The Norwalk Hour

The Republican solution on affordable health care

- By state Sens. Kevin Kelly and Tony Hwang

What a recent Hearst Connecticu­t Media editorial characteri­zes as the “wrong” way forward is actually part of a better way to make health care less expensive and more accessible for working- and middleclas­s families, small businesses and nonprofit organizati­ons in Connecticu­t. Here’s why:

Connecticu­t is unaffordab­le. Our health care system is overly complicate­d. Senate Republican­s are offering achievable solutions which will reduce premiums by 30 percent. That’s an annual savings to the average family of four of $7,000, almost $600 a month. That’s real money for real families.

Do we have your attention now? Our “A Better Way to Affordable Health Care” proposal implements a reinsuranc­e program to defray high cost claims, eliminates a tax requiremen­t when buying health insurance and uses benchmarki­ng of hospitals and pharmaceut­ical companies for transparen­cy to control their costs. Our plan also calls for small businesses to join in associatio­ns to pool resources to buy group health plans together.

This latter solution has bipartisan — and bicameral — support. It notably also has the backing of 37 organizati­ons, including the Connecticu­t Business and Industry Associatio­n, the Connecticu­t Community Nonprofit Alliance, the Connecticu­t Restaurant Associatio­n, the Connecticu­t Brewers Guild, as well as Chambers of Commerce from Danbury to New Haven to Waterbury and the Naugatuck Valley.

Bruce Adams, president of the Credit Union League of Connecticu­t, which counts about 60 member organizati­ons, said associatio­n health plans would open up more affordable options for many organizati­ons. “If our 60 members all signed on to one plan, we would have a couple thousand people in our group, so clearly we could obtain health insurance at a cheaper rate,” Adams said.

But allowing small businesses, nonprofits and their employees across our state to “thrive” is dismissed by the Hearst editorial as a “half-measure.” Why? The editorial apparently prefers an alleged “robust” approach: a public option staterun health care payment system.

And a note of correction: The editorial erred when it claimed that self-funded associatio­n plans can theoretica­lly discrimina­te. In fact, the bill prohibits that conduct, stating that the associatio­n self-funded plans

“shall provide coverage for essential health benefits as defined in the Affordable Care Act” such as pre-existing conditions.

Here’s the problem with the public option. It simply is not insurance. It is a government payment program like Medicaid, Medicare (without a supplement), or V.A., benefits which are not the health insurance gold standards. As a result, it has none of the ACA’s protection­s, like mandatory coverage for essential health benefits or protection for pre-existing conditions.

Meanwhile, the state’s attempt at a public option, the Partnershi­p Plan 2.0, which was supported by majority Democrats, allow discrimina­tion based on geography and utilizatio­n rate. The Partnershi­p Plan is not insurance, it is not regulated, and it does not have the protection­s of the ACA. It has also continuall­y run a deficit and put the taxpayers at risk. Consider:

In 2018, the plan had a deficit of $10.1 million. State taxpayers covered the losses.

In 2019, the plan had a deficit of $31.9 million. State taxpayers covered the losses.

In 2021, a $40 million bailout was needed to keep the plan afloat.

After that bailout, and contrary to promises that it would lower health care costs for Partnershi­p members, the Partnershi­p Plan increased premiums by 10.5 percent, making care more expensive for teachers and municipal employees across the state

It paid out 8.7 percent more in claims than it received in premiums during 2022, putting the plan underwater by $54.1 million in 2022.

Eight municipal groups left the Partnershi­p Plan this year because they felt that they could find cheaper options in the private insurance market.

Connecticu­t Senate Republican­s have a real, detailed, achievable solution

to make our health care more affordable for everyone. Our ideas have already attracted support from Democrats who understand that our families are taking it on the chin every day. Together we understand that family budgets are breaking, and people are living paycheck to paycheck as they have difficulty making hard choices on things like health insurance.

A 30 percent reduction in premiums is achievable.

Annual savings for working class and middle class families totaling thousands of dollars a year is achievable.

Providing health care relief for struggling small businesses and their employees in Connecticu­t — a truly transforma­tional benefit — is achievable.

Our plan achieves these goals through transparen­cy, through competitio­n, and by enabling the marketplac­e to work better for the consumer. Our plan could become reality in the next three months and start Connecticu­t on that more affordable path.

Connecticu­t Senate Republican­s believe all of this is worthy of a conversati­on at the Capitol. The promises of the Affordable Care Act — to create affordable and accessible quality care for all people — have not been delivered for far too many Connecticu­t residents. It’s past time to give families the healthcare they were promised. Senate Republican­s will continue to offer thoughtful and impactful solutions to provide relief. Fighting to create a more affordable Connecticu­t is not the “wrong” way. It’s a vision we can achieve together. It’s the better way.

Sen. Kevin Kelly represents the 21st Senate District and is the Senate Republican Leader. Sen. Tony Hwang represents the 28th Senate District and serves as the ranking senator on the Connecticu­t General Assembly’s Insurance and Real Estate Committee.

 ?? File photo ?? State Sen. Kevin Kelly, center, with state Sen. Tony Hwang, second from left, and others in 2019.
File photo State Sen. Kevin Kelly, center, with state Sen. Tony Hwang, second from left, and others in 2019.

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