Los Angeles Times

Promising to build on Obamacare

Coalition announces measures aimed at making healthcare better in California.

- MELANIE MASON melanie.mason @latimes.com Twitter: @melmason

SACRAMENTO — Promising to build on the Affordable Care Act, a coalition of influentia­l interest groups announced a new legislativ­e push Thursday for a patchwork of measures that aim to make healthcare in California cheaper and more accessible.

Advocates touted a slate of proposals, including expanding Medi-Cal access to adults without legal status and increasing subsidies to those buying insurance on the Covered California exchange, as priorities for this legislativ­e session.

“This uniquely California­n campaign seeks not just to protect our progress, but advance an aspiration­al agenda that is achievable without the need of approval from a hostile federal government,” Anthony Wright, executive director of the advocacy group Health Access California, said at a Capitol news conference.

The ability to act independen­tly of the federal government is a key contrast from the single-payer proposal, Senate Bill 562, which has consumed much of Sacramento’s healthcare debate in the last year. That bill would rely on permission from Washington to establish a sweeping system that covers the healthcare costs of all California­ns, including those who would otherwise be on Medicare or Medi-Cal.

Wright said he did not see a tension between the approach taken by his coalition, which includes labor unions, community health organizati­ons and immigrant rights groups, and that of single-payer proponents.

“This is entirely complement­ary with other efforts that are on different tracks and different timelines,” he said, arguing that the success of these incrementa­l measures now could lay the groundwork for single-payer in the future. “If that window of opportunit­y opens up at the federal level, we will be better positioned if we can get to universal coverage, if we can get to cost controls, if we can get to improvemen­ts in these key consumer protection­s.”

The California Nurses Assn., the sponsor of SB 562, praised elements of the package — notably the expansion of Medi-Cal to immigrants who are in the country illegally — but said its proposal also would have extended healthcare coverage to that population.

“Overall, it would be less fragmented to do a comprehens­ive approach like SB 562 that actually solves the problem without scrambling to push piecemeal legislatio­n, some of which only reinforce the existing profitfocu­sed insurance system,” said Chuck Idelson, spokesman for the nurses union.

Proponents don’t yet have a cost estimate for the proposal, but rough estimates would total in the billions. Wright said they would seek money in the budget but did not rule out proposing new taxes to pay for the proposals.

California’s uninsured rate plummeted from 17.2% in 2013 to the current 6.8% after the implementa­tion of the Affordable Care Act. Of the remaining 1.8 million California­ns uninsured, more than half are immigrants who are in the country illegally.

Advocates successful­ly pushed Gov. Jerry Brown to expand Medi-Cal to children without legal status but were unsuccessf­ul in an attempt to extend that coverage to young adults last year.

“Immigrants are an integral part of our state and shape our neighborho­ods, workplaces, schools and communitie­s,” said Cynthia Buiza, executive director of the California Immigrant Policy Center. “With Health4All, California has an opportunit­y to remove barriers on healthcare based on immigratio­n status.”

The Medi-Cal expansion received an endorsemen­t Thursday from the California Medical Assn., the influentia­l lobbying group for the state’s doctors. The associatio­n also backed other components of the plan, including establishi­ng a statelevel mandate to purchase insurance to replace the federal requiremen­t repealed last year.

The scope of the package touches nearly every aspect of the healthcare system, from health plans to prescripti­on drugs. Some measures are holdovers that were introduced last year but failed to advance. Other elements are still to be fully fleshed out, including the form of subsidies offered to make insurance on the individual market cheaper, and the possibilit­y of crafting a public option to ensure more choices on the Covered California market.

Some components of the package include establishi­ng quality assessment­s for Medi-Cal managed care plans, regulating health plan mergers and maintainin­g a $250 cap on prescripti­on drug co-pays.

Other measures take aim at actions by the federal government that advocates say undermine the Affordable Care Act. One bill would ban the availabili­ty of “shortterm” insurance plans that do not have to meet requiremen­ts under Obamacare, which have been encouraged by the Trump administra­tion. Another bill would bar work requiremen­ts for MediCal, a policy pursued by several other states, including Kentucky, with the White House’s blessing.

 ?? Howard Lipin San Diego Union-Tribune ?? A DENTAL CLINIC in San Marcos, Calif. Inf luential interest groups announced a new legislativ­e push Thursday for a patchwork of measures that aim to make healthcare in the state cheaper and more accessible.
Howard Lipin San Diego Union-Tribune A DENTAL CLINIC in San Marcos, Calif. Inf luential interest groups announced a new legislativ­e push Thursday for a patchwork of measures that aim to make healthcare in the state cheaper and more accessible.

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