Watch: NYC Municipal Retirees Rally Against Spectrum’s Corporate Hit Piece; Stand Behind Intro. 1099
By Joe Maniscalco
Editor’s Note: This is the first of a multi-part report following today’s New York City Organizaiton of Public Service Retirees’ press conference held outside City Hall.
Sonia Agron, a retired EMT for the City of New York stood in a downpour outside City Hall this afternoon talking about how she and her husband — a retiree from the NYPD — are both “very sick” with 911-related illnesses and feeling very betrayed by all those trying to strip municipal retirees of their traditional Medicare health benefits and force them into a profit-driven Medicare Advantage program run by Aetna.
NYS Assembly Member: ‘It’s Critical We Stand Up For Our Retirees’
By Joe Maniscalco
This week, District Council 37 Executive Director Henry Garrido immediately started calling City Council Member Charles Barron’s measure to preserve a half-century commitment to retiree healthcare “the single most irresponsible proposal in the history of New York City’s Council” — he forgot to include the New York State Legislature where Assembly Member Kenneth Zebrowski is responsible for introducing virtually the same legislation.
Barron Leads the Charge for NYC Retirees
By Bob Hennelly
New York City Council Member Charles Barron (D-Brooklyn) has introduced the legislation that’s been sought by New York City municipal retirees to preserve their access to traditional Medicare.
NY Retiree Advocates Open Up Two New Fronts in Fight Against Healthcare Privatization
By Joe Maniscalco
New York City municipal retirees rallying outside City Hall in support of new legislation by Council Member Charles Barron protecting traditional Medicare got more than they expected Thursday, when they learned New York State Assembly Member Kenneth Zebrowski is also introducing similar legislation at the state level.
GOP-Led Caucus Files Brief in Support of NYC Retirees; Long-Awaited Medicare Legislation to Be Introduced
By Joe Maniscalco
Members of a mostly Republican caucus inside the New York City Council filed an amicus brief today in New York State Supreme Court supporting municipal retirees seeking a preliminary injunction against Mayor Eric Adams’ plan to strip city workers of their traditional Medicare coverage and force them into a profit-driven Medicare Advantage plan run by Aetna.
NYC Mayor Calls Tentative UOC Pact a ‘Great Deal for Workers’
By Bob Hennelly
New York City Mayor Eric Adams’ administration and a coalition of 11 unions representing more than 32,000 uniformed officers have reached a tentative contract deal that raises pay 3.25 percent in the first two years, 3.50 percent in the third and fourth year, with a 4 percent bump in the fifth and final year.
No Sale: NYC Union Leaders Reject Aetna’s Rosy Take on Medicare Advantage Prior Authorizations & Denials
By Joe Maniscalco
Aetna is one the largest private health insurance companies in the United States today, in the top 10, in fact. And this week, we learned the company is alleging to have handled 82 million Medicare Advantage claims last year alone — and out of that vast number, they say, “only” 3.4% were subjected to prior approval, with a mere 0.49% ultimately being denied. Whoa!
UFT Announces Tentative Contract with NYC
By Bob Hennelly
UFT President Michael Mulgrew’s working with Mayor Adams to push New York City’s 250,000 retired municipal employees into a controversial for-profit Medicare Advantage health insurance plan appears to be paying dividends for his union’s active members under terms of a tentative contract announced June 13 at City Hall.
Will NYC’s Mayor Back Off on Privatizing Retiree Healthcare?
By Joe Maniscalco
Is there a possibility — now that Comptroller Brad Lander has declined to register the city’s Medicare Advantage contract with Aetna — New York City Mayor Eric Adams will reconsider his plan to strip municipal retirees of their traditional Medicare coverage?
Now, What’s the Mayor Gonna Do? NYC Comptroller Delivers Another Win for Retirees Fighting Medicare Advantage
By Joe Maniscalco
New York City Comptroller Brad Lander isn’t gonna help Mayor Eric Adams and the heads of the Municipal Labor Committee [MLC] strip municipal retirees of their traditional Medicare coverage and push them into a profit-driven Medicare Advantage plan.
Are We Gonna Learn Anything From This Mega-Cloud?!?
By Bob Hennelly
Courtesy of InsiderNJ
Canada is on fire.
The smog fallout downwind has set off air quality alerts for 13 states south of the border with the worst air quality currently being reported in upstate New York from Syracuse to Binghamton. Toxic smog has extended down along the East Coast and into the Ohio Valley as millions of Americans are being advised to curtail outdoor activity if they have pre-existing health conditions.
Put Up or Shut Up: Time for the NYC Council to Prove it Stands with Retirees Fighting to Save Traditional Medicare
By Joe Maniscalco
Former profit-driven health insurance industry insider turned profit-driven health insurance industry foil Wendell Potter thinks it’s possible to “at least begin to slow” the privatization of traditional Medicare, but that we need Democrats running both houses of Congress and the White House.
Will New York Extend a Lifeline to 9/11 Survivors?
By Bob Hennelly
Last month marked the 21st anniversary of the end of the official clean-up in lower Manhattan of the 9/11 World Trade Center attack and the fires that persisted for months after the collapse of the Twin Towers. In the years since, more people have died from their exposure to the toxic air than the close to 3,000 that perished the day of the attack.
Untangling the Web of Nursing-Home Ownership to Reduce Fraud and Neglect
By Steve Wishnia
Editor’s Note: This is Part II of special two-part Work-Bites series on New York State’s nursing home crisis. Part I is here.
If the owners of for-profit nursing homes are shuffling money around multiple related companies to conceal income and increase profits, what can be done about it?
Concerns About Retiree Healthcare Swirl Around New TWU, MTA Pact
By Bob Hennelly
Editor’s Note: This story has been revised from a previously published version.
The tentative contract deal reached earlier this week between TWU Local 100 and the MTA provides for “solid annual raises of 9.8 percent compounded over three years-and $4,000 in Essential Worker Cash Bonus payments-that are substantially better than the city pattern,” according to the union’s press release announcing the deal.
‘Angry & Organized’ - NYC Municipal Retirees Press Fight to Save Traditional Medicare
By Joe Maniscalco
Nancy Losinno still remembers her husband Joseph returning home in the immediate aftermath of 9/11 absolutely devastated by all the death and suffering he experienced as a faithful member of the FDNY. New Yorkers back then were constantly being exhorted to “Never Forget.” Nancy never needed to be told.
SPECIAL: How a ‘Tangled Web’ of Ownership Conceals Nursing Home Fraud and Neglect
By Steve Wishnia
Editor’s Note: This is part one of a special two-part Work-Bites series on New York State’s nursing home crisis.
A growing business model among nursing-home owners is connected to worse care, worse conditions, and worse pay for workers — and its structure makes it much harder to regulate.
NYC Retirees to Adams: ‘We Shall Not Be Screwed By You!!’
By Steve Wishnia
About 50 retired city workers, some with canes, a few with walkers, and some wearing prop “screws” going through their heads, made their way to the Brooklyn Bridge this morning for a face-off with New York City Mayor Eric Adams.
Business Groups Push to Axe Subway Conductors; Strip NYC Retirees of Traditional Medicare Benefits
By Bob Hennelly
Is the MTA’s Addiction to Tax Exempt Borrowing Making Wealth Inequality Worse?
Talks are making progress this week between the Metropolitan Transportation Authority and the Transport Workers Union Local 100 which represents the 40,000 workers who run the city’s vast subway and bus network, according to John Samuelsen, TWU international president.
NYC Council Members Under Pressure Not to Support Retirees Fighting Medicare Advantage
By Joe Maniscalco
The powerful political machine bent on bulldozing New York City municipal retirees into a profit-driven Medicare Advantage program is kicking into high gear ahead of a special “People’s Hearing & Rally” set for Wednesday, May 24, outside City Hall.