[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 129 (Wednesday, September 10, 2014)]
[House]
[Page H7394]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SUPPORT THE EMPLOYEE HEALTH CARE PROTECTION ACT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
West Virginia (Mrs. Capito) for 5 minutes.
Mrs. CAPITO. Mr. Speaker, later today, the House will consider the
Employee Health Care Protection Act, and I urge my colleagues to
support this important piece of legislation.
As I traveled West Virginia during the August recess, I heard from
small business owners and workers across the State that their health
insurance premiums are increasing. I also heard that their deductibles
are increasing quite rapidly.
Given that the Obama administration's own Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid studies found that 11 million small business employees will
see their premiums increase due to ObamaCare, it was sad, but not
surprising, that businesses in West Virginia and around the country are
feeling the pinch of this law's misguided policies.
Yesterday a report issued by the American Action Forum found that the
Affordable Care Act regulations are reducing small businesses' pay by
$22.6 billion annually, and the rising premiums spurred by the law have
cost our Nation's economy more than 350,000 jobs.
In my State of West Virginia, more than half of our private sector
workers are employed by small businesses. Making sure that health
insurance on the small group market is affordable is important to both
the family budgets and to make sure those small businesses can continue
to grow and provide jobs.
We saw last fall the tremendous problems and uncertainty that
occurred when roughly 5 million Americans who purchased insurance on
the individual market received cancelation notices, but recent
testimony at the House Energy and Commerce Committee has indicated that
millions more workers who have employer-sponsored plans could get
similar notices starting as early as this year.
If a worker is forced to change health insurance policies, their new
plan might not include their doctor or their community hospital. This
is another example of overreaching government that is taking away the
freedom of individuals and businesses to make the health care decisions
that best fit their unique circumstances.
The bill the House will consider today is very simple. If a plan was
offered on the group health insurance market in 2013, that plan can
continue to be offered for the next 5 years. Any worker covered by one
of these plans will not be fined under the individual mandate. The
Employer Health Care Protection Act keeps the President's promise that
people who like their insurance, health insurance, can keep it.
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It also provides more affordable alternatives for small businesses
whose health care costs are soaring. This bill is a commonsense step
forward.
There is still much more work that needs to be done. We need to go
back to the drawing board and enact true health care reform. We should
build on the good ideas, like helping those with preexisting conditions
and allowing children to remain on parents' benefits until the age of
26. These are good things.
We should get rid of bad ideas like the job-killing employer mandate,
the individual mandate, and regulations that have cost many Americans
the insurance plan and the doctor that they choose. We should enact
meaningful medical liability reform, we should help spur association
health plans, and allow insurance to be sold across State lines to
broaden competition in the individual insurance market.
We need to come together to fix our broken health care system. But
today, the least we can do is keep the promise that the President made
to the American people and allow current plans to continue to be
available. I ask my colleagues to support the Employee Health Care
Protection Act.
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