Sunday, April 2, 2017

Wash Post discovers Walker cruelty we flagged last week

Last week I wrote about how right-wing WI Gov. Scott Walker was gearing up for his 2018 re-election campaign by taking his six-year-long war against the poor to a new level through the humiliation and punitive power of mandatory drug testing:
Walker continues to try and obtain more state power over life-preserving public services to humiliate, punish and otherwise strong arm lower-income people into the workforce he has not expanded through mandatory drug-testing and other coercive measures.
A sample as reported by the Journal Sentinel:
Screen these Medicaid applicants [some single adults, 18-49] with questions about illegal drug use and actually test some of them for it. Refusing the test will mean the applicants go at least six months without state coverage. If they test positive, the individuals could receive treatment.
And then extend these practices and others to food stamp recipients - - despite known proof of their costly failure - - along with lifetime benefit limits reduced to adults four years - - all aimed at getting people off public assistance in Wisconsin job markets that have been stalled during Walker's tenure and are principally creating work at the lowest end of the wage scale.
Now The Washington Post lets the country in on Walker's cruelty
Now that House Republicans have squandered their shot at reordering Medicaid, governors who want conservative changes in the health program for ­low-income Americans must get special permission from the Trump administration.
Near the front of the line is Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, a Republican who not only supports work requirements and premium payments but also a new additional condition: to make applicants undergo a drug test if they’re suspected of substance abuse.
If Walker gets his way, Wisconsin would be the first state in the country with mandatory drug screening for Medicaid enrollees. The governor plans to release his proposal in mid-April and submit it to the Department of Health and Human Services by the end of May.
On, Wisconsin. 

6 comments:

  1. When will we start drug testing our elected officials?

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  2. If Walker gets his way, Wisconsin would be the first state in the country with mandatory drug screening for Medicaid enrollees. The governor plans to release his proposal in mid-April and submit it to the Department of Health and Human Services by the end of May.

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  3. I say that since he is a public servant, that he should be drug tested first, followed by all Wisconsin senators and public service workers. We don't need to be spending our taxes on drug addicted State workers.

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  4. Greg asks

    Why would it be a bad idea to do drug testing?

    ReplyDelete