Obama health care law has unexpected beneficiaries
 By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR - Associated Press | AP
By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR - Associated Press | APWASHINGTON (AP) — Some of the money from President Barack Obama's health care law is flowing to places you might not expect.
Two Texas  public employee programs are among the top 25 beneficiaries of a  $5-billion fund to shore up employer coverage for early retirees,  despite Texas Gov. Rick Perry's vow to repeal what Republicans derisively call "Obamacare."
And records show the Huntsman family business, where GOP presidential candidate Jon Huntsman was once a top executive, received about $1 million.
Some see a gap between dire Republican rhetoric about the health care overhaul and the pragmatic impulse to cash in on a new government benefit.
"Lots of Texans are already benefiting from health care reform," said Anne Dunkelberg, a health care expert at the Austin-based Center for Public Policy Priorities.  "Other than for political theater, there would not be the kind of  opposition there is." The nonpartisan center advocates for the poor.
Employer-sponsored  health insurance for retirees has been shriveling for years, ever since  companies were required to report their liability to investors.  Democrats who wrote the new law wanted to encourage employers to keep  offering coverage. Only about 6 percent of private companies currently  provide such a benefit for early retirees, according to the nonpartisan  Employee Benefit Research Institute.But that still works out to more than 400,000 companies. Add state and local government agencies, as well as union plans, and the number swells. The Obama administration's subsidy program got so many applications it stopped accepting new ones after approving more than 6,000. It pays 80 percent of the claims amount for early retirees ages 55 to 64 whose care costs between $15,000 and $90,000.
The top beneficiary: the United Auto Workers retiree medical plan, collecting more than $220 million.
"Some  people have described this program as 'Cash for Clunkers,' in the sense  that if you want it, you have to get in line first," said Paul  Fronstin, an economist with the benefits research group. "There was a  lot of advice given to be first in line." The original Cash for Clunkers  paid people to trade in gas guzzlers for more fuel-efficient  transportation. It created a marketing sensation before running out of  cash.
Texas, it seems, heeded the advice. So did Huntsman International.The  Teacher Retirement System of Texas, a statewide system for public  education employees, received more than $70 million as of Sept. 22,  according to the federal Health and Human Services Department. The  Employees Retirement System of Texas, which covers state employees,  received about $30 million.
Huntsman International, the main operating subsidiary of the family-founded chemical conglomerate, is also collecting.
As  candidates, both Perry and Huntsman have sworn to repeal Obama's  signature health care law, which gradually extends coverage to most of  the uninsured and makes other changes, including a ban on denying  coverage to people in poor health and an unpopular requirement that most  Americans carry insurance.
Spokesmen for the Perry and Huntsman campaigns said they see no contradictions.
Texas  taxpayers also pay federal taxes, said Perry spokesman Ray Sullivan.  "State taxpayers have a right to get those federal funds returned to  them, in this care in the form of disbursement to the teachers and state  employee retirement systems," said Sullivan. "No Texas law or policy  needed to be changed in order for these agencies to be eligible to  receive the funds."
Huntsman  spokesman Tim Miller said his candidate, Obama's first ambassador to  China and a former governor of Utah, is opposed to all subsidies.
Jon  Huntsman has not been involved in the family business since 2005, said  company spokesman Gary Chapman. Huntsman resigned from the company to  pursue his political career.
Asked  why Huntsman International applied for the early retiree subsidy,  Chapman responded: "We're a commercial organization. We are looking to  maximize our shareholders' value. If there was a legitimate opportunity  for us to get help in this respect, we would go for it."
Republicans  have tried to paint the early retiree program as a political reward to  unions, among the staunchest Democratic loyalists. According to  calculations by the office of Sen. Mike Enzi, R-Wyo., the United Auto  Workers Retiree Medical Benefits Trust has made out the best.
A  UAW spokeswoman did not return phone calls. In its 2007 contracts with  Chrysler, GM and Ford, the union agreed to form the trust to pay health  care costs for the companies' retirees, including early retirees too  young to qualify for Medicare. The trust started paying in January 2010,  before Congress passed the health care law.
Calculations  by Enzi's staff also list AT&T, Verizon, General Electric, General  Motors, Qwest, Caterpillar and other private companies in the top 25,  not to mention the two Texas state programs. AT&T received $157  million.
Several media companies are also benefiting. The  Associated Press, a nonprofit news-gathering service owned by the  nation's newspapers, has received $191,888.Back in Texas, public and private employer retiree plans have collected more than $326 million. They range from American Airlines to Texas A&M University — Perry's alma mater.
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Associated Press Auto Writer Tom Krisher contributed to this report.
source:yahoofinance , AP
 
 
 
 
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