Well, there is a solution that might be possible, but not something my husband wants. He really liked working for this company and they were doing great, until the recession finally got them in a bind, and at age 65 with a year to go to full retirement, he was hoping to finish out his career with them. However, he is well liked and respected in the floor covering community in Portland and if he extended feelers, he might be asked to join another company. However, they are all feeling the pinch, and as much as these other companies would like to have him, there might not be a job opening at this time. We'll have to talk about that. With our pre-exisiting conditions, not having continuing coverage scares me to death. We won't ever get insurance. I don't know how that works once I'm on medicare and have to get a supplemental insurance. Would they deny me, too?
I was talking to Lorenzo, who used to come on here, and he lives in Ireland. I told him about this and he was shocked about the pre-existing conditions problem. He said it was against the law in Ireland to do that. I told him that was one of the things President Obama is working on. I also said I'd probably be 110 before all of this insurance hoopla is settled by Congress, if it ever is.
Really, I'm just teasing about Uruguay. Sounds like a lovely place to visit, but I would be scared to death to move so far from home. With my luck, quiet, peaceful Uruguay would, at that moment, decide to have a major military upheaval. I'd be more inclined to go north to Canada, if it ever came to that. Which I'm sure it won't. Of course if we decide we have to move to Canada, that would be when they would change their policy and not allow all of these uninsured Americans into their country to further burden their health care system, thereby making native Canadians wait longer for their care. We'd be run out of town on a rail.
You know how wild and crazy those Canadians are!!
Washington state has some kind of insurance thing that I was looking at yesterday. You have to show them you've been denied and they might have some kind of emergency coverage available. It's a thought.
Never thought we'd be a part of the current political situation. And if "they" are going to reform our health care mess, somebody better hurry, because there are a lot of folks in trouble.
Sue in Vancouver, USA (currently!)