These greedy hogs
yesterday defeated in committee SB 357 by Republican state Sen. Conrad Appel,
which today caused Republican state Rep. Tony Bacala to
set aside his HB 334.
Both bills would put the state on course to creating a long-term managed care
system for persons with disabilities.
This change in
philosophy discomfits nursing home interests, who benefit greatly from current
state practice that biases placement of individuals in nursing homes instead of
in their own homes or the community. While waiting lists for access to this
care, called waiver programs, has steadily risen to 28,000 people, Louisiana
nursing homes enjoy a gravy train at their expense.
Consider that:
- The average state ratio of spending on nursing homes to waiver programs is 60:40, while in Louisiana it’s 77:23.
- The rate of inflation in the past decade has increased 18 percent, but the state’s nursing homes have seen their rates rise 54 percent despite an almost-unchanged occupancy rate.
- The industry by law can enjoy a profit margin of over 18 percent, thanks to a low-cost environment partially enabled by state law. Yet instead of plowing these funds back into care, Louisiana’s nursing homes ranks consistently close or at the bottom of quality among the states.
But many legislators,
whether like Republican state Rep. Bob Hensgens
who works as a nursing home administrator, or like Democrat state Sen. Jay Luneau who takes
substantial campaign funds from the industry (and former state Sen. Joe
McPherson whom he essentially replaced, who then and now continues to shill for
nursing home interests) won’t support these kinds of bills. In the committee
hearings on the two bills both had the audacity to say they supported funneling
more money to home- and community-based services without acknowledging or addressing
the wasteful, inefficient spending favoring nursing homes.
And both are hypocrites
of the highest order. While Luneau prevents rebalancing of the state’s
long-term care spending to make it more efficient, he rails
against business tax exemptions he says are wasteful. Yet given direct evidence
of such waste in spending on long-term care, he entirely loses his appetite for
making government work smarter and would rather increase people’s taxes.
Luneau also criticizes legislators
who “never have solutions, only rhetoric,” saying "I think any legislator
who thinks it’s so easy to cut state government should be man or woman enough
to stand up and say this is what should be cut and why.” That some make the
very suggestion and he dismisses it shows what an empty windbag he is, if not
actually turning his own criticism against himself.
For his part, Hensgens
has questioned
the spiraling growth in state Medicaid costs. Nursing homes consume $1
billion annually of that, yet when presented with an opportunity to do
something about that, he resists. And can’t he understand he can’t be against rapid
growth in Medicaid while wanting to increase funding to home- and
community-based solutions without controlling excessive nursing home costs to
taxpayers?
Unfortunately, the Legislature
has too many cowards like Luneau and Hensgens, and not enough of the likes of
Appel or Bacala, or state Sens. Dan Claitor, a
Republican, and Ed
Price, a Democrat, who provided the only committee votes in favor of Appel’s
bill. But perhaps the most malleable feet of clay belong to Democrat Gov. John Bel Edwards,
who by issuing a simple order could institute the contents of the two bills.
During his campaign, wherein
nursing home interests donated significant sums to his campaign, Edwards said he
favored the models envisioned in the bills. But as soon as he got elected, he
did an about-face, and now says the matter needs more study – despite that fact
managed care has worked well for the remainder of Louisiana’s Medicaid
population and the legwork for the transition already took place before he
entered office.
That makes him the
biggest hypocrite of all, but he has lots of company. Appel notes that these
politicians are on the wrong side of history, observing that fiscal pressures
will force changes that send relatively fewer dollars to nursing homes and more
to other solutions. It’s just a shame that it must happen later rather than sooner,
and in the interim, more fragile citizens and taxpayers will suffer needlessly because
of the actions of a few.
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