Several states addressed health reform and gay marriage during Tuesday's election, though the outcomes of several of those ballot initiatives are still
unknown.
The outcome of a ballot measure in Arizona that targeted any health reform
proposals that would have included either individual or employer mandates was
still undecided as of noon Wednesday, November 5, as election officials tallied
the results.
If passed, Arizona’s Proposition 101 would prohibit the passage of any law
restricting an individual’s or entity’s freedom of choice of private health care
systems or private health plans of any type.
Meanwhile, a measure instructing the Wisconsin Legislature to enact
health reforms ensuring universal coverage appeared to be winning in the 22
cities and counties where it had been placed on the ballot. Results were still
being tallied Wednesday morning.
Voters in Milwaukee on Tuesday overwhelmingly approved requiring private
employers to pay for sick days for all workers in Wisconsin’s largest city. The
referendum, sought by a coalition of union and community groups, gives full-time
workers five to nine sick days a year, depending on the size of their
employer.
The cities of San Francisco and Washington previously passed similar
measures.
South Carolina voters decided Tuesday not to risk retired public employees’
health benefits in the stock market, defeating two proposed ballot measures that
would have allowed such investments by the state and local governments to pay
for future retirees’ health care and other post-retirement benefits. Most other
states allow the funds to be invested in stocks.
An amendment to California’s state constitution recognizing marriage as a
union between a man and a woman narrowly passed, overriding a ruling by the
California Supreme Court in May.
While not conceding defeat, opponents of the ballot measure that would end
same-sex marriage in California filed a petition with the California Supreme
Court to invalidate the proposed constitutional amendment.
The petition charges that Proposition 8 is invalid because the initiative
process was improperly used in an attempt to undo the state constitution’s core
commitment to equality for everyone.
Voters in Florida and Arizona passed gay marriage bans during Tuesday’s
elections.
North Dakota voters approved a measure putting the governor in charge of
appointing the director of the Workforce Safety and Insurance Agency, which
administers and oversees the state’s workers’ compensation program for injured
workers. Currently, a board of directors appoints and oversees the agency’s top
manager. The ballot measure also restores state civil service protection to the
agency’s employees and establishes an independent administrative panel of law
judges to conduct hearings and make final decisions.
In Montana, voters overwhelmingly approved a measure expanding health care
coverage for children under the state’s Children’s Health Insurance Program by
raising the income threshold for families to become eligible to $55,000 a year.
Filed by Joanne Wojcik of Business Insurance, a sister publication of
Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.
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