Alexander: Obamacare Delivers Unwelcome Christmas Present, Unhappy New Year for Many Tennesseans
| Federal Information & News Dispatch, Inc. |
"The fact that at least 82,000 Tennesseans will begin to lose their individual health insurance policies starting
The senator discussed how Obamacare's mandates have outlawed many insurance plans - despite the president's promise that "If you like your health insurance, you can keep it" - will increase costs for individuals and businesses and is even burdening school districts.
Alexander's remarks as prepared are below:
For the last couple months, we've heard countless stories from constituents who are losing the health plans they purchased on the individual market.
According to
By now we all know what the president said wasn't true. According to news reports collected by my staff, at least 5 million Americans, including 82,000 Tennesseans, will lose their individual plans starting
My constituent Emily from Middle Tennessee told me in a recent letter: "I cannot keep my current plan because it does not meet the standards of coverage. This alone is a travesty. CoverTN has been a lifeline ....With the discontinuation of CoverTN, I am being forced to purchase a plan though the Exchange...My insurance premiums alone will increase a staggering 410 percent. My out-of-pocket expense will increase by more than
Unfortunately, Emily is not the only one experiencing "rate shock." Millions of Americans are losing their insurance plans and then being forced to buy new plans with higher premiums, deductibles, and co-insurance.
According to data from the
* In 2013, a 27-year-old man in
* In 2013, a 27-year-old woman in
* In Nashville today, a 27-year old woman can choose from 30 insurance plans that cost less than the administration says insurance plans on the exchanges will cost, even with the new tax subsidy.
* In Nashville, 105 insurance plans offered today will not be available in the exchange.
According to
That is 42 percent more than the average deductible of
And according to Deloitte, that is 348 percent more than the
According to
Americans had to wait until the exchanges opened on
With such dramatic hikes in premiums and out-of-pocket expenses, it's no wonder Americans are outraged.
Thanksgiving, we learned that the Obama administration is delaying open enrollment for 2015 until after the mid-term elections in November.
The only American consumers this change will help are Democratic politicians who voted for Obamacare, because it delays disclosure of some of the law's most insidious effects until after the election.
Senators Barrasso, Enzi, and I today introduced a bill called the "Premium Disclosure Act" to change the open enrollment date back to October and to provide Americans notice of their premiums and cost-sharing requirements 30 days in advance so that they can plan for the future knowing their health care costs for the next year.
This is a common-sense proposal that I hope my colleagues across the aisle will join me in passing.
As my colleague Senator Barrasso likes to say, what we now know about Obamacare is just the tip of the iceberg.
Much of the media attention has focused upon the disastrous rollout of the website and the19 million Americans in the individual market. But just below the tip of the iceberg are nearly 160 million Americans who the
Think about issues like restrictive grandfathered plan rules, limits on the number of hours employees can work and be considered part-time, the mandate that employers provide government-approved insurance or pay a fine, and the millions of dollars in new taxes on health plans. All of these issues will have an impact on employer-sponsored health insurance in both the public and private sectors.
We're already starting to see the effects of the law and it hasn't even gone fully into effect. Employers such as
The CEO of
In case you think these are isolated examples, the
The U.S. Chamber of commerce also has a membership survey which says 74 percent of businesses are reporting that the health care law makes it harder for their firms to hire new workers.
Many of these businesses self-insure, meaning they design and pay directly for the health plans they offer to their employees.
According to the
Self-insurance is a method of providing health insurance that has worked well since its inception in 1974 and should be preserved.
Last month, Senators Rubio, Risch, McConnell and I introduced a bill to ensure the Obama administration does not change the rules that allow companies to insure themselves against a medical claim that could bankrupt them.
Any effort by the Obama administration to change the rules on companies that self-insure will break the president's promise to millions more hardworking Americans. It won't matter if they like their employer's health care plans; many won't be able to keep them.
It's not just the private sector facing fiscal challenges because of Obamacare. Our nation's schools, colleges, and universities are also being hit hard.
There's no shortage of examples in
*
*
*
* At least eight other
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
The impact of Obamacare on education is by no means limited to
Who pays the price for this? Our children. Cash-strapped schools simply do not have the resources to absorb these costs, so they're forced to make difficult choices that will impact our nation's education system.
For these reasons - broken promises, higher costs, fewer choices - Obamacare was an historic mistake. It expanded a health care delivery system we already knew cost too much, and left Americans with fewer choices.
Now, what would we do differently, as Republicans, if we could elect a Republican
Here are some of the steps we would take to transform health care so Americans could afford it:
1. Make
2. Give Governors more flexibility with their state
3. Strengthen innovative workplace wellness programs that empower employees with more incentives to make healthy lifestyle choices.
4. Let small businesses pool their resources and offer lower cost insurance plans for their employees.
5. Provide families the opportunity to purchase insurance across state lines, creating greater competition between insurance companies and lowering premiums for everyone.
6. Expand access to Health Savings Accounts and catastrophic health insurance plans, giving people more affordable insurance options that fit their lifestyles.
7. Incentivize the growth of private health insurance exchanges to give consumers expanded health insurance choices and allow them to keep insurance between jobs.
8. Make it easier for patients to compare prices and quality of doctors and medical services.
9. Incentivize states to reform junk lawsuits that drive up health care costs for everyone and are driving medical professionals out of their profession.
When
That's what Republicans would like to do.
But unfortunately, at least 82,000 Tennesseans are losing their health policies this year, and that's an unwelcome Christmas present. Even more unfortunately, an Unhappy New Year is coming in which hundreds of thousands of Tennesseans could lose the employer-sponsored policies they have and like when Obamacare's burdensome mandates on employers kick in.
We're ready to go in a different direction. We want to create a way for Americans to have more choices, more competition, and insurance they can purchase at a lower cost.
Read this original document at: http://www.help.senate.gov/newsroom/press/release/?id=6f2194d9-55ed-4edd-baf5-4da62c51fde3&groups=Ranking
| Copyright: | (c) 2010 Federal Information & News Dispatch, Inc. |
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