Governor Steve Beshear and his Kentucky Health Benefit Exchange disagree about the total number of Kentuckians placed on Medicaid under ObamaCare -- by over half a million people.
Beshear announced today that 375,000 people were added to Medicaid from October 1, 2013 to the end of 2014. KHBE answered an open records request last November 26 stating "806,783 individuals are currently enrolled in Medicaid through Kynect."
The really odd thing about Beshear's number today is that there were already 310,000 Kentuckians on ObamaCare Medicaid at the end of open enrollment last April. At that time, enrollment for private plans was closed down and the army of ObamaCare sales people turned their focus completely toward signing new people up on Medicaid, aided by a flood of advertising dollars for the various Medicaid plans.
And Beshear now wants you to believe that in seven months they only signed up 65,000 for "free" Medicaid among people who would face fines for not signing up. It's much easier to believe hundreds of thousands were signed up, as KHBE said.
Beshear also said expanded Medicaid under ObamaCare will be responsible for adding 40,000 jobs a year in Kentucky by 2021 and add $30 billion to the state's economy. Skepticism abounds.
Thursday, February 12, 2015
Will T. Scott: make the call on pensions
Will T. Scott urged his supporters statewide to call their legislators and demand a "NO" vote on Speaker Greg Stumbo's pension bailout bill, House Bill 4."Fixing Kentucky's public pension mess without borrowing us into a deeper hole or raising taxes is one of my highest priorities," Scott said. "We should not have to beg our representatives to lead on this. Pick up your phone and call 800-372-7181 and order them to vote against House Bill 4."Scott is the only gubernatorial candidate with a plan to solve Kentucky's worst-in-the-nation pension underfunding problem with expanded gambling revenues constitutionally devoted to paying down pension debt.
Wednesday, February 11, 2015
Will T. Scott urges March caucus for state GOP
Kentucky Republicans should support a plan by Senator Rand Paul to choose a presidential candidate next year in March, before the May primary election, gubernatorial candidate Will T. Scott said.
"Rand is right when he says Kentucky's primary usually comes too late to have our voices heard in a meaningful way," Scott said. We can try a caucus in March this one time and see how it works. I'm sure most Republicans will agree with me."
Senator Paul will ask county leaders of the Kentucky Republican Party to make this change at the next Central Committee meeting in Bowling Green on March 7.
Senator Paul will ask county leaders of the Kentucky Republican Party to make this change at the next Central Committee meeting in Bowling Green on March 7.
Friday, January 30, 2015
GOP candidate breaks from pack against ObamaCare
Kentucky must shut down its ObamaCare exchange and GOP gubernatorial candidate Will T. Scott will do that on his first day in office, making him the only candidate holding this position.
"The only thing we get out of surrendering on ObamaCare is Barack Obama's appreciation," Scott said. "My primary opponents already gave up that fight last summer telling the Chamber of Commerce what they wanted to hear. I got in this race to provide leadership, not to go with the flow. The only thing we are getting out of a state-run ObamaCare exchange is the privilege of paying for it. When we shut ours down, the feds will come in and pay for the whole thing. And if the U.S. Supreme Court rules against Obama this summer, the law falls apart completely for the three dozen states without a state exchange. If I'm elected, we will be one of them."
"I say 'no ObamaCare today, no ObamaCare tomorrow, no ObamaCare ever.'"
Reference: http://www.wdrb.com/story/26085741/little-daylight-between-heiner-comer-at-kentucky-chamber-forum
Monday, January 26, 2015
Will T. Scott: $34 billion is enough debt
Frankfort Democrats are circling their wagons around plans to plunge Kentucky $3.3 billion deeper into debt to cover years of state pension mismanagement, choosing to ignore the realities that massive taxation or more debt are not solutions to the pension system. Republican gubernatorial candidate Will T. Scott says enough is enough.
"They are just moving debt from one pile to another and, worse than that, if we do this for KTRS we will have to do it for KERS too so that means at least six billion," Scott said. "These same people are pushing casino gambling but they want to spend that revenue on more new programs and that's wrong. The only way to expand gambling in Kentucky is to mandate in the Constitution that ninety five percent of the money goes to fix our $40 billion pension problem."
"Kentucky has the worst pension problem of any state and Frankfort is still trying to poke the problem with a stick. The growing chorus of more debt, more debt, and even more debt isn’t a solution. I'm running for governor because Kentucky has a promise to keep that runs a lot deeper than allowing politicians to vote themselves wealth from taxpayers' pockets."
Monday, January 05, 2015
Misstating my case won't get rid of me
COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY
FRANKLIN CIRCUIT COURT
DIVISION II
CIVIL ACTION NO. 14-CI-1337
DAVID
ADAMS
PLAINTIFF
V.
MOTION TO RECONSIDER
COMMONWEALTH OF
KENTUCKY,
STEVEN L. BESHEAR,
GOVERNOR, et
al.
DEFENDANTS
Plaintiff moves the
Court to reconsider its order filed in this case December 22, 2014 to correct
multiple errors. The fundamental mistake from which others flow is found in the
following sentence in the Court’s ruling: “No funds for the Exchange are
appropriated from the General Fund or Road Fund as alleged by Plaintiff. Even
taking all of Plaintiff’s allegations as true, Plaintiff has not stated a claim
for relief.”
Plaintiff alleged
the spending in question is not legal and requests that, as such, it must not
be allowed by the Court. This is both a legitimate claim for relief and an
allegation that can be proven true and entering the Executive Branch Budget
into evidence does nothing to change that. Again, from Plaintiff’s Response to
Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss,” “State Group Health Insurance Funds for state employees exist in
General Funds, whose forbidden appropriations present an inescapable problem
for state employees charged with implementing “the ACA.” Even if all other legal problems with the attempted implementation
of the “Affordable Care Act” are ignored out of hand, such as the multiple
executive orders and constitutional and statutory problems in KRS 12.028 and
Kentucky Constitution Sections 47, 180 and 230 with moving, spending and/or
adding to Kentucky Access funds, this one cannot be.
Plaintiff again respectfully requests the Court to reconsider
its ruling in this case.
Respectfully
submitted,
David
Adams
121
Nave Place Nicholasville,
KY 40356 859-537-5372
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
This certifies the forgoing was served this 5th
day of January, 2015 by electronic mail delivery upon Patrick R. Hughes,
Dressman Benzinger LaVelle PSC, 207 Thomas More Parkway, Crestview Hills,
Kentucky 41017-2596.
David
Adams
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