OKLAHOMA CITY — A state lawmaker who has blocked legislation that would require health insurers to cover a variety of medical procedures and conditions has accepted thousands of dollars in donations from individuals or political action committees with ties to the insurance industry, records show.
Rep. Ron Peterson, chairman of the House Economic Development and Financial Services Committee, has received a total of $64,600 in election campaign contributions since Jan. 1, 2007, according to records filed with the Oklahoma Ethics Commission. Of the total, $20,075 came from people or PACs with ties to the insurance industry.
Peterson, R-Broken Arrow, is the former owner of a property and casualty insurance agency and his wife is a part-time independent insurance agent. Peterson said the campaign contributions and his close ties to the industry have not influenced his position on insurance mandate legislation.
“They can say I’m the devil and I’ve been bought off. It’s absolutely not true,” Peterson said. Peterson said he opposes insurance mandates and believes they drive up the cost of health insurance, making it unaffordable for many Oklahomans.
He said his opinion is based on studies performed by health insurers who have assessed the cost of mandates on their policies.
“When you pass a mandate, it costs money. I know what I know,” he said. “Once you believe the Earth is round, it’s hard to go back. I cannot say the world is flat anymore.”
Peterson has been criticized by supporters of mandate bills that received bipartisan support in the Senate but died in Peterson’s committee.
One of the measures would require health insurers to cover behavioral and other treatments for autistic children. This sort of coverage is provided in a number of other states, including Texas.
After dying in Peterson’s committee, it was resurrected in the Senate and sent back to the House, where supporters said it would pass if given a hearing on the House floor.
But House Speaker Chris Benge has said he does not plan to schedule a vote on the legislation, effectively killing it.
Wayne Rohde of Edmond, whose 10-year-old son, Nick Rohde, suffers from autism, said he believes Peterson’s close ties to the industry influenced his judgment on the bill.
“That’s what he was doing for a living,” Rohde said.
Rohde said no insurance mandate legislation has been seriously considered in the House since Peterson has chaired the committee, the clearinghouse for all insurance-related measures.
“I don’t have a problem with people seeking political contributions. The problem I have is when it blurs the vision of these legislators,” Rohde said. “Don’t let it blur your leadership and what you were sent to do by the voters. He’s not responding to voters any more.”
Rohde said that not requiring health insurers to cover the diagnosis and treatment of autistic children will eventually place the burden of caring for them on taxpayers.
“They’re the ones who are going to pick up the bill and it’s going to be huge,” he said. “We are going to bankrupt this state if we don’t allow health care to be taken care of in the private sector.”
Peterson rejected allegations that he is “the industry’s boy.”
“I understand that’s what they’re saying,” he said. “I think that’s a false argument.”
Campaign records show that since January 2007, Peterson raised the most money from insurance-related contributors during the first three months of 2008, a period that included the start of the 2008 Oklahoma Legislature.
He received $6,000 from political action committees linked to the industry, along with another $2,325 from lobbyists or individuals directly tied to the insurance industry.
Insurance-linked PACs that contributed to Peterson’s election campaign fund, according to campaign finance records, include the Hartford Advocates Fund, a PAC linked to The Hartford Financial Services Group, one of the nation’s largest investment and insurance companies, which donated $1,000.
Other donations came from the Oklahoma Association of Insurance Agents, $500; Property Casualty Insurers PAC, $1,000; Farmers Employee & Agent PAC, $1,000; and Blue Cross Employees PAC, $1,500.
Local news
Conflict of interest?
Lawmaker who blocked insurance mandate bills had many donors tied to insurance industry
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