Once you give the social engineers an inch, they'll soon be
looking for that mile. From the Boston Globe:
The state Legislature will probably make a round of
changes in the one-year-old law mandating near universal health
insurance, but not before late fall, according to Senator Richard
T. Moore, co-chairman of the Joint Committee on Health Care
Financing....
During testimony, Moore said he endorsed a proposal to require
that businesses pay at least 50 percent of the premiums for
employees' health insurance if they want to avoid a penalty of up
to $295 per employee. Currently, the requirement is 33 percent, set
by the administration of former governor Mitt Romney. Two weeks
ago, Moore asked the administration of Governor Deval Patrick to
make the change.
If they don't, he said, "it's my intention that would be put
into the statute." But he said there was no rush to do that.
Other changes proposed at the hearing included setting the
maximum that anyone would have to pay for insurance at 10 percent
of income. The Commonwealth Health Insurance Connector, the state
agency implementing the law, has set limits based only on premiums,
and costs for many individuals and families are certain to top 10
percent.
Now that the politicians are sticking their noses in the
Massachusetts Health Care Honey Pot again, I wonder if some
reporter covering the Romney Campaign will ask the former governor
if he still likes his health care plan?
topics:
Health Care, Business, Law, NATO