[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 71 (Wednesday, May 12, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3633-S3634]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FEHBP DEPENDENT COVERAGE EXTENSION ACT
Mr. CARDIN. Mr. President, I rise today to discuss the Federal
Employees Health Benefits Program Dependent Coverage Extension Act.
This bill will allow Federal employees to benefit immediately from an
important provision of the new health care law.
FEHBP is the largest employer-sponsored group health insurance
program in the world, covering more than 8 million Federal employees,
retirees, former employees, and their dependents. Currently, FEHBP
enrollees with family coverage can keep unmarried, dependent children
on their health insurance policies until age 22.
Earlier this year, Congress passed the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act, which moves us to universal health coverage and
lowers health care costs for our Nation and for families. One of the
first effective provisions of the legislation requires health plans to
allow parents to keep children on their health insurance policies until
their 26th birthday. Previously, most plans terminated dependent
children's coverage once they tunred 22. While the insurance exchanges
created by the new law will enable millions more Americans to access
affordable coverage, they will not be operational until 2014. Enabling
children of insured parents to stay on their policies until age 26 is
an immediate benefit that will begin now to improve our health care
system by increasing the number of people with affordable coverage
right away.
This provision of the law will take effect on the first day of the
new plan year after September 23, 2010. For most plans, that means
January 1, 2011. But I am pleased to report that many insurance
companies have chosen to implement this provision earlier than required
by law.
But unless Congress acts, Federal employees with family coverage will
have to wait until next year for this benefit to kick in. This is
because FEHBP law prevents the Office of Personnel Management Director
John Berry from moving up the effective date. Two sections of the law
hinder OPM from taking action now. According to OPM, ``The first
section allows OPM to contract with plans to provide health services to
employees and their families. The second defines family members to
include `an unmarried dependent child under age 22.' Unfortunately,
this does now allow flexibility for FEHB plans to provide coverage to
other adult children until the provision in the Affordable Care Act
becomes effective.'' Director Berry has stated that he would like to
begin expanding coverage for enrollees' adult children now, and that he
does not want to wait until next January to offer this cost-saving
benefit.
The bill we are introducing today would conform FEHBP law with PPACA
and ensure that all children of Federal employees can remain on their
parents' health insurance policies until their 26th birthday and give
OPM the authority to implement the change immediately.
Graduation season is upon us, and many college seniors are preparing
for new challenges, including moving out on their own, starting
graduate studies, finding a job, and other life transitions. They
should not have to endure the additional stress that comes from
suddenly losing their health insurance coverage. Young adults just
starting their careers often lack access to affordable employer-based
health insurance and must rely on the prohibitively expensive
individual market for coverage. That is why so many private insurers
have stepped up to the plate. Permitting Federal employees to benefit
from the new law now will ease young adults' transition from college to
the workforce and reduce their out-of-pocket expenses.
The independent Congressional Budget Office has issued a preliminary
analysis indicating that this legislation has no cost associated with
it. So it will save families money, get more young adults insured, and
bring greater efficiencies to our health care sooner, all at no cost to
the Federal budget.
[[Page S3634]]
I thank my colleagues for joining me in this bipartisan effort:
Senators Collins, Akaka, Rockefeller, Mikulski, Bingaman, Johnson,
Kaufman, Kerry, Landrieu, Stabenow, and Warner. This is the companion
bill to H.R. 5200, introduced by my colleague from Maryland, Chris Van
Hollen, and it has been endorsed by the National Active and Retired
Federal Employees Association, NARFE, the National Federation of
Federal Employees, NFFE, the American Federation of Government
Employees, AFGE, and the National Treasury Employees Union, NTEU. I
urge my colleagues to support this important legislation and to pass it
without delay, so that children of Federal employees can have the same
coverage option as children of other employees in the private sector.
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