[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 121 (Wednesday, July 30, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H7043-H7044]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MEDICARE, MEDICAID, AND THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
North Carolina (Mr. Butterfield) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BUTTERFIELD. Mr. Speaker, with the stroke of a pen 49 years ago
today, several weeks after I finished high school, then-President
Lyndon Johnson signed into law two of the largest and most important
health-related programs the country had ever seen, Medicare and
Medicaid. Those programs were created nearly half a century ago because
our Nation's leaders saw, time and time again, the hopelessness of
people who had no way to provide the most basic level of health care
for themselves and their families.
It was President Harry Truman who initially conceived of a health
care safety net for struggling Americans. Nearly 70 years ago, Truman
said: ``Millions of our citizens do not now enjoy good health. Millions
do not have security against the economic effects of sickness . . . and
the time has arrived for action to help them get that protection.''
Since the creation of Medicare and Medicaid, no achievement has been
as significant and consequential as the Affordable Care Act. In
addition to providing affordable health insurance, to some for the
first time ever, the ACA has also provided for significant expansion of
states' Medicaid programs so that individuals with incomes less than
138 percent of the poverty level could finally have access to basic
care.
A Supreme Court case would make Medicaid expansion voluntary. Now,
nearly half a century after Medicaid was created to help the least
among us, 24 States in this country, 24 States believe it best to
disenfranchise millions and deny them access to Federal dollars they
rightfully deserve by not expanding their programs.
States that have refused to expand point to the increased costs as a
main reason for their decision. But, Mr. Speaker, the Federal
Government has committed to pay 100 percent--that is, 100 percent of
the cost of expansion--for the first 3 years and then 90 percent beyond
the first 3. Nationally, the States would see only a 1.6 percent
increase in their share of Medicaid spending, a 1.6 percent increase to
provide health care for millions of deserving individuals.
The benefits of expansion far outweigh the costs. In my home State of
North Carolina alone, expanding Medicaid will save the State more than
$65 million over the next 8 years and would benefit its economy by
adding nearly $1.5 billion to the State's revenue. It would not only
help to save jobs, but help to create them, too. That is just in North
Carolina. And this same scenario is playing out in nearly half of all
the States in our country.
The cost of not expanding is simply too great. Pungo Hospital,
located just outside of my congressional district in Belhaven, has
closed its doors, closed its doors because North Carolina refuses to
expand Medicaid.
The decision by Governor Pat McCrory and the Republican-led State
legislature has cost a woman her life. Portia Gibbs was 48 years old.
She had a heart attack and died on her way to the nearest open
hospital, which was an hour away.
Providing care to the sick and injured is a moral imperative that
Harry Truman saw nearly 70 years ago when he first spoke about it.
Congress and President Lyndon Johnson believed caring for the least
among us was a moral necessity when Medicare and Medicaid were passed
and signed into law.
At the signing ceremony 49 years ago, former President Harry Truman
said of the people that would benefit from Medicare and Medicaid:
``These people are our prideful responsibility, and they are entitled,
among other benefits, to the best medical protection available. We
don't want them to have any idea of hopeless despair.'' That was
President Harry Truman.
In response to Truman, President Lyndon Johnson said improving the
health of all Americans ``calls upon us never to be indifferent to
despair. It commands us never to turn away from helplessness. It
directs us never to ignore or to spurn those who suffer untended in a
land that is bursting with abundance.''
Those elected officials standing in the way of Medicaid expansion
should
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simply reflect on President Johnson's words. In a country that has come
so far--so far--Americans who struggle financially deserve better than
that. They deserve better than to have their elected officials tell
them that their worth in this world is tied to their ability to afford
health insurance.
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