Patient-Centered Health Plan for State Employees Wins Panel’s Approval
From NJ Spotlight, July 7, 2015
While Gov. Chris Christie’s latest proposal to reduce government spending on public-employee healthcare has stalled, a pilot program with the same goal backed by Senate President Stephen Sweeney is moving forward.
A vote yesterday by a panel that oversees the design of public-employee health benefit plans in New Jersey paves the way for an experimental program based on offering patient-centered healthcare to New Jersey public employees.
It’s the latest development in an ongoing public debate over employee-benefit costs that Christie, a second-term Republican now running for president, has been driving for much of the last year as state revenue growth has failed to keep pace with increasing worker pension and healthcare costs.
From NJ Spotlight, July 7, 2015
While Gov. Chris Christie’s latest proposal to reduce government spending on public-employee healthcare has stalled, a pilot program with the same goal backed by Senate President Stephen Sweeney is moving forward.
A vote yesterday by a panel that oversees the design of public-employee health benefit plans in New Jersey paves the way for an experimental program based on offering patient-centered healthcare to New Jersey public employees.
It’s the latest development in an ongoing public debate over employee-benefit costs that Christie, a second-term Republican now running for president, has been driving for much of the last year as state revenue growth has failed to keep pace with increasing worker pension and healthcare costs.
From NJ Spotlight, July 7, 2015
While Gov. Chris Christie’s latest proposal to reduce government spending on public-employee healthcare has stalled, a pilot program with the same goal backed by Senate President Stephen Sweeney is moving forward.
A vote yesterday by a panel that oversees the design of public-employee health benefit plans in New Jersey paves the way for an experimental program based on offering patient-centered healthcare to New Jersey public employees.
It’s the latest development in an ongoing public debate over employee-benefit costs that Christie, a second-term Republican now running for president, has been driving for much of the last year as state revenue growth has failed to keep pace with increasing worker pension and healthcare costs.
From NJ Spotlight, July 7, 2015
While Gov. Chris Christie’s latest proposal to reduce government spending on public-employee healthcare has stalled, a pilot program with the same goal backed by Senate President Stephen Sweeney is moving forward.
A vote yesterday by a panel that oversees the design of public-employee health benefit plans in New Jersey paves the way for an experimental program based on offering patient-centered healthcare to New Jersey public employees.
It’s the latest development in an ongoing public debate over employee-benefit costs that Christie, a second-term Republican now running for president, has been driving for much of the last year as state revenue growth has failed to keep pace with increasing worker pension and healthcare costs.
From NJ Spotlight, July 7, 2015
While Gov. Chris Christie’s latest proposal to reduce government spending on public-employee healthcare has stalled, a pilot program with the same goal backed by Senate President Stephen Sweeney is moving forward.
A vote yesterday by a panel that oversees the design of public-employee health benefit plans in New Jersey paves the way for an experimental program based on offering patient-centered healthcare to New Jersey public employees.
It’s the latest development in an ongoing public debate over employee-benefit costs that Christie, a second-term Republican now running for president, has been driving for much of the last year as state revenue growth has failed to keep pace with increasing worker pension and healthcare costs.
From NJ Spotlight, July 7, 2015
While Gov. Chris Christie’s latest proposal to reduce government spending on public-employee healthcare has stalled, a pilot program with the same goal backed by Senate President Stephen Sweeney is moving forward.
A vote yesterday by a panel that oversees the design of public-employee health benefit plans in New Jersey paves the way for an experimental program based on offering patient-centered healthcare to New Jersey public employees.
It’s the latest development in an ongoing public debate over employee-benefit costs that Christie, a second-term Republican now running for president, has been driving for much of the last year as state revenue growth has failed to keep pace with increasing worker pension and healthcare costs.
From NJ Spotlight, July 7, 2015
While Gov. Chris Christie’s latest proposal to reduce government spending on public-employee healthcare has stalled, a pilot program with the same goal backed by Senate President Stephen Sweeney is moving forward.
A vote yesterday by a panel that oversees the design of public-employee health benefit plans in New Jersey paves the way for an experimental program based on offering patient-centered healthcare to New Jersey public employees.
It’s the latest development in an ongoing public debate over employee-benefit costs that Christie, a second-term Republican now running for president, has been driving for much of the last year as state revenue growth has failed to keep pace with increasing worker pension and healthcare costs.
From NJ Spotlight, July 7, 2015
While Gov. Chris Christie’s latest proposal to reduce government spending on public-employee healthcare has stalled, a pilot program with the same goal backed by Senate President Stephen Sweeney is moving forward.
A vote yesterday by a panel that oversees the design of public-employee health benefit plans in New Jersey paves the way for an experimental program based on offering patient-centered healthcare to New Jersey public employees.
It’s the latest development in an ongoing public debate over employee-benefit costs that Christie, a second-term Republican now running for president, has been driving for much of the last year as state revenue growth has failed to keep pace with increasing worker pension and healthcare costs.
From NJ Spotlight, July 7, 2015
While Gov. Chris Christie’s latest proposal to reduce government spending on public-employee healthcare has stalled, a pilot program with the same goal backed by Senate President Stephen Sweeney is moving forward.
A vote yesterday by a panel that oversees the design of public-employee health benefit plans in New Jersey paves the way for an experimental program based on offering patient-centered healthcare to New Jersey public employees.
It’s the latest development in an ongoing public debate over employee-benefit costs that Christie, a second-term Republican now running for president, has been driving for much of the last year as state revenue growth has failed to keep pace with increasing worker pension and healthcare costs.
From NJ Spotlight, July 7, 2015
While Gov. Chris Christie’s latest proposal to reduce government spending on public-employee healthcare has stalled, a pilot program with the same goal backed by Senate President Stephen Sweeney is moving forward.
A vote yesterday by a panel that oversees the design of public-employee health benefit plans in New Jersey paves the way for an experimental program based on offering patient-centered healthcare to New Jersey public employees.
It’s the latest development in an ongoing public debate over employee-benefit costs that Christie, a second-term Republican now running for president, has been driving for much of the last year as state revenue growth has failed to keep pace with increasing worker pension and healthcare costs.
From NJ Spotlight, July 7, 2015
While Gov. Chris Christie’s latest proposal to reduce government spending on public-employee healthcare has stalled, a pilot program with the same goal backed by Senate President Stephen Sweeney is moving forward.
A vote yesterday by a panel that oversees the design of public-employee health benefit plans in New Jersey paves the way for an experimental program based on offering patient-centered healthcare to New Jersey public employees.
It’s the latest development in an ongoing public debate over employee-benefit costs that Christie, a second-term Republican now running for president, has been driving for much of the last year as state revenue growth has failed to keep pace with increasing worker pension and healthcare costs.
From NJ Spotlight, July 7, 2015
While Gov. Chris Christie’s latest proposal to reduce government spending on public-employee healthcare has stalled, a pilot program with the same goal backed by Senate President Stephen Sweeney is moving forward.
A vote yesterday by a panel that oversees the design of public-employee health benefit plans in New Jersey paves the way for an experimental program based on offering patient-centered healthcare to New Jersey public employees.
It’s the latest development in an ongoing public debate over employee-benefit costs that Christie, a second-term Republican now running for president, has been driving for much of the last year as state revenue growth has failed to keep pace with increasing worker pension and healthcare costs.
From NJ Spotlight, July 7, 2015
While Gov. Chris Christie’s latest proposal to reduce government spending on public-employee healthcare has stalled, a pilot program with the same goal backed by Senate President Stephen Sweeney is moving forward.
A vote yesterday by a panel that oversees the design of public-employee health benefit plans in New Jersey paves the way for an experimental program based on offering patient-centered healthcare to New Jersey public employees.
It’s the latest development in an ongoing public debate over employee-benefit costs that Christie, a second-term Republican now running for president, has been driving for much of the last year as state revenue growth has failed to keep pace with increasing worker pension and healthcare costs.
From NJ Spotlight, July 7, 2015
While Gov. Chris Christie’s latest proposal to reduce government spending on public-employee healthcare has stalled, a pilot program with the same goal backed by Senate President Stephen Sweeney is moving forward.
A vote yesterday by a panel that oversees the design of public-employee health benefit plans in New Jersey paves the way for an experimental program based on offering patient-centered healthcare to New Jersey public employees.
It’s the latest development in an ongoing public debate over employee-benefit costs that Christie, a second-term Republican now running for president, has been driving for much of the last year as state revenue growth has failed to keep pace with increasing worker pension and healthcare costs.
From NJ Spotlight, July 7, 2015
While Gov. Chris Christie’s latest proposal to reduce government spending on public-employee healthcare has stalled, a pilot program with the same goal backed by Senate President Stephen Sweeney is moving forward.
A vote yesterday by a panel that oversees the design of public-employee health benefit plans in New Jersey paves the way for an experimental program based on offering patient-centered healthcare to New Jersey public employees.
It’s the latest development in an ongoing public debate over employee-benefit costs that Christie, a second-term Republican now running for president, has been driving for much of the last year as state revenue growth has failed to keep pace with increasing worker pension and healthcare costs.
From NJ Spotlight, July 7, 2015
While Gov. Chris Christie’s latest proposal to reduce government spending on public-employee healthcare has stalled, a pilot program with the same goal backed by Senate President Stephen Sweeney is moving forward.
A vote yesterday by a panel that oversees the design of public-employee health benefit plans in New Jersey paves the way for an experimental program based on offering patient-centered healthcare to New Jersey public employees.
It’s the latest development in an ongoing public debate over employee-benefit costs that Christie, a second-term Republican now running for president, has been driving for much of the last year as state revenue growth has failed to keep pace with increasing worker pension and healthcare costs.
From NJ Spotlight, July 7, 2015
While Gov. Chris Christie’s latest proposal to reduce government spending on public-employee healthcare has stalled, a pilot program with the same goal backed by Senate President Stephen Sweeney is moving forward.
A vote yesterday by a panel that oversees the design of public-employee health benefit plans in New Jersey paves the way for an experimental program based on offering patient-centered healthcare to New Jersey public employees.
It’s the latest development in an ongoing public debate over employee-benefit costs that Christie, a second-term Republican now running for president, has been driving for much of the last year as state revenue growth has failed to keep pace with increasing worker pension and healthcare costs.
From NJ Spotlight, July 7, 2015
While Gov. Chris Christie’s latest proposal to reduce government spending on public-employee healthcare has stalled, a pilot program with the same goal backed by Senate President Stephen Sweeney is moving forward.
A vote yesterday by a panel that oversees the design of public-employee health benefit plans in New Jersey paves the way for an experimental program based on offering patient-centered healthcare to New Jersey public employees.
It’s the latest development in an ongoing public debate over employee-benefit costs that Christie, a second-term Republican now running for president, has been driving for much of the last year as state revenue growth has failed to keep pace with increasing worker pension and healthcare costs.
From NJ Spotlight, July 7, 2015
While Gov. Chris Christie’s latest proposal to reduce government spending on public-employee healthcare has stalled, a pilot program with the same goal backed by Senate President Stephen Sweeney is moving forward.
A vote yesterday by a panel that oversees the design of public-employee health benefit plans in New Jersey paves the way for an experimental program based on offering patient-centered healthcare to New Jersey public employees.
It’s the latest development in an ongoing public debate over employee-benefit costs that Christie, a second-term Republican now running for president, has been driving for much of the last year as state revenue growth has failed to keep pace with increasing worker pension and healthcare costs.
From NJ Spotlight, July 7, 2015
While Gov. Chris Christie’s latest proposal to reduce government spending on public-employee healthcare has stalled, a pilot program with the same goal backed by Senate President Stephen Sweeney is moving forward.
A vote yesterday by a panel that oversees the design of public-employee health benefit plans in New Jersey paves the way for an experimental program based on offering patient-centered healthcare to New Jersey public employees.
It’s the latest development in an ongoing public debate over employee-benefit costs that Christie, a second-term Republican now running for president, has been driving for much of the last year as state revenue growth has failed to keep pace with increasing worker pension and healthcare costs.
From NJ Spotlight, July 7, 2015
While Gov. Chris Christie’s latest proposal to reduce government spending on public-employee healthcare has stalled, a pilot program with the same goal backed by Senate President Stephen Sweeney is moving forward.
A vote yesterday by a panel that oversees the design of public-employee health benefit plans in New Jersey paves the way for an experimental program based on offering patient-centered healthcare to New Jersey public employees.
It’s the latest development in an ongoing public debate over employee-benefit costs that Christie, a second-term Republican now running for president, has been driving for much of the last year as state revenue growth has failed to keep pace with increasing worker pension and healthcare costs.