HARRISBURG -- Almost one in six Wal-Mart employees in Pennsylvania was enrolled in the state's health care program for the poor and disabled last year, a newspaper reported Thursday.
Wal-Mart had the highest percentage of employees on Medicaid out of the state's 10 largest private-sector employers, according to data provided to The Philadelphia Inquirer by the state Department of Public Welfare.
The company, which is Pennsylvania's largest private-sector employer, had 7,577 of its 48,000 employees, or nearly 16 percent, on Medicaid, according to the figures. The annual cost to the state was $15 million, the newspaper said.
http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/s_429434.htmlWal-Mart No. 1 in employee MedicaidMONTGOMERY (AP) — Many workers at some of the largest companies operating in Alabama get insurance for themselves and their children through state programs and not from their employers.
During a meeting last week with Alabama Medicaid Commissioner Carol Herrmann, state Rep. John Knight Jr., D-Montgomery, expressed concern about major companies that do not offer health benefits to some of their Alabama employees, the Montgomery Advertiser reported Tuesday.
"We spend a lot of money to get them in this state," said Knight, chairman of the House committee that writes the budget for Medicaid and other non-education state services. He said some of these companies receive incentives, such as tax breaks, to locate in Alabama.
Retail giant Wal-Mart tops the list of companies in Alabama whose employees have children on Medicaid, the Advertiser reported, citing state records. Wal-Mart workers' children account for 3,864 children on the Medicaid rolls at a cost between $5.8 million and $8.2 million.
http://www.decaturdaily.com/decaturdaily/news/050223/medicaid.shtmlWal-Mart Increases Medicaid Spending, Decreases WagesWal-Mart increases Medicaid expenditures by an average of $898 per employee, according to a study presented on Friday at a conference held by the company to examine the impact of Wal-Mart on the U.S. economy, the New York Times reports (Greenhouse, New York Times, 11/5). Wal-Mart held the conference, called "An In-Depth Look at Wal-Mart and Society," to address criticism of wages, health benefits and workplace policies and "examine its effect on jobs, inflation and income growth," Bloomberg reports (Bloomberg, 11/4). Wal-Mart commissioned the independent economic research company Global Insight to manage the conference, conduct a study and solicit research (Joyce, Washington Post, 11/5). In total, nine studies were presented at the conference (Grant, USA Today, 11/7). For the Medicaid study, economist Michael Hicks, a professor at the Air Force Institute of Technology, examined the impact of Wal-Mart on government aid programs. According to the study, Medicaid expenditures increase by 1.5% for every 1% that the market share of Wal-Mart increases in a state. The study also found government cash aid to families decreases by 3.3% for every 1% that the market share of Wal-Mart increases in a state. The studies also indicate that Wal-Mart decreases wages in the communities in which it operates, Bloomberg reports (Bloomberg, 11/4). Wal-Mart does not increase expenditures for welfare or food stamps, the study found (New York Times, 11/5).
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/medicalnews.php?newsid=33206That's just sampling.