[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 82 (Thursday, May 29, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H4917-H4918]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
{time} 1030
LET'S ACKNOWLEDGE OBAMACARE DOESN'T WORK
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Kentucky (Mr. Barr) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BARR. Mr. Speaker, recently, some politicians in Washington and
even back in my home State of Kentucky have held out Kentucky's online
exchange, or Kentucky Kynect, as a model for how the Affordable Care
Act, or ObamaCare, can be implemented successfully. They argue that
ObamaCare is working in Kentucky.
While it is true that, unlike the billion dollar malfunctioning
healthcare.gov Web site, the Kentucky Kynect Web site has appeared to
function properly, but that is about all that works well.
ObamaCare is making life harder for most Kentucky families and small
businesses, driving up premiums and deductibles, taking away choices of
doctors and hospitals, and forcing people to lose the insurance
coverage that they liked. The President promised that: if you like your
health care plan, you will get to keep it.
But 280,000 of my fellow Kentuckians have lost the health insurance
that they had, the health insurance that they liked. The government is
taking away choices. Patients, families, and doctors should be in
control of their health care, but ObamaCare takes choices away from
people.
One insurance broker in Kentucky told me that insurance on the
Kentucky Kynect exchange, the replacement for all of those canceled
policies, excludes 90 out of 130 hospitals in Kentucky from its
network.
Then there is the cost. Premiums and deductibles are skyrocketing.
When people are able to get the Web site to work, they are discovering
that insurance is not affordable.
As a candidate for President, then-Senator Barack Obama promised to
sign a health care law that would cut the cost of a typical family's
premium by up to $2,500 a year, but a quietly released report from the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services projects that 11 million
Americans will face higher premiums because of ObamaCare.
ObamaCare is an especially bad deal for our seniors. A recent report
studying the impact of the law's cuts to Medicare Advantage plans
concluded that premiums could increase for some Kentucky seniors up to
$1,700 per year.
Every day, I hear stories from Kentucky families and small businesses
about how they have been hurt by ObamaCare, about how the government is
making life harder for them.
Consider Tony Calvert, a truck driver and member of the Teamsters
union
[[Page H4918]]
who lives in my district. He stood up in my townhall meeting in
Winchester, Kentucky, and told me he suffered from aggressive stage 4
mantle cell lymphoma and lost his current health insurance.
The least expensive replacement policy on the Kentucky Kynect
exchange was $1,800 more per month. ObamaCare was supposed to fix the
problem of preexisting conditions, but for Tony Calvert and for his
family, ObamaCare in Kentucky is a personal and financial disaster.
Consider the Blue Grass Stockyards, a beef cattle auction business
that employs over 60 full-time employees who have enjoyed the benefits
of high-quality, employer-provided health insurance for many years.
In 2010, the company's cost per employee was about $250 each month,
and it provided about a $1,500 deductible, good prescription coverage,
and $3,000 out-of-pocket maximum.
By 2014, this company faced a 50 percent increase in cost because of
ObamaCare and nowhere near the coverage quality that they had been able
to provide to their employees in the past.
Moving all of their employees to Kentucky Kynect was no help. The
very best scenario they have come up with is to purchase a policy at
over a 9 percent increase in premiums, a $5,000 in-network deductible,
and a $10,000 out-of-network deductible, and these are narrow networks.
The company told me that they have always taken pride in providing
their valued employees with quality coverage, but because of ObamaCare,
they can't do that any more.
Then there is Joe and Laura Westbrook. They have been owner-operators
of Speedflo and Snapflo, a family printing company in Lexington,
Kentucky, since 1976. Their family-owned business has grown to 32
employees--including many working moms--providing good benefits and
affordable group health insurance until May 2014, when their renewal
rates skyrocketed 101 percent.
To make matters worse, the available post-ObamaCare plans had
deductibles that were three times larger than the pre-ObamaCare plans.
These increases threatened to make it impossible for them to continue
to provide their employees with health insurance, and for the first
time, they had to ask their employees to contribute to cover the cost
of the new plans.
The VA scandal is a window into the future of ObamaCare. It is a
window into what government health care looks like: higher cost, higher
premiums, less choices.
Let's get together as a country and acknowledge that this law doesn't
work. It is unfortunate that ObamaCare doesn't work. The American
people deserve health care reform that actually lowers costs, that
provides more choices, and does not put bureaucrats in charge of health
care.
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