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2019   HAPPY NEW YEAR  2019

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36th Annual A&R Convention

A&R will be holding its 36th Annual Convention on Thursday April 25, 2019. 

This convention is open to all active members and will be held at the A&R Office, 805 Brook St, Rocky Hill.

Registration starts at 4:30pm with dinner provided.
A&R Scholarships will be awarded at 5:30.
The Convention meeting starts at 6:00pm (doors close and no entry after 6:00pm).

More details to come...
 

As reported by CT News Junkie, Governor-elect Ned Lamont has hired Connecticut's first ever Chief Operating Officer (COO) in an apparent effort to increase operating efficiencies across state agencies.  The newly created COO position will be held by Paul Mounds.  Lamont intends for the COO to ensure "all departments are working together collaboratively".  According to the Governor-elect's Chief of Staff, Ryan Drajewicz, the COO will evaluate state agency processes to "ensure that the taxpayers have a better user experience when they’re looking to do business with the state of Connecticut". 

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For the past 20 years, A&R has been represented by two attorneys: Barry Scheinberg and Denise Bevza.  Barry has been our lead attorney and chief spokesperson for nearly 40 years while Denise Bevza has been with us for nearly 20 years.  Barry will continue to be our lead attorney but A&R will no longer have the regular services of Denise Bevza.  Denise was a great attorney and a good friend and we will miss her flare and personality while remaining grateful for all she has provided us over the years. 

A&R has secured the services of a another attorney, Marshall "Chip" Segar to act as our

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SmartShopper is looking to boost enrollment by offering a $10 Amazon gift card to the first 1000 primary plan members who sign up by December 22, 2018

SmartShopper is a new part of our healthcare cost savings and is a program run by a company called “Vitals”.  The goal is to find high-quality, low-cost locations for a host of medical procedures/screenings.  Medical procedures can fluxuate in pricing by hundreds or thousands of dollars for the same procedure from one location to another.  If you use SmartShopper to find the more cost efficient locations/doctors, then you will be sent a cash

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A New Narrative

In an article entitled "Ben Barnes Unplugged" from CTNewsJunkie, outgoing OPM Secretary Ben Barnes spoke candidly about State Employee Pensions at a state budget forum on 12/13/18.  Ben Barnes' view as reported in the CTNewsJunkie article:

Barnes also talked at length about the issue of state pensions. He said he felt that state workers were unfairly “scapegoated” for the problem.

He said while there are some examples of very high pensions being paid to state employees, the average state pension is about $38,000.

“Local government pensions are way better,” the OPM secretary said. He said those who work in the private sector also retire with much better pensions than the average state worker.

Besides, Barnes said, there is a moral obligation involved.

“The law of the land is that when somebody retires with a pension they have a right to that pension,” Barnes said. “We can’t renege on our deal to employees.”

He said even if there was a legal way found to tear up state pension agreements, “Why on earth would we want to do that? These are folks who are cleaning up after our elderly parents or our grandparents. The idea that we would walk away from that is reprehensible.”

Barnes said while he believes that the budget will be in good hands with Lamont in charge and the newly-elected legislature, he also said he’s worried that the 2019 budget was built with what he termed “one-time sweeps” that will create a $630 million hole that will need to be filled in next year’s budget.


Thank you, Ben...we know we are an important piece of the budget, but not the budget problem.  State Employees became the target of a heavily-funded, politically-motivated campaign.  That is why we were so adamant in turning out the vote and turning around the legislature; too many false-narratives and untruthful assessments, it was angering.  Hopefully, some in the legislature will now focus on the real roots of the problem, not the easy target.  Timely as it may be, the Comptroller's Office updated the "OpenPension" piece of the "OpenConnecticut" portal this week to incorporate up-to-date monthly pension information as opposed to the prior iteration which provided static, annual data  visit OpenPension...also, the newly created Pension Stability Commission was given an extension to complete their recommendations on ways to improve the pension liability issues...and we might as well note that on December 3, 2018, Comptroller Lembo projected a $245m surplus for FY19 (which ends June 30, 2019). 

Refreshing to see the State budget director acknowledge that state employees and our benefits are not the source nor the sole solution to the State's budget problems.  It is refreshing to see that there are better ways to improve the semi-scientific pension liability numbers in some manner other than stripping away benefits, and it is certainly refreshing to see a surplus projected in the annual budget.