Democratic leaders of three House committees formally started the health care
legislative process on their side of Capitol Hill on Friday, June 19, by
introducing a draft bill that would make companies cover employees or contribute
to a national insurance fund.
The 850-page proposal
is meant to serve as the foundation for the work that the House health, commerce
and tax committees will do over the next several weeks to develop a final health
care measure by the end of July. Hearings are slated to begin June 23.
The Senate Health Education Labor and Pensions Committee began hearings on
its 615-page bill this week. The sessions have generated partisan tension, as
Republicans complained of being shut out and questioned how the more than $1
trillion measure would be funded.
The Senate Finance Committee postponed hearings on its health care bill until
after the congressional July 4 recess because of concerns about cost estimates
that have been reported to be as high as $1.5 trillion.
The House draft measure depends in part on employers to foot the bill through
what it calls “shared responsibility.”
Under the proposal, employers would pay 72.5 percent of the premium cost for
full-time employees and 65 percent for a family policy while meeting minimum
coverage standards.
If an employer does not offer health care, it would have to pay 8 percent of
its payroll cost into a health insurance exchange, where individuals would be
able to buy their own policies.
That exchange would include a so-called government-run public option, which
Democratic leaders argue would provide competition to private insurers and lower
premiums. Republican lawmakers have fiercely criticized the public option,
calling it a step toward a federal takeover of the health care system.
The House committee leaders said their bill would cover about 95 percent of
Americans. They do not yet have a cost estimate from the Congressional Budget
Office.
“Our discussion draft is the first step in building a truly American solution
that will reduce costs, offer real choice and guarantee affordable, quality
health care for all,” said Rep. George Miller, D-California and chair of the
House Education and Labor Committee.
Previewing their opposition at next week’s hearing, committee Republicans
attacked the plan.
“From employer mandates that could cost workers their jobs to a government
takeover that could cost patients their current coverage, Democrats are
proposing a radical shift in how Americans receive health care—one that,
unfortunately, puts government before people,” said Rep. John Kline, R-Minnesota
and the ranking Republican on the House Education and Labor Committee.
But the leader of the House tax panel said that details like the 8 percent
assessment on employers that do not offer health care coverage are open to
negotiation.
“There is nothing locked in cement,” said Rep. Charles Rangel, D-New York and
chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee.
In an interview after the June 19 press conference, Miller said the three
House committees had reached out to the corporate community before drafting
their proposal.
“Big businesses, small businesses met with us,” Miller said. “People have
been very cooperative.”
He stressed that the House bill would not impede companies that want to offer
health insurance, which many of them see as vital for recruiting and
retention.
“Life is going to go on for them the way they want to do it,” Miller said.
Although they didn’t provide details about cost cutting or revenue
provisions, the Democratic leaders asserted that the bill would not drive up the
federal deficit, which now stands at $1.8 trillion.
“We don’t have the figures of how much this is going to cost,” said Rep.
Henry Waxman, D-California and chairman of the House Energy and Commerce
Committee. “But we’re going to pay for this bill.”
—Mark Schoeff Jr.
Workforce
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