NEWS: Thiopropazate Omeprazole Minocin Zolpidem! Chlorotrianisene Gentamicin Mirtazapine Cordarone Adenosine Bleomycin Acetazolamide Methimazole. Tolbutamide Trazodone, Cyproheptadine Nialamide: Isoniazid Inderal! Mazindol Iodamide Stavudine Methenamine Famvir Estradiol Acyclovir Suboxone Flonase Bupropion, Piperacetazine Echinacea? Percocet Hexamethonium Buspar Trichlormethiazide? Heroin Rizatriptan Amiodarone Keflex Penicillin Chlorotrianisene Loracarbef Trimethobenzamide Clomid Naloxone Advair Neomycin Clemastine Piperazine Nadolol Amaryl Zantac Cilexetil Alesse Nitroprusside! Dextrothyroxine Mephobarbital! Mepenzolate Toprol Methoxsalen Norethindrone? Lunesta Trovafloxacin Isocarboxazid Cyclizine Chlortetracycline Zyrtec! Lisinopril Lozol! Bromocriptine Methotrexate Thiabendazole Cinoxacin Ceftizoxime Phenergan Xanax Nalbuphine Ribavirin Doxepin Carphenazine Carbidopa! Skelaxin Oxymorphone! Ethionamide Concerta Provigil Ganciclovir Ethinyl Oleandomycin. Phytonadione Trihexyphenidyl Aminopterin Remeron Benzthiazide Propranolol. Tetracycline Flagyl Phenylpropanolamine Dextroamphetamine Ergotamine Climara Homatropine Gemfibrozil Methsuximide Dyphylline Aprotinin Methadone. Valerian Lotrel: Atarax Dulcolax! Trientine Terfenadine! Danazol Bumetanide Vicodin Moxifloxacin Demeclocycline Fosamax Podofilox Ketoprofen Avapro Dicyclomine! Zyrtec Clomocycline Sulindac Benztropine Brompheniramine Doxylamine Cefoperazone Lactulose? Maprotiline Iproniazid Cyclothiazide Norfloxacin Spectinomycin Isoproterenol Avodart Leflunomide! Plicamycin Dienestrol: Haldol Lorazepam Anisotropine Ritodrine: Robaxin Kaopectate Inderal Montelukast Carbimazole Nizoral Methoxamine Ambenonium Eulexin Buprenorphine Propylthiouracil Quinine Vitamin Niacinamide Iodine Anafranil Protonix Isotretinoin: Fexofenadine Epinephrine Diclofenac Nolvadex Chlordiazepoxide Oxytetracycline? Bendroflumethiazide Androgel Cephradine Bentyl Clarinex Actonel Ergocalciferol Yasmin Chlorprothixene Diphenadione: Cyclophosphamide Vaccine. Disulfiram Metolazone Cefmetazole Avapro! Methaqualone Vicodin? Cilostazol Vytorin Amrinone Heroin: Troglitazone Nicoumalone Decamethonium Calcitriol Dicumarol Leuprolide Methantheline Buspirone Acetylcholine Atacand Daunorubicin Cycloserine Pyridium Amitriptyline Mephenytoin Dianabol? Diflunisal Tinzaparin Clomiphene Isradipine Loperamide Accupril Clopidogrel Dimethindene Digoxin Phenazopyridine, Venlafaxine Zalcitabine! Sparfloxacin Risperdal Divalproex Penicillamine Butorphanol Phentolamine, Claritin Colestipol Ceforanide Cefixime. Hydrocodone Midazolam. Zyprexa Stavudine Glimepiride Brompheniramine: Dalteparin Diltiazem. Benicar Troglitazone, Oxytetracycline Repaglinide Diphenoxylate Orlistat Echinacea Penicillin. Tolmetin Timolol? Furosemide Dipyridamole Adipex Duragesic, Ursodiol Mannitol, Methazolamide Fenfluramine Menadione Aldara! Macrodantin Avodart Levaquin Dolasetron Lescol Secobarbital! Mitoxantrone Cinnarizine Beconase Erythrityl Septra Flomax Clonidine Nabumetone Oxaprozin Glipizide Dulcolax Hyperalimentation Geodon Cytomel Ceftin Hydrocortisone Dipyridamole Estrone: Glatiramer Colchicine Anagrelide Mebanazine. Famciclovir Dexfenfluramine! Pemoline Lopressor Cyclandelate Cyclothiazide Methyclothiazide Hydrochlorothiazide, Isosorbide Accutane? Cloxacillin Topamax? Lidocaine Levlen? Ranitidine Carbenicillin Fenoterol Cefonicid, Ketorolac Dibenzepin? Bromides Losec Naloxone Dobutamine Isosorbide Cilostazol! Repaglinide Elocon Dopamine Chlorthalidone Locoid Clozapine, Trichlormethiazide Dilantin Cephalothin Camphor: Heparin Terconazole Enalapril Imipramine Norflex Captopril Arthrotec Verapamil Ondansetron Pentasa, Chloroquine Felodipine Quinapril Pseudoephedrine? Methylphenidate Cafergot Zidovudine Diprolene Procainamide Hydromorphone Nafcillin Tolmetin Potassium Chlorzoxazone Mirena Cefepime Methacycline Pyrilamine Acarbose Laetrile Thalidomide Lithium! Phenolphthalein Kaolin: Metoclopramide Fastin Iprindole Methscopolamine Isradipine Glatiramer? Cefuroxime Famotidine! Thyrotropin Ethionamide Aztreonam Methyldopa: Zafirlukast Dioxyline Nicardipine Perphenazine Glycerin Pancuronium: Bontril Piperidolate! Guaifenesin Fioricet! Melphalan Chlortetracycline Mirapex Zyprexa: Meprobamate Bepridil Phenoxybenzamine Ribavirin? Chlorpropamide Cephalexin Ionamin Benadryl Hydrocortisone Nylidrin Protirelin Betamethasone Hydroflumethiazide Disulfiram. Flovent Amoxicillin! Pancuronium Pentazocine Colchicine Clonidine Phencyclidine Amiodarone? Droperidol Cefuroxime Ultracet Mesalamine Elidel Lanoxin Dicyclomine Cleocin Hyzaar Terazosin: Triamcinolone Meclizine Adapalene Troleandomycin Trifluoperazine Sucralfate Cefixime Danazol Neomycin Atracurium Oxtriphylline Carphenazine Chlorambucil Chantix Bacampicillin Levaquin! Hexamethonium Loprox Triflupromazine Esmolol Betaxolol Amiloride Viagra Methacycline Thyroid Phenyltoloxamine, Terfenadine Amoxapine Arava Ursodiol Sertraline Celecoxib Cefprozil Fenoterol Mefloquine Macrobid Thiothixene Insulin Dimethothiazine Foscarnet Tricor Ergocalciferol? Aldactone Oxyphenonium Midazolam Eprosartan Bexarotene Chloramphenicol Sumatriptan Marijuana Lodine Minocin! Elocon Naprosyn Carbidopa Cefdinir. Somatostatin Cyclobenzaprine Zuclopenthixol Cefoperazone: Nicoumalone Octreotide Indocin Paregoric Guanfacine Oxycodone? Lamivudine Thiabendazole Fluvoxamine Doxycycline Nuvaring Oxprenolol Naltrexone Gitalin Differin Pentoxifylline? Guanethidine Letrozole? Amiloride Nadroparin. Aspirin Calan Antazoline Cimetidine Afrin Voltaren Felbamate Labetalol Probenecid Meclofenamate Effexor Bricanyl! Ethinamate Oxtriphylline Procyclidine Ethynodiol, Bretylium Methotrimeprazine Chantix Daunorubicin Phenylephrine Femara Medrol Provera! Tolazamide Imdur Griseofulvin Aspirin Cosopt Prednisone? Foradil Biperiden Busulfan Tridihexethyl Minocycline Tocainide! Phenyltoloxamine Micronase Atacand Thiothixene! Phenazocine Clonazepam Simvastatin Zidovudine? Chlorothiazide Sulindac! Trimethaphan Phenelzine Cocaine Avalide, Norethindrone Beconase Rabeprazole Propofol Astemizole Cefotaxime, Reglan Alavert Olanzapine Ethambutol Soma Cortisone Toprol Methylphenidate Ticarcillin Chlorothiazide Trandolapril Isopropamide, Meloxicam Crestor Ketamine Metronidazole Minoxidil Amrinone? Methenamine Pyrazinamide Premarin Epirubicin Electricity Beclomethasone! Fluticasone Thyrotropin? Acetohexamide Novobiocin Tyropanoate Dirithromycin! Mucomyst Furazolidone Carisoprodol Imipenem. Alprazolam Thiopropazate: Plendil Hexachlorophene! Insulin Vancomycin! Ethanol Losartan. Diphemanil Somatostatin Dioxyline Ultram Eldepryl Avandia Carbachol Alteplase Zileuton Codeine Imipenem Hexoprenaline Niacinamide Divalproex? Feldene Gabapentin Quinacrine Phenprocoumon Meperidine Levitra. Ramipril Indomethacin? Estrone Parnaparin Fastin Minocycline.

Archive for January, 2008

Backdoor COLA Cuts

Thursday, January 31st, 2008
Al Brooks brought this to my attention and I thought you would be interested-Dave
How Congress Let Economists Do The Dirty Work in 1998
By Mary Johnson

 

 

What could you do with an extra $778 this year? Pay your Part D plan premiums or your rent for a month? Buy groceries? I can think of a hundred ways to use it! That’s why I was shocked when I estimated that someone who retired with an average benefit of $816 per month in 2000 would have received an extra $778 in higher Social Security benefits this year if government economists hadn’t quietly changed the way they calculate the Consumer Price Index (CPI) in 1998.


Your annual Cost-Of-Living Adjustment (COLA) is calculated by the rate of increase in the CPI. Changing the math to make the CPI seem to be growing more slowly also cut the growth of your Social Security benefit, especially over time.

In 1996, a report by a commission of economists recommended a 1% downward adjustment to the CPI. Some economists, including Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, said the index “overstated” inflation and that seniors were being overpaid.

The proposal was rightfully considered to be political dynamite. Instead of legislating any changes to COLAs, a wary Congress seized on the strategy of letting the government economists at the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) do their dirty work for them. The BLS, the agency responsible for collecting the data and calculating the CPI, adopted a series of seemingly tiny changes that makes the index grow more slowly.

In 1998 The Senior Citizens League created national controversy when it warned seniors that changes the government was making to the CPI would result in cutting the COLA. Senior outrage prompted the commissioner of Social Security to hold an emergency press conference seeking to assure seniors that they would continue to receive a COLA, although the increases would be smaller in the future.

By 2000 government economists estimated that the BLS changes had resulted in slowing the growth of the CPI by an estimated 0.8 percentage point annually. The following table illustrates the impact on an average benefit of $816 of such a reduction.

 

 

Impact of 0.8 Percentage Point Change In CPI On Your Social Security Benefit

Year

Monthly Benefit

(If Pre-1998 CPI Used)

Actual Monthly

Benefit

COLA*

(If Pre-1998 CPI

Used)

Actual COLA*

Annual Benefit

(If Pre-1998 CPI Used)

Actual Annual Benefit

2000 $816.00 $816.00 4.3% 3.5% $9,792.00 $9,792.00
2001 $851.09 $844.56 3.4% 2.6% $10,213.06 $10,134.72
2002 $880.02 $866.52 2.2% 1.4% $10,560.30 $10,398.22
2003 $899.39 $878.65 2.9% 2.1% $10,792.63 $10,543.80
2004 $925.47 $897.10 3.5% 2.7% $11,105.61 $10,765.22
2005 $957.86 $921.32 4.9% 4.1% $11,494.31 $11,055.88
2006 $1,004.79 $959.10 4.1% 3.3% $12,057.53 $11,509.17
2007 $1045.99 $990.75 3.1% 2.3% $12,551.89 $11,888.97
2008 $1,078.42 $1,013.53 $12,941.00 $12,162.42

Total

$101,508.32

$98,250.40

* COLAs payable starting January 1 in the following year.

In the past 13 years, since I’ve been writing this newsletter, changing the CPI, cutting COLAs, or both, have been proposed as major options for Congress to cut spending on Social Security virtually every year. The Senior Citizens League fights such cuts and instead supports legislation that would pay a more fair and adequate COLA using a seniors CPI, The Consumer Price Index For Elderly Consumers (CPI-E). TSCL supports two similar bills “The Consumer Price Index for Elderly Consumers,” H.R. 1953 introduced by Representative Charles Gonzalez (TX)), and H.R. 2032 introduced by Representative Peter DeFazio (OR).

Real Life Situation in Oak Ridge

Monday, January 14th, 2008

Bob Henderson writes:

"Joe" had attended evening school and worked as an accountant. He was recruited in 1942 to come do important work "for the government" in Oak Ridge. With pride he served his country supporting the secret work here. His family moved to Knoxville until rental housing became available in Oak Ridge in 1945. When Oak Ridgers were allowed to buy their government-owned-houses in 1957 he bought the home they had rented for twelve years. By 1971-72 health problems forced him to retire shortly before he was sixty-five.

Joe was a professional who worked in Oak Ridge for 30 years. Salaries weren't very high in Oak Ridge when he retired in the early 70's, but he was confident his government would reward his loyalty with a livable pension for him and his wife for as long as they lived. Joe died in 1989 at age 81. His widow receives a surviving spouse pension check and she remains in the house where she has now lived for over sixty two years.

Her pension check in 2005 was $395 each month and $187 of that was withheld to provide health coverage. She received a net of $209 each month from the pension. That and her social security check are how she survives. She provides minimal upkeep on the house, keeps the lights and heat as low as she can stand and doesn't pay anyone to come to clean because she can't afford it. She fell in the Fall of 2006 and broke her hip. After time in the hospital and in rehab, she returned to her home to live alone.

As a ninety-three year old, she wouldn't complain because she grew up during the depression. She loves Oak Ridge, her USA, and the University of Tennessee. She taught school for a number of years when she was younger. Is this how we say, "Thanks for a job well done for DOE contractor retirees and their spouses in Oak Ridge?

In December of 2007, now 94 years old, she fell again at her home and couldn't reach the telephone to call for help. She lay on the floor for two days before someone came and found her. I visited her in early January, 2008 at a health care center. She hopes to be able to return home soon. One of her most pressing concerns is the high cost of care outside her home. How long will she be able to hold on hoping for a pension adjustment that can make her last days more tolerable, at least financially? Should I suggest that she be patient? Should we wait patiently for change?

   

Please Call Your Councilperson

Thursday, January 10th, 2008

A key committee of the Oak Ridge City Council recommended an initiative to try to secure a boost in pensions for more than 5,300 Anderson and Roane county retirees "chafing under current pension plans provided by two local Department of Energy contractors". This, along with other proposals, will go before the full council this month for approval.

If you live in Oak Ridge or nearby, call or write a City Councilperson and encourage them to approve this initiative.

The Editor

Another Attack on Retirees

Saturday, January 5th, 2008

US Ruling Backs Benefit Cut at 65 in Retiree Plans
By Robert Pear
The New York Times

Thursday 27 December 2007

Washington - The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission said Wednesday that employers could reduce or eliminate health benefits for retirees when they turn 65 and become eligible for Medicare.

The policy, set forth in a new regulation, allows employers to establish two classes of retirees, with more comprehensive benefits for those under 65 and more limited benefits - or none at all - for those older.

More than 10 million retirees rely on employer-sponsored health plans as a primary source of coverage or as a supplement to Medicare, and Naomi C. Earp, the commission's chairwoman, said, "This rule will help employers continue to voluntarily provide and maintain these critically important health benefits."

Premiums for employer-sponsored health insurance rose an average of 6.1 percent this year and have increased 78 percent since 2001, according to surveys by the Kaiser Family Foundation. Because of the rising cost of health care and the increased life expectancy of workers, the commission said, many employers refuse to provide retiree health benefits or even to negotiate on the issue.

In general, the commission observed, employers are not required by federal law to provide health benefits to either active or retired workers.

Dianna B. Johnston, a lawyer for the commission, said many employers and labor unions had told it that "if they had to provide identical benefits for retirees under 65 and over 65, they would just drop retiree health benefits altogether for both groups."

In a preamble to the new regulation, published Wednesday in the Federal Register, the commission said, "The final rule is not intended to encourage employers to eliminate any retiree health benefits they may currently provide."

But AARP and other advocates for older Americans attacked the rule. "This rule gives employers free rein to use age as a basis for reducing or eliminating health care benefits for retirees 65 and older," said Christopher G. Mackaronis, a lawyer for AARP, which represents millions of people age 50 or above and which had sued in an effort to block issuance of the final regulation. "Ten million people could be affected - adversely affected - by the rule."

The new policy creates an explicit exemption from age-discrimination laws for employers that scale back benefits of retirees 65 and over. Mr. Mackaronis asserted that the exemption was "in direct conflict" with the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967.

The commission, by contrast, said that under that law, it could establish "such reasonable exemptions" as it might find "necessary and proper in the public interest." The United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, in Philadelphia, upheld this claim in June, in the case filed by AARP, which has asked the Supreme Court to review the decision.

In its ruling, the appeals court said, "We recognize with some dismay that the proposed exemption may allow employers to reduce health benefits to retirees over the age of 65 while maintaining greater benefits for younger retirees." But the court said the commission had shown that the exemption was "a reasonable, necessary and proper exercise" of its authority.

Under the new rule, employers may, if they choose, provide retiree health benefits "only to those retirees who are not yet eligible for Medicare." Likewise, the rule says, retiree health benefits can be "altered, reduced or eliminated" when a retiree becomes eligible for Medicare.

Further, employers will be able to reduce or eliminate health benefits provided to the spouse or dependents of a retired worker 65 or over, regardless of whether benefits for the retiree are changed.

Employers and some unions contend that retirees under 65 have a greater need for employer-sponsored health benefits because they are generally not Medicare-eligible. Large employers have often provided some health benefits to retirees 65 and older, to help cover costs not paid by Medicare. But employers have for years been trying to reduce retiree benefits or to shift more of the cost to retirees.

Lawyers for the commission said the new Medicare drug benefit, now nearing the end of its second year, had strengthened the case for the regulation because it guaranteed that retirees 65 and older would have access to drug coverage. Younger retirees have no such guarantee, so employers may want to provide drug coverage to them in particular, the lawyers said.

Helen Darling, president of the National Business Group on Health, which represents large employers, welcomed the rule.

"If employers could not coordinate with Medicare, they would be far less likely to provide health coverage" to retirees, Ms. Darling said. "They could not afford to."

A study by the Government Accountability Office in 2001 estimated that one-third of large employers and fewer than one-tenth of small employers offered health benefits to retirees. Ms. Darling said newer retirees often received not comprehensive coverage but instead a fixed amount of money, based on years of service, to help them with their medical costs.

James A. Klein, president of the American Benefits Council, a lobby for large employers, said: "The new rule is a victory for common sense and for retirees. Retiree health coverage has been declining for many years. Without this rule, many more retirees, especially early retirees, could find themselves without employer-sponsored coverage."

Gerald M. Shea, assistant to the president of the A.F.L.-C.I.O., also saw merit in the new rule.

"Given the enormous cost pressures on employer-sponsored health benefits," Mr. Shea said, "we support the flexibility reflected in the rule as a way to maximize our ability to maintain comprehensive coverage for active and retired workers."

Schoolteachers, like many other public employees, often retire early and rely on employer-provided health benefits until they become eligible for Medicare. At a Congressional hearing in 2005, the National Education Association and Representative John A. Boehner of Ohio, who is now the House Republican leader, supported the proposed rule. The teachers union said it feared that employers would cut health benefits for early retirees if they had to provide identical benefits to those over 65 and those under.