Page 4 — Thursday, February 3, 2022 — The Hastings Banner
Have you met?
Do you remember?
Did you see?
No-fault reform
eliminates the care
Much vaunted efforts by our governor
and state legislators to change Michi-
gan’s no-fault auto insurance laws, which
they ballyhooed as historic reform, are
nothing more than a thinly veiled politi-
cal pitch for votes.
This is, after all, an election year.
And everyone who had vehicles
insured in Michigan as of Oct. 31, 2021,
are being told that, later this year, they’ll
get $400 per insured vehicle, thanks the
members of our state Legislature, who
rammed through a reform bill without
even reading it.
Before last summer, the state’s no-fault
auto insurance law allowed people who
had suffered serious injuries in vehicle
accidents to receive 100-percent reim-
bursement for their medical costs. Mich-
igan had some of the highest auto insur-
ance rates in the nation. But that changed
last July, when reforms took effect to
lower car insurance rates for most people.
The legislation also cut deeply into the
profit margins for caregiving companies.
The state slashed reimbursement rates by
45 percent, dialing it back to what care-
givers had received about 30 years ago.
How many businesses can survive
today on what they were making 30
years ago? The simple answer to that
question is: They can’t.
So the people who needed care for
catastrophic injuries have lost that care
- and those who provided that care can’t
afford to operate, so many of those busi-
nesses no longer exist.
It’s bad news if you were one of the
catastrophically injured people who was
promised this level of care for the
remainder of your life. None of those
cases was grandfathered in under the
new reforms. Instead, like herding live-
stock, victims were moved to facilities
where they live in groups and receive a
lower level of care.
It’s true that, to allow for any unfore-
seen needs and adjustments, state legisla-
tors had set aside $25 million to help
those who had been receiving care
through the system before the reforms
had passed. Some industry experts
appropriately called it a Band-Aid – and
it solved nothing. It involves a lengthy
application process and those funds are
capped at $500,000 per calendar year for
each provider, which cannot sustain the
costs of living for people who require
24/7 care.
What drove up the cost of no-fault
insurance in Michigan over the years?
The biggest program was the Legisla-
ture’s creation in 1978 of the Michigan
Catastrophic Claims Association, a non-
profit, unincorporated entity formed to
ensure that permanently-disabled victims
of crashes and their families would be
financially supported for the rest of the
victims’ lives.
But here’s where the wheels came off
the wagon: The state didn’t provide over-
sight of the MCCA in an effort to control
costs, rather than monitoring the amount
that drivers were being charged for auto
insurance.
Prior to reform, the law also limited
the ability of auto insurers to negotiate
prices from health care providers. Plus,
legislators failed to deal with some of the
real issues that drove up the costs – such
as drivers with bad driving records and
out-of-control medical costs and rates
determined based on where drivers live.
That neglect made it nearly impossible
for a number of state residents to even
afford auto insurance.
Michigan drivers have always been
required by law to have a no-fault policy
that includes a Personal Injury Protection
benefit. Drivers had no choice on the
level of that benefit – it was high due to
the provision of unlimited coverage for
catastrophically-injured drivers.
Now, the law allows drivers to choose
their level of PIP protection: no coverage
and maximum limits of $50,000, if also
enrolled in Medicaid, $250,000, and
$500,000. Unlimited coverage is still
available at the higher premiums.
But, for those who choose to opt out of
any PIP coverage or who choose a lower
PIP, major problems will result if tragedy
strikes and they are injured. Allowing
drivers to opt out of any coverage is dan-
gerous because it threatens the financial
stability of the victims and their families
- unless they choose unlimited coverage.
And here’s the ultimate irony in all of
this: Choose unlimited coverage now
and who will provide the care?
The businesses that once existed in
Michigan to provide the care aren’t there.
It’s clear that, in implementing these
reforms, our lawmakers capitulated to
the insurance companies, who played
them like chumps. A May 2019 report by
Michigan Campaign Finance Report
analyzed, over a five-year period, dona-
tions made from auto insurance interest
groups to Michigan lawmakers.
It found that the Michigan Legisla-
ture had received about $2.71 million
from political action committees or
organizations in favor of the auto insur-
ance reform, with multiple members,
such as state Reps. Annette Glenn,
R-Midland, and Lee Chatfield, R-Le-
vering, and state Sens. Jon Bumstead,
R-Newaygo, and Tom Barrett, R-Char-
lotte, receiving more than $100,000.
State Sen. Lana Theis, R-Brighton, who
chairs the Insurance and Banking Com-
mittee that oversees any changes to the
current no-fault legislation, received
nearly $80,000.
So these reforms looked like a slam-
dunk for the governor and her cronies.
Other than those catastrophically
injured and their families, everybody
else is happy: Drivers have lower premi-
ums to pay. Insurance companies are
paying out less in benefits and settle-
ments. And legislators get the votes they
seek.
Just don’t look too deeply.
A few lawmakers are beginning to
realize what they’ve done and they’re
concerned.
State Rep. Phil Green, a Republican
from Millington, recently introduced
new legislation that would make further
changes to the reforms as far as pay
structures and family caretakers.
That proposed bill is currently in the
House Insurance Committee.
State Rep. Julie Calley, a Republican
from Portland, said the reforms have
resulted in unintended consequences and
is asking for a full report on the impact of
the reforms before those $400 checks are
sent out.
What is clear to us is that legislators
didn’t fix the system, they just reduced
the protection and benefits by putting
more of the risk right back on the drivers
and their families.
Under the reforms, yes, people can
now choose.
But what’s the choice? There’s no
care.
It’s nothing but smoke and mirrors.
The Hastings Banner
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That’s snow way to travel –
better keep off the road
Area residents are braced for more snow today
as a winter storm warning remains in effect. This
is part of a major cross-country storm system
that’s unleashing heavy snow, ice and even some
severe thunderstorms on different parts of the
Midwest. In Michigan, total snow accumulations
could add up to as much as 11 inches, when all
is said and done, in parts of south central and
southwestern Michigan. Hazardous travel condi-
tions were expected as temperatures drop and
the rain that had been falling Tuesday transi-
tioned into snow Wednesday. Forecasts indicate
that continuing rounds of snowfall will bury parts
of the Midwest into Friday. OK, that’s enough
about the weather. Scrabble anyone?
Real diehards
Undated Banner clipping, but
definitely winter; possibly late
1970s or early 1980s
It took real diehards to go ice
fishing on a recent weekend.
The rains came and melted
much of the snow, made slush
along the shoreline and poured
several inches of water on the
surface of the ice. However,
quite a few participated in their
favorite sport, including Mr. and
Mrs. R.J. Bates who live at
Leach Lake and enjoy fishing
there. Mrs. Bates had a nice
catch of perch (bottom right)
along with a few dandy bluegills.
Two days after Tracy Baker graduated
from Delton Kellogg High School, she
moved to California.
Her friend Beth Hamilton from Delton
had been visiting her father, who lived
close to Los Angeles, and she invited Baker
to tag along.
It sounded like a short, warm trip – a
chance to take time off before Baker went
to college and became a teacher. She could
see parts of the country she had never seen.
The daughter of a truck and bus driver,
Baker, whose maiden name was Leinaar,
grew up on a 40-acre pig farm. When she
wasn’t helping care for pigs, she was work-
ing in the cornfields or canning beans,
potatoes, tomatoes or cucumbers.
She didn’t know anything other than
farm life. She had never even left the state,
except to go to the Cedar Point amusement
park in Ohio.
Then, after graduating from high school
in 1982, she went to California and that
short vacation stretched from being a few
weeks to 10 years. She liked the 75-degree
weather and the beaches just minutes away.
She also liked experiencing a different kind
of fast-paced lifestyle.
Five weeks into her stay, she turned 18,
had a resume printed, bought a bike and
pedaled around the Los Angeles area sub-
mitting her application everywhere she
could.
Then a place called her back. It was Mat-
tel, the toy company that produced some of
the most iconic toys around the world. They
offered Baker a job in research and devel-
opment, and she took it.
Over the next 10 years, she built a life for
herself near Redondo Beach, just outside of
Los Angeles. She worked long hours, often
8 a.m. to 8 p.m. She rarely had energy for
anything outside of work and never did
fulfill her goal of returning to school or
becoming a teacher.
But that was OK. She designed toys for a
living.
“You’re living the life. You’re in the mid-
dle of toys. Who wouldn’t like that?” she
said. “So, I didn’t really have any extracur-
ricular activities. I just to work and I came
home.”
She held a number of roles in the compa-
ny. At one point, she flipped through maga-
zines and picked out Barbie’s fashion. She
would later serve on a “Shark Tank”-type
board for the company, where people would
pitch their toy ideas. There, she met celeb-
rities like Gene Simmons and Michael
Jackson.
In 1992, Baker decided to move. She had
two kids, Paul and Brian, who were 1?
years and 6 months old at the time. And she
didn’t want them to grow up in the whirl-
wind of Los Angeles.
“It’s fun, but they grow way too fast,”
she said. “They see way too much. So, we
came back here. Slow it down, let them
grow up and be kids.”
She returned to West Michigan, bought a
rental home in Cloverdale and almost
instantly missed the beaches, the weather
and the vibe of California.
“It was slow,” she remembered about
returning to Barry County. “It was like,
‘What I do now?’ ”
It took a couple of years to adjust, she
said.
She worked various jobs, including
Bradford White Corp. in Middleville, where
she met her husband of 25 years, Tim. A
childhood friend eventually encouraged her
to try selling real estate. Now, 22 years
later, she’s the owner and a broker with
At-Home real estate in Hastings.
“There are no two days alike,” she said
of the profession.
Since returning to Barry County, she has
found herself slowly getting integrated into
the community. It started with Rutland
Charter Township, where she was asked
serve on the joint planning commission and
zoning boards. She agreed, and the list
expanded after she moved to the city of
Hastings in 2015. Now, she is part of the
downtown business team, the Downtown
Development Authority board and the zon-
ing board of appeals. She also has coordi-
nated the Jingle & Mingle December cele-
bration.
Sometimes she still misses California,
though. Sitting in her drafty office on State
Street, she said she wasn’t built for the cold.
She’s bundled up in multiple layers with a
heater aimed at her feet and a radiator rus-
tling a few feet away
She misses the toy industry, too.
“I love that,” she said. “I’d go back there
in a heartbeat.”
But moving away also gave her a new
respect for Barry County.
“You didn’t realize what you had until
you left,” Baker said. “And then you came
back and you go, ‘This is pretty good. This
is a good life.’ ”
For her active role in the community,
Tracy Baker is this week’s Bright Light:
First job: Mattel Toys.
Person I am glad to have met: Tim
Baker.
Favorite season and why: Summer. It’s
hot.
Favorite vacation destination: South-
ern Caribbean.
Something most people don’t know
about me: I have a soft side for animals.
I worked for 10 years with the Kalama-
zoo Nature Center.
Favorite board game: Monopoly.
What the world needs now is: Love.
When I was kid, I wanted to be: A
teacher.
Each week, the Banner profiles a person
who makes the community shine. Do you
know someone who should be featured
because of volunteer work, fun-loving per-
sonality, for the stories he or she has to tell,
or for any other reason? Send information
to Newsroom, Hastings Banner, 1351 N.
M-43 Highway, Hastings, MI 49058; or
email [email protected].
Tracy Baker
Fred Jacobs, CEO
J-Ad Graphics, Inc.