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Representative Dougherty meets personally with Governor Matt Blunt.  Representative Dougherty stated, "Governor Blunt was very friendly and outgoing and we discussed many issues affecting Missouri's citizens."

 

 

 

 

Representative Dougherty discussing issues with
Governor Matt Blunt in the House Chamber.

 


 

NEWS

From the Office of

Representative Curt Dougherty

 

                                                                         53rd District

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

April 16, 2007

 

 

CONTACT:    Rep. Curt Dougherty

                                    (573) 751-6535

 

     

 

 

Rep. Curt Dougherty Meets With Health Care Stabilization Fund Feasibility Board Members to Discuss Missouri’s Options For Retaining Doctors

 

Jefferson City – The Health Care Stabilization Fund Feasibility Board recently held its first meeting and board member Rep. Curt Dougherty, D-Independence, was in attendance to discuss the state’s options for keeping doctors from leaving Missouri because of costly medical malpractice insurance rates. Rep. Dougherty is one of two House members serving on the Health board.

The 10-member board was created in legislation (House Bill 1837) passed by the Missouri General Assembly and signed into law by the governor last year. The primary duty of the board is to determine whether a health care stabilization fund should be established in Missouri to provide excess medical malpractice insurance coverage for health care providers.

At the board’s first meeting members discussed current status of doctors in Missouri as it relates to a physician’s ability to afford medical malpractice insurance. The board also discussed the potential benefits of a Health Care Stabilization Fund similar to the one in Kansas. Rep. Dougherty voiced his support for mirroring tort laws in Kansas where there are tight limits on pain and suffering awards.

“With so many doctors leaving our state because of skyrocketing medical malpractice insurance rates it is crucial that we act quickly to find solutions to that will help us retain the medical professionals we need to keep Missourians healthy,” said Rep. Dougherty. “It is important that we take the time to get all of the necessary information and statistics to make a well-informed decision. However, right now it is obvious we have a serious problem and we must address it in a timely fashion.”

As part of its duties, the board will develop a comprehensive study detailing whether a health care stabilization fund is feasible within Missouri or whether a health care stabilization fund would be feasible for specific medical specialties. The board will analyze medical malpractice insurance data collected by the department of insurance and any other data the board deems necessary to its mission.

The board’s next meeting will take place in June.

###


Posted on Tue, Jan. 30, 2007
Lawmakers consider exempting retirement benefits from state taxes


Associated Press

The leader of the state House wants to give some Missourians a tax break, but some of the seniors targeted for the break don't want it.

Fritzi Lainoff, 77, of St. Louis, urged a special House tax committee on Tuesday to reject a $160 million proposal exempting many retirement benefits from state income taxes. Instead, she said, the state should use the money for health care and senior meals programs.

The tax break would eliminate state income taxes on Social Security payments, teacher pensions and pensions from police and fire departments that opted out of Social Security.

Lainoff estimated she would get less than $5 from the tax break. She said it was the principle, and not money, that fueled her opposition.

"I'm in total disagreement with giving people tax breaks," she said. "I know I have to pay my share of taxes if only so that I know that I have enough police in my district, enough firemen in my district and so that my roads are good."

Supporters of the plan, including House Speaker Rod Jetton and Gov. Matt Blunt, said eliminating state taxes on Social Security benefits would put Missouri in line with most states and abolish a "double tax."

Jetton, R-Marble Hill, also urged committee members to consider expanding the proposed tax break to make all retirement benefits - public and private - tax exempt. If lawmakers were to do that, the price tag would jump to about $380 million annually.

Social Security benefits are already exempt for individuals making less than $25,000 for single filers and $32,000 for those who are married.

Jetton said lifting taxes on retirement benefits, military pensions and Social Security entitlements would help attract retirees to Missouri.

"Most of these folks aren't saving a ton of money," he said. "They're spending it, and they're going to help our state's economy."

According to figures from the Institute for Tax and Economic Policy, Jetton's proposal would help wealthy seniors the most. The Washington-based institute advocates for higher tax rates at for the wealthy.

According to the institute, of the 546,000 Missouri income tax filings by seniors, about 247,000 earn too little to pay any taxes on Social Security benefits. Because the figures are based on the total filings, which includes those from single and married seniors, it is impossible to know exactly how many people would get the tax break.

About 136,000 taxpayers, the largest group of filers who would get a tax break, earn between $47,000 and $73,000 and would have a tax cut worth between $127 and $195, according to the institute. The 16,000 taxpayers who earn the most, at least $132,000 annually, would have $1,092 to $1,378 cut, according to the institute.

Jerry Thompson, a corporate marketer who retired in 1992 and moved to Missouri in 2002, said the state's tax on Social Security would have driven him to retire elsewhere, but his wife wanted to move to her hometown of Jefferson City.

Thompson said many seniors on fixed incomes struggle to keep up with increasing bills and health care costs.

"It's always stuck in my craw that I pay taxes on something I've already paid taxes on," he told committee members.

Missouri AARP, citing the higher benefits for wealthier seniors, wrote in a letter to Jetton earlier this month that the senior advocacy association prefers a tax cut that targets those with low incomes, regardless of age.

Amy Coffman, a lobbyist for the senior group representing 780,000 Missourians, told lawmakers that the association's volunteer board does not want to support "an unwarranted tax cut and then tomorrow ask you to spend more money for health care."

Rep. Bryan Stevenson, the tax committee's chairman, questioned whether Missouri AARP was actually representing its members' wishes. Stevenson, R-Webb City, said Missouri AARP hadn't even polled its members to find out if they oppose the idea.

House Democrats say that while they agree with Jetton that seniors could use some tax relief, cuts should cover more than just retirement benefits.

Rep. Clint Zweifel, D-Florissant, said increasing a tax credit based upon how much is paid in property taxes, establishing an earned income tax credit based on the existing federal model, plus a more modest Social Security benefits exemption would cost the state a little less than Jetton's plan while better targeting the taxes that cause problems for seniors.

Zweifel's proposal would increase the eligibility level for the property tax credit from $25,000 to $30,000 for one person and $27,000 to $34,000 for a couple. It would also exempt Social Security benefits for singles earning less than $42,000 and couples earning less than $50,000.

Some critics said lawmakers shouldn't be considering any tax cuts.

Tom Kruckemeyer of the Missouri Budget Project, a lobbying group that analyzes fiscal policy for its impact on the poor, said state workers in Missouri receive the lowest pay in the nation, the higher education budget is at the same level as it was seven years ago and the formula for funding K-12 education is being challenged.

"The state is not in a place for a substantial tax cut," said Kruckemeyer, a former state economist.

---

Retirement tax exemption is HB444

 

House Minority Caucus
Jeff Harris
, Minority Leader
Paul LeVota, Asst. Minority Leader

Connie Johnson
, Minority Whip
Ed Wildberger
, Caucus Chair
Sara Lampe
, Caucus Secretary


For Immediate Release:                                       For more information contact:
Jan. 25, 2007                                                      Rep. Jeff Harris at (573) 751-9753
 
House Democrats say governor’s agenda lacks substance
 
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. ­­– House Democrats were dismayed by the lack of substance in the governor’s State of the State address on Wednesday, especially his focus on renaming the state’s Medicaid program rather taking steps to ensure health care access for all Missourians.
 
Although Gov. Matt Blunt promised the renamed MO HealthNet would “guarantee that every participant has access” to care, House Minority Leader Jeff Harris, D-Columbia, noted the plan would restore coverage to only a few thousand of the more than 177,000 Missourians – including 70,000 children --whose health care was unnecessarily eliminated by the governor and the Republican-controlled General Assembly in 2005. More than 700,000 Missourians have no health care insurance.
 
“This so-called plan completely fails to live up to the promise Governor Blunt made to Missourians in his speech,” Harris said. “The governor said our policies should reflect our values. House Democrats agree, but denying health care to the sick, elderly and disabled is not a Missouri value.”
 
State Rep. Margaret Donnelly, who was a member of the State Medicaid Reform Commission that extensively studied the issue, said the governor’s proposal is not for an entirely new system but for minor changes.
 
“The governor is not proposing anything new,” Donnelly said. “This isn’t reform. He simply is using new language in an attempt to distract people from his harmful health care cuts.”
 
Assistant House Minority Leader Paul LeVota said Blunt’s assertion that “the days of economic uncertainty are in the past” demonstrates the governor is oblivious to Missouri’s economic reality. According the Federal Bureau of Labor Statistics, Missouri had the sixth-worst net job growth in the nation during 2006 and currently is tied for the 13th-worst unemployment rate in the nation.
 
“The governor may call his failure a victory, but that doesn’t make it so,” LeVota said. “The Blunt administration’s inability to create jobs in Missouri relative to other states is not cause for celebration.”
 
LeVota also called it wrong for the governor to propose a $30 million, job-killing sales tax increase on certain equipment purchased by businesses, especially when he is leaving $200 million in expected revenue unspent in his budget plan for the fiscal year beginning July 1.
 
-more-
House Democrats in November proposed increasing state funding for public colleges and universities by $110.7 million, as recommended by the Missouri Coordinating board for Higher Education. The 12.6 percent boost endorsed by Democrats is necessary to enable these institutions to regain some of the ground lost after several years of budget cuts. Blunt proposes a 4.5 percent, or $40 million increase, in higher education spending.
 
“The recent explosion in tuition costs is a direct result of the state’s failure to support higher education,” Harris said. “Democrats propose record-high funding for public universities that would help bring down tuition and make a college education more affordable. The governor’s plan barely keeps up with the rate of inflation."
 

Capitol Address:
State Capitol Bldg.
201 W Capitol Ave. RM102BB
Jefferson City, MO 65101
(573)751-6535
Fax: (573) 751-9418

District Address:
16003 E. Cogan Lane
Independence, MO 64050
(816)8
33-0916
   

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