We attended the Retired Chapter Meeting on Zoom this afternoon. I didn't take minutes as I had other responsibilities. What stood out for me were two points:
•Michael Mulgrew continues to spread misinformation that the judge ruled GHI Senior Care could not be offered any longer. The reality is Mulgrew's Medicare Advantage with Aetna was agreed to by the Municipal Labor Committee and the City. They are mutually killing Senior Care to privatize Medicare for municipal retirees.
•There was plenty of confusion at today's retiree meeting. Some don't understand this change. Imposing it on seniors does not seem at all fair.
I proposed yesterday that we should call for a constitutionally allowable referendum on this huge change on senior healthcare. We need 10% of the UFT membership to demand a vote.
In other news on Medicare Advantage, PSC President James Davis sent this out yesterday. The PSC will vote NO on Mulgrewcare:
Dear Delegates,
As you know, the Adams administration (Office of Labor Relations) and the Municipal Labor Committee have been in negotiations with Aetna for a Medicare Advantage plan.
Last Thu, March 2, representatives from Aetna presented an overview of their Medicare Advantage plan to MLC member unions. This morning I received notice of a MLC meeting on Thu, March 9, at which the member unions will be asked to vote to approve the Aetna contract.
I will vote No on behalf of the PSC for several reasons.
We have not seen the contract, only summaries of its elements - which I've attached here. As we found the last time with the "Alliance" MA contract, the devil is in the details. It's unfair to ask the member unions of the MLC to approve a contract without an opportunity to review it fully.
Even a much-improved Medicare Advantage plan - and the Aetna plan appears to be far better than the "Alliance" plan - still represents a major step away from the premium-free public health option that the PSC supports. Aetna promises minimal pre-authorizations and co-pays, minimal disruption in terms of the health care providers who will accept it, access to hospitals such as MSKCC and Hospital for Special Surgery, and other benefits. Nevertheless, the push toward privately administered health insurance is antithetical to our union's stated commitments. The fact that nearly half of retirees in the US are now enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan of some kind rather than traditional Medicare does not mean we should advocate for Medicare Advantage.
No Medicare Advantage plan will save New York City the kind of money needed to genuinely fix the problem of runaway health costs because retiree health benefits are a relatively small piece of the puzzle. The $600 million in annual savings that this Medicare Advantage plan is supposed to achieve for the City will shore up the Health Insurance Stabilization Fund only short-term. The real leverage that the City has to drive down skyrocketing health costs - using its 1+ billion covered lives to negotiate better terms with hospitals and prescription drug companies - will not have been used.
There are other union representatives who will vote No. But there are probably enough Yes votes for the contract with Aetna to be approved. So I have been discussing with other MLC union representatives and with PSC leaders, including the Social Safety Net working group, how premium-free Senior Care could be preserved once the Adams administration moves to implement Aetna Medicare Advantage. To be clear, eliminating an option for Senior Care is the City’s explicit intention.
The implementation of Medicare Advantage for NYC retirees and their dependents is very likely, but it is still not a foregone conclusion. If premium-free Senior Care is slated for elimination during the MA implementation, the same group of municipal retirees that sued previously may well file another lawsuit.
We are now asking retirees and active members to contact their City Council members to join a sign-on letter to Mayor Adams. Based on our proposal, the letter urges the Mayor to preserve premium-free Senior Care, form a stakeholders commission, and buy time - using the City’s current budget surplus - for the commission to address the true causes of the rising cost of healthcare for NYC, as other states and municipalities around the country have done. As well, the NYC Office of Contract Services will need to hold a public hearing, as was held in Fall 2021 when the previous MA contract was under consideration.
You should also be aware that the City is entering into negotiations for a new Comprehensive Benefits Plan (CBP) to replace GHI, the plan in which most of PSC's active employees are enrolled, starting in 2024. The intent is to keep the CBP premium-free while saving 10% on the current costs. MLC union representatives have not seen the proposals, but they are under review by the MLC executive committee and health technical committee.
I will continue to keep you updated on developments and notify you of any actions in which the PSC is participating. Thank you in particular to the Retiree chapter leadership and the Social Safety Net working group for their vigilance, and to all members who have recognized the importance of this struggle for current and future retirees.
In solidarity,
James Davis
2 comments:
James, after the MLC vote this week, please see if you can share a tally list of which unions voted for and against implementing Mulgrewcare. Thanks!
Retirees and active workers opposing the drive towards Medicare Advantage will rally on the steps of the Smithsonian Museum, just across from Battery Park in Manhattan, beginning at 11:30 a.m on Thursday, March 9. They will then march along Broadway before rallying again at City Hall Park at 1 p.m. For more information, contact crocnyc22@gmail.com.
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