A tag-team campaign stunt by
state Rep. John
Bel Edwards and Atty. Gen. Buddy
Caldwell might cause some bureaucratic headaches and burn up some taxpayer
dollars, but in the end will make no difference to coming changes for health
care benefits for state employees, retirees, and some school district employees
– and may even hurt their 2015 electoral ambitions.
This week, Caldwell’s office
issued an opinion
stating that changes being made to the benefit packages had to have gone
through the Administrative
Procedure Act, upon the request by Edwards. The changes in most cases
likely would have the overall effect of increasing payments made by clients,
due to changes in deductibles, co-payments, and services covered. Using this
process for this matter has not been done in the past, and no one ever had
complained about it.
The Gov. Bobby
Jindal Administration, with good reason, disputes
the idea that the APA should apply to these kinds of decisions, but a
creative reading of the law possibly could shoehorn in decisions made about services
disbursed to a class of active and former government agents distinct from the
public, especially in the case of the retirees. It’s a reach and if Caldwell
had not wanted it to succeed, there was ample basis on which to reject that
line of reasoning. But by issuing it under his imprimatur, the controversy
could continue that could benefit certain parties politically.