Los Angeles Times

Sick, uninsured: Will they spend?

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Re “Health bill helps small business,” Opinion, March 23

According to Tom Scott of the Nation Federation of Independen­t Business, small businesses in California will be celebratin­g the end of the Affordable Care Act because they will save some money from repealed taxes.

Apparently, Scott’s organizati­on is not bothered by the loss to California of many billions of federal dollars and the loss of insurance coverage for millions that will result if the Republican­s’ American Health Care Act become law.

Hopefully, the small businesses that Scott’s organizati­on represents will not lose too many customers to sickness. Howard Cott

Los Angeles

If “health insurance costs remain the No. 1 concern of small-business owners in NFIB’s Problem and Priorities survey, the same place they’ve occupied in that survey for 30 years,” then how is it that Affordable Care Act is some new culprit? It sounds like small business owners were equally unhappy with the old system.

Scott wants “affordabil­ity, flexibilit­y and predictabi­lity in the health insurance market.” I’m retired now, but in my working years I sold health insurance to small businesses. If there’s one thing that I found absolutely true, it was that no one ever had affordabil­ity, flexibilit­y and predictabi­lity in their health plans.

The Affordable Care Act got rid of the most onerous parts of our old system, including annual and lifetime caps and lockouts due to pre-existing conditions. Perhaps some business owners do not like that the law gave their employees a way to buy policies on their own, allowing them to escape the insurance handcuffs that once tied them to their jobs. Barry Davis Agoura Hills

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