Why Jason Freilinger out-debated Patti Milne

I just got back from a League of Woman Voters' debate between Jason Freilinger and Patti Milne, candidates for a Marion County Board of Commissioners position. In my utterly biased opinion, Freilinger won by a mile. Maybe even a light year. Why? Because he didn't shy away from tough questions like Milne did. Milne is a professional politician seeking a third term in office. Freilinger has a business degree and works in the private sector, where problems have to be tackled head-on or you don't succeed in the long run. I said that I was utterly biased because I am.…

Who knew you could pitch a no-hitter on LSD?

I sure didn't know this until last night, even though I took quite a bit of LSD back in my early college days (1966-1968'ish). I learned about the marvelous achievement of Dock Ellis via an HBO presentation of a Robin Williams stand-up comedy show. When I saw Williams tell the tale of Ellis' LSD'ized no-hitter, I laughed a lot. Sort of felt like a flashback. Maybe it was. Here's the You Tube snippet:  If you want to know the full story of how Dock Ellis came to be pitching a major league baseball game while high on LSD and benzedrine…

Salem arts/culture scene shakily supported

It'd be a stretch to call the way Laurel and I dance "artistic." But, hey, it's a form of creative expression, as evidenced by our dance instructor often saying to me, "Brian, what the heck were you doing with that move? That's not the way it's done in ..." [choose any dance style; I can screw it up creatively]. We've been enjoying going to the dances of the Salem Social Dance Club, a group organized by Robert -- whose last name I don't know. One Friday a month there'd be a get-together at the Salem Senior Center. Good music. Nice…

Regence BlueCross of Oregon is heartless

Regarding the title of this post: at first I had "evil" instead of "heartless," but I thought that sounded too metaphysical.

And Regence BlueCross of Oregon is definitely part of the material world — unfortunately, a part that no longer cares about people, which isn't the way a health insurance company should operate.

Here's two examples of Regence's heartlessness, one personal and one general that many Oregonians read about in a headline on the front page of The Oregonian today.

I'll start with my wife's experience in dealing with Regence about the dropping of coverage for a prescription drug, Restasis, she needs for a dry eye problem. Regence has paid for Restasis for over three years.

This spring Regence forced all of its individual plan subscribers, including us, to switch to new Evolve plans. As I noted in previous posts (here and here), the plans actually were a devolution, not an evolution, as they reduced benefits while keeping premiums about the same — which amounts to a cost increase.

Laurel was able to switch to the top-end Evolve plan after we found a way to get around some pre-existing condition bullshit. She assumed that the prescriptions Regence had been paying for on her low-end Blue Selections plan would be covered by the top-of-the-line Evolve plan.

Nope.

It didn't take long for us to discover that now we were paying our pharmacy several hundred dollars a month out of pocket for Restasis because Regence was rejecting the claim.

Looking into this, Laurel had some frustrating conversations with Regence employees. They said, "Restasis isn't in our formulary, so we can't pay for it." Laurel explained that they aren't any generic versions of Restasis, and the only alternative for her is tear duct surgery, which naturally she isn't wild about.

Tough luck, said Regence.

Laurel didn't give up. She appealed the decision, supplying a letter from her eye doctor saying that Restasis was medically necessary. Yesterday we learned that Regence still is staying with "tough luck."

We have reviewed all documentation you provided, including any documentation you or your provider's office previously submitted. As a result of the review, we concluded that we must uphold your plan benefit regarding brand name medications not listed on the formulary. According to your plan, brand name prescription medications not listed on the formulary are specifically excluded from your health care plan. No benefits will be provided for this service.

Heartless, bureaucratic, unreasonable. That's today's Regence Blue Cross of Oregon, whose motto seems to be "dedicated to denying needed health care to people whenever possible."

There's no non-brand name medication that acts like Restasis. The Restasis patent expires in 2019. So I guess Regence patients with dry eyes who need Restasis are supposed to suffer for nine more years, by which time, I can only hope, we'll have a national health plan like Canada and most of Europe does.

We're going to continue to appeal Regence's ridiculous denial of benefits.

No medical reason was given, just circular double-talk: your health plan says that only drugs listed in the formulary are covered; the drug you need isn't in the formulary; so we've decided that the plan we wrote won't cover a necessary prescription because this drug isn't in the formulary that we wrote.

Here's the other example of Regence's evil (oops) heartless nature, the Oregonian story: "Regence drops child-only coverage."

Starting Thursday, the federal health reform law stipulates that insurance companies can no longer deny coverage to children because they are sick. But parents hoping to buy insurance for kids received a jolting message this week from Regence BlueCross BlueShield, Oregon's largest health insurer: "Regence is no longer accepting applications for individual coverage from applicants under 19 years of age."

Bastards. That word popped into my head when I read the story, and it's still in my psyche now.

I worked in health planning at the state level in Oregon for about fifteen years in the 70's and 80's. I got frustrated when health care problems looked like they were intractable. The reform efforts passed by Congress this year started to restore my faith that the United States is headed in the right direction, health-wise.

Today the New York Times affirmed my guarded optimism, giving the new health care law an overall grade of "B." But health insurance companies got a sub-grade of "D," saying "they have been dragged kicking and screaming at every step."

That's because Regence Blue Cross of Oregon, along with most other private insurors, isn't committed to providing health care. They're committed to making money. So when given a choice between doing what's right for their subscribers, and lessening their profit margin a bit, they choose self-interest over the public interest.

Why else would Regence stop issuing individual health insurance policies for children? Now an Oregon child whose parents can't afford insurance and is diagnosed with cancer is out of luck if the parents turn to Regence — and the parents are going to be stuck with a huge bill, assuming they can find health care providers willing to take the child on.

I'd be happy to pay a bit more for my Regence policy if I knew that those dollars (or maybe even just cents) were making it possible for Oregon children to get necessary medical care, as the national health care reform bill specified.

But Regence has decided that children can be thrown under the medical care rug when they get sick, through no fault of their own, obviously. Nor, almost always, because their parents chose to go without insurance that they could afford.

How many parents think, "I'd rather have a big screen TV than make sure that my child can get needed health care?" Very few. Yet this is what Regence seems to be assuming, because the insuror's fear is that families will sign children up for insurance only when the kid has a serious illness.

Well, duh…that's when a child needs medical insurance, when he or she requires expensive care. Regence of Oregon is indeed heartless. It prefers to set children adrift on the uninsured health care ocean so it can pad its profits.

This disgusting display of health insurance company greed does have one slight bright side: it points out the absurdity of the Republican goal to repeal the requirement that every American needs to have health insurance — because the Republican leadership wants to keep the ban on denying insurance because of pre-existing conditions.

You can't have one without the other, children being a current (and probably temporary) exception on compassionate grounds.

Many adults almost certainly would take advantage of an ability to buy insurance only after they become seriously sick, which would interfere with the basic purpose of health insurance: spreading risks as widely as possible among both the healthy and the ill.

So in general, Regence is correct in arguing that people shouldn't be able to buy health insurance on demand irrespective of what sorts of pre-existing conditions they have. This is why it's so important that everybody in the United States has insurance, since there's a general consensus that it's unfair to deny coverage to people who need medical care the most — those who have medical problems.

However, individual policies for children account for only a very small percentage of Regence's business. And plenty of other health insurance companies are continuing to insure children with pre-existing conditions.

Thus the conclusion remains: Regence BlueCross BlueShield of Oregon is heartless. For more reasons why, I'll append an email on this subject that came today from OSPIRG, the Oregon Student Public Interest Research group.

To condo or not to condo — the big retirement question

Like lots of guys who are about to get their first Social Security check, I've been having some fantasies that would fall into a "mid-life crisis" category if I wasn't so damn old. I imagine cozying up to a younger and more petite model of what I've been accustomed to for so long, and am getting tired of. She'd be beautiful. Easy-maintenance. I wouldn't have to put up with all the problems I deal with now. She'd do what I wanted, when I wanted, and leave me in peace the rest of the time. I'm speaking, naturally, of a modern…

Jason Freilinger vs. Patti Milne for Marion County commissioner: a clear choice

County commissioner elections often get about as much attention from voters as an “exciting” (using that word in its most ironic sense) race for county assessor. Yawn... But in Marion County, as elsewhere in Oregon, November’s election is going to determine who will play a big part in running county government for the next four years. Marion County’s budget is $350 million, affecting 315,000 county residents. That’s a big deal.Currently Marion County’s three commissioners are all Republicans. Two are running for re-election this year, Patti Milne and Janet Carlson. Carlson is unopposed, while Milne has a strong Democratic challenger: Jason…

Bummer! Still no Comcast Sports Net NW on my DirecTV

Ah, tomorrow looks like a great football day here in rural south Salem. It'll probably be raining, which makes for an outdoor chore-free afternoon. Plus, both the Beavers and Ducks football games are televised. Oregon State vs. Louisville and Oregon vs. Portland State University -- here I come! All I have to do is fire up my HD DirecTV, which gets jillions (more or less) of channels for the billions of bucks (or so it seems) I pay for programming every month. Oh. Forgot. DirecTV doesn't carry a certain channel. Comcast SportsNet Northwest, which happens to be the freakin' channel…

Cosmic reasons to vote Democratic this November

Being a philosophical sort of guy, I enjoy looking at the big picture. The really Big Picture. Like, where we stand in the cosmos. Which can be viewed as "super small" or "very tall" depending on one's perspective -- and they can merge into one vision when perceived through the factual lens of science. Our universe is 13.7 billion years old. If Stephen Hawking is correct in his surmising, it is but one of a near-infinity of bubble universes which spring from quantum fluctuations in an everlasting energy field (no God required). Most universes are inhospitable to life. We, obviously,…

Crazy Ninth Circuit decisions show importance of Obama appointments

When I voted for Obama, one big reason was the power of the President to appoint members of the federal judiciary. Often our court system is the only thing that stands between screwy executive and legislative branch actions that violate the Constitution and/or established laws. Judges aren't perfect, for sure, and I'll offer a couple of egregious examples of this. But getting competent people appointed to vacant judicial positions is the best way for a President to assure that our federal courts operate as our Founding Fathers intended. So I've been bothered by Obama's seeming "ho-hum" attitude toward Republican obstructionism…

Learning the Hustle offers lesson in living

For me, learning how to dance means a lot more than just gaining some skills in moving around the hardwood to music. After all, life is a dance. And dancing is part of life. Last night Laurel and I had a private Hustle lesson with Lora at Salem's RJ Dance Studio. Lora has an impressive background in dance and music. At this stage in our dancing lessons, her central critique of me -- which is entirely accurate -- is that often I don't follow the beat or rhythm of a dance. I'm pretty good at getting steps down, though. With…

Trader Joe’s coming to south Salem. For real!

When it comes to a Salem Trader Joe's, it sure looks like The Who was right: "Won't be fooled again." Every sign, including the one below that I took a photo of this afternoon, points to Trader Joe's opening a store on south Commercial Street. So even though we Salemites were fooled by the Trader Joe's false alarm in June, when the Statesman Journal had a front page story about an apparent store opening at Keizer Station in north Salem that turned out to be wrong, this time the evidence is much stronger. I was alerted to this marvelous bit…

Photos of Camp Sherman’s new Lake Creek Trail

Laurel and I had read in the Sisters Nugget weekly about the opening of a hike/bike/ride trail that goes from Camp Sherman to Suttle Lake. On Labor Day we decided to give it a try, starting from the Camp Sherman end. Wisely. Also, necessarily, because we were staying at our co-owned forest service cabin along the Metolius River and didn't have an extra car for a shuttle. I say "wisely" because on this trail we had to break our usual rule of mountain biking: namely, don't bike up any mountains. Or even steep hills. So it was good that we…

Kitzhaber shouldn’t lose to Dudley, but I fear he will

It's just so wrong -- the highly respected political prognosticator FiveThirtyEIght saying that Chris Dudley has a 56% chance of becoming the next Governor of Oregon, while John Kitzhaber has a 44% chance. Hey, we're a blue state! On the left coast. I want Oregon to be an idyllic island of progressivism where Democrats like me can take shelter from the Republican storm that threatens to wash over most of the rest of the country come November. Yet here we are, first week of September, just two months from election day, and Kitzhaber seems stuck in low gear while Dudley…

Baby carrots go Xtreme! I’m crunch with that.

For a sixty-one year old dude, I'm on the cutting edge of what's happening, man. (Though those last three words date me.) In fact, I'm the handle that anticipated the cutting edge four years ago. Back in 2006 I was one of the few bloggers covering the baby carrot scene. My "Baby carrot community shaken to roots" post had a terrific title which should have won some kind of award. However, I didn't exactly make eating baby carrots seem like a mucho macho activity. I eat a lot of baby carrots. My wife makes me. At the age of 57…

Oregon Court of Appeals reverses Yamhill Co. subdivision approval

Here's more good legal news for the vast majority of Oregonians who want our state to stay as green as possible -- both environmentally and economically. Hot on the heels of a Marion County District Court judge's reversal of the county commissioners' decision to allow a 43-lot, 217 acre subdivision on groundwater limited farmland in our neighborhood to move forward comes an even more legally significant ruling: Today the Oregon Court of Appeals said approval of a 10-lot, 39-acre subdivision in Yamhill County was flawed and needs to be reconsidered by the Board of Commissioners. This is the first decision…