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	<title>Comments on: How Will We Pay for the Health Care Plan? (Part II)</title>
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		<title>By: mike oliphant</title>
		<link>http://wallstreetpit.com/5339-how-will-we-pay-for-the-health-care-plan-part-2#comment-19160</link>
		<dc:creator>mike oliphant</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 22 Jun 2009 22:29:38 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>I am a health insurance agent in Utah. I sit on the board of the Utah health underwriters as webmaster for http://www.benefitsmanager.net/  and  http://www.uahu.org/. I was heavily involved in designed a web connector to help Utah residents by pulling private and state sponsored insurance mechanisms together. It had a low budget of around $150k that virtually guaranteed health insurance coverage through either the private or state programs.  Better yet all the local carriers agreed to split the costs.  Our state insurance task force committee rejected the idea. They elected to go for a Massachusetts type connector program that isn&#039;t working well when you actually dig deep and check facts of where they are now. Our state approved H.B. 188 with a zero fiscal note attachment! My point is, I have been a fly on the wall in countless legislative meetings, insurance board meetings, hospital board meetings, the list goes on. The problem is conflict with the market demanding profit in all sectors of the system. Tough order to fill and keep costs down?  You are absolutely right when you claim that healthcare is now unsustainable. I have been crying that a long time. Nobody listens.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I am a health insurance agent in Utah. I sit on the board of the Utah health underwriters as webmaster for <a href="http://www.benefitsmanager.net/" rel="nofollow">http://www.benefitsmanager.net/</a>  and  <a href="http://www.uahu.org/" rel="nofollow">http://www.uahu.org/</a>. I was heavily involved in designed a web connector to help Utah residents by pulling private and state sponsored insurance mechanisms together. It had a low budget of around $150k that virtually guaranteed health insurance coverage through either the private or state programs.  Better yet all the local carriers agreed to split the costs.  Our state insurance task force committee rejected the idea. They elected to go for a Massachusetts type connector program that isn&#8217;t working well when you actually dig deep and check facts of where they are now. Our state approved H.B. 188 with a zero fiscal note attachment! My point is, I have been a fly on the wall in countless legislative meetings, insurance board meetings, hospital board meetings, the list goes on. The problem is conflict with the market demanding profit in all sectors of the system. Tough order to fill and keep costs down?  You are absolutely right when you claim that healthcare is now unsustainable. I have been crying that a long time. Nobody listens.</p>
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