(continued)
Retirees Hard Hit
As hard as unions
have been fighting to retain benefits for retirees, the bottom-line
reality for businesses is that older Americans are much more
likely to make frequent visits to doctors, take prescription
drugs and require hospitalization.
"Its retirees
who absorb the major cost of all of the plans and thats a
factor everywhere," Pultar said. "Companies want
retirees to pay more and more."
"Everything
goes up in price
your doctors, your gasoline, your groceries,
your utility bills, even your home. One of these days you
wont be able to
afford it."
Julian
Otte,
Retired Local
551 member
Some employer-sponsored
plans and multi-employer funds are cutting back or cutting
out benefits for retirees completely, leaving them to fend
for themselves until Medicare kicks in. Some members retire
from jobs that have no coverage for retirees, forcing them
to work until they are eligible for Medicare or spend precious
savings or pensions on health care.
A recent report
by the Economic Policy Institute found that 66 percent of
large firms offered health care coverage to retirees in 1988;
in 2002, it was down to 34 percent.
Wichita, Kansas
Local
271 gives retirees the opportunity to be covered by its
health and welfare fund but its $642 monthly price tag prohibits
all but a few from participating. "They cant afford
it," said Local
271 Business Manager James Davis. Of the locals 150 retirees,
only 11 take advantage. The others try to get by on Medicare
if they are 65 or older, Medicaid (if they qualify for the
low-income program) or veterans hospitals (if theyve served
in the armed forces), Davis said.
Retiring before
the age of 65 is considered "early" from the perspective
of Social Security and Medicare. But due to the physical nature
of the work performed in the construction and utility industries,
sore joints and other physical problems resulting from a career
pulling wire or climbing poles make early retirement in some
cases a necessity.
"The trade
does take a toll on the members," said an IBEW business
manager whose health and welfare fund was forced to drop retiree
coverage. "There are guys that cant go on early retirement,
because its costing $1,000 a month."
Retired Local
551 member Julian Otte, of Santa Rosa, California, said
the United States should seek a health care system that provides
universal coverage. "Ive been for that for years,"
he said. "If they did that, the cost overall could go
down drastically.
"Everything
goes up in priceyour doctors, your gasoline, your groceries,
your utility bills, even your home," said Otte, 82, who
retired as an inside wireman in 1983. "One of these days
you wont be able to afford it." Otte has health insurance
through Local
551 that includes prescription drugs, but a limited pension.
"Theyll
come around one of these days," Otte said about health
care reform. "But I might not be here."
Shifting Burdens,
Shafting Workers
In the United
States, most people fit into three broad categories: those
covered by Medicare, people without insurance and people with
insurance. Medicare, the government-sponsored health care
program for people over age 65, currently does not cover prescription
drugs or many procedures. As employer-sponsored and multi-employer
benefit plans continue to slash benefits, the number of uninsured
and underinsured Americans increases, and the costs shift
to the states and towns and county hospitals that treat them.
NCHC President
Henry Simmons said health care reform must address the national
"shell game" of cost shifting. "Some large
employers control their costs by shifting costs to their employees
or other business, large or small," he said. "Employees
have no place to shift their costs except to their pockets."
Wal-Mart, Americas
largest private employer, offers such costly health insurance
coverage, less than half of its work force is covered. This
leaves most of its 1.2 million employees without health insurance,
burdening states and communities for unpaid health costs.
Often when workers
are forced to bear a greater burden of health care costs,
they drop out of their insurance plan altogether. This is
particularly true for workers who must take on greater out-of-pocket
expenses to keep coverage when they are not working.
Continued
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