[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 44 (Monday, March 22, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1783-S1784]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HEALTH CARE
Mr. REID. Mr. President, the House of Representatives deserves the
appreciation of the entire Nation for what it did last night. A clear
majority of Congressmen and Congresswomen voted in favor of the bill
that a supermajority of Senators passed on Christmas Eve a few months
ago. Tomorrow the Senate will begin to put the final touches on this
enormous effort.
[[Page S1784]]
Last night's vote took both courage and common sense. Their votes
were momentous. They were historic. They were right.
After a century of working and waiting, going back to the days of
Theodore Roosevelt, real reform will become the law of the land, not in
a matter of years or months or weeks but in a matter of hours. In the
very near future, various parts of this bill will take effect and
improve the life of millions. Soon insurance companies will no longer
be able to refuse to cover children with preexisting conditions. They
will no longer be able to drop your coverage just because you get sick.
Small businesses that today cannot afford to cover their employees
will soon get tax credits to help them right that wrong. Tens of
thousands of small businesses will benefit in Nevada alone--24,000 to
be exact.
Reform means that if you have a preexisting condition and no health
insurance, you soon will be able to finally afford the care you need to
get and stay healthy.
If you are stuck in the prescription drug doughnut hole, you will
soon get a check to help pay for your medicine. That will help seniors
stay healthy while we completely close that loophole, once and for all,
for nearly 60,000 Nevada seniors and millions more across the country.
Also, starting this year, no insurance company will be able to impose
a lifetime limit on your benefits.
Those changes are just a tip of the iceberg. They are only some of
the benefits that will kick in almost immediately--some in 3 months,
some in 6 months but none longer than what I am going to talk about
today--just a fraction of what this bill will do over the long term for
the health of our Nation, our economy, and, most importantly, our
citizens.
When all is said and done, more than 600,000 Nevadans will be able to
access affordable coverage. More than 300,000 Nevadans will get tax
credits to help them buy health coverage from the private market.
Another 300,000 seniors in the State of Nevada will get free preventive
annual services, such as physicals and checkups.
Nevadans who buy insurance on their own will also save money. Because
of this bill, their premiums will go down as much as 20 percent, which
means Nevada families can save more than $2,000 a year.
This bill will also save our country money and lots of it. Over the
next 10 years, it will slash our deficit by $143 billion; in the next
10 years, a $1.3 trillion deficit reduction.
Many Senators deserve credit for getting us this far, and many will
help us cross the finish line this week.
I thank especially Chairman Baucus, who oversaw the financial aspect
of this bill that will bring down health care costs and vastly reduce
our deficit; Chairman Dodd, who oversaw the parts of reform that will
ensure more healthy Americans, and they did that in the HELP Committee.
Not only will it allow people to stay healthy, it will allow them to
stop being sick in the first place. Our friend, Ted Kennedy, must
surely be proud of this work. Chairman Harkin, who has led the HELP
Committee down the home stretch, deserves our thanks for the work he
has done to make college more affordable. Chairman Conrad, who is head
of the Budget Committee, will continue to guide us through the budget
reconciliation process--a fiscally responsible final piece that will
further reduce the deficit, ensure more Americans can afford more
health insurance, and fully close the doughnut hole.
I know the other side watched the House vote last night, as we did.
As they did, I hope they finally learned that a strategy of delay,
myths, and fear might slow progress, but it cannot stop it. I hope this
week, when we take up the final revisions of what will soon be the long
overdue law, our Republican friends will finally act in the interests
of their constituents and not just in the interests of the insurance
industry or their political party.
The other side has made it clear they will try to stop progress based
on a technicality. But without substance, they are powerless. What this
budget process is all about is simply making a good law that we passed
on Christmas Eve even better.
The other side is still talking about the number of pages in the
bill, but we will not stop talking about the number of lives it will
save.
____________________