There’s one thing easy on the coronary heart of this entire battle over Medicare Benefit: a promise is a promise.
For generations, New York Metropolis instructed its employees that in the event that they gave this metropolis their careers, their greatest years, we’d care for them once they retired. That meant a steady pension and high quality healthcare, plain and easy. This wasn’t a favor. It was a part of the deal, and a part of how we had been capable of recruit and retain one of the best lecturers, firefighters, nurses, and sanitation employees within the nation.
Now, many years later, after these employees held up their finish of the cut price, the town is attempting to vary the phrases. That’s not simply fallacious. It’s disgraceful. And I received’t stand for it.
The try and drive metropolis retirees right into a Medicare Benefit plan isn’t simply dangerous coverage. It’s a betrayal of belief between a authorities and its folks.
These retirees did their half. They bought up early, stayed late, pulled double shifts, and confirmed up when New York wanted them most – by a fiscal disaster, blackouts, blizzards, 9/11, Hurricane Sandy, COVID. They didn’t ask for a lot. They only anticipated the town to maintain its phrase.
As an alternative, what they bought was a shameful bait-and-switch.
Let’s not sugarcoat it. Medicare Benefit is a personal insurance coverage scheme that places income earlier than sufferers. These plans usually look nice in a slick PowerPoint presentation however crumble in actual life – particularly for older New Yorkers with advanced medical wants. We’ve all seen the experiences: denied claims, slender supplier networks, infinite delays for important care.
Fortunately, New York Metropolis’s present Comptroller, Brad Lander, rejected the contract that may have pressured greater than 250,000 retirees onto a privatized Medicare Benefit plan. He made the suitable name, standing up for the individuals who constructed this metropolis as an alternative of rubber-stamping a deal that may’ve jeopardized their care.
Sure, healthcare is pricey. There’s no denying that. Finish-of-life care, lengthy hospital stays, prescribed drugs – these prices have been rising 12 months after 12 months. And sure, the system is damaged. However we don’t repair it by pulling the rug out from underneath the very individuals who constructed this metropolis. We repair it by tackling the true drawback: the outrageous costs being charged by hospital methods and insurance coverage firms.
That’s why, final 12 months, the Metropolis Council handed laws creating the Workplace of Healthcare Accountability, a first-of-its-kind watchdog to analyze and expose the sky-high costs driving up prices for everybody. This new workplace will assist the town negotiate higher charges, shine a lightweight on value gouging, and convey much-needed transparency to a damaged system. That’s the way you make healthcare extra sustainable – not by chopping corners on the backs of retirees.
This isn’t nearly a bunch of retirees. That is concerning the form of metropolis we’re. Will we stand by our employees, or will we flip our backs on them when the invoice comes due?
For those who’ve ever labored a metropolis job, or know somebody who has, try to be paying consideration. As a result of if the town can do that to its retirees, it could possibly do it to anybody.
Metropolis Council Member Justin Brannan represents the forty seventh Council District overlaying the Brooklyn neighborhoods of Bay Ridge, Coney Island, Sea Gate and components of Dyker Heights, Tub Seashore and Gravesend.
Editor’s be aware: This op-ed was supplied by Brannan’s Metropolis Council workplace.