Study: Wisconsin schools’ insurance costs fall [Telegraph-Herald (Dubuque, IA)]
| By MD Kittle | |
| Proquest LLC |
about the organization According to its website, "EAGnews.org is the flagship website of
Act 10 is Gov.
workers.
In a survey of 312 of
The savings have continued in the current school year, with average monthly rates down to
For family coverage, average rates have declined from
"It's been two years since Act 10 brought a lot of competition into the
EAG's findings are supported in part by research from the nonprofit
Total accumulated savings for all districts were higher, but the
While many districts have implemented the changes, others extended full collective-bargaining contracts prior to the enactment of Act 10.
The law is in a kind of legal limbo.
While a
provisions related to local public employees, a federal appeals court upheld the law in its entirety.
Some contend the financial results have been mixed. The administrator of one school district noted in EAG's report contends that while his public school system saw significant savings in health insurance costs, the savings haven't made up for the cuts in state aid sustained under Walker's austerity measures in the past two-year budget.
As the EAG report points out, Act 10 took health insurance off the collective-bargaining table, allowing school boards to unilaterally select insurance providers.
It also opened the door for increased competition from insurance companies that had stayed out of the public school market in large part because the market was dominated by
In many cases before the collective bargaining changes, teachers'unions would demand
"That allowed
The EAG study includes comments from several district administrators who recalled the insurance climate before the collective bargaining changes.
"I can't remember a time when premiums haven't gone up," said
pre-Act 10 era.
A representative from
But a lot of districts left
Other public school systems, like the
The school board adopted insurance plan changes and came out with first-year savings "a bit under
In an interview with
"I'd say that's a double-edged sword," the administrator said. "The changes we made allowed us for the most part to offset the decreases in revenues we got from the state. We were probably pretty close to a wash. So was Act 10 positive? Depends on who the eye of the beholder is."
The health-insurance savings helped, Lozeau said, but they came at the expense of public school teachers and other public employees.
"I would say that if more than 10 percent of any school district in the state can honestly with a straight face, when all is said and done, say they have saved some money, I would be surprised," he said of Act 10. "Mostly it was a wash, and for some, it was a reduction."
But the EAG study found much has changed in the public school insurance market during the past few years. In 2010-11, 51 of 316 surveyed school districts reported lower single coverage insurance rates than the previous year, while 46 had lower family rates.
| Copyright: | (c) 2013 ProQuest Information and Learning Company; All Rights Reserved. |
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