[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 45 (Wednesday, March 15, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1832-S1833]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REPUBLICAN HEALTHCARE BILL
Ms. WARREN. Mr. President, last week Republicans in the House
released a bill to repeal the Affordable Care Act and cut Medicaid to
the bone. On Tuesday, the Congressional Budget Office--those are the
independent budget experts who analyze policies under consideration
here in Congress--estimated that the plan would rip health insurance
coverage away from 24 million Americans and cut $880 billion in the
Medicaid program. And as a bonus, the plan provides hundreds of
billions of dollars in tax breaks for the rich. Who comes up with a
plan like this? What kind of healthcare bill has, as its central
feature, ripping away health insurance from tens of millions of
American citizens?
What kind of politician thinks they were sent to Congress to destroy
the financial stability of millions of middle-class families and give
wealthy donors a tax break that they certainly don't need? Who thinks
that the central problem in America is that middle-class families have
too much healthcare coverage and that the richest people in America
need government to hand them more money? There is no other way to say
it: This bill is just part of a Republican plan to help the rich get
richer and kick dirt in everyone else's face.
This bill is an economic disaster, and at its center, it is cruel--
cancer survivors losing coverage, seniors facing premium increases of
$12,000 a year, people with disabilities forced into nursing homes. And
one of the cruelest things is what this bill will do to individuals, to
families, and to communities struggling with the opioid crisis.
Last year in Massachusetts, nearly 2,000 people died from opioid use.
That is more than double the number who died in 2013. That is right,
double. Between 2014 and 2015, Massachusetts had a bigger jump in its
death rate from drug overdoses than any other State except North
Dakota.
Last week, I was on the front lines in Lynn Community Health Center,
where dedicated staffers are trying to meet this opioid epidemic head
on. This week, I went to Manet Community Health Center, where a
coordinated team in Quincy is battling the opioid crisis. While I was
there, I not only met with the professionals, I saw the mamas and the
babies, the people who are in recovery, and people who reach out to
those who are still in the grip of drugs. The opioid crisis isn't
happening to someone else's family or in someone else's community. It
is happening to our families in our communities, and we need to do more
to stop this plague before it takes another of our loved ones.
We need to do more; what we absolutely cannot do is less. We cannot
take away the resources already committed to fighting the opioid crisis
so that some millionaire can get a tax break. Current law, the ACA,
requires all insurance plans to cover substance use disorder treatment
and prevention as an essential health benefit. That means that your
insurance company can't turn off the access to treatment just when you
need it most by saying: Sorry, we just don't cover that. Current law,
the ACA, gave people the chance to get that insurance through health
exchanges and subsidies. Millions more people got private insurance.
And through Medicaid expansion, millions more were covered by Medicaid.
So there it is, our first line of defense in the war on opioid
addiction.
The ACA currently means that more people are covered, and that
coverage includes substance abuse treatment. What does the Republican
plan do? It
[[Page S1833]]
takes away coverage for 24 million people. That is 24 million people
who no longer have any access to substance use disorder treatment and
prevention services. And then they want to let insurance companies jack
up the out-of-pocket costs for substance abuse programs and mental
health programs. In fact, some Medicaid plans would be able to drop
this coverage altogether. So millions more people would lose their one
lifeline if someone in their family is taken by drugs.
Don't get me wrong. What we are doing right now is not enough. Even
now, only 10 percent of those who need treatment for substance use
disorder receive it and 90 percent can't get help, but that means we
need more, not less help.
Repealing the protections for mental health and substance use
disorders in the ACA would yank more than $5 billion in actual funding
that is currently going to mental health and treatment services. That
is the Republican plan to deal with the opioid crisis. Ask any family
trying to get treatment for a loved one who is addicted to drugs. We
already have an opioid treatment gap. Gutting the ACA is like shoving a
stick of dynamite into the treatment gap and then lighting the fuse.
And if the Republicans get their way, people will lose health coverage.
People will lose access to recovery services. People will die.
Now is the time to stop this cruel bill in its tracks before it hurts
real people. Now is the time to speak out about the importance of the
ACA and Medicaid to you and to your family.
If you or someone you know has been touched by the opioid epidemic,
you know how much this matters. Maybe you have a sister, a child, a
church member, or a high school friend who has struggled with substance
use disorder. Maybe you know someone who has fought on the frontlines
of this crisis as a healthcare provider, community advocate, as a first
responder.
If you do, then you know the stakes in this debate over the ACA and
Medicaid. Now is the time to act. Don't wait. If the Republicans end up
destroying help for millions of people, don't wake up the next morning
and wonder if you could have said more or if you could have raised your
voice back when it mattered. No, the Republicans are trying to pass
this terrible healthcare bill now, now is the time to speak out. It is
time to stand up and to tell Republicans to end their cruel healthcare
plan. Our families and our communities are counting on us and we cannot
let them down. Please, speak out.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Alaska.
____________________