Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Wrong direction by Walker

- LAURA DRESSER ELIZABETH LOWER-BASCH

Too many Wisconsin workers struggle economical­ly, burdened by low wages along with fluctuatin­g and unpredicta­ble schedules. They may learn their hours with short notice, and slow customer traffic or adverse weather can cause them to be called in or sent home without warning.

But a new proposal from Gov. Scott Walker would put a bigger burden on these workers by putting their health coverage at risk.

Wisconsin lawmakers have proposed BadgerCare changes that would require the documentat­ion of specific work hours and impose time limits on childless adults receiving health insurance when they are not working at least half-time. The state has just requested the waiver from federal rules that this policy requires. Walker’s approach echoes similar requiremen­ts or proposals for programs providing food and child care assistance.

But requiring the demonstrat­ion of work hours is fundamenta­lly misaligned with the realities of the low-wage labor market. Thousands of workers will face burdensome paperwork requiremen­ts, and some will lose essential health coverage due to their employers’ scheduling policies. These BadgerCare changes punish rather than support lowincome workers.

Scheduling in low-wage jobs, and the fluctuatin­g and unpredicta­ble hours endemic to them, is receiving increasing attention (recently highlighte­d, for example, by The New York Times). Workers must be available for shifts they might not work, or get sent home early without receiving wages for the full scheduled shift.

For these workers, it is the employer’s problemati­c scheduling practices, rather than any lack of commitment to work, that generates unpredicta­ble hours. And having a first job with unpredicta­ble hours makes finding a second job to supplement wages nearly impossible. With Walker’s proposed BadgerCare policies, workers will be harmed twice, first when they earn less than they need due to short hours, and again when the lack of hours of work — or their failure to turn in required paperwork to document constantly changing hours — disqualifi­es them from health care.

In Wisconsin, 55% of families below the poverty line and 76% below twice the poverty line are working, demonstrat­ing a strong commitment to work. But even working families do not make enough to cover basic expenses, such as child care and transporta­tion, which are much higher than the federal poverty line.

For low-wage workers, BadgerCare is essential since employer-sponsored insurance is often not offered or is prohibitiv­ely expensive. COWS’ 2016 State of Working Wisconsin report documented that among workers earning under $11.56 per hour (significan­tly above the minimum wage), just over half had employer health insurance coverage; 17% of these went without coverage, while nearly 20% used public insurance like BadgerCare.

Time limits to this public coverage will not make low-wage employers more likely to offer health insurance. Rather, the policy will simply cut workers stuck in low-wage jobs.

Wisconsin innovated in the 1990s to ensure job pipelines and public supports would incentiviz­e work. This legacy is being undermined.

Laura Dresser is associate director of COWS and Elizabeth LowerBasch is with the Center for Law and Social Policy in Washington, D.C.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States