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rox63
Op-ed by Senator Kerry, informing us about a very bad GOP-sponsored proposal on health care.

http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews...on/14552515.htm

QUOTE
Posted on Thu, May. 11, 2006 

GOP proposal strips state mandates on affordable health care

By John Kerry

Imagine telling women in 49 states that their insurance no longer has to cover mammogram screenings for breast cancer. Or taking away coverage of diabetes supplies from 5.7 million Americans living with the disease. Or dropping mental health parity protections in 39 states.

That's exactly what could happen if Republican leaders in Congress get their way. And that's just the risk for the Americans lucky enough to have health care coverage. For those Americans without coverage, the message is even worse.

There are 46 million Americans living without health insurance, and every day 4,000 more Americans fall into the ranks of the uninsured. With the costs for providing health care to employees skyrocketing, every day we hear stories of employees being laid off, benefits being reduced and other painful cutbacks. With these soaring costs, the number of small businesses offering their employees health care has dropped to less than 60 percent.

Congress can and must act to make affordable health care accessible to small businesses and all Americans, and we have a real opportunity to cross partisan lines and get the job done. But to do so, we have to meet our responsibility to protect consumers and not undermine hard-fought state protections already in effect.

Under the guise of helping small businesses, there's a movement in Congress to pass legislation that would ultimately strip away important state mandates that ensure affordable access for our most vulnerable citizens. They've taken doomed Association Health Plans and renamed them Small Business Health Plans.

No one should be fooled by this wolf in sheep's clothing; striking down decades of consumer-advocacy protections at the state level will prove to be a boon for the insurance industry, not small businesses and not the American people.

The fact that 49 states have already passed regulations on which health care benefits must be covered tells us something. They recognize that without these state-mandated benefits, insurance companies will have incentives to cherry-pick the youngest and healthiest workers to keep their costs down. Those most in need of health insurance will be left on their own with sky-high premiums.

It's for this reason that 39 state attorneys general have come out against the Republican plan. "Allowing health insurers to abandon mandated benefits . . . will result in an increasingly ill population and higher health care costs as the health care system treats a growing number of consumers in crisis," they wrote in a letter to federal lawmakers.

In 2004, I argued that every American should have access to the same high-quality health care enjoyed by members of Congress. We can do that by providing small employers with the same benefit plans and premiums available to members of Congress and 8 million federal employees while still protecting every state mandate on the books. This would allow small businesses to get lower rates using the powerful negotiating clout of the federal government.

A real start for helping small businesses with the cost of health care premiums is to give those with fewer than 50 employees a refundable tax credit. And we should set reasonable rules on what insurers can charge so they can't price-out our most vulnerable citizens.

Affordable health care should be a right for all Americans, not a privilege for the elected and the connected. But in our eagerness to fix the problem, we cannot let America's hard-working entrepreneurs, our small-business owners, be used as a political pawn to move legislation that will put health care beyond the reach of the very people who need it most. It is time for Congress to address this problem with meaningful solutions, not empty sound bites. It is time to pass true small-business health reform.


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JOHN KERRY of Massachusetts is the ranking Democrat on the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship. He wrote this article for Knight Ridder. 
EvelyninTexas
Grrr. This really strikes close to home for me. My diabetic supplies, test strips, needles, and insulin (which isn't covered as a prescription under many plans) would cost me over $300 bucks a month, if I had to pay for them outright. As it is, I pay about $800 to cover myself and two college age kids, plus about $150 a month in co-pays, including my prescription costs. To add another $275 or so (the difference in co-pays for the supplies) would just about wreck me. I once asked my doctor how "poor" people or the elderly afforded the necessary supplies to take care of their diabetes. Teary eyed, he told me they don't. They cut every corner they can, ultimately ending up in the hospital, with exorbitant bills, serious complications (dialysis, blindness, amputations), which, of course, we all pay for in increased health care costs.

We need to send Kerry's letter out everywhere we can. Between this and the medicare fiasco, we are on a catastrophic course.
rox63
I agree. My Mom is a low-income senior, and her diabetic testing supplies are heavily subsidized. I have a friend struggling with serious mental illness, and she is getting her psych care through a state program. Everyone knows someone that would be affected by this. In fact, this is big enough that I considered posting it in the cafe. But I wasn't sure if I should, since it is specific to health care. Feel free to post it there yourself, if you'd like.
lenal
Sen Michael Enzi of Wy is the main sponsor of this bill and it is a huge Trojan horse hiding inside an elephant.

The usual deception by the R's is highly refined in this masquerade.It conceals under the guise of helping small businesses, an elimination of many programs that the sickest and poorest in our nation are in dire need of in order to live.

There have been ploys to limit and deny amendments proposed by Sen. Snow with Sen.Byrd, In fact right now on the senate floor, Sen. Byrd is speaking to this. (now finished after I previewed this)

I think there was a thread here asking that we contact our congresspersons to oppose this bill. I did so.The bill is S1955.

There is nothing to stop small businesses to form groups and negotiate with insurance carriers for discounted rates for health care contracts. In fact, if my memory is correct, when we had a business we belonged to a couple of organizations that offered just such a possiblity. MANA and NFIB.

lenal
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