[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 7 (Wednesday, January 11, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H309-H310]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ACA REPEAL AND DELAY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Speier) for 5 minutes.
Ms. SPEIER. Mr. Speaker, the Republicans' plan to repeal the
Affordable Care Act should be entitled repeal and collapse, because it
will generate, in this country, a financial and healthcare meltdown for
tens of millions of people.
In fact, if we repeal the ACA, 30 million Americans will lose their
health insurance. States and hospitals will be on the hook for $1.1
trillion in uncompensated care, and rural hospitals will close.
It will cost the country 3 million jobs. All of this is to give the
top one half of 1 percent an almost $200,000 tax break and costs middle
class families as much as $6,000 more a year. Once
[[Page H310]]
again, the Republicans are taking care of the richest while imposing
tax hikes on hardworking Americans.
As this chart shows, the ACA has caused dramatic reductions in every
age group across the entire marketplace in terms of uninsurance, a 50
percent reduction in uninsured in America.
So what does this mean to the average American? For my constituent,
Penny Floor, it could return her to a time when she lived with no
health insurance whatsoever.
Here is a picture of Penny. She works for the San Mateo Community
College District and is one of the 27 percent of Americans under the
age of 65 who have a preexisting condition. She is now at risk, thanks
to the GOP's reckless ideological agenda, to lose her health insurance.
This is Penny's story in her words:
I tried to buy health insurance in my thirties and in my
forties, and both times I was turned down and was told I was
ineligible. Basically, I didn't lie on the portion of the
form that asked if I had ever been hospitalized for mental
illness. I said I was treated for depression when I was 17,
and for that I was denied the ability to purchase health
insurance.
For a long period of my adult life, I had no health
insurance. I worked for a nonprofit childcare center and had
no coverage. I got married in my forties, and both my husband
and I went to graduate school and were covered then. But when
we received our degrees, the coverage ended. My husband was
working as a freelance computer programmer. He ended up
taking a corporate job that wasn't his dream job so we could
be insured.
He is still there today. He is 62, and I am 60, and we live
in fear he will be laid off. I am holding my breath that
there will be some coverage through Medicaid if that happens,
or if we make it to retirement.
When I was younger, I was lucky enough to have incredible
health. I didn't go to the doctor or the dentist for 10
years. I was constantly terrified that I would be in a car
accident and would be sued. And I was afraid my family would
be bankrupt trying to take care of me.
Thank God for Planned Parenthood and access to birth
control. It is the only medical attention I received during
that time because their sliding pay scale was the only thing
I could afford.
Now I am 60, though, and I do have health issues. I was
hospitalized earlier this year for blood clots in my legs and
lungs. It was scary and expensive, but we had good coverage.
But if the ACA is repealed and Medicaid is affected, I
don't know what we will do. We are educated, not poor, very
productive members of society, and we are scared.
These are the words of a real American, my constituent, Penny Floor.
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