The Samaritan Ministries board of directors was privileged to hold their summer meeting on the shores of Lake Superior, in the heart of copper country on the Keweenaw peninsula in Northern Michigan. There Samaritan members Melvin and Carol Jones direct Gitche Gumee Bible camp, that offers camp experiences for children and families as well as seniors. They also work with churches and other organizations for special events, all for very reasonable prices. Here is a pdf of the member spotlight on Melvin and Carol from a few years ago: Melvin and Carol Jones.pdf
Posts Tagged ‘samaritan ministries’
Peoria paper profiles Samaritan
Monday, June 28th, 2010The Peoria Journal Star’s Jenni Davis profiled Samaritan Ministries in the Sunday, June 28, issue. She quotes Samaritan VP James Lansberry extensively as well as member Jason Morris and shares a great deal of info about us. SMI members also defend the ministry against negative statements made in the comments section by site users.
Read the article here.
Accountability and oversight at Samaritan
Thursday, June 24th, 2010We cannot respond to every blog that purports to provide useful information to the readers about health care sharing ministries, but occasionally one comes along that is so careless in gathering facts and presenting accurate information that we think it wise to respond.
Today a blog post came to our attention that contained the following:
“There is no accountability, no oversight, and the people who participate have no protection.” …
State authorities have been slow to take action, critics say, because of the plans’ religious affiliations — and the scarcity of subscriber complaints. And since it’s not an insurance company, it isn’t governed by your state’s insurance laws. If you have a beef over a claim denied, where do you go? Perhaps appeal to a higher authority.
In addition to several confusing and misleading statements in the article, both the quote above from the Maine insurance superintendent and the closing statement in the article are wrong.
At Samaritan Ministries, we have an appeals process. If members believe that the staff here is misapplying the guidelines, they can appeal to a panel of 13 randomly chosen members. Those are members who could face the same problem as the member making the appeal, and the decision of that panel is binding on the ministry. The member gets a chance to make the appeal to other members just like him, and the ministry binds itself to their decision.
What insurance company would ever let you ask 13 randomly chosen policy holders what they should do about your claim? But at Samaritan our focus is ministry. And we are a member-led organization. Our goal is to help as many people as we can, not to maximize profits.
Being member led goes beyond the 13 randomly chosen member panels. We elect a Board of Directors who serve without pay, and who are all members of the ministry. Two of our three Board members have been members of Samaritan for more than 12 years each, and have seen the ministry grow from a hundred or so families to the 14,800+ families we have today.
Insurance companies have consumer protections in the state regulatory system. But our members get to regulate their own ministry, which, if you ask them, is a better and more faithful way of doing things.
Schillinger podcast now online
Wednesday, June 9th, 2010Samaritan, other HCSMs featured in Houston Chronicle
Tuesday, April 13th, 2010Samaritan Ministries and other health care sharing ministries were featured in a Houston Chronicle story by Moises Mendoza that ran April 9. Quoted were Joel Noble, who is part of Samaritan’s public policy department, and member Mark McLeod of Houston.
“Who is going to take care of you — a company or people? I’d rather put my faith in people who believe in God,” McLeod explained.
The story is part of increasing awareness of alternative ways to pay health care bills. Samaritan is expected to be discussed in a story to appear this week on MSNBC.com, and a caller to Rush Limbaugh’s show last week explained the health care sharing ministry concept to the radio host, who was unfamiliar with the concept.
Please stay in prayer that this increased exposure will be a blessing for the operation of these ministries and for our members.
Health care pain
Wednesday, March 24th, 2010Members of Samaritan Ministries and other health care sharing organizations are exempt from the individual mandate included in the new health care law, but we’ll be sharing some of the pain of increased taxes with all other Americans as the plan phases in. John Goodman details how it will feel in a post on his Health Policy Blog:
2010
- 10% tax on tanning salons
2011
- Tax on brand name drugs ($2.5 billion).
- Medicare cut $1 billion ($22 per senior/disabled)
- Medicare Advantage cut $2 billion ($195 per senior)
- Increase in tax on non-medical Health Savings Account withdrawals from 15% to 20%
- Over-the-counter drugs become taxable ($400 million)
2012
- Tax on brand name drugs increased to $3 billion.
- Medicare cut $5 billion ($112 per senior)
- Medicare Advantage cut $6 billion ($585 per senior)
- Tax on Over-the-counter drugs ($600 million)
2013
- Taxes on wage income rises from 1.45 to 2.35% (for singles earning more than $200,000 a year (families above $250,000).
- New tax on unearned investment income 3.8% (for singles earning more than $200,000 a year (families above $250,000).
- New taxes on wheelchairs and other medical devices (2.9%)
- Flexible Spending Account contributions limited to $2500 annually
- Floor for deductible medical expenses increased from 7.5% of AGI to 10%
- Medicare cut $9 billion ($201 per senior)
- Medicare Advantage cut $9 billion ($877 per senior)
- Tax on Over-the-counter drugs ($600 million)
2014
- Individual Mandate: fine: $95
- Employer Mandate: fine: $2,000 per-worker
- Medicare cut $13 billion ($290 per senior)
- Medicare Advantage cut $13 billion ($1,267 per senior)
- Tax on Over-the-counter drugs ($600 million)
- Tax on health insurers ($6.1 billion)
Samaritan Ministries responds
Monday, March 22nd, 2010James Lansberry, vice president of Samaritan Ministries and president of the Alliance of Health Care Sharing Ministries, will be interviewed on several programs today:
- G. Gordon Liddy Show, noon ET, http://www.radioamerica.org/
- Talk Radio News Service, http://talkradionews.com/
- American Freedom Report, http://americafreedomreport.com/home/ 1:08 PM ET.
- KFAX AM-1100, San Francisco, 11 AM PT http://www.kfax.com/
- WORD-FM, 101.5, Pittsburgh, 5:30 PM ET http://www.wordfm.com/
That’s just what he has scheduled so far.
Samaritan will post a press release later today responding to yesterday’s congressional action.
Follow-up to NPR story
Wednesday, March 17th, 2010Columnist Britt Combs of the McDowell News in North Carolina writes a follow-up to the NPR story that aired last week.
Some highlights:
Here’s the really nifty thing: The money does not pass through the groups’ administrative hands. It goes directly from member to member.
(snip)
No force, no threats, no violence or coercion. And they save an enormous amount of money in the process. As it turns out (Surprise!), it’s cheaper and easier to do it yourself.
(snip)
Meanwhile Samaritans members are solving their own problems. James Lansberry, a spokesman for the group, said he is very concerned about Washington attempts to force everyone to buy into the government’s insurance scheme. He said his members are paying their own medical bills without asking for insurance or government help and should not be punished for it.
Samaritan to be featured on NPR Friday 3/12
Thursday, March 11th, 2010Samaritan Ministries will be profiled on “Morning Edition” by NPR reporter Jeff Brady in a report to air at 6:35 AM ET, 5:35 AM CT on Friday, March 12. Airtimes of the report may vary according to station.
If you miss the report, though, it’ll be archived at www.npr.org.
Try to listen in!





