Rutland Herald

The Legislature allocated a large sum of money — I believe a million dollars — for a consultant to assess the state of Vermont’s health care and identify potential solutions.

After many months and miles and meetings, the consultant, Dr. Bruce Hamory, released a lengthy report that identified numerous problems. The vast majority of these he could have gleaned from simply reading news headlines (people unable to afford premiums and out-of-pocket costs, wait times too long, hospitals in financial trouble, major insurer using up reserves, transportation lacking, housing lacking, etc.).

The consultant’s recommendations call for many things that disrupt the network of providers and the lives of the people who count on those providers, but do not call for modifying the system of multiple payers and multiple policies, and multiple coverages and endless haggling between patients, providers and insurers.

The consultant estimates savings of $400 million over five years if all recommendations are implemented. Almost 10 years ago, former-governor Shumlin estimated savings from universal care roughly equal to that (or greater than that if you take account of inflation) but unilaterally killed the plan.

Does anyone think we’re making progress on the disaster that is health care in Vermont?

Lee Russ
Bennington