Stillwater, MN |
There’s no such thing as a “free lunch”… even when mandated by Government?
In August 2014, there was a flap over a .35 cent minimum wage fee charged at a Stillwater, Minnesota restaurant that went viral nationally and caused quite a furor. It seems that Craig Beemer, owner of the Oasis Café, figured out that the new minimum wage rate would add an additional expense of .35 cents per customer ticket. The itemized receipt read a subtotal of the food items, next line Sales Tax, next line Minimum Wage Fee .35 cents, and then the Total that became the New Balance Due.
Cell Phone Bill. All of a sudden a .99 cent, new charge appeared on my cell bill. They did indicate what it was for… sending me a paper bill. I reached for my land-line and called them! They were prepared and offered a trade to cover that fee. That reminded me of my regular phone bill. What were all the fees for?
Land-Line Phone Bill. Down deep was an “access charge”. In my naiveté, I had assumed (never do so) that it was something like a fee to access long distance service elsewhere. Stupid me, it’s code for… we’re paying for free cell phones and free minutes for those on certain public assistance programs. Those that have them, call them “Obama-phones”. Phone companies, please tell the truth; don’t protect the politicians. Worse yet that set me off about the Medicare changes, where no one will give you the straight scoop.
Medicare Insurance Changes and Premium Deceptions. Most of these occurred for the 2014 calendar year, but please check if you are on Medicare for 2015 policy changes. Especially watch for co-payments, new deductibles and co-insurance.
I was and still am very angry over what happened to my coverage and premiums for 2014. My “premium” went up about $5-$6 a month to let’s say about $150. This is with one of the major insurers in Minnesota which shall remain unnamed. A few dollars increase is not a big deal but Katie, bar the door, as to what they did to the coverage.
I had been paying top dollar for their best plan to avoid co-pays, deductibles and co-insurances as much as practicable and really didn’t have any. Now, all of a sudden, deductibles occur and co-insurance surfaces. My premium only went up a few dollars but those of us in this top plan are now subject to $3,000 of out of pocket medical expenses not previously contracted for.
In essence, if an insured had a real bad medical year, they could find themselves paying not $150 per month but an equivalent $400 a month. To me this is highly deceitful, deceptive and (if they were in the finance business) materially misrepresentative.
What we need is a straight, no-spin, completely honest answer from the insurance company if this is in any way one of the negative effects of the Affordable Care Act. My experience with the company leads me to believe they are scared to death of the feds who regulate them and that you couldn’t get a bona fide answer out of the company.
When I called to get some explanations of the coverage, at first they gave me some fancy spin. Later, it became a little better without the spin. Their changes hurt the self-employed. The Mom and Pops get the biz.
Conclusion.
Now, back to Mr. Beemer. He did us all a favor laying it out as it is. Regardless of where any of us stand on the issue, he brought public attention to the cost of governmental actions no matter what they are. We all will pay in some form or another for them. Let’s be honest and open. There’s no free lunch at the Oasis or elsewhere. Thank you, Mr. Beemer, we’ll check your menu out one of these days.
Bob Smith 3rd
bob333smith3rd@gmail.com
GopherStatePolitics.com
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