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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsDid we know? Walz signed the Debt Fairness Act banning transfer of medical debt, impacting credit scores, & more
Banning reporting medical debt to credit bureaus, and banning denying necessary medical care on the basis of unpaid bills. And much more.
The Press Release explains
Governor Walz Ceremonially Signs Legislation to Help Minnesotans with Burden of Medical Debt
June 17, 2024
[ST. PAUL, MN] Governor Tim Walz today held a ceremonial bill signing for legislation that will help ease the burden of medical debt on Minnesotans. Governor Walz was joined by Attorney General Keith Ellison, bill authors Senator Liz Boldon and Representative Liz Reyer, and impacted Minnesotans to celebrate the signing. The provisions are part of the Minnesota Debt Fairness Act, which was signed into law this session.
Life-saving cancer treatments or a trip to the emergency room shouldnt cause a tanked credit score or a lifetime of debt, said Governor Walz. Thanks to the work of the Attorney General, legislators, and Minnesotans whove shared their stories, these reforms will help Minnesotans get the care they need, manage their medical debt, and feel protected in their most vulnerable moments.
We all agree that if you borrow money, you should pay it back. We also all agree that we shouldnt punish people for getting sick. We also agree that a debt-collection system that makes it harder for people to pay back what they owe does nobody any good. And we also agree that debt collection shouldnt create more debt, said Attorney General Ellison.
With the passage and signing today of the Debt Fairness Act, we have a fairer, more dignified, and more just system for repaying debt than we did before. My thanks go to chief authors Senator Liz Boldon and Representative Liz Reyer for their outstanding work in seeing it through to passage, and to Governor Walz and Lieutenant Governor Flanagan for their steadfast support. There is more work to do, and were not done yet but today, Minnesotans facing debt, including medical debt, can rest easier in the knowledge that the law provides them with more protections than it did before, Attorney General Ellison concluded.
The legislation eases the burden of medical debt for Minnesotans by:
Banning medical providers from withholding medically necessary care due to unpaid debt;
Preventing medical debt from impacting credit scores
Eliminating automatic transfers of medical debt to a patients spouse
Establishing strong new protections from unethical medical debt collections practices
Requiring medical providers to publish their medical debt collection practices
Creating a new process to help people dispute medical coding and billing errors
The Minnesota Debt Fairness Act makes additional debt reforms, including:
Establishing automatic income-based wage garnishment levels, ranging from 10% to 25%, rather than the flat 25% garnishment cap that previously existed
Extending Minnesotas wage garnishment protections to independent contractors and everyone living and working in Minnesota
https://mn.gov/governor/newsroom/press-releases/?id=1055-627879#:~:text=The%20Minnesota%20Debt%20Fairness%20Act%20makes%20additional%20debt%20reforms%2C%20including,garnishment%20cap%20that%20previously%20existed]
These are policies we can win on.
Farmer-Rick
(10,925 posts)I had bills to pay.
But they were on my insurance. I was told that's why I had to pay it off. It wasn't so much but it just made me angry that I had to pay the hospital that couldn't help him survive. It's like paying someone who failed to do their job.
ColinC
(9,775 posts)Charm to pull in younger voters
Nanjeanne
(5,384 posts)Last edited Sun Jul 28, 2024, 09:38 PM - Edit history (1)
just looking at social media which of course is not mainstream tv - the young are drawn to him. Hes not the choice of course of the corporate donors and right now he doesnt have the name recognition for some of these tv polls - but young people certainly rallied around Sanders and he really is old. Walz is same age as Harris. He says he looks older from all the years supervising school lunchrooms!
RandomNumbers
(18,051 posts)Basically making life better for everyday people.
Making sure kids have school lunches and breakfasts so they can LEARN - and not have to deal with shaming for getting free meals - that is huge.
https://www.mprnews.org/story/2023/03/17/gov-signs-universal-school-meals-bill-into-law
Nanjeanne
(5,384 posts)oasis
(51,245 posts)Nanjeanne
(5,384 posts)selfish - his policies I really stand behind. Hes a breath of fresh air to me in his confidence to be his own authentic goofy, real self. He just doesnt have that slick politician vibe but hes not a bumpkin at all. Very relatable.