Barb wrote:No, they didn't have to, but they had the RIGHT TO. They ended up letting her keep the money - that is the "rest" that is charity.
Great.
So they enforced a fine print legal technicality to shakedown a few shekels from Terry Schiavo’s twin sister.
I guess Sam Walton can now finally afford that second gold plated Louie XIV office toilet he’s been lusting after.
You guys are so out of touch it's unreal.
Barb wrote:Good thing this woman worked for big bad Walmart, huh? Imagine if she worked at some rinky dinky chain without the big bucks. She probably wouldn't have had insurance at all.
She DID work at a rinky-dinky chain.
That’s why they sicked their pack of corporate attorneys on her measily diapers and medicine trustfund.
Barb wrote:Do you know how many people Walmart employs? Do you have any idea what the cost is to them to provide health insurance for all of these people?
Walmart doesn't provide healthcare to 'all these people'.
In fact, they costs taxpayers' millions each year by driving their workers (mostly part-time) onto the public dole.
This, in addition to the company’s already dodgy record of pocketing local sales taxes and holding-out on property taxes.
As a point of fact, thanks to Wmart suing this woman, her husband had to divorce her so she could qualify for more public aid.
Once again, effectively driving an employee onto the public's dime.
Barb wrote:The reason that clause is the employee contact is because it allows them to keep costs to employees DOWN.
This is not a broken limb.
This a permanent brain condition requring around-the-clock care.
In other words, she will not be stocking cheap chinese crap at WallyWorld anytime soon.
All this, it goes without saying, costs $$$.
After legal fees and adding ramps to the house, the family is already just barely scraping by.
Barb wrote:You act like business should be a charity for the employees.
No, I don't think healthcare should be coupled with employment at all.
Barb wrote:The mentality here is that Walmart owes this woman this extra cash just because they can afford it.
"Extra" is a misnomer.
Health insurance is supposed to cover medical expenses.
Wmart then
chose to go after the brain damaged woman's accident settlement years later.
Demanding not only reimbursement of the woman's medical costs, but of their own legal fess, too!
Barb wrote:I would never in my life expect a hand out for something I am not entitled to just because I have the temerity to decide someone else can afford it so they need to give it to me. That is pathetic.
Employer based healthcare is not a handout.
She paid the premiums.