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wal-mart & tenncare

Study: Thousands of Wal-Mart workers on TennCare

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Chattanooga - A study shows that thousands of Wal-Mart employees are on TennCare, the state's expanded Medicaid program, providing fodder for critics who say the retail giant and other businesses are shifting costs for low-paid employees onto the backs of taxpayers.

Wal-Mart, with 9,617 employees listed as receiving benefits from the program, said it offers health plan available to full-time workers after six months and to part-time employees after two years. Critics said the high cost of the retailer's insurance is out of reach for low-income workers who are forced to turn to publicly financed health insurance.

The figures come from a survey conducted during the past two months of TennCare rolls and labor Department data, requested by the Chattanooga Times Free Press. It shows the number of TennCare enrollees who were employed by Tennessee companies at some point during the year. The top 20 companies on the list employed a total of 68,303 TennCare recipients roughly 6 percent of the 1.3 million people now on the state's health care plan.

State officials said they were going to keep looking at the data, as it may be somewhat imprecise because of high employee turnover rates at the private companies. �The fact of the matter is there is a trend here that large employers have a large number of TennCare enrollees on the rolls, and we have to find out what's behind that,� said TennCare spokesman Michael Drescher.

Wal-Mart, with about 25 percent of the company's 37,000 workers on TennCare, tops the list of businesses with employees on the expanded Medicaid program. Wal-Mart is the state's largest private employer.


Wal-Mart spokesman Dan Fogleman called the retailer's benefits "competitive." If there are some of our associates who have decided for some reason not to participate in our health plan, we don't know the reason, he said.

Phil Mattera, a research director of Good Jobs First and a Wal-Mart critic, said the list of employers with Medicaid-dependent workers shouldn't include the largest and most profitable companies in the country. "There was a time when the biggest company in the land � Ford Motor Co. in the early 20th century and General Motors after World War II � set the pace for raising wages and benefits," he said. "But Wal-Mart seems to be leading us downhill and, in effect, using the government to help pay for its expansion by not giving its workers a sufficient health benefit plan, in many instances."

Last year, a study in California found that Wal-Mart workers there cost that state an estimated $32 million because of their reliance on public assistance programs. "Wal-Mart, in its effort to drive costs down, shifts part of their costs on to the public sector,: said Ken Jacobs, deputy chairman at the institute who authored the study on the Hidden Cost of Wal-Mart jobs.

Temporary employment agencies represented~ seven of the top 10 companies with employees on TennCare, while Chattanooga-based Krystal Co. was ninth on the list with 3,183 employees. Goodlettsville-based discount retailer Dollar General was 10th with 3,002 employees on TennCare. "It's egregious," said Jerry Lee, president of the Tennessee AFL-CIO. "The AFL has long been aware that these kinds of companies are putting their employees on the public dole."

Legislation in the works this year would require the state to track all companies that have at least 25 employees or their family members enrolled in TennCare.

Gordon Bonnyman, executive director of the Tennessee Justice Center, suggested that the state should offer reforms that allow large companies such as Wal-Mart with low-wage earners to buy into TennCare or other insurance health insurance. �It would be good if we could get private employers to pitch in and do their fair share, and take advantage of the economy of scale and volume that TennCare provides,� Bonnyman said, �Nobody understands volume discounts like Wal-Mart.�

EDITOR'S NOTE: If you are a TennCare patient who has received a letter stating that you have been dropped from the program, we'd like to talk to you. Please e-mail Staff Writer David McGee at dmcgee@bristolnews.com or call (276) 646-2532.

Copyright January 21, 2005 Bristol Herald Courier

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Giving money to people who don't earn it, whether it's health insurance or food stamps, is immoral. Giving them money just rewards them for being lazy. The people who own and run Walmart have lots of money because they work hard and deserve it. That's why it's good that we have gone to war. It may bankrupt our country (and give money to lots of good rich people along the way), but at least it'll make it clear that we don't have the money to pay for health insurance or other such immoral gifts to the unworthy.

Or, maybe, companies like Walmart prosper precisely because of taxes that we pay. Our roads, military, and, oh yeah, public health insurance enable them to do well. For them (and their executives) not to pay for the things that make their business possible is irresponsible and unfair.

The Global War on Terror is really about bankrupting our country so that we can't continue to waste money on immoral things like health care and education for people who haven't earned it. Halliburton makes more money every month than the Feds spend on education every year. (OK, I just made that up, but I'm afraid it's true.)

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Anonymous said...

Walmart really needs to work to improve health care for employees as more than 50% lack health insurance.