Opposition lawmakers yesterday threatened to boycott cross-party negotiations in the next legislative session if the government carries out its plan to raise health insurance fees.
While branding the latest opposition move as irrational, the DPP caucus and health officials said they would try again to win understanding from the KMT and PFP.
PHOTO: CHIANG YING-YING, TAIPEI TIMES
On Saturday, the Department of Health (DOH) announced that it was raising National Health Insurance premiums to 4.55 percent from 4.25 percent of a person's monthly salary, starting on Sept. 1. Outpatients will also have to pay higher fees at hospitals and clinics under the new system. Lawmakers from the opposition KMT and PFP said during a joint news conference that the hikes are unacceptable.
"If the government insists on raising the health insurance fees, we will consider withdrawing from cross-party talks," KMT legislative leader Tseng Yung-chuan (
Tseng suggested that the health department postpone the hike until after the legislature convenes for the fall session, when he and his colleagues would make the issue a top priority.
Lee Chuan-chia (
He noted that health officials had earlier said a fee adjustment wouldn't be necessary before the end of next year in light of the bureau's financial condition.
"I see no compelling reason to justify the planned hike," Lee said. "The government had better put it off to avoid angering the public."
DOH Director-General Lee Ming-liang (李明亮) said the plan has been finalized and has won the Cabinet's support.
PFP legislative whip Liu Wen-hsiung (劉文雄) accused the government of treating the people as "automatic teller machines [ATMs]."
With the upcoming hike, the health department promised not to raise the fees again for two years, Liu noted.
"That means it will make a new round of fee adjustments in 2004," he said. "The PFP will not tolerate the government treating the people as ATMs when it needs money."
Health officials have said the health program is in danger of collapse if no reform takes place.
But PFP lawmaker Shen Chih-hwei (沈智慧) dismissed the contention as a lie. She noted that the health insurance bureau gave its employees a bonus worth 4.6 months of salary last Lunar New Year, topping all other government agencies.
"No financially strained institute would act so generously," Shen said, adding that raising fees would not prevent waste or the misuse of medical resources.
DPP legislative whip Wang Tuoh (
"A hike of less than six percent does not require legislative consent," Wang quoted health codes as saying.
Taking a milder stand, Ker Chien-ming (
NATIONAL SECURITY: Authorities are working to confirm the identities of the military personnel involved and investigating possible illegal conduct and regulatory violations Authorities are probing possible national security implications after Kinmen police and immigration officers on Sunday found a Chinese woman allegedly posing as a tourist while engaging in prostitution involving more than 10 military personnel. The woman, surnamed Chen (陳), has since been deported, authorities said, adding that investigators are still working to confirm the identities of those implicated, as the records only listed code names and aliases. The case stemmed from a report received by the Kinmen District Prosecutors’ Office on Friday last week from the Jinhu Precinct of the Kinmen County Police Bureau. On Sunday, police, along with the National Immigration
REASONS FOR TRAVEL: An assistant professor said that proposed amendments to penalize drivers if they used drugs overseas would not deter people from traveling People who operate a motor vehicle under the influence of marijuana would have their driver’s license revoked, even if they used the substance while overseas, the Ministry of Transportation and Communications said yesterday, citing proposed amendments to the Road Traffic Management and Penalty Act (道路交通管理處罰條例). The amendments would also authorize the government to revoke the licenses of people determined to have used Category 1 or Category 2 narcotics, even if they were not operating a vehicle while under the influence of drugs, as well as ban them from taking the license test for three years, the ministry said. People aged 18 or
GLOBALGIVING: ‘ Caving to external pressure is not acceptable for an organization that has cultivated justice reform and human rights for 30 years,’ one NGO said A slew of non-government organizations (NGOs) have withdrawn from the GlobalGiving fundraising platform after it announced it would use “Chinese Taipei” instead of “Taiwan” from next month. The Taiwan Good Rice Association wrote on Facebook on Friday that it was informed on April 28 via a teleconference call of the change, which was made because the platform wanted to operate in China. Taiwan Good Rice is to terminate all cooperative relationships with GlobalGiving in response to the platform’s “unilateral and non-negotiable” decision to remove references to Taiwan, the NGO said. “Taiwan is in the official name of Taiwan Good Rice Association and the
HEAVY WEATHER: Typhoon Jangmi is due to crash straight into the Ryukyus as airlines look to shift flights to larger aircraft or cancel flights to Okinawa entirely Taiwan’s international air carriers announced flight adjustments over the weekend as Typhoon Jangmi is forecast to hit the Ryukyu Islands today and tomorrow. The Central Weather Administration (CWA) upgraded Jangmi from a tropical storm to a typhoon at 8am yesterday, with the eye located 580km south of Naha city. It was moving north at 19kph. Today, China Airlines’ CI-120, CI-121, CI-122 and CI-123 flights between Taoyuan and Naha, Okinawa, have been canceled as well as CI-132 and CI-133 between Kaohsiung and Naha. EVA Air’s BR-112, BR-113, BR-186 and BR-185 flights between Taoyuan and Naha are also canceled. Low-cost carrier Tigerair Taiwan canceled IT-230,