Such happened when the House Appropriations
Committee met jointly with the Senate Finance Committee to
review a contract negotiated to administer the state’s Preferred Provider
Organization health care plan for state employees and retirees. The current
state-run operation wastes
taxpayer dollars and will produce an estimated $20 million in savings for
them as well as lower costs to clients with comparable if not better service.
Trying to stop this contract –
for while Republican Gov. Bobby
Jindal’s Division of Administration has complete legal authority to remove
the state from operating its own insurance business without legislative input,
an attorney general’s opinion interpreted that law to mean a contract to do so would
have to pass muster of majorities of both committees – has become the latest cause célèbre for Louisiana’s left on the heels of a long string of
defeats. Ignoring the taxpayer and ratepayers that preventing privatization
represents, they justify this partially out of their love for big government
(as a number of inefficient positions would remian), but perhaps more pertinently
they wish merely to try to poke Jindal in the eye as he uses a conservative
agenda to sweep them aside from policy-making relevance.