Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Maine has an Obligation to Help Our Most Vulnerable and Pay its Bills

Governor LePage's Radio address today: "Welfare expansion will cost Maine more than $800 million dollars over the first 10 years.

Hello, this is Governor Paul LePage.

While liberals are busy blasting me and the Administration about hiring a consultant to analyze whether we should expand Maine's Medicaid program, the reality is the report provides a road map to save taxpayers money and improve services for the truly needy. If Maine opts to expand Medicaid as it did 10 years ago, the report estimates it will cost the state more than $800 million—and that’s without additional risk factors. It does not include the hundreds of millions of dollars that will be shifted onto the middle class who buy their insurance. This will cause private insurance premiums to skyrocket. Maine already has the third-highest spending on Medicaid in the nation. Expanding is not affordable. The report also predicts between 31 and 36 percent of all Mainers will be receiving taxpayer-funded health care by 2023. In other words, for every three Mainers, one will be on Medicaid at the taxpayer’s expense. Today, Maine’s welfare program is not financially solvent. Last week, I alerted legislative leadership of a major shortfall in the budget. The culprit? The Medicaid program. There is a multimillion-dollar shortfall for several reasons, including a rise in the use of services and increasing health care costs. Like everything else, prices are going up and health care is no exception. I do not want to see Maine falling behind in paying its bills again. It was a battle with liberals for three years to get them to do the right thing and finally pay 750 million dollars to Maine’s hospitals. The state had an obligation to pay its welfare bills. And we have an obligation to continue to pay them. I talk frequently about fiscal responsibility, but as important is the quality of care provided by our welfare programs. Medicaid is supposed to help our most vulnerable citizens – the children, elderly, disabled and mentally ill. However, there are thousands of Mainers on wait lists who need health care services. We have nursing homes on the brink of closing due to below cost reimbursement rates. Our Administration wants a welfare system that works for Maine people. Mainers deserve a safety net that provides quality and accessible care. That’s why we are striving to gain greater flexibility from the federal government to improve services for those who need it most.

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Friday, January 10, 2014

Who do you want managing your govenment? A politician or a Businessman?

If you had two choices as a voter, which would you pick? A 30-year politician who has voted for budget after budget which has helped balloon the federal debt to over $17 trillion? Or a lifelong businessman and job creator who solved a $500 million hospital debt without raising taxes? Among your major party candidates that is your choice this fall.

Follow Gov Paul LePage on Facebook.

Is unemployment really 6.7 percent?

What is the unemployment? It is hard to say. If you have stopped looking for employment then the US Department of Labor stops  counting you. The unemployment rate is determined by deviding the unemployed by the number that are considered employed. Is this an accurate way to tabulate those who are unemplyed?

Yahoo! News

Unemployment fell to a five-year low of 6.7 percent in December, yet employers added just 74,000 new jobs during the month — the lowest monthly payroll increase in nearly three years.

So how does the "unemployment" number fall despite such weak job growth?

In simple terms, the U.S. Department of Labor stops counting people who have stopped looking for work. The "labor force," as defined by the department, fell from 155.3 million in November to 154.9. This decrease of 400,000 accounts for nearly the entire drop in unemployment — from 7 percent in November to 6.7 in December.

How the department calculates unemployment is rather simple: It takes the number of unemployed and divides it by the number of people it considers in the labor force. But does this provide an accurate account of how many people are really unemployed? Not really.

Full story: Yahoo! News