[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 53 (Tuesday, April 12, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Page S2367]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FREE CHOICE VOUCHERS
Mr. WYDEN. Madam President, in one cruel swoop late last week, more
than 300,000 Americans lost the opportunity to buy affordable health
insurance for years to come. Specifically, I am talking about the
removal behind closed doors by budget negotiators of the free choice
voucher provision that would have been a lifeline to hundreds of
thousands of low-income Americans.
One could say: Senator Wyden, everybody has to give a little during
tough times. Why is this different?
The difference is that hundreds of thousands of Americans without
health care options, in a process that doesn't even have any direct
cost to the Federal budget, are being asked to give up a guarantee of
coverage just a year after passage of the Affordable Care Act. They are
going to be forced to make a Hobson's choice between unaffordable
insurance and going without health care, directly contradicting the
theoretical underpinnings of the Affordable Care Act. Under that
provision, those whose income falls below 400 percent of the poverty
line and whose employer-sponsored health insurance premiums are between
8 and just under 10 percent would be exempt from having to purchase
health coverage.
Unfortunately, now that they do not have access to the exchanges,
they will also not qualify for government assistance to insurance. The
provision leaves hundreds of thousands of Americans who need health
care as a lifeline out in the cold.
With free choice, however, folks who fell into this hole and couldn't
afford the plan they were offered at work could use their employer's
contribution. They could have gotten a voucher to choose a more
appropriate affordable plan in the exchange. The amount of the voucher
would be set at the same percentage that employers pay today: 70
percent of the cost of a typical plan. The amount would be fixed,
giving employers certainty in the cost of doing business. For these
families, it could mean the difference between being able to buy a
health plan they could afford or going without coverage. If they found
a plan in the exchange that's cheaper that was cheaper than the voucher
amount, but gave them everything they needed, they could have pocketed
the difference in cost. This gives that family an incentive to shop for
lower cost coverage and helps hold down everyone's health care costs.
This kind of concept is not only good for the employee, it is good
for our businesses, particularly the small businesses that so strongly
back this provision. When the impact of free choice was proposed during
the health reform debate, the Congressional Budget Office and the Joint
Committee on Taxation estimated that more than 300,000 families could
benefit from this new approach to choice and competition. That was
then.
Since passage of the health care reform law, the need for free choice
vouchers is greater than ever. The Kaiser Family Foundation, in their
recent analysis, found that employers, even since the law, are shifting
more of the health care cost on to the backs of the workers. In that
analysis, The Kaiser Family Foundation reported that the typical
increase for family coverage went up three percent on average last
year, but the cost for the typical worker went up 14 percent. The
employer was paying virtually none of that increase. The worker was
eating almost all of it because costs were being shifted from employers
on to the backs of the workers. So if anything, even more people would
likely need free choice vouchers, and would have been eligible to use
them, than was originally envisioned when we passed the law.
I am of the view that it is not that businesses don't want to provide
affordable benefits to workers. It is just making less and less sense
to do so given the way the current system operates. Incentives would
not change in 2014, leaving an increasing number of families with a
choice between the unaffordable and the unavailable. Up until late last
week, in the dark of night, those families had a choice. They had a
choice, a third path. The two that I mentioned, unaffordable and
unavailable, were not very appealing, and free choice vouchers would
have created a third option that would have worked for those families.
They would have had a chance to take their pretax dollars provided by
their employer to the free market exchange and decide for themselves
which plans they could afford that provide the benefits they need.
Free choice is good for workers, it is good for business, it is good
for our country's bottom line; it offers a way to rein in higher health
care costs by putting purchasing power back into the hands of the
consumer. Once people know they are paying for their health coverage
and can shop for a plan that answers their specific needs, costs will
come down.
We hear often colleagues on both sides of the aisle talk about choice
and competition and market forces. What this did was provide a chance
for both sides to take principles they hold dear, expanding coverage
with a market based approach for workers who are hurting, and say: Free
choice vouchers can do that. The arguments against free choice didn't
start with Democrats or Republicans. The arguments started with the
interest groups, the lobbies, the special interests that have a vested
stake in holding their employees captive and locking them into this
incredibly inefficient status quo.
This provision has no budget impact in the fiscal year. Three hundred
thousand low-income Americans are being hurt in this budget bill for
something that spends no money in the upcoming year; 300,000 Americans
with no acceptable alternative to make sure that when they go to bed at
night with their families they can take care of an illness or a medical
expense that comes up in the morning.
I don't think this had to be. Clearly, if we had had the opportunity
in an open forum to address this, there would have been a different
result because that is how it got into the law in the first place. I
want to make sure colleagues know we will have to be back here to get
some relief for the 300,000 Americans we put out in the cold as a
result of that particular provision. I hope, once again, we can do it
in a fashion that brings Democrats and Republicans together the way
free choice vouchers and the principles it represents did in the first
place.
I yield the floor.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Minnesota.
Ms. KLOBUCHAR. Madam President, I first acknowledge my colleague from
Oregon for his great leadership in this area. We look forward to
working with him. He has taken an essential lead on this important
matter. This has been a difficult time for all of us with some of the
changes being made.
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