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Dirigo
Health leader selected
Saturday, January 10, 2004
By FRANCIS X. QUINN, Associated Press
Dirigo Health, Maine's fledgling universal health-care
program, will be run by a Cape Elizabeth businessman
who will earn $1.
Gov. John Baldacci and Dr. Robert McAfee, the chairman
of Dirigo Health's board of directors, announced Friday
that Thomas Dunne will be the agency's first executive
director.
Dunne, formerly with the Accenture management consulting
firm, has been working with the Governor's Office
of Health Policy and Finance for several months, officials
said.
"Thomas Dunne brings a wealth of experience
and leadership to Dirigo and will guide this agency
through implementation of the landmark legislation
passed last year," Baldacci said in a prepared
statement.
"I am pleased to have Mr. Dunne's expertise
to head this important effort to bring affordable,
quality health care to every man, woman and child
in Maine," the governor said.
Dunne's salary was not mentioned in the Baldacci
administration's announcement statement, but the nominal
sum he is to receive was confirmed by top Baldacci
health policy aide Trish Riley.
"He came here as a volunteer," Riley said.
The Dirigo Health program enacted by the Legislature
last year is designed to expand access to affordable
insurance coverage by 2009 to all Mainers who need
it.
The new law also seeks to lower health-care costs
through voluntary pricing caps.
Dirigo enrollees who are not eligible for Medicaid
will pay for coverage under the plan. Group policies
are to be made available to businesses and municipalities
with 50 or fewer employees and to the self-employed.
The law envisions 3 percent caps on hospital operating
margins and 3.5 percent on annual cost increases.
McAfee said the Dirigo board had conducted "an
extensive national search" and was confident
"we have found the perfect person for the job
in Tom Dunne."
Officials said a director of sales and marketing
for the new health program - Karynlee Harrington of
Gray - has also been hired.
Harrington formerly worked as vice president of sales
and customer support for Maine and New Hampshire at
CIGNA, officials said.
"Tom Dunne and Karynlee Harrington bring extraordinary
business background and experience that will help
us assure a solid, affordable, quality health plan
at a price Maine businesses can afford," said
Riley, who is the director of the Governor's Office
of Health Policy and Finance.
The Dirigo Health program is scheduled to start in
the middle of this year.
"The challenge of implementing Dirigo Health
in July is significant, but the board is confident
in its capacity to do so with the leadership of Tom
Dunne and the team he is already beginning to pull
together," McAfee said. "We look forward
to great success."
The Dirigo Health board will set policy guidelines
for the implementation and operation of the new health-care
system. Besides hiring an executive director, it will
establish a benefits package to be offered by participating
carriers.
Additionally, the board will establish an alternative
plan for providing insurance in the event that private
carriers are unavailable. The board will also set
a subsidy scale for low-income enrollees.
Baldacci has likened the health-care initiative to
Maine's effort to make workers' compensation insurance
more affordable, saying, "It's going into a field
and trying to create a free market competition."
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