Rhode Island news
Political scene: More members of R.I. General Assembly paying part of health cost -- voluntarily
07:29 AM EDT on Monday, May 5, 2008
The public spotlight placed on their free health-care benefits has prompted several more state lawmakers to offer to pay 10 percent of the cost of the premiums costing up to $16,233 a year for family coverage.
In recent days, Senate Majority Leader M. Teresa Paiva Weed, D-Newport, newly elected Sen. Roger Picard, D-Woonsocket, and Representatives Edwin Pacheco, D-Burrillville, and David Caprio, D-Narragansett, have joined the relatively small group of lawmakers already contributing voluntarily because they thought it was the right thing to do.
Including the newcomers, the number of $13,508-a-year lawmakers paying a portion of their health insurance premiums now stands at 26 of 113.
Others either get it for free, or they get a $2,002 waiver payment for giving it up.
A handful opted to return 10 percent of their waiver payments. Only two — Sen. Paul Jabour, D-Providence, and Rep. John Patrick Shanley, D-South Kingstown — said no to the free insurance and a waiver payment.
Attention turned to the lawmakers’ free health care after an hours-long debate last week, on a bill to cut $168 million out of the current-year budget, that saw lawmaker after lawmaker rise from their seats to talk about the need to “share the burden” and “share the pain.”
A key lawmaker said the House Democratic leadership was willing to attach a requirement that legislators start contributing to the health-dental and vision package, but the senators signaled they were unwilling to go along during an unannounced caucus from which the media was excluded.
According to the legislative business office known as the Joint Committee on Legislative Services (JCLS), the following lawmakers are receiving free health-care packages:
In the House: Representatives Joseph Almeida, Jon Brien, Kenneth Carter, Elaine Coderre, Arthur Corvese, Elizabeth Dennigan, John DeSimone, Grace Diaz, Robert E. Flaherty, Raymond Gallison, Al Gemma, Arthur Handy, J. Russell Jackson, Donald Lally, Jan Malik, Nicholas Mattiello, John McCauley, Joseph McNamara, William Murphy, Eileen Naughton, Peter Palumbo, Peter Petrarca, Henry Rose, William SanBento, Gregory Schadone, Joseph Scott, Agostinho F. Silva, Richard Singleton, Thomas Slater, Peter Wasylyk, Anastasia Williams and Timothy Williamson have family plans. Edith Ajello, Steven Costantino, Gordon Fox, Brian Kennedy, Peter Lewiss, David Segal and Raymond Sullivan have individual plans.
In the Senate, Stephen Alves, Leo Blais, Frank Ciccone, Daniel DaPonte, James Doyle, Hanna Gallo, Daniel Issa, Beatrice Lanzi, J. Michael Lenihan, John McBurney, Michael McCaffrey, Josh Miller, Joseph Montalbano, Paul Moura, Juan Pichardo, Leonidas Raptakis, John C. Revens Jr., Dominick Ruggerio, Susan Sosnowski, and William Walaska have family plans. Daniel Connors, Maryellen Goodwin, Charles J. Levesque and Rhoda Perry have individual plans.
Twenty-one lawmakers who do not want or need the coverage each get a $2,002 annual waiver payment for giving it up.
Those receiving the waiver payment include Senators Walter Felag, Paul Fogarty, Christopher Maselli, Harold Metts and James Sheehan; and Representatives Joseph Amaral, Lisa Baldelli-Hunt, Raymond Church, Deborah Fellela, Frank Ferri, Douglas Gablinske, Joanne Giannini, Robert Jacquard, Peter Kilmartin, Charlene Lima, Rene Menard, John Savage, Patricia Serpa, Steven Smith, Stephen Ucci and Kenneth Vaudreuil. (Savage, Smith and Fogarty decided to voluntarily forgo 10 percent of the waiver payments).
Within this group are a number of current and retired state and municipal employees, including a retired probation and parole officer, school principal, firefighter and police officer who has moved on to a new career as a lawyer.
For the record, Governor Carcieri, the retired chief executive of Cookson America, has acknowledged he, too, gets the $2,002 waiver payment because he has health insurance under his private-sector retirement package. Retired from his earlier perch as chief executive at Cookson America, Carcieri has been unwilling since taking office to disclose the size of his pension and how much — if anything — he pays for his health coverage, though he acknowledged during his 2006 reelection campaign that his Cookson pension was between $200,000 and $500,000 annually.
The numbers seem to be changing daily, but according to the JCLS those legislators voluntarily paying 10 percent of the cost of their health-care premiums include Senators Dennis Algiere, David Bates, Kevin Breene, Marc Cote, June Gibbs, Paiva Weed, Picard and John Tassoni; and Representatives Caprio, Steven Coaty, Laurence Ehrhardt, Nicholas Gorham, Bruce Long, John Loughlin, William McManus, Helio Melo, Victor Moffitt, Carol Mumford, J. Patrick O’Neill, Pacheco, Amy Rice, Susan Story, Joseph Trillo, Robert Watson and Thomas Winfield. Rep. Donna Walsh opted to pay 6 percent.
The overall taxpayer cost this year of the legislators’ health benefit program: $1,344,861. The annualized savings would be a projected $142,739 if every legislator taking the benefit contributed 10 percent of the projected $1,427,390 cost next year.
House Speaker William J. Murphy on Friday disclosed that Representative Rice, D-Portsmouth, intends to reintroduce a proposal to require 10 percent co-payments that died in committee last year.
This year, Murphy said, the Rice bill “has the support of the Democratic Leadership.” No word yet on whether the Senate, which resisted attempts to attach a legislative co-pay requirement to the $168-million mid-year budget-cutting bill will go along.
Ucci urges term limits, longer terms for Assembly
Rep. Stephen R. Ucci, D-Johnston, has proposed that General Assembly members be limited to three terms and that the length of a legislative term be doubled, to four years.
“Longer, four-year terms for lawmakers would result in more stability in the legislature and ultimately more voter trust and confidence in the General Assembly,” Ucci says. “Most legislators cannot accomplish everything they’d like to for their communities in a two-year term.”
Increasing terms to four years would allow them to spend less time campaigning and fundraising and more time working for constituents, he says.
His legislation would limit any senator or representative who has served more than four years in the chamber as of Dec. 31, 2010, to serve two additional four-year terms. Ucci, a lawmaker since 2004, would qualify for the additional time.
The National Conference of State Legislatures reports that 15 states have term limits for legislators.
Ucci’s bill has been referred to the House Judiciary Committee. No hearing has yet been scheduled.
Loughlin mulls run for Patrick Kennedy’s seat
Rep. John Loughlin, a Tiverton Republican, told Political Scene last week that he is considering whether to challenge U.S. Rep. Patrick J. Kennedy in November.
“It has not been ruled in or ruled out at this point,” said Loughlin, 49, a retired Army Reserve lieutenant colonel. “I’ve had some discussion with folks in Washington about the race.”
He declined to identify the “folks” he spoke to in Washington, describing them only as “folks in the Republican Party apparatus.”
Loughlin said he would at the very least run for reelection to his House District 71 seat.
Campaign finance reports suggest that he isn’t well-positioned for a run at an incumbent congressman with deep pockets.
Loughlin had $7,973 in his campaign account as of March 31, according to the latest filing with the state Board of Elections.
Kennedy, meanwhile, had $617,182, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.
GOP hypes Operation Clean Government event
The citizens-advocacy group Operation Clean Government has a new best friend.
Who? The state Republican Party, which issued an e-mail under its own e-Pluribus banner last week reminding one and all of OCG’s “Second Annual Forum.”
And why would the state’s hugely outnumbered Republicans give the organization’s May 10 breakfast at the University of Rhode Island a free election-year plug? Perhaps it’s the theme.
“The General Assembly: Private Deal$ and Public Corruption.”
According to the statement, “the lively discussion will include: a review of legislative corruption and high profile violators; is our legislature worse than those in other states; how corruption affects you; causes of corruption at the legislature; how effective are the existing tools to battle legislative corruption; what else needs to be done to reduce legislative corruption.”
The scheduled panelists include former Republican Attorney General Arlene Violet; WPRO talk show host John DiPietro; Channel 10 political reporter Bill Rappleye, former Senate policy adviser Kenneth Payne; Ross Cheit, a Brown University political science professor and member of the state Ethics Commission; and Edward Achorn, deputy editorial page editor for The Providence Journal. Onetime Channel 6 anchor Dave Layman will moderate. Further information on the cost and location is available at www.ocgri.org
Hayward, in new post, queries state ethics panel
Before getting too comfortable in her new job, Jane Hayward, former health and human services secretary, decided to check in with the state Ethics Commission.
On April 3, Hayward asked the commission what she can and cannot do — under the state’s revolving door law — in her new role as president and CEO of the Rhode Island Health Center Association, a trade organization that provides management services and advocacy for 12 member health centers who, in turn, have grants and/or contracts with the two of the agencies in her former realm: the Department of Human Services and Department of Health.
The revolving-door law places restrictions on what elected and senior officials can do within a year of leaving state government.
In her letter, Hayward said she deliberately negotiated an employment contract that puts someone else — the clinical director — in charge of the management and supervision of the state department contracts until the one-year revolving door ban expires. “In her role as the president and CEO,” the letter promises, Hayward “will have no ministerial or substantive participation in these grants and/or contracts and will not appear before any of the five health and human services departments on behalf of RIHCA.”
Her question to the Ethics Commission: Is that sufficient?
A draft reply from the commission’s executive director, Kent A. Willever, said she needs “to be vigilant in insuring she does not disclose or make use of confidential information acquired during her state service.” But beyond that, Willever said, she can lobby the legislature and general officers, but not represent herself or others before the governor’s office or the Department of Administration for a year. The full Ethics Commission weighs in tomorrow.
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