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Archive for May, 2010

Shareholders Move to Curb Extravagant Pay for WellPoint CEO

Posted on May 20th, 2010 by Ethan Rome in Profits Before People

William H.T. Bush – a WellPoint board member and President George H.W. Bush's younger brother — collapsed at the annual shareholder meeting the other day, just as the health insurer's CEO, Angela Braly, was trying to explain to angry shareholders why profits are up but the company's reputation is in the tank. Thankfully, Bush improved enough to go home from the hospital, but the meeting never recovered. Braly refused to continue after paramedics wheeled Bush out, so she got away without answering any of the tough questions about her company.

Shareholders never got to ask why WellPoint and its Blue Cross plans in 14 states look like a train wreck to 34 million uneasy customers. Before Bush collapsed, the AFL-CIO, Connecticut's public employee retirement system and other shareholders criticized WellPoint for abusing consumers, funding a duplicitous campaign to block health reform, and misusing premium money to give indefensible compensation packages to top executives. In 2009, Braly's pay jumped 51 percent to $13.1 million. Many of us didn't get a raise at all last year. Ten percent didn't even have jobs.

Shareholders at the meeting didn't get answers to some other big questions on the minds of investors. Why did legendary stock picker Warren Buffett, the world's third richest man, dump 1.3 million shares (worth about $70 million at today's price) of WellPoint stock during the first quarter. Buffett knows a little bit about money. What's the deal? And what's up with the company's outrageous submission of inaccurate data to get California regulators to permit premium increases as large as 39 percent for individuals this year? And why is the company driven to pursue sleazy policies, like targeting patients with breast cancer for fraud investigations, and then calling President Obama a liar for saying the practice should stop? Is that really in the interest of the owners of $23 billion worth of WellPoint stock? Most investors want WellPoint to make money, not enemies.

Maybe Braly wasn't worried about how things would look because her P.R. team decided shortly before the shareholders meeting to drop plans to webcast the event. Only reporters who attended in person could observe. Just like the health insurer Cigna did at its annual shareholder meeting last month, WellPoint shut out the media to minimize the impact of embarrassing questions.

Greed has made WellPoint completely lose touch with the founding mission of the nonprofit Blue Cross companies it acquired over the last 15 years (in California, Colorado, Connecticut, Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, Missouri, New Hampshire, New York, Nevada, Ohio, Virginia and Wisconsin). The Blue Cross plans, once seen as a refuge for each state's sickest residents, have been transformed by Braly and her ilk into cash machines to satisfy the unbridled greed of Wall Street and corporate executives.

Rather than accept responsibility for the insurance industry's unwillingness to slow the growth of health costs through tougher negotiations with doctors, hospitals and drug makers, Braly and her industry peers prefer to just keep raising prices, cutting benefits, denying care and boosting their profits and compensation. They serve the needs of the high rollers on Wall Street instead of millions of Americans.

The good news is that more shareholders are refusing to accept WellPoint's unconscionable behavior and are taking action. The evidence of that came at the meeting when shareholders adopted a resolution to limit excessive CEO compensation by giving themselves an advisory vote on executive pay during the company's annual meetings. Among the shareholders who demanded more "say on pay" was Connecticut State Treasurer Denise L. Nappier, who controls investments for the $23 billion pension plan for state employees. Similar proposals were defeated by WellPoint shareholders in 2008 and 2009, but the tide has turned.

The grotesque compensation paid to insurance CEOs costs more than the face value of their pay packages. It also exerts unhealthy influences on CEOs' decisions about company finances and health care policy even when customers' lives are at stake. That's why shining a light on companies like WellPoint is so important.

Even by the standards of people who believe that it's okay to do just about anything to make money, WellPoint consistently goes too far. Their turbo-charged greed is out of control, and their lack of any moral compass is shocking.

Rate Regulation Needed to Restrain Big Insurance Greed

Posted on May 14th, 2010 by Ethan Rome in Profits Before People, Take Action!

It seems that WellPoint CEO Angela Braly hasn't been happy with British Petroleum (BP) grabbing all the headlines lately as the most reckless, buck-passing, greedy corporation. So she unwisely decided to pick a fight with President Obama, who rightly used his Saturday address to the nation to criticize the insurance industry — and her company in particular. President Obama attacked the insurance industry's "perverse practice of dropping people's coverage when they get sick" and described Americans as "held hostage to an insurance industry that jacks up premiums and drops coverage as they please".

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius has also been fighting with Braly and WellPoint and for good reason: like the other big for-profit insurers, they've been making money hand over fist — at our expense. Their turbo-charged greed is out of control, and their lack of any moral compass is shocking.

Yesterday Heath Care for America Now released a report on insurance industry profits and the facts are stunning: In the worst economy since the Great Depression, the five largest for-profit health insurance companies recorded huge profit gains in the first three months of 2010 compared with a year earlier. WellPoint Inc., UnitedHealth Group Inc., Aetna Inc., Humana Inc. and Cigna Corp. reported combined net income of $3.2 billion, a 31 percent leap from the same period in 2009. Together they had already set a full-year profit record in 2009.

So how do they do it? They put profits for Wall Street and bloated CEO salaries above all else. It's called greed and they're good at it.

HCAN's report shows that the top five insurers made record profits by covering fewer people, offering worse benefits, providing less care and charging consumers and employers more in the process. It is an obscene business model: they sell people a product, make it worse but more expensive over time, and then deny people the service they've paid for when they need it.

So while their profits went up, their combined commercial enrollment fell by a staggering 2.8 million people since 2008. And they spent less on health care and more on profits and excessive CEO pay.

In 1993, the leading health insurers spent about 95 cents of every premium dollar on health care. Today, insurers have cut spending on actual medical care to around 81 percent. For the five largest health insurers, the difference between 81 and 95 percent of premiums in 2009 equaled about $25 billion.

This adds up to skyrocketing premiums that America's families and businesses can't afford.
But back to Braly and WellPoint Inc.

In February, WellPoint subsidiary Anthem Blue Cross announced plans to jack up rates by as much as 39% in California. On February 24, Braly testified before the House Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations to defend the proposed increases, saying they were justified by rising medical costs.

To say Braly was casual with the truth is generous. In fact, from 2000 to 2008, family premiums for the big insurers grew twice as fast as medical inflation, five times faster than general inflation and three times faster than wages.

And then, as we have all recently learned, it got worse; an independent auditor hired by the state showed that WellPoint's rate request was based on faulty numbers and should be drastically lower. Maybe WellPoint had bad intentions, or maybe they're just bad at math. Either way, the rate hike request was outrageous, unjustified and bad for consumers.

During this same period, the Reuters news service reported that WellPoint was engaged in one of the most unconscionable and reprehensible business practices imaginable. WellPoint was systematically targeting women with breast cancer to find ways to cancel their insurance when they needed it the most.

Not many people knew what an "algorithm" was before the Reuters investigation. I sure didn't. In this case, it's WellPoint's grotesque mathematical equation used by a computer to find ways to drop customers (such as women diagnosed with breast cancer) after they get sick. As a result, women are left to fight both cancer and WellPoint. This is appalling corporate behavior. Even by the standards of people who believe it's okay to do just about anything to make money, WellPoint went too far.

Because of the cooked California numbers, on April 28 HCAN urged all states that allow WellPoint to sell policies to study whether other rate hikes were based on faulty numbers. In a letter to governors and insurance commissioners, Health and Human Services Secretary Sebelius wrote that states lacking the authority to reject rate hikes should pass laws enabling them to do so. The Health Insurance Rate Authority Act of 2010, sponsored by Senator Dianne Feinstein and Representative Jan Schakowsky, is the logical next step.

The new health care reform law will guarantee health security for all Americans, end the worst insurance company abuses, and hold insurance companies accountable in a number of unprecedented ways. The Health Insurance Rate Authority Act of 2010 will build on the protections in the new law. It will give federal and state governments authority to review and reject unjustified rate increases. And it will stop Big Insurance from exploiting differences in state laws and taking advantage of the people who live in the 26 states lacking authority to reject or modify requested premium hikes.

Yesterday Health Care for America Now sent an e-mail asking our activists to call their Member of Congress and urge support for the Health Insurance Rate Authority Act of 2010 to make health care more affordable for businesses and families. In addition to calling Congress, feel free to call Angela Braly and let her know you're disgusted by her company's behavior and her misguided defense of it. Her number at WellPoint's headquarters is (317) 287-6000.

HCAN Partners Rally to Thank Congress for Health Care Reform

Posted on May 5th, 2010 by Melinda Gibson in Take Action!

Tomorrow, May 6, 2010, HCAN Partners - AFL-CIO, SEIU and United Steelworkers are rallying on Capitol Hill to thank Members of Congress for supporting health care reform. Congress took on the Insurance Companies.  They took on the Chamber of Commerce.  They took on the K Street Lobbyists and stood up for America's working families.

Rally Information (see flier below):

Date: Thursday, March 6th
Time: 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm
Location: Longworth Fountain Plaza on Capital Hill, Washington, DC