Marriage debate will be tricky next year for Republicans
By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com
John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com
INDIANAPOLIS – Indiana House Minority Leader Scott Pelath, D-Michigan City, described the upcoming battle in the state over same-sex marriage with one word.
Pelath called it a “distraction.†He said Indiana’s leaders need to be focused on creating jobs for Hoosiers.
Indiana Sen. Jim Merritt, R-Indianapolis, was more cautious. While noting that he voted in favor of the proposed state constitutional amendment that would ban same-sex unions, Merritt wouldn’t commit himself to voting for the measure again. He said he was “listening†to his constituents on the issue.
Merritt and Pelath were talking as guests on the radio show I host. Their remarks illustrated how tricky the dynamics on the issue have become.
Nearly a decade ago, Hoosier Republicans (with the support of many Democrats) could proclaim enshrining a ban into the Indiana constitution their top priority. They already had a ban in place in state law, but they wanted to nail the door shut.
It seemed at the time to be a safe political move – at least on the surface. Even then, though, there were signs that a change was going to come.
In those days, I was the executive director of what was then the Indiana Civil Liberties Union – now the ACLU of Indiana, which opposed bans on same-sex unions. In that position, I saw both polling and focus-group studies that showed that the support for a ban was strongest among social conservatives who were middle-aged or older and that opposition to the ban was likely to grow over time.
And that opposition has grown. The most recent poll showed that almost twice as many Hoosiers now oppose putting the ban in the constitution as support it. That poll found that 64 percent of the state’s voters think a constitutional ban would be bad while 34 percent liked the idea. The numbers narrowed, though, when those polled were asked how they’d vote – with 46 percent saying they’d vote against a ban if it were on the ballot and 43 percent saying they would vote for it.
For it to get on the ballot, legislators will have to take the measure up again. The process for amending the Indiana constitution is protracted. It requires the legislature to approve and the governor to approve the measure twice, with an election between the two approvals. Only after the second affirmation by the legislature can the proposed amendment go before the voters.
And, if the legislature doesn’t reaffirm the proposed amendment before yet another election takes place, then the measure dies and the clock starts over.
That means that Indiana lawmakers have to deal with same-sex marriage during this upcoming session, one way or the other.
Lawmakers will have to make that decision under intense spotlights because Indiana likely will be a battleground state on the issue. After a long string of states voted in favor of bans, the states where such measures were the on the ballot most recently have rejected them.
And the U.S. Supreme Court since has struck down the federal same-sex marriage ban, saying that, among other things, it violated the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
If the measure does go onto the ballot this fall, Hoosiers can expect to see presidential campaign year level spending on the issue from both sides of the debate. I know sales people at Indiana radio and TV stations who are salivating at the thought of the advertising revenue that a same-sex marriage fight could generate next year.
That doesn’t end the list of pressures and complications. Republicans, in particular, are under the gun for two reasons.
The first is that two of their major constituencies – the business community and social conservatives – are at odds on the issue. A long list of major employers in the state has come out against the ban while social conservatives have made getting the ban into the constitution their top priority. Either way Republicans go, they’ll alienate some of their friends.
There’s also no way for them to duck the issue. With super majorities in both the House and Senate, Republicans will be the ones held accountable for whatever happens on the issue.
Perhaps that’s why Pelath seemed to enjoy, for the moment, being in the minority.
When I asked the Democratic leader if he took some pleasure in seeing his Republican opponents on the verge of having a huge family quarrel, Pelath said no – but he was laughing when he said it.
Merritt wasn’t laughing.
He said the same-sex marriage issue was going to be “tough.â€
Merritt’s got a gift for understatement.
John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism, host of “No Limits†WFYI 90.1 FM Indianapolis and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
WALORSKI, INDIANA LAWMAKERS CALL FOR HEALTH CARE ENROLLMENT NUMBERS
Here are the Health Care Numbers:
Walorski: Elizabeth Guyton 202-225-3915;Â elizabeth.guyton@mail.house.gov
Brooks: Alex Damron 202-226-5377;Â alex.damron@mail.house.gov
Bucshon: Nick McGee 202-225-4636;Â nick.mcgee@mail.house.gov
Coats: Matt Lahr 202-224-5623;Â matt_lahr@coats.senate.gov
Messer: Liz Hill 202-225-3021;Â liz.hill@mail.house.gov
Rokita: Zach Zagar 202-225-5037;Â zach.zagar@mail.house.gov
Stutzman: James Wegmann 202-225-4436;Â james.wegmann@mail.house.gov
Young: Trevor Foughty 202-226-6856;Â trevor.foughty@mail.house.gov
EVSC School Board Hears Proposal to Establish Employee Health Clinics
Two employee health clinics may soon be established following a proposal presented to the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation Board of School Trustees tonight.
The clinics, which will be free to be used by eligible employees and their covered family members, will be a cost savings for those employees and ultimately the EVSC, as well as providing the opportunity to improve the quality of employees’ overall health and well-being. This is one part of an ongoing effort by the EVSC. Past actions have included wellness consultants and revised insurance plans which slowed the upward trajectory of the cost of insurance that is occurring in the EVSC, as well as across the United States. An added benefit of cost control will be the ability to reallocate compensation from health insurance to wages, while still providing affordable options for high quality healthcare.
For example, a 1% increase in wages for all EVSC employees would total about $1.5 million. The increase in insurance costs for this school year totaled $3.5 million. If the EVSC had not seen that spike, that funding could have been used for a wage increase.
In 2008, the EVSC’s medical plan total cost was $30 million. Since that time, EVSC has undertaken several cost-savings measures including changing healthcare insurance plan designs, negotiating new cost-containment increases and incorporating wellness initiatives to help employees be as healthy as they can. In 2012, the EVSC spent $26.5 million on healthcare insurance. “Naturally, despite all the changes we have already made, if we don’t change our framework – it would be difficult to imagine a time when our employees could receive increases in their wages. Not only is that model not sustainable, but it is not good for our employees,†said Superintendent David Smith.
“I applaud the Board’s vision and pro-active stance for providing health care coverage for our employees,†Smith said when addressing the board during the meeting tonight.  “Because of this paradigm shift, I firmly believe you are positioning our corporation to provide not only better access to health care, but we are also establishing a protocol that will control and contain the cost of this very expensive benefit afforded to our employees.â€
Because of the continuous climb of healthcare costs across the nation, the EVSC has continued to look for additional ways in which to save money for the corporation and its employees. The healthcare clinics are part of an overall strategy to help in this endeavor. Through Old National Insurance, which provides comprehensive consulting services to EVSC for life, long term disability, dental, vision and medical plan benefits, requests for proposals were solicited and the committee of EVSC employees investigating options is recommending Tri-State Community Clinics as the proposed provider for the two health clinics.
EVSC’s average health plan cost per employee has grown at a rate much less than the rest of the state, through the active work of the corporation and Old National Insurance.
Supt. Smith said that EVSC employees currently have access to one health insurance plan design. “One of the benefits of a health clinic is that it incentivizes employees to be better healthcare consumers. Studies have shown that when employees have a choice in healthcare designs in conjunction with a healthcare clinic – they choose the design that best fits their family needs, which may be at a lesser cost to them and to their employer,†he added.
Services to be provided for employees covered by the EVSC health plan include those that are normally provided in a primary care setting and the healthcare providers will have the ability to retrieve electronic medical records for all patients. All primary care services, laboratory services, as well as basic maintenance and antibiotic prescriptions will be provided at no cost to the covered employee or covered family member. The clinic will also have a wellness component through Deaconess LifeQuest to help employees make healthy lifestyle choices. The proposal calls for a 24-hour call-in line for any health questions and wellness visits by nurses throughout the EVSC, as well.
The contract is still undergoing some revision and locations for the clinics have not yet been selected, although it is known that the clinics will not be located in any EVSC schools.
A Tale of Two Cities: Winnecke vows to “fight like the dickensâ€
By: Brad Linzy
In a recent statement to an Indianapolis radio show, Mayor Lloyd Winnecke said his Administration would “fight like the dickens†to bring a proposed 4-year IU Medical School to downtown Evansville. In his statement, Winnecke suggested he would fight both developers without and developers within the City of Evansville who want the med school built anywhere but downtown. “We are in the early stages of putting together what we think will be a dynamite plan for downtown,†Winnecke said, “and we know that we will be competing with developers who will want it in another county. We know we will compete against developers who will want it in other parts of the city, but we’re gonna fight like the dickens to get it right downtown.†The Mayor’s remarks follow a trend of politicians supporting downtown growth in Evansville by pumping millions into downtown projects. The Ford Center, the Loft developments, Front Door Pride, and now the new convention hotel are just a few examples of this trend. According to statements released by several City Council members, a majority of them also support a downtown IU development, although it is unclear how many would support a development in another part of the city.
John Friend, a Councilman from Ward 5, the most remote Ward in relation to downtown, has publicly stated support for a downtown development, but has also expressed reservations, “I think we should keep our options open as much as possible. We don’t know what [IU] are looking for exactly. We do know they’ll probably want access to teaching beds.â€
Dan McGinn, the Councilman from Ward 1, also represents a remote ward with relation to downtown. He could not be reached for comment.
Ward 3 is the home to three of the proposed sites for the IU medical school (Roberts Stadium, Evansville State Hospital, and Old North High School). Stephanie Brinkerhoff-Riley, the Councilwoman from Ward 3 is adamant about finding out more about what IU wants. “We really need feedback from IU, because we haven’t asked. Warrick County has an active committee and they’re getting information somehow. We’re behind,†said Brinkerhoff-Riley.
She also thought the idea of pitching the Roberts Stadium site had merit and could reinvigorate the Boeke area. “Roberts would be a great site,†she said. “It’s an idea that eliminates a lot of problems. It’s already razed for development. It doesn’t put it on the tax rolls, but the dog park wouldn’t have done that anyway. At the Roberts location it bridges east and west. Boeke could be a Broadripple type development in the future with the right planning. East side has stretched out so much Roberts Stadium might be a perfect bridge.â€
IS IT TRUE October 22, 2013

IS IT TRUE October 22, 2013
IS IT TRUE it was reported over 4 years ago that the medians on Burkhardt Road were catching on fire from slovenly drivers who were throwing their cigarette butts out of car windows into the dry mulch?…at that time the area was under the jurisdiction of Vanderburgh County and was not the responsibility of the City of Evansville?…with the annexation of that area by the City of Evansville problems like this became the responsibility of the City?…business owners on Burkhardt have recently advised the City County Observer that this problem has not been fixed in the three years that the City has been in control?…these business owners have also complained about the fact that street lights are not abundant enough to keep the area from looking to dark to be safe?…one particular business owner was so aggravated that he made the following statement:
“It does not take a rocket scientist to figure out that replacing mulch with @*! #*@% rocks will solve this problem. Is our government aware that @*! #*@% rocks do not burn and are very cheap. I guess if we were downtown they would give us all of the @*! #*@% rocks we can stand.â€
IS IT TRUE the sentiment among people and business owners outside of downtown Evansville is that the City of Evansville under the Weinzapfel and Winnecke Administrations has become the Mayors of the downtown with limited interest in anything that is not downtown?…this attitude has been verified first by the construction of the Ford Center which has yet to attract an entertainer that has not played at Roberts Stadium, second by the willingness of the Winnecke Administration to fork over $37.5 Million for a hotel downtown that competes with other businesses in and out of downtown, and most recently by the outward bias that downtown Evansville will be the only public response to the RFP for the IU Medical School campus?…there is no reason whatsoever that justifies other locations and private efforts to attract the IU Medical School going without the same support from the City that any downtown site will be given?
IS IT TRUE that last weekend saw another South Central Los Angeles style drive-by shooting in good ole Evansville?…this time the location was a residence near the corner of Covert and Kentucky Avenue that just a short 30 years ago was a premium location?…that it has been reported that a full 15 bullets were fired into the home but that no one got shot?…the “I didn’t see nothin†virus must still be at epidemic proportions because no one has come forward to identify just who or what fired 15 shots into a home?…of course the EPD will step up their patrols but the truth is that unless the people of any given neighborhood will find a cure for the “I didn’t see nothing†disease crimes like this will go unsolved and havoc will continue to expand?…we plead and encourage the people of areas plagued by drug and gang violence that this probably was to come forward and turn the perpetrators in so Evansville’s official homicide rate can once again be lower than LA’s?
IS IT TRUE that President Obama after 3 weeks has finally acknowledged that the technology launch of ObamaCare is not acceptable and that there is no excuse for the website to be crashing and reporting false and insufficient data to insurers?…he has also been holding some blame-storming meetings so he can visibly roll some heads over these problems?…some IT professionals and programmers are stating that the technology chosen by the Obama Administration is outdated and that the implementation may be better off if this $625 Million code mess is scrapped altogether?…rolling the heads of Sebillius and a few others for public show will not solve the problem of passing legislation without reading it and of not hiring capable people to lead a tech based effort?…we shall say again that if the Obama Administration would have been in charge of the Manhattan Project and the D-Day invasion that we would all be bilingual (German and Japanese) citizens of a very different nation?…it is time for these people to stop the bullcrap sessions and start to actually do something?
Indiana State Police to Participate in Drug Take Back VII
Indianapolis: This Saturday the Indiana State Police will be partnering with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and numerous other law enforcement agencies across the United States in the seventh drug take back event in three years.
Last April, Americans turned in 371 tons of prescription drugs at over 5,829 sites operated by the DEA and its thousands of state and local law enforcement partners across the U.S.
This initiative addresses a vital public safety and public health issue. Medicines that languish in home cabinets are highly susceptible to diversion, misuse, and abuse. Rates of prescription drug abuse in the U.S. are alarmingly high, as are the number of accidental poisonings and overdoses due to these drugs. Studies show that a majority of abused prescription drugs are obtained from family and friends, including from the home medicine cabinet. In addition, Americans are now advised that their usual methods for disposing of unused medicines—flushing them down the toilet or throwing them in the trash—both pose potential safety and health hazards.
This Saturday, October 26 Hoosiers can dispose of any expired or unwanted drugs by simply taking those drugs to their nearest Indiana State Police Post (with the exception of the Toll Road Post in Bristol, IN) between the hours of 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. and dispose of them in a designated receptacle, no questions asked. There will also be a drop off site located at the Indiana Government Center on Friday, October 25 between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. It should be noted the drug take back is for pills, capsules, and liquids only. No sharps will be accepted.
For those individuals who do not live near an ISP facility, the links below will assist you in determining the nearest drop off location.
http://www.deadiversion.usdoj.gov/drug_disposal/takeback/
https://www.deadiversion.usdoj.gov/NTBI/NTBI-PUB.pub?_flowExecutionKey=_c1955CC4A-07CC-19A6-B5FD-0D10B9B3CBAD_k39620E77-8DA9-FC3B-741E-A09A85CEB267
For full details, view this message on the web.
WALORSKI, INDIANA LAWMAKERS CALL FOR HEALTH CARE ENROLLMENT NUMBERS
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Congresswoman Jackie Walorski and Hoosier lawmakers sent a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius today requesting information on the number of Hoosiers currently enrolled in the health care exchange. Over the past three weeks, numerous malfunctions and problems have been reported with the website, preventing applicants from successfully enrolling in the health care exchange.
“We have received numerous reports from Hoosiers who have been unable to enroll due to website malfunctions as well as complaints from Hoosiers who can no longer afford the new premium amounts. As we work to assist these constituents, it is important that we are able to provide them accurate data regarding the health insurance exchange,†wrote lawmakers.
Since Saturday, roughly 476,000 applications have been filed in state-run and federally-run health insurance exchanges that started October 1st. These filed applications do not represent the number of individuals who have actually obtained coverage through the exchange. The Administration has released no information to the public on this figure. Low enrollment numbers have been largely attributed to technical problems, such as trouble creating accounts and confusing error messages.
This Thursday, the House Energy and Commerce Committee has scheduled a hearing to examine the health care law’s rollout. To date, Secretary Sebelius has refused to testify, despite written requests from the committee to reconsider the invitation.
Full text of the letter:
October 21, 2013
The Honorable Kathleen Sebelius
Secretary of Health and Human Services
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
200 Independence Avenue, S.W.
Washington, D.C. 20201
Dear Secretary Sebelius,
We are writing to request information about the number of Hoosiers who have applied for and enrolled in insurance plans on the health insurance exchange since its launch on October 1, 2013.
Please provide the total number of applicants in Indiana as well as the number of applicants in each Indiana congressional district. Please also provide the total number of enrollees in Indiana as well as the number of enrollees in each Indiana congressional district.
We have received numerous reports from Hoosiers who have been unable to enroll due to website malfunctions as well as complaints from Hoosiers who can no longer afford the new premium amounts. As we work to assist these constituents, it is important that we are able to provide them accurate data regarding the health insurance exchange.
We look forward to receiving the requested information in a timely fashion and appreciate your attention to this matter.
Sincerely,
Rep. Jackie Walorski
Senator Dan Coats
Rep. Susan Brooks
Rep. Larry Bucshon, M.D.
Rep. Luke Messer
Rep. Todd Rokita
Rep. Marlin Stutzman
Rep. Todd Young
Debunking the Myths of ObamaCare So Far
By: Megan McArdle
I’ve been seeing a few things floating around the blogosphere about Obamacare that aren’t true. They’re not really conservative or liberal talking points; they’re just misconceptions that people may have about how the health-care law works. So it seems worth pointing them out, especially because relying on some of these “facts†could get you into big trouble:
You have until March 31 to buy health insurance. This is technically true: Open enrollment ends on March 31. So you can buy health insurance up until then. But you have to buy insurance well before that if you want to avoid paying the mandate’s penalty. Basically, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act says that in order to avoid paying the fine for being uninsured, you have to be insured by the end of March. But insurance policies begin on the first day of the month, which means that you need to buy insurance by February. And because it takes a couple of weeks to process a policy, in practice, you need to purchase by Feb. 15. If you buy insurance after that, you will still be insured — but you will also need to pay a penalty. Which brings me to my second untrue “factâ€:
The penalty for being uninsured next year is $95. Again, this is partly true. In fact, the penalty for being uninsured next year is $95 or 1 percent of your income, whichever is higher. So if you make $75,000 a year and you decide to go without insurance, the penalty will be $750. There are a number of things you can do to avoid having to pay it, from deliberately getting your utilities shut off to under-withholding taxes from your paycheck so that they don’t have a refund from which to take out the penalty. But that number is what will go on the books at the Internal Revenue Service, not the $95 you’ve probably heard.
If the exchanges don’t work, as a last resort, we can always get people signed up through call centers. It’s true, there are call centers. But the computer systems at the call centers for states running the insurance exchanges are the same as the computer systems that consumers are having such a hard time with. A nice woman at a federal call center told me that (at least for the state of Florida, where my in-laws live) there is an alternate procedure: They can fill out a manual application in PDF format. But she also told me that it takes three weeks for that application to be mailed to your house. After you receive it, you check the application to ensure it’s accurate, and then mail it in. One to two weeks later, you will be notified of your subsidy eligibility. Then you can actually enroll in a plan, though she wasn’t quite clear on how that part would work — do you call back again?
This may work for older people who simply can’t figure out how to use computers, or for desperately ill people who have been rebuffed by the computer system . . . but so will repeatedly logging in until you finally get the system to work. It is unlikely to get loads of healthy, young, premium-paying folks to sign up for insurance and thereby make this whole thing financially viable. And by the time we’re ready to default to this option, it’s unlikely that there will be enough time to make it work.
The state exchanges are doing fine. This isn’t exactly wrong. It’s just that it’s actually very hard to tell how the state exchanges are doing. The numbers being thrown around by various news sources are inexact and confusing. People are using “enrolled†to mean all sorts of things, from creating an account on the exchange to actually selecting and signing up for a plan. (The latter is what it should actually mean. Arguably, we should restrict it to people who have actually paid a premium, but because premiums aren’t due until Dec. 15, that wouldn’t be very useful.)
David Freddoso at Conservative Intelligence Briefing points out that people are also blurring together two numbers that should be kept separate: people who have bought insurance through the exchanges and people who have signed up for Medicaid. The latter is important in terms of reducing the number of uninsured. But getting a bunch of people signed up for Medicaid doesn’t do anything for the health of the exchanges, because people on Medicaid do not pay premiums or participate in the risk pool. The Barack Obama administration has been expecting 7 million people to join the exchanges in the first year, with a slightly larger number going onto Medicaid.
Here’s what Freddoso found when he dug into the numbers:
In Oregon, that 56,000 number you’re hearing today is all Medicaid. Their online exchange doesn’t even work yet. The state bulked up its Medicaid rolls by targeting food stamp recipients. So great, those folks have some kind of insurance (whether or not a doctor will see them), but it tells us nothing about the private health insurance exchanges — the middle class version of Obamacare — or how they’re going to fare.
Something similar is happening in many other states as well. Minnesota, for example, said it had 3,800 applicants. But when you scratch the surface, only 406 of these are Obamacare exchange applicants — again, most of the signups were low-income customers who were steered to Medicaid instead.
Washington State is Obamacare’s biggest success story so far. But it has only about 3,000 people actually enrolled in the private exchange plans. Nearly 90 percent of enrollees so far are going to Medicaid instead. Although it isn’t completely clear from their confusing presentation of the numbers, it appears they have as many as 25,000 exchange applicants in all, if you include people who have applied but haven’t paid. Even so, that’s half the number people have been bragging about from Washington. So even the best success story is perhaps less exciting than believed.
California, has put 600,000 new people on Medicaid, but their last hard number of actual, completed applications for the exchanges was under 17,000. That’s over a week old, but I’m still skeptical when I see them say that 100,000 “are in some stage of applying for insurance on the marketplaces.†Why all those weasel words? Have those people completed applications — in which case California is doing great — or have they merely entered their zip code and started looking at plans? California may not release any reliable numbers on their exchange enrollment until next year.
Now, that doesn’t mean that you should freak out and declare that no one’s ever going to sign up for insurance on the exchanges. In the early days of the program, we would expect to see most of the interest coming from people who are older, sicker and poorer than average, because those are the people who have found it hardest to buy cheap insurance — and who will benefit the most from getting it, through subsidies or community rating.
But it does mean we should watch those numbers. Ultimately, Obamacare will only be economically and fiscally sustainable if it can also get the rest of the uninsured to join the ranks of the insured. Almost all of the reporting has focused on people who have found it hard to get insurance in the past. But the health of the program ultimately depends on roping in people who could easily buy insurance right now — but haven’t bothered, for one reason or another.
It’s too early to know at this point whether most of the state exchanges can handle a big rush of people who want to buy insurance policies, because at this point, few state exchanges have yet to do so.
This is a good reminder to everyone of just how many things are in flux about this system right now. Even things you’ve seen reported widely may turn out to be more complicated than you think.
Source: Bloomburg
Andrew McNeil Announces Bid for 8th District Congressional Seatâ€
Andrew McNeil of Freedom, Indiana has announced that he will be running against Rep. Larry Bucshon in the 2014 Republican primary. “Today I stand before you in the spirit of 1776,†said McNeil. “Now is not the time for timidity. It is not the time to cower in fear. Today we must lead. We must stand and fight with dependence upon the same God who saw us through 237 years ago, albeit with humility.†McNeil will focus his campaign on listening to the voice of the people of the 8th district and representing their concerns as opposed to the interests of the political structure in Washington. He will also highlight the responsibility of leaving a prosperous and free nation for future generations. Issues that McNeil has placed at the top of his priorities include REPEALING Obamacare, fiscal responsibility, returning America to Constitutional government, and reviving a stagnant economy. “Obamacare is an unprecedented betrayal of all that we are as a nation,â€Â said McNeil, “from its violation of our religious freedoms to its unconstitutional control over every area of our lives. This fight should have been fought a long time ago, but now that we are engaged, it must be seen through until there is a clear victory.†McNeil, along with Andrea, his wife of 19 years, and 7 children, resides in Freedom, Indiana, where he has lived for 28 years. In addition to operating a family farming business, he works at Ronnoco Coffee Company, where he has been employed for 16 years. For more information about Andrew McNeil and his platform visit www.andrewmcneilforcongress.com.