Friday, August 07, 2009

Rick Scott, the man behind the Town Hall Teabaggers

Rick Sanchez of CNN takes on Rick Scott.

Watch it:



Rick Scott, from the Nation:

A Texas lawyer who shared a business partner with George W. Bush, Scott started his health company, Columbia Hospital Corporation, in 1987. Its growth was meteoric, expanding from just a few hospitals to more than 1,000 facilities in thirty-eight states and three other countries in 1997. As his firm gobbled up chains, like the Frist family's Hospital Corporation of America (HCA), it became the largest for-profit hospital chain in the country. By 1994, Columbia/HCA was one of the forty largest corporations in America, and Scott had acquired a reputation as the Gordon Gecko of the healthcare world. "Whose patients are you stealing?" he would ask employees at his newly acquired hospitals.

He promised to put nonprofit hospitals--which he insisted on referring to as "nontaxpaying" hospitals--out of business and touted his company's single-minded pursuit of profit as a model for the nation's entire healthcare system. "What's happening in Washington is not healthcare reform," he told the New York Times in 1994. "Healthcare reform is happening in the marketplace."

The press portrayed Scott as a guru to be admired and feared, "a private capitalist dictator," in the words of one Princeton health economist. "Probably the lowest body fat of anybody I've been in business with," his partner told the Times.

"Other hospitals were intimidated," recalls John Schilling, who worked for Columbia/HCA in the 1990s. Scott was "like the bully that would come into town and if you didn't sell to him or partner with him, he would open up shop across the street from you and put you out of business."

Not long after joining the company in 1993 as the supervisor of reimbursement for the Fort Myers, Florida, office, Schilling noticed things weren't quite kosher. "They were looking for ways to maximize reimbursement...which ultimately would improve the bottom line."

One way they did this was to fudge the costs on their Medicare expense reports. They were "basically keeping two sets of books," says Schilling. The company would maintain an internal expense report, what it called a "reserve" report, which accurately tallied its expenses. "And then they would have a second report, which...they would file with the government, which was more aggressive." That report would "include inflated costs and expenses they knew weren't allowable or reimbursable. The one they filed with government might claim $5 million and the reserve would claim $4.5." Columbia/HCA would pocket the difference.

It wasn't just happening in Florida, and it wasn't just fraudulent Medicare expense reports. Around the country, dozens of whistle-blowers like Schilling stepped forward to file lawsuits under the False Claims Act, charging the company with sundry forms of chicanery: kickbacks to doctors in exchange for referrals, illegal deals with homecare agencies and filing false data about the use of hospital space.

By 1997 the FBI was investigating Columbia/HCA. Days after agents raided company facilities armed with search warrants, Scott was forced to resign. In 2000 the company pleaded guilty to fraud and agreed to pay the government $840 million. Other civil settlements would follow, ultimately totaling a staggering $1.7 billion, making it the largest fraud case in American history.

(Scott was never criminally charged and continues to deny wrongdoing. His spokesperson did not respond to repeated interview requests.)

And this is the man behind the organization to disrupt these Town Hall meetings. What surprises me are all the people falling all over themselves to come to these town hall meetings from other areas to disrupt them. Why? What is the real reason?

For Mr. Scott, it's to protect his Business which is walk-in Health Clinics, most of which are in Wal Marts. For the people he's recruiting? With a true bill from Congress not even out yet, people like Scott are scaring these simple people with all kinds of misinformation. And these simple people, deep down, don't trust a Black President. That's the whole thing right there. They want to believe that this president will do them wrong. What a sad world we live in!

2 comments:

monsieurbenet said...

trying to make sense of the meeting disruptors.

It is an uprising of sorts.

In the pictures I've seen, it seems to be a bunch of angry white people. "Just say no" they say.

If this is indeed a race based action, then it could be said that in essence "saying no" is what the historical "whites only" race segregation was based on. The denial by whites of non-whites use of what the whites thought they created.

Keep these disruptors talking, or denying others the opportunity to talk. Provide them the opportunity to show themselves.
Then destructive self-reflection becomes positive self-realization and these separators will finally disappear from "our" culture.

I hope.

mmrules said...

Crazy,Criminal Right wingers..

Now, exactly who are the brown shirt, bully national socialists ?

--stewarjt says

**
How are you doing ?
Well I hope.. :)