The Times West Virginian

West Virginia

November 6, 2008

Manchin pitches health-care plan

Vows to extend coverage to every uninsured working West Virginian

CHARLESTON — Buoyed by the largest victory margin ever won by someone seeking his office, Gov. Joe Manchin vowed Thursday to extend health coverage to every uninsured working West Virginian — possibly through the main benefits program for state employees.

Manchin said he could propose expanding the state’s Public Employees Insurance Agency to cover small businesses.

He may also ask lawmakers to let the working poor keep their Medicaid benefits for 10 years once their rising income otherwise leaves them ineligible. The grace period is now five years.

“I’m committed to getting every working person health care,” the Democrat told The Associated Press. “They’ll say it’s too costly. Well, hell, it’s costly now.”

The latter option would require a federal waiver, and both are among several that require more research, Manchin spokeswoman Lara Ramsburg later said. She added that the economy or other factors could delay his health care proposals beyond 2009, but that they would remain a priority of his second term.

About 254,000 West Virginians, just over 14 percent, lack health insurance, according to the latest Census estimates. PEIA already covers about 197,000 state workers, retirees and their families, while about 281,000 residents rely on Medicaid. The two programs cost the state $1.2 billion last year.

The governor also pledged to continue the gradual tax cuts that helped define his first term — but he offered no specific tax-related proposal for next year’s session. He instead cautioned that a national recession could at least hamper that goal.

“Are we going to stop the progression we’re having? Not at all,” the governor said. “But when we see a storm coming that we have no control over, we’re not going to get ourselves in a position where we’re hemorrhaging.”

Manchin won re-election Tuesday with nearly 70 percent of the vote, an apparent record according to a review of previous results. He carried all 55 counties, including the Raleigh County base of Republican opponent Russ Weeks.

A former state senator, Weeks received just under 26 percent of the vote, unofficial returns show. Jesse Johnson drew 4.5 percent, ensuing his Mountain Party a place on the 2012 ballot. State election rules require at least 1 percent of the vote to keep ballot status.

An estimated 488,835 West Virginians backed Manchin for a second term. Only three governors have attracted a larger number of votes: Homer Holt in 1936, Matthew Neely in 1940 and now-Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., in 1976.

Exit polling conducted by AP suggested support near or above 70 percent for Manchin among all age, education and income levels and among both genders. It measured 59 percent support among Republicans, and 62 percent among self-described conservatives.

Manchin attributed Tuesday’s outcome to a growing confidence by residents in their state, and themselves. Besides shaving down both business and consumer taxes, such as the one on groceries, the state has narrowed funding shortfalls in its pension programs and built up its emergency reserves since he took office in 2005.

Thanks to such policies and a booming coal market, West Virginia has so far weathered the global financial crisis that has buffeted other states.

“We have cash flow, we have reserves. We’re going to get through it,” the governor said.

Manchin said his second term agenda also includes continuing efforts to reorient higher education toward providing the skills needed by the modern work force. He said he also remains dedicated to seeking cleaner ways to derive energy from coal, while also increasing an emphasis on such renewable sources as wind power.

The governor credited both the Legislature and public employees for the state’s recent successes. Some in the latter group are among Manchin’s most vocal critics, however, particularly teachers unhappy with the pace of pay raises.

While giving no concrete proposal, Manchin pledged to rely on federal worker wage levels as a benchmark for the state to meet or exceed. He said he’s also halfway met an administration goal to cut $350 million in wasteful spending.

Text Only
West Virginia
  • Tomblin expects miner drug testing approval

    Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin said Thursday he believes lawmakers will quickly come to agreement and pass his proposed mine safety legislation, including a provision that calls for mandatory drug testing of coal miners.

    February 3, 2012

  • Autism law in jeopardy, supporters warn

    West Virginia’s new law extending health care coverage to children with autism may not do what its supporters intended, and a fight is brewing with insurers over pending legislation on the subject.

    February 3, 2012

  • Main says violations at U.S. coal mines down in 2011

    Coal operators across the country are changing the way they work, and mines are becoming safer, but the head of the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration said Thursday there are still too many who “don’t get it.”

    February 3, 2012

  • ‘Cracker’ chase enters waiting phase

    West Virginia’s hunt for a multibillion-dollar chemical plant has come down to talks between potential investors and private property owners, Commerce Secretary Keith Burdette said Thursday.
    Burdette told The Associated Press that the two companies that each want to build a massive “cracker” facility in the Marcellus shale region are negotiating with owners of potential sites.

    February 3, 2012

  • Fix for W.Va. retiree health costs passes Senate

    West Virginia’s Senate moved Wednesday to tackle one of the state’s biggest funding shortfalls, a $5 billion liability stemming from public retiree health care costs, unanimously passing a proposal from Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin.

    February 2, 2012

  • MSHA officials: U.S. coal mine safety is improving

    Federal regulators said Wednesday the nation’s coal mines have made huge strides in safety, pointing to a dramatic reduction in the number of accidents and injuries in the nation’s single largest district in southern West Virginia.

    February 2, 2012

  • Three states offer big tax breaks to lure Shell Oil plant to region

    Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia are trying to top each other with the sweetest package of tax breaks for Shell Oil Co., which plans to build a huge new petrochemical refinery in the region.
    But some are questioning why there’s been so little public discussion over exactly what’s being offered, and how the deals would impact communities and the region.

    February 2, 2012

  • W.Va. Senate kills bill on magistrate education

    The Senate killed a bill that would require elected magistrates to earn at least an associate’s degree, likely ending efforts this year to increase education requirements for the officials.

    February 1, 2012

  • Penn State scandal spurs sex abuse bills

    All adult West Virginians would be required to report suspected sexual abuse to the police under a bill working its way through the Legislature.

    January 31, 2012

  • Lack of candidates will shape many W.Va. legislative races

    West Virginia ended its candidate filing period Saturday, but the results of more than 50 of this year’s legislative races are already largely decided, according to a review by The Associated Press.

    January 30, 2012

Featured Ads
Special Editions