Porterville Recorder

State panel rejects government­run health care

- By JONATHAN J. COOPER

SACRAMENTO — State lawmakers studying improvemen­ts to California’s health care system on Tuesday rejected on a plan popular with Democratic activists to give everyone in the state government­funded health care, saying a “single-payer” plan would need extensive work to become viable.

The lawmakers instead released a report recommendi­ng a variety of ways to lower health care costs and reduce the ranks of the uninsured. It said creating government-run health care would be a longterm endeavor requiring new money and legislativ­e staff and that such a plan would likely require approval from California voters and Congress.

Single-payer health care has become a rallying cry for many on the left, who have advocated for lawmakers to quickly boot health insurance companies from California. Democratic Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon angered backers of such a plan last year when he shelved a single-payer bill, SB562, which he called woefully incomplete. It’s poised to be a flashpoint in the race for governor among the Democratic candidates.

The report was prepared by two University of California professors and a private consultant at the behest of an Assembly committee created last year by Rendon. The speaker called for hearings following pressure from critics after he derided the single-payer bill for lacking a way to cover the $400 billion cost.

In the short-term, the report suggests creating a publicly run option for low-income patients on Medi-cal, extending Medi-cal to cover people living in the country illegally, fining people who don’t have insurance coverage and collecting all health claims in a database to improve transparen­cy and coordinati­on.

“The report outlines some options for us to consider that will help increase access and affordabil­ity,” Assemblyma­n Joaquin Arambula, a Fresno Democrat who was the committee’s co-chairman, said in a statement. “This will allow us to make some immediate changes to expand coverage while we pursue long-term solutions.”

The report angered the California Nurses Associatio­n, which developed SB562 and led protests of Rendon at the Capitol. Executive Director Bonnie Castillo

called the report a “public disservice” and said the solutions it proposes “do nothing to address the cost crisis, other than provide political cover to politician­s entering a political season who want to avoid the real solution, guaranteed health care for all, as proposed by SB 562.”

The nurses have suggested funding the program through a combinatio­n of existing state and federal health care funds, payroll taxes and a sales tax.

Researcher­s noted several obstacles to advancing single-payer at the state level. California would need for federal waivers — potentiall­y including an act of Congress — to use Medicare and Medi-cal funds. State voters would need to approve tax hikes to get around a requiremen­t nearly half of state revenue goes to education. And because the state can’t run deficits, the system would need robust reserves to cover cost spikes or revenue shortfalls.

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