Delaware Liberal

DL Open Thread: Friday, September 15, 2023

UAW Goes On Strike Against Detroit’s ‘Big Three’.  BTW, ‘Stellantis’ (a combination of ‘Stella!’ and ‘Atlantis’?) is the nom du jour of what used to be Chrysler.  How did this fact escape me?  The UAW members deserve our support:

Never before has the United Auto Workers union carried out a simultaneous work stoppage at all three automakers. But rather than strike every plant involved in the labor dispute, the union called on workers to walk out at only certain facilities when their contracts expired at midnight.

In a Facebook Live announcement, the union’s president, Shawn Fain, said the first three struck facilities would be Ford’s Michigan Assembly Plant, in Wayne, Michigan; GM’s Wentzville Assembly plant, in Wentzville, Missouri; and Stellantis’ Toledo Assembly Complex, in Toledo, Ohio.

Such a strategy could enable the union to disrupt production for the companies while keeping many members on the job and earning paychecks. Fain said the unpredictable work stoppage may expand to other facilities over time if the union doesn’t continue to make headway in contract talks.

“The money is there. The cause is righteous. The world is watching,” Fain said. “This is our defining moment.”

Lest there be any doubt that the cause is righteous, the following comments should clear it up for you:

The nation’s largest business lobbying group, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, is pointing a finger of blame directly at the Biden administration for the failure to head off a walkout.

“The U.A.W. strike and indeed the ‘summer of strikes’ is the natural result of the Biden administration’s ‘whole of government’ approach to promoting unionization at all costs,” the chamber’s president, Suzanne P. Clark, said in a statement.

General Motors chief executive Mary Barra expressed her dissatisfaction: “I’m extremely frustrated and disappointed. We don’t need to be on strike right now.” She said that G.M. “put a historic offer on the table” with gross wage increases of more than 20 percent, in addition to better job security and “world-class health care.”

I especially like what UAW President Shawn Fain had to say:

“This is the end of company unionism, where the companies and the union work together in a friendly way, because it hasn’t been good for our members,” he said in an interview as the vote count neared completion.

Somewhere, a pro-Chamber governor is putting on a heavy-duty pair of leak-proof Depends.

Gen Z For Me!  They clearly recognize that nothing will be done on climate change without drastic intervention:

Six young people are preparing to appear at the European court of human rights to try to compel 32 nations to rapidly escalate their emissions reductions in the world’s largest climate legal action to date.

Aged from 11 to 24, the six Portuguese claimants, say they were driven to act by their experiences in the wildfires that ripped through the Leiria region in 2017, killing 66 people and destroying 20,000 hectares of forest.

After another summer in which wildfires raged across Portugal, Greece, Spain, Croatia and Italy, the young people will argue in the grand chamber of the Strasbourg court in 13 days’ time that the 32 European nations’ policies to tackle global heating are inadequate and in breach of their human rights obligations.

Crowdfunded by people around the world, who have donated more than £100,000, they are seeking a binding ruling from the judges to force the countries to rapidly escalate their emissions reductions in what would be a historic milestone in climate litigation.

“This case is unprecedented in its scale and its consequence. Never before have so many countries had to defend themselves in front of any court anywhere in the world,” said Gearóid Ó Cuinn, of Global Legal Action Network (GLAN), which is supporting the claimants.

Speaking Of Pro-Chamber Governors…:  Medicare Advantage continues its inexorable march to screw retired government employees.  No group too small to screw:

Apparently, no group of retirees is too small for these companies. A combination of an Insurance Brokerage (Assured Partners) and United Health Care have descended into tiny upstate New York Cortland County to engorge themselves on the Medicare benefits from about 400 retired county employees.

The majority cohort of our grossly ill-informed county legislators were told they were going to save $800,000 per year if they forced the retirees into the UHC “advantage” program. That was all they needed to hear. On August 24th after shockingly minimal notice to the retirees, and even deceiving the retirees as to when they would actually vote on it, the legislators voted to shove the retirees into the “advantage” pipe. They first announced they would not vote on it until October. Then the Legislative Chairman pulled a sneak maneuver and suddenly put it on the agenda for August 24th– contrary to what he had publicy stated previously. He apparently feels this was an appropriate thing to do, he must think himself very clever putting that one over on the retirees. They then bum-rushed the vote through before hardly anyone knew they had moved the vote up by over a month. No hearings, no chance to present witnesses or actual evidence about why the plan might not be best for the retirees—just a rushed, sneak vote with the republican majority ramming it through.

If I didn’t know any better (he snarked), I’d almost think this is their normal modus operandi.  Which reminds me, this should be a defining question for our candidates for Governor.  BHL danced around this question at our 7th RD Committee meeting, wouldn’t answer it.  Haven’t yet heard a definitive statement from Matt Meyer.  We deserve to know where both stand on this issue. 

Time for a topic-appropriate letter to the editor.  This one from the Delaware State News:

As a Delaware retiree following the ongoing situation regarding the proposed changes to the state retirement insurance program, it is amazing how quiet most of the legislators have been publicly.

It was good to read all of the comments that were appearing daily in the Delaware State News, which show that both retirees and state workers are opposed to any change of the promise made by the state to the workers at the time of their hiring. Keep up the good work.

To make sure our voice is heard loud and clear, let your senator and your representative of your district know not only how you feel but let them tell you via their return answer to you how they feel about this situation.

Let the legislators know that we will not forget at their reelection times. We have the power of the vote. United, we stand strong. Divided, we fall. We must not weaken as time goes by. We must be diligent.

Richard Senato

Dover

I, too, would have expected more, much more, from our state legislators.

Photo Ops Don’t Mean Shit When Huge Insurance Companies Screw Medicaid Recipients:

Every day, patients in the Wilmington area and beyond visit YOUr Center in Penny Hill. The practice offers behavioral health and substance abuse counseling, psychiatric services and medication management for people of all ages.

Many of the practice’s patients rely on Medicaid to pay for their treatment, with about 400 of them using AmeriHealth Caritas as their primary insurance provider.

But after nearly a year’s worth of issues with reimbursements and a grueling audit process, the center is planning to cut ties with the provider – meaning many patients will no longer be able to afford treatment at YOUr Center.

Josey said the issues with AmeriHealth Caritas began in January.

The insurance provider notified Josey they were conducting a “provider integrity” audit of the center. The audit – which can be conducted by the company regardless of whether a complaint has been filed – wasn’t an issue in and of itself, Josey said.

It was the lack of transparency – and over $47,000 in missing reimbursements – that Josey said has left her without any other options.

YOUr Center had never had major issues with AmeriHealth Caritas in the past. The reimbursement process was straightforward: see a patient, submit a claim and receive the money to pay the clinician.

In the last cycle, YOUr Center submitted 116 claims to AmeriHealth Caritas for reimbursements, Josey said. Only six were approved.

When Josey asked for a peer-to-peer review to determine why the claims were denied, the insurance company declined, stating that they were not denied because of medical eligibility but providing no other explanation.

This reminds me: Don’t we have an Insurance Commissioner in this State?  Shouldn’t he be more diligent in conducting his work on behalf of Delawareans than, say, a former New Castle County sheriff who spent most of his time at the track?  What, in fact, does he do?

What do you want to talk about?

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