[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 141 (Thursday, October 10, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H6459-H6460]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE HIGH COST OF THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
North Carolina (Ms. Foxx) for 5 minutes.
Ms. FOXX. Mr. Speaker, earlier this week I received an email from
Scott, a constituent of the 5th District who lives in Boone, North
Carolina. Here is what he had to say:
With all of the talk to this point about the effects of the
Affordable Care Act, it has just turned into brutal reality
for me and my family. I received a letter from Blue Cross
Blue Shield this week regarding my coverage. All of the
promises of if you like your current health coverage, you
will be able to keep it is absolutely untrue. Blue Cross has
dropped my current plan that I was relatively happy with and
was expecting to continue using. Blue Cross will be moving me
into a new plan where the cost is devastating for my family.
My monthly premium is increasing 55 percent, $3,816 more per
year, and my out-of-pocket expenses will cost my family an
additional $3,650 per year. So, all in all, I will be paying
an additional $7,466 next year for health insurance and
copayments on top of my already high premiums. I do not
qualify for any of the subsidies either, so this one is all
on the back of this middle class family of four. I have a 4-
year-old daughter and a 2-year-old daughter. I have no choice
but to keep them covered any way I can as any father would.
But the new outlays of $7,466 will be a huge burden. We will
[[Page H6460]]
all have to make some big changes in our family to be able to
afford this. I knew the Affordable Care Act would be tough on
someone like myself, but I had no idea how hard it would hit
me and my family.
Mr. Speaker, Scott is not alone. Families across this country are
baffled by ObamaCare sticker shock. Accepting the devastating truth
that costs will be much higher for them next year, some families are
trying to find a way to make it work, but they can't even get to the
Web site.
But what do they hear from Washington? ObamaCare apologists say, Be
patient with us. We will get these glitches sorted out. It will take a
few years, and you will all be used to it.
Mr. Speaker, if only those voices in Washington would be willing to
give the American people the same time and patience they are demanding.
A bipartisan House majority has asked for families to have 1 penalty-
free year to figure out what ObamaCare will mean for their families and
for their budgets, 1 penalty-free year, not unlike the penalty-free
year the President gave to Big Business all on his own.
Fairness: that is what we have asked for. Fairness: that is what
Senate Democrats are refusing to discuss. Fairness: that is what the
President describes as ransom.
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