-Clop is offline
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Stop reading opinion pieces on the law and start reading the actual law, something I am beginning to think I am the only person that has actually done so anywhere in the world.
Making someone buy something is not "providing" them with same. Forcing others (not wealthy either, almost all are middle class) to pick up the tab for those that cannot afford this product is inappropriate and irresponsible.
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