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Holiday Wish List
Here is a list of Indianapolis-area not-for-profit organizations and the things each needs most.
Setbacks in diabetes market batter Roche
Roche Diagnostics Corp., once the darling of the U.S. diabetes-device market, is now licking its wounds. And
it’s mulling whether to keep fighting on all fronts or to pull back.LOU’S VIEWS: A ballet blockbuster tops 2009’s list of favorites
Here are the 10 offerings that I most enthusiastically recommended to friends and readers in the past year.
HETRICK: As a new decade dawns, could we start again?
Ten years ago this week, a new century dawned. A lot has changed since.
Company news
It’s tough being a most-favored nation. Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Connecticut, a subsidiary of Indianapolis-based
WellPoint Inc., got a tongue lashing from that state’s attorney general for the “most-favored
nation” clauses it inserts in its contacts with hospitals. The clauses insist the hospitals give
no other insurance plan a discount larger than that given to Anthem. The clauses are preventing some
of Connecticut’s hospitals from signing up for a new state-run insurance plan for the uninsured,
called Charter Oak. It pays rates lower than those negotiated by Anthem, and many hospitals have refused
to join for fear Anthem would insist that the hospitals allow Anthem to lower its payment rates to equal those
of Charter Oak. Connecticut Attorney general Richard Blumenthal wrote a letter this month to Anthem asking it to promise not
to insist on receiving discounts equal to Charter Oak. “I call on Anthem to break its death grip on hospitals and encourage
them to join in this critical health insurance program,” Blumenthal said in a statement. Most-favored nation clauses
were banned in Indiana by the General Assembly in 2007.Even though Wall Street likes the Senate health reform
bill, that doesn’t mean rank-and-file insurance professionals do. But in the Christmas spirit, Susan Rider, president-elect
of the Indianapolis Association of Health Underwriters found some positives in the latest version of health
reform. She likes that there will be no government-run health plan or an expansion of the Medicare program—although
she still does not like the proposed expansion of Medicaid. She likes that a cap on flexible-spending
accounts of $2,500 will now rise in line with inflation. She likes that the federal Department of Health
and Human Services will not set broker commissions in the newly created insurance exchanges. But she
does not like much of the meat of the bill. She thinks the requirement for insurance plans to spend at
least 85 percent of premiums on care (80 percent for individual policies) needs to be reduced, likewise the $6.7 billion in
annual taxes assessed on for-profit health insurers and the 40-percent tax assessed on insurance
policies costing $23,000 or more. Rider said the fines used to enforce the mandate that all individuals
buy health insurance will be “completely ineffective” because they will allow
Americans to pop in and out of insurance pools only when they need health care services.This
can’t be good for business—especially for a human resources business. Indianapolis-based
consultant HR Solutions Inc. was sued in federal court last month for allegedly failing
to pay commissions earned by a saleswoman and then firing her the day after she got out of the hospital after a pancreatitis
attack. The saleswoman, Candi Marsch of Evansville, wants HR Solutions to shell out back pay, punitive damages and legal
fees.Indianapolis business supports community
I loved [Benner’s Dec. 14] column [about Indiana Sports Corp.]. Thirty years is not a long history, but I’ll bet most folks in Indy don’t
know about this.LOU’S VIEWS: Dylan tribute Bob-bob-bobs along
This week, a Bob Dylan tribute at the Athenaeum and tell-all tales at Theatre on the Square.
EDITORIAL: Booze bill is a small step for Sunday sales
More than once, we have used this space to rail against legislation that would further restrict alcohol sales in Indiana. So we are happy to be patting lawmakers on
the back for advancing a measure that would begin to ease the onerous limitations on when Hoosiers can buy booze.Indianapolis Motor Speedway board must point to path for success
They’ve ousted Tony George, now it’s time for the former Indianapolis Motor Speedway CEO’s three sisters and mother to lead
open-wheel racing out of the woods.HETRICK: Awed by America’s generous help for Haiti
I much prefer a nation that can be more the world’s benefactor and less the world’s cop.
FEIGENBAUM: Debate rages over the right to bear arms
House Bill 1065 would bar business owners
from prohibiting an employee from keeping a legally owned firearm in his or her locked vehicle at work.PARENT: Why I’m rooting for the Saints in the land of Blue
The Indianapolis Colts may be the home team, but this Hoosier sits squarely in the New Orleans Saints’ corner.
Key business issues clear mid-session hurdle
The first half of a short session will close Wednesday, meaning bills must have passed out of either the House or Senate to
stay alive. Legislation regarding unemployment taxes and township-government reform easily met that deadline.Government reform, unemployment taxes chug through Legislature
Key measures cleared their chambers of origin by the Feb. 3 deadline.
BENNER: Super Bowl delegation’s focus is two years out
We can promise, at game time, a perfect environment: 70 degrees and dry.
MARCUS: Governor’s ship of a state losing sailors?
A State of the State address is supposed to make us feel better about who we are, where we are and where we are going.
Governors ask Congress to go easy on Toyota
Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels and three other governors of states with Toyota plants are calling on Congress to be fair to the
automaker in hearings concerning safety recalls.KATTERJOHN: Local businesses kick in for Haiti
Hoosier businesses have
stepped up for the citizens of Haiti, the island nation that was literally shaken to pieces by a massive earthquake Jan. 12.