House, Senate, governor show how not to run a government

House, Senate, governor show how not to run a government
House, Senate, governor show how not to run a government
GOV. RICK SCOTT

Who will pay the cost of healthcare for indigent Floridians has brought our state government to a halt. The Florida House didn’t like what the Senate was doing with healthcare so members just packed their bags and closed three days before the scheduled end of the session.

To the nation we must appear, once again, to be run by a bunch of buffoons. It’s not like we have a Republican House fighting a Democrat Senate. That I could understand. No, the House and the Senate are both heavily controlled by the Republican Party.

House Democrats immediately wemt to the Florida Supreme Court and said “put the House back to work.” The Supreme Court agreed that the House violated the state constitution “but there wasn’t any sense making them go back to work as the session would end in one day.”

So what is all the fuss about? Last year the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) in Washington, DC, advised Florida that it was discontinuing the Low Income Pool (LIP), which helped states reimburse hospitals for their service to indigents. The Feds said they would be replacing it with an expanded Medicaid. Gov. Scott accepted the logic of the expanded Medicaid in this instance, notwithstanding the fact that he is vehemently opposed to expanded Medicaid.

Here’s the problem: The House opposes the Medicaid expansion. The Senate supports the idea. The two houses couldn’t come to any form of the compromise so the House literally picked up its marbles, closed early and went home.

Why didn’t the elected leader of our state government, Gov. Rick Scott, call the president of the Senate and the speaker of the House into his office and say, “Okay you guys, we are all Republicans. We all have the same basic concept on running our government. Let’s work this out! Don’t make yourselves look like a bunch of fools!”

What does our governor do? Well, he doesn’t do anything with the two leaders. Rather he goes to Washington and meets with Sylvia Burwell, Secretary of HHS. She listens to his request for an extension and says “no.”

Meanwhile in Tallahassee the governor has the state sue the federal government to force it into continued funding. I am sure this lawsuit, like all the others he has initiated, will end up a loss for the state and just another legal bill for taxpayers to absorb.

Next, our governor, suggesting that Florida’s hospitals are making too much money and don’t need the government’s reimbursement, creates a “committee” to review salaries, expenses and profits to determine if hospitals really need the money. He hasn’t named the committee’s members as of this date, but I can picture a onesided group that will say, “Good heavens no, governor, hospitals are making too much money. They can absorb the cost of providing healthcare for the indigents.” Hospitals will not bear the cost. We, paying patients, will bear the cost with increased charges for services rendered.

There is another side to the standoff between the two houses. Bills that were in committee, bills that should have been voted upon by the House and gone to compromise between the two houses will never see the light of day this session.

Some examples: Water conservation through the recently passed Amendment One to the Florida Constitution, a proposed corporate tax cut, reform of the Public Service Commission, more money for education, fracking control, prison reform, online voter registration and many other bills needing a Senate compromise and the governor’s signature. The legislature will reconvene for a “special” session in June but only to pass a budget. Nothing else will be considered.

Broward County’s public hospital already is planning for a $180 million cut — nonessential services will go. We really need our governor to step in and take control of this fiasco. We don’t need a 21st Century rendition of Nero fiddling while Rome (our Florida) burns.

We appreciate your opinions on this column whether in agreement or disagreement. Send your comments to (fax number) 305-662-6980 or email to Kenneth.Bluh@ColumbusCL.com. The opinions expressed in this column are not necessarily those of this newspaper, its editors or publisher.


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