1/23/2006

Kitty Rhoades wants you to keep paying for Badger Care health benefits for Wal-Mart employees

'Wal-Mart bills' focus on getting workers off government health care

Kitty Rhoades says:
Getting big business of government welfare sends a dangerous message to businesses. Supports letting the individual taxpayers and small businesses pay for Wal-Mart health benefits.

"It's hard to say we want to bring jobs here, and we want businesses to come to this state, and by the way, we're going to slap you with these things," said Rep. Kitty Rhoades (R-Hudson), who specializes in Medicaid issues for the Legislature's Joint Finance Committee



(Hey! There's $6 million Governor Doyle could use to help pay for the heating bills of the poor this winter or use to help provide poor kids with schlorship and college education assistance to they can earn degrees in engineering.)


"Why should small-business people have to foot the bill for someone who is making millions and millions in profit?"

That question is at the core of a new law in Maryland that effectively requires Wal-Mart to spend at least 8% of its payroll on health benefits or make a contribution to the state's health programs for low-income families.

Wal-Mart says 5% of its 1.3 million U.S. employees receive Medicaid, and 27% of its employees' children get health care through Medicaid or affiliated programs such as Wisconsin's BadgerCare. It says that percentage is lower than the retail sector average of 36%.

Unions and activists say dozens of states are considering variations of the Maryland legislation - including Wisconsin. In most states, the bills are given little chance of becoming law. Hearings were held last week on Wisconsin's version, backed by Rep. Terese Berceau (D-Madison) and Sen. Dave Hansen (D-Green Bay), but the bill is all but dead in committee.

Read more in Milwuakee Journal

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

So Kitty, do you want to bring jobs (with
a little j to WI) or Jobs,(with a big J that pay living wages and allow WI residents to provide for
their families and their needs, including health care). Oh, I'm sorry I guess you already anwered that quesion didn't you.
See you later.I have to go stock up on DVD cuttouts at the Big W, I love their low prices and their low brow atmosphere as well.

Anonymous said...

My pa get's over 11 bucks at Wam-Mart. Don't the 28500 people who work for em in Wis. pay taxes?

JPN said...

Yo Buck:

I would certainly hope they pay in taxes to the state. Just think, if we could get Wal-Mart and the others to pay for basic health care for those 809 people and 1,252 dependents, we'd have an additional $2.7 million to help provide financial aid to your children, when it comes time for them to further post-secondary education and train for the future. Or maybe we could use that money to help retrain those people losing their $20+/hour jobs (+retirement, +health bennies)who are winding up needing Badger Care because of the globalizing of business and the need for retraining.

Maybe your pa can provide all this on his $15,000 annual, take home pay? That sounds like a stretch...