From the category archives:

Insurance

After largely sitting out the pitched political battle that has been waged over flood insurance reform virtually since the moment the last long-term authorization of the National Flood Insurance Program was signed in 2004, the Federal Emergency Management Agency – the federal agency that actually administers the NFIP – has chosen to break its silence and actually weigh in.

To say that their comments are not particularly helpful would be a mammoth understatement.

Despite an overwhelming 406-22 U.S. House vote in July 2011 to pass a five-year NFIP reauthorization that includes substantial reforms; despite a unanimous vote by the Senate Banking Committee to report a very similar bill to the floor in September 2011; despite a bipartisan group of 41 senators signing a letterurging a Senate floor vote on the measure; despite even the support of the White House itself; FEMA has decided that – with the goal line in sight after nearly a decade of the painstaking work of building coalitions and finding appropriate compromises that serve to fix the program – the best thing to do right now would be to scrap all that and extend the existing, insolvent program for the next two years.  As FEMA put it:

In recent years, a series of short-term reauthorizations and temporary suspensions of the NFIP have had a negative impact on the confidence in the program among citizens and stakeholders, including state governments, tribal governments, local communities, individual policyholders, mortgage lenders, and the private insurance industry. FEMA is asking Congress to support a two year reauthorization and affirm its commitment to citizens, communities, and private sector partners that the federal government will continue to support our nation’s efforts to manage flood risk.

Let’s grant this upfront: The current program is set to expire May 31 and another NFIP lapse would not benefit anyone. Ever since its last long-term authorization expired in September 2008, the program has been kept alive through a series of 12 short-term extensions (sometimes as part of a full Continuing Resolution, sometimes on its own) and there have been numerous lapses. The four lapses in 2010 alone amounted to 53 days that the NFIP could not write or renew policies.

So even though, in the long run, we at The Heartland Institute would like to see the NFIP privatized, we’re with David Miller, FEMA’s associate administrator for the Federal Insurance and Mitigation Administration, when he says “reauthorizing the National Flood Insurance Program is the prudent thing to do.”

The problem is that a so-called “clean” reauthorization of the program’s current structure would be anything but. It would, instead, be a perpetuation of an unsustainable program that is $18 billion in debt, that subsidizes development in risk-prone and environmentally sensitive floodplains, that massively underprices risk and that puts taxpayers on the hook. The reform efforts that have passed the House and the Senate Banking Committee don’t go far enough, by our measure, but they do certainly start moving the program in the right direction by phasing out premium subsidies, stepping up enforcement and providing authorization for FEMA to begin transferring risk to the private reinsurance and capital markets. That’s nothing to sneeze at.

Moreover, if the goal is providing the housing market with the certainty that a longer extension offers, then A) The five-year extension included in the reform bills provides more of that than a two-year extension would, and B) There is no reason whatsoever to suspect that a new, two-year reauthorization bill offers any more expedient path to passage than what’s already on the table. Indeed, one of the reasons the program has lapsed so often in the past is that it has proven extraordinarily difficult to get Congress to agree even to a six-month extension.

What’s especially strange about FEMA’s choice to speak out here is that it seems to mark a notable breach in the chain of command. FIMA Administrator Miller reports to FEMA Director W. Craig Fugate. Fugate reports to Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano. And Napolitano, of course, reports to President Barack Obama.

But the Obama White House has already made its position on flood insurance reform crystal clear – they’re for it. In a July 2011 Statement of Administration Policy, the White House voiced support for the House-passed H.R. 1309 and noted that it “looks forward to working with the Congress on further reform to strengthen the NFIP.”

The Administration is pleased that the bill would provide the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) with greater flexibility to set premium rates. The bill provides improved protection for American taxpayers by requiring FEMA to use actuarial principles in determining full flood risk rates for certain properties. The bill would also phase in changes to let policyholders and communities adjust. The bill would authorize studies and pilots to test alternative approaches to flood insurance that is sustainable and cost-effective.

That’s well-said and we couldn’t agree more. Now, if only someone at the White House would place a call to their subordinates at FEMA repeating that same message.

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Welcome to the Heartland’s podcasts. This week, listen to a discussion on how to defend freedom in our personal and economic lives. Click the links below to listen, and subscribe on iTunes so you get the latest podcasts as soon as they are produced. (Search for “Heartland Institute” in the iTunes store.)

ON EDUCATION: While education reformers focus on big schemes like Common Core standards and teacher evaluations, little over the several past decades has seemed to change about American education. Author Beverlee Jobrack, a long-time textbook editor for SRA-McGraw Hill, explains in Tyranny of the Textbook that some of the reason why is that textbooks have not changed. Teachers keep teaching the way they always have, and publishers print books that make them happy, whether it’s based on research about how children learn best or not. Jobrack also explains why the Khan Academy and crazes over much education technology are non-research-supported fads. Listen here.

ON TECHNOLOGY: Eric M. Fraser discusses his extensive research and writing on municipal wi-fi systems, finding them to be more expensive and less effective than promised by governments willing to put taxpayers on the hook to pay for them. Fraser also addresses the technical and regulatory limitations of municipal wi-fi systems. Listen here.

ON ENVIRONMENT: International Climate Science Coalition (ICSC) executive director Tom Harris explains how ICSC is turning Earth Hour into Energy Hour. Listen here.

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Like residents of all states with significant hurricane risks, people in Florida have to pay a lot for windstorm coverage. In an effort to control the costs of this coverage, Florida’s legislature has established the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund, a massive-government owned reinsurance entity. In theory, the Cat Fund provides reinsurance (insurance for insurance companies) at rates less than the private market would and thereby produces savings that they can pass on to consumers.

An excellent new video was released recently illustrating how and why the Cat Fund was created and describing the current risk all Floridians face because of the fund’s $3.2 billion shortfall. In a press release announcing the video, its creators discuss the how the “hurricane taxes” associated with the Cat Fund will financially burden all Floridians.

Hidden Hurricane Taxes and You

All private insurers operating in the state are required to buy coverage from the Cat Fund (as it’s commonly known) and the Florida Citizens Property Insurance Corporation buys only Cat Fund coverage.

This system poses enormous risks to Florida’s fiscal future. According to Ray Lehmann, Deputy Director of the Center on Finance, Insurance and Real Estate at The Heartland Institute, these liabilities have risen to multi billion dollar levels. “The Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund has $18.4 billion of liabilities this year, and the fund’s own management concedes that its funding structure would leave it billions short of its obligations should a major storm hit the Sunshine State.”

These liabilities are unpayable. No state has ever issued more than $11 billion in bonds all at once.

Given these and other systemic problems, changes are needed to reform the Cat Fund. New reform proposals include Senate Bill 1372 and House Bill 833, which are featured in the video. These bills are based upon reform previously proposed by Jack Nicholson, the Florida Cat Fund’s chief operating officer and is designed to reduce or eliminate the possibility of the Cat Fund going broke after a storm and posing a risk to the state’s fiscal future.  Senate Bill 1372 and House Bill 833 are supported by various business, nonprofit and consumer groups.

“For several years Associated Industries of Florida has supported reform of the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund, and while there has been forward progress in the past, we believe the legislation that is being considered this year will play a positive and important role in restructuring the fund,” said Jose Gonzalez, Associated Industries of Florida Vice President of Government Affairs.  “It’s important the Florida Legislature implement the necessary changes in order to better protect all Florida businesses, consumers, charities, churches and automobile policy holders.”

“Consumers should watch this video to learn more about how insurance works in Florida,” said Bill Newton, Florida Consumer Action Network Executive Director.  While ‘solvency and assessment risk issues’ are not familiar to most Floridians, the video may help consumers understand their premiums. FCAN supports the legislation from Senator Alexander, Representative Hager and Florida Hurricane Catastrophe Fund Chief Operating Officer Jack Nicholson and I believe it is an incremental, measured path to necessary reform. But it is important that the bill remain as originally drafted so it has only minimal impact on premiums.”

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As the gradual implementation of Obamacare continues and debate over the intelligence of socialized medicine mounts, the budgetary malaise of the current Medicaid system should be a red flag to supporters of the President’s health care plan. The current degree of governmental control over healthcare is proving calamitous for states with financial troubles, and the expanded bureaucracy that is Obamacare will only make matters worse.

The contradictions and logistical maladies manifest in government-controlled healthcare have never been more evident than in the recent series of cuts in the Pennsylvania Medicaid apparatus. Over the next nine years, $1.2 trillion in reductions will mean the elimination of care for 150,000 people (43,000 of which are children) and more than 80,000 in job losses.

The uncertain economy has meant a surge in those receiving Medicaid across the nation, but since the summer of 2011, Pennsylvania has seen a steady decline because of the Department of Public Welfare’s (DPW) efforts to cut those no longer living in state and those who are dead or otherwise ineligible for aid. Patient advocates are saying otherwise, calling the cuts “disastrous.”

The bureaucratic nightmare that the cuts have unleashed on eligible patient care could be called Orwellian, as Pennsylvania’s push to close the backlog of cases has resulted in an overload for an already understaffed DPW. Hundreds of thousands of pending cases were “reviewed” in a matter of weeks, and technical omissions that would regularly necessitate simple clarification from the patient, such as lack of information, resulted in the cancellation of thousands of cases.

But the bureaucratic incompetence doesn’t end there.

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Culturally and politically, the United States and Great Britain have much in common; a shared heritage, similar economic and foreign policy goals, and a recently, a mutual proclivity toward socialized medicine. As opposition to Obamacare continues to mount in the U.S., an examination of how socialized medicine is fairing in light of global financial troubles is necessary.

The UK’s National Health Service, or NHS, established in 1948, is experiencing massive cutbacks, to the tune of $31 billion by 2015. As the Service’s 2011/2012 budget is approximately £106 billion pounds, such cuts are already taking a toll.

In order to compensate for its losses, the NHS is reducing the number of treatments given and medical personnel employed. Surgeries deemed to be “non-lifesaving” are being postponed, waitlists for simple procedures are growing longer and longer, and more than 50,000 doctors, nurses and other healthcare professionals will be let go in the next four years, according to The Telegraph.

It makes sense then, that those unable or unwilling to postpone surgeries or submit to months of waiting seek out private “self-pay” services instead. As the Daily Mail points out:

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The year is near its end, but Heartland’s podcasts keep chugging along. This week, listen to a discussion about the EPA’s ‘facts’ on lives ‘saved’ through emission restrictions, and other interesting conversations on public policy. Click the links below to listen, and subscribe on iTunes so you get the latest podcasts as soon as they are produced. (Search for “Heartland Institute” in the iTunes store.)

ON EDUCATION: Patricia Siroky’s 12-year-old daughter was failing core classes, acting out to her parents and teachers, and calling herself “stupid” while attending her local public schools. Now, half a year into a small private school she can attend thanks to Indiana’s new school vouchers program, the seventh grader is happier, engaged in after-school activities, upping those grades in her hardest subjects, and once more delighting her parents. Listen Here.

ON ENVIRONMENT:  Dr. John Dale Dunn explains how the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency distorts the facts on lives allegedly saved through emissions restrictions. Listen Here.

ON TECHNOLOGY: In this weeks Infotech and Telecom News podcast, Matt Howard, CEO of ZoomSafer, discusses safe, legal and handsfree use of mobile phones while driving. Listen Here.

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Good stuff from Heartland’s podcasts this week, including a discussion on Medicare’s quarter-billion dollars spent on penis pumps for elderly men. Click the links below to listen, and subscribe on iTunes so you get the latest podcasts as soon as they are produced. (Search for “Heartland Institute” in the iTunes store.)

ON EDUCATION: Americans are the most generous givers in the developed world, and research has shown the more a person believes in private enterprise and personal freedom, the more likely that person is to give more of his or her income to charity. Jonathan Butcher, education director at the Arizona-based Goldwater Institute, joins the School Reform News podcast to discuss one way individuals and businesses can sponsor a good education for a needy child. Listen here.

ON HEALTH CARE: Ben Domenech discusses Medicare’s quarter-billion dollars spent on penis pumps for elderly men, how this is indicative of larger Medicare fraud, and how lobbyists perpetuate the system. Listen here.

ON ENVIRONMENT: James Taylor discusses global warming and Climategate on The Jason Lewis show. Listen here.

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Good stuff from Heartland’s podcasts this week, including a discussion of Steve Jobs’ legacy in technology and his overall place in the pantheon of American industrialists. Click the links below to listen, and subscribe on iTunes so you get the latest podcasts as soon as they are produced. (Search for “Heartland Institute” in the iTunes store.)

ON TECH: In this week’s podcast, Jim Lakely, director of communications and co-director of the Center for the Digital Economy for The Heartland Institute, discusses the legacy of Steve Jobs. Listen Here.

*Related Article: Steve Jobs, Capitalist, R.I.P

ON ENVIRONMENT: Energy analyst Tom Tanton explains the shortcomings of wind and solar power. Listen Here.

ON BUDGET: Politicians on the Right and the Left display hypocrisy when they agree to subsidize billionaire sports teams owners, says Taxpayers League of Minnesota President Phil Krinkie, whose organization is fighting for local citizens to have a vote on a proposal for a local sales tax to build a new stadium for the Minnesota Vikings. Listen Here.

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We’ve got some good stuff for you this week, as always — in all six of our primary topic areas. Be sure to subscribe on iTunes for the latest in free-market policy. (Search for “Heartland Institute” in the iTunes store.)

ON HEALTH CARE: Maureen Martin reacts to the Fourth Circuit decision to dismiss Virginia’s lawsuit against the individual mandate. Listen here.

ON ENVIRONMENT: International Climate Science Coalition executive director Tom Harris discusses flaws in Al Gore’s latest movie. Listen here.

ON EDUCATION: More than a decade after the No Child left Behind Act was originally passed, the House of Representatives just took the first steps to reauthorize it. Lindsey Burke, policy analyst at The Heritage Foundation discusses the context of the bill and the implications of its passage. Listen here.

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We’ve got some good stuff for you this week, as always — in all six of our primary topic areas. Be sure to subscribe on iTunes for the latest in free-market policy. (Search for “Heartland Institute” in the iTunes store.)

ON HEALTH CARE: Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul was repeatedly singled out to defend his libertarian beliefs at the MSNBC/Politico debate at the Reagan Library on September 7. He had a great answer about the Food and Drug Administration — which has driven up the costs of drugs and not greatly improved drug safety. In fact, the FDA does more harm than good by keeping life-saving drugs off the market. Ben Domenech, managing editor of Health Care News, uses the exchange between Paul and NBC’s Brian Williams to discuss Heartland’s Free To Choose Medicine project. Listen Here.

ON ENVIRONMENT: Heartland Institute science director Jay Lehr explains why EPA is no longer necessary, the safety of nuclear power, and groundwater conservation. Listen Here.

ON EDUCATION: The school district that created its own voucher program using a charter school to administrate state funds has received financial help from a private foundation as the lawsuit against it heads for the Colorado Supreme Court. Ben DeGrow, senior education analyst at the Colorado-based Independence Institute, joins the podcast to talk about that district’s unusual focus on school choice and competition. Visit the Independence Institute’s DougCo Vouchers page for more information and the latest updates.  Listen Here.

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