Posted on 10/21/2011 9:12:04 AM PDT by tobyhill
Prices aren't the only thing being slashed at Wal-Mart.
Amid rising costs, Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the world's largest retailer and the nation's largest private employer, said Friday that it is cutting health benefits for part-time workers and raising premiums for many of its full-time staff.
The news was first reported in The New York Times.
New part-time employees who work less than 24 hours per week on average will not be eligible for any of the company's health insurance plans. New employees who work 24 to 33 hours per week would not be allowed to add a spouse to their coverage, either, although children would still be covered.
The changes take effect in January, Reuters reported.
(Excerpt) Read more at bottomline.msnbc.msn.com ...
To get around wartime wage controls.
welcome to obamacare world
didn’t Wal-mart support Obamacare and higher minimum wages??
Yep. I was just about to start up All-Mart and they stopped me cold. :p
heh
I had thought so, too but I’m not finding it. Though I did find they and SEIU backed Obamacare.
http://michellemalkin.com/2009/06/30/not-a-surprise-seiu-wal-mart-unite-behind-obamacare/
Wal-Mart is missing a bet, here. They could set up a chain of stores designed specifically for “mass production medical testing”. Here’s the concept:
For a set contract price, all sorts of organizations send employees through these medical analysis centers that are somewhat like military induction medical centers, but far more complex. Segregated by gender, they provide their complete medical history and a list of all medications, OTC meds and supplements they are taking. They take off their clothes and put on medical gowns. Then, in some order:
Full body and dental X-ray and maybe other scans. Complete blood, urine, stool, saliva and hair testing. Fingerprints and retinal scans, height, weight, blood pressure. DNA test. Vision, hearing, smell (used for some neurological analysis), etc.
The idea being to provide a comprehensive medical baseline, as well as spotting major preexisting conditions, both known and unknown.
Processing hundreds of people every day, its purpose is not to diagnose and treat illness, but to ascertain “wellness”, as well as having a comprehensive snapshot of the person before they develop problems, so that changes can be automatically noted for physicians.
Over time, this could save companies a huge amount of money now lost to serious illness. But a Wal-Mart set up could then be subdivided for follow-up comparisons, such as the comprehensive blood work, which today is done by private labs.
They made a effort at beginning such an enterprise a couple of years back. For some reason they stopped.
Probably the same reason they haven’t been able to get into the banking business, lawsuits from those aready established in the business.
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