WellPoint to delay insurance rate hike in California
The planned rate increase, which state officials estimated would affect about 700,000 customers, averaged 25 percent and would have been as high as 39 percent for some.
The planned rate increase, which state officials estimated would affect about 700,000 customers, averaged 25 percent and would have been as high as 39 percent for some.
The firestorm created this week by Indianapolis-based health insurer WellPoint’s spike in premiums could resurrect some parts
of
the languishing health reform bills.
With Lucas Oil Stadium and other new city amenities to show off, local sports and tourism officials are considering making
a bid for the NBA’s midseason blowout weekend.
Hamilton County is poised to become the demographic all-star of the decade. Its 269,785 residents make up the fastest-growing,
most educated and wealthiest county in the state, according to estimates from the Indiana Business Research Center.
Overseas sales are a major emphasis for Indianapolis-based Peerless Pump, which makes highly engineered pumps for fire suppression,
factories and waterworks. President Obama’s administration wants to help rebuild the U.S. economy by putting more companies
on Peerless’ trajectory.
Locally based Broadbent Co.’s legal battles with lenders have escalated, pushing one of its 34 strip malls into bankruptcy
and prompting Huntington National Bank and PNC Bank to sue to collect principal owed on loans tied to four more.
Polymer Technology Systems Inc., a small Indianapolis-based maker of handheld blood monitors, has gone to court to fight
a competitor more than 100 times its size: Roche Diagnostics Corp.
Health insurer WellPoint is blaming the Great Recession and rising medical costs for its planned 39 percent rate increase
for some California customers of its Anthem Blue Cross plan. But Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius isn’t
buying the explanation proffered in a letter delivered to her Thursday.
Attorneys for the company and its parent firm denied any fraud occurred but said receivership nonetheless made sense.
Carmel’s new 1,600-seat concert hall will be called “The Palladium,” part of a marketing effort designed to generate more financial
support for the city’s performing arts center.
The Indianapolis-based health insurer says a shift in demographics and rising medical costs have led to its planned 39 percent
rate hike for some California customers.
Once considered a destination only eight months of the year, Indianapolis—with its compact downtown and indoor walkways—is
emerging as a convention powerhouse even during cold weather.
It’s the most famous rate hike in the country now. And that’s not good news for WellPoint Inc.
The Indianapolis-based health insurer’s California subsidiary will raise customers’ premiums by as much as 39
percent this year, according to the Associated Press. That alarmed President Obama, who is trying to resurrect his health
reform efforts. He cited the WellPoint rate hike in his Sunday interview with Katie Couric on CBS. "That’s a portrait
of the future if we don’t do something now," Obama said. Also, Obama’s health secretary, Kathleen Sebelius, fired
off a letter to WellPoint, demanding an explanation. The Obama administration has no authority in the matter, and the California
insurance department says it can do nothing about a rate hike unless WellPoint’s pricing violates state rules. But California
Insurance Commissioner Steve Poizner is hiring an outside actuary to make sure WellPoint’s rate hike won’t breach
a state threshold that no more than 30 percent of premiums pay for overhead and profits. WellPoint, in a statement, blamed
the rate hike on the weak economy, which has reduced WellPoint’s customer base by eliminating 7 million jobs, and on
ever-rising costs for medical care. The rate hike "highlights why we need sustainable health care reform to manage the
steadily rising costs of hospitals, drugs and doctors," the statement said.
Eli Lilly and
Co. Chairman and CEO John C. Lechleiter received $16.4 million in total compensation last year, a 33.6-percent increase.
The rest of Lilly’s executive team got an average 25.4-percent pay hike. The majority of pay for the top five Lilly
executives came in the form of stock-based awards. But Lilly’s stock performance has been dismal the past two years. Indianapolis-based
Lilly faces a raft of patent expirations in the next five years that could sap more than half its current
revenue. On top of that, it has suffered numerous setbacks on bringing drugs to market. Therefore, investors
have sent Lilly’s stock price tumbling. Even counting Lilly’s substantial dividend, investors
suffered a 21-percent loss in value in 2008 and another 6-percent loss in 2009. By contrast, Lilly’s
profits have grown by double-digits each of the past two years.
Dublin, Ohio-based
health care products distributor Cardinal Health LLC says it plans to cut more workers at its
Indianapolis distribution center, bringing the number of recent layoffs to 49. Cardinal Health notified the state on Feb.
3 that it laid off 37 workers at the end of January and plans to lay off 12 more effective April 3. The center is at 6812
Corporate Drive on the city’s northwest side. The cuts eliminated 44 warehouse-operations associates, two operations
managers, two warehouse supervisors and an assistant administrator. About 25 employees will be left at the facility after
the layoffs.
After 30 years of government
studies of a regional transportation system, a private-sector group on Wednesday is set to unveil its own
plan that includes commuter rail and toll lanes added to congested interstate highways.
Anthem has declined to say how many of its 800,000 individual policyholders in California are being affected by the hike.
But Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius demanded specifics in a sternly worded letter.
WellPoint Inc. chief financial officer Wayne DeVeydt said President Obama’s Federal Trade Commission is unlikely to approve
mergers among the biggest insurers.
NFL honchos are asking local 2012 Super Bowl Host Committee leaders for patience while they work out a deal with the players
union that will preserve the big game here. If that doesn’t happen, locals may be waiting a while for the game to come back.