[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 161 (Wednesday, November 13, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H7004]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
OBAMACARE CANCELATIONS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
North Carolina (Mr. Holding) for 5 minutes.
Mr. HOLDING. Madam Speaker, President Obama promised the American
people that if you liked your health care plan, you could keep your
health care plan. Period. No exceptions.
Now, as the ObamaCare exchanges have opened and enrollment has begun,
there are hundreds of thousands of people in North Carolina who are
finding that the President's promise doesn't hold true. According to
the North Carolina Department of Insurance, over 183,000 policies have
already been terminated, impacting over 473,000 people and their
families across the State.
When ObamaCare supporters talk about the new health care law, they
focus on the number of people who previously did not have health care
and will now be covered. What you don't hear them talk about is the
people who already had health care and are losing it now. They don't
talk about the canceled policies and the alternative plans offered that
are vastly more expensive and far from comparable. This is extremely
misleading, Madam Speaker, and this administration has demonstrated a
lack of transparency when it comes to the real impacts of ObamaCare.
Madam Speaker, I have heard from hundreds of constituents whose
health care plans are going up in cost or being canceled altogether. A
man in his sixties from Zebulon, North Carolina, wrote to my office
that his wife's current plan, which costs $292 a month, will be
discontinued because it does not comply with ObamaCare standards. She
will be moved to a comparable plan that doubles her monthly payment. On
top of the increased cost, the new plan is not tailored to their needs.
The couple is in their sixties, retired, and their children are adults;
yet their new plan includes newborn care, plus dental and vision for
dependent children.
A constituent from Cary, North Carolina, wrote in with similar
concerns. He and his wife currently pay about $715 a month for their
health care plan and were informed that it was being canceled. Their
new plan will cost them double annually and will no longer include
vision care, but they are now both covered for maternity care. He wrote
that his present policy is better and more suited for two people in
their sixties, and ``it just doesn't seem quite fair that two people
who have always been responsible and done without things in order to
afford health care insurance and save enough to retire should now be
faced with this.'' Madam Speaker, I agree.
Men and women of all ages across my home State and the country are
feeling the negative impacts of ObamaCare. I received a letter from a
mother in Wake Forest, North Carolina, who got a notice that her
monthly premium for a family of four is going from $624 a month to
$1,207 a month. This is as much as their mortgage payment. Now her
family is forced to pay the steep increase or choose a plan that
includes a smaller premium, but with fewer benefits and much higher
deductibles. So much for keeping the health care plan she liked.
Another constituent from Cary wrote that a difference in cost between
his current BlueCross BlueShield plan and the lowest option under
ObamaCare is about $700 a month, tripling his current rate. How is this
comparable to the plan he already has and now cannot keep?
Madam Speaker, these are real people who have real problems with
ObamaCare. President Obama needs to listen to North Carolinians and
American families across the country. Stories like this indicate that
what President Obama said simply wasn't true. People are being forced
into plans that include coverage they don't need or want, and they are
not being able to keep the doctors and plans they had for years.
ObamaCare gives little choice and puts many in an impossible financial
situation.
Madam Speaker, this is simply not right. The American people want to
be able to keep their doctors and health care plans that they were
promised, and they were promised this by the President. That promise
should be upheld.
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