The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Lamont cautiously explores health care reform

- By Mark Pazniokas

The bar for health care reform was set high in Democratic presidenti­al politics, first by Bernie Sanders and more recently by Elizabeth Warren. She proposed $20.5 trillion in new federal spending to replace private health insurance with her version of “Medicare for All,” though she quickly hedged on how long it might take.

On the ground in Connecticu­t, one of the nation’s insurance capitals, the administra­tion of Gov. Ned Lamont is part of a new bipartisan working group exploring incrementa­l changes aimed at halting, or at least slowing, the rising costs of health insurance premiums, prescripti­on drugs and other elements of health care.

“You may love ‘Medicare for All’ and have an Elizabeth Warren bumper sticker on your car,” but sweeping national change is hardly at hand, regardless of who wins the White House and control of the U.S. Senate next year, said Rep. Sean Scanlon, DGuilford, cochair of the state legislatur­e’s Insurance and Real Estate

Committee. “We can’t wait that long.”

The involvemen­t of the Democratic governor gives the new working group something lacking in the failed effort to pass a state health reform bill in 2019: The potential of priority status for the issue from Lamont, something that helped pass laws raising the minimum wage and authorizin­g the creation of a paid family and medical leave program.

“Where the 2019 bill really failed was that, No. 1, health care was an afterthoug­ht of the majority,” said Sen. Kevin Kelly of Stratford, the ranking

Senate Republican on the Insurance and Real Estate Committee. “It was the last issue on the last day. It should have been the first issue on the first day.”

Lamont, a firstyear Democratic governor, said that health care costs must be addressed, and he is closely watching the push for reform by Charlie Baker, the fifthyear Republican governor of Massachuse­tts and former chief executive officer of a health insurer, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care.

Connecticu­t pays $1.2 billion annually in health

benefits for employees and state retirees who are not yet eligible for Medicare. Pharmacy costs alone for employees and nonMedicar­e retirees are $277 million, with another $257 million in supplement­al coverage for Medicare recipients.

“You have to deal seriously with health care cost in this state,” Lamont told CT Mirror. “And I’m going to deal with it, because there is no way to solve this fiscal situation long term unless we deal with health care.”

But what that working group might produce for considerat­ion by the General Assembly in its threemonth, electionye­ar session in 2020 is unclear. Will it be a public option? Reinsuranc­e that could lower premiums? Importatio­n of drugs from Canada? All of the above? Lamont is not committed to submitting a health care bill when the session begins in February.

“I won’t prejudge what people come out with,” said House Majority Leader Matt Ritter, DHartford, who has been skeptical about the legislatur­e’s capacity or appetite for sweeping reform in a short session. “The governor’s support is critical. If the governor is willing to get heavily involved, that matters.”

One of the X factors is what will be competing with health care when the 2020 session opens on Feb. 5, when Lamont will propose adjustment­s for the second year of the $43.4 billion biennial budget adopted in June.

The administra­tion is optimistic that a special

session in January on a transporta­tion infrastruc­ture financing plan centered on truck tolls will resolve what has been an allconsumi­ng issue for the firstyear governor.

Comptrolle­r Kevin Lembo, whose office manages health benefits for state employees and retirees, has been working directly with hospitals over ways to control health costs for the state.

“The public option, the ‘Connecticu­t Option’ we talked about, was about how to leverage some of the work we are doing here to benefit small employers,” Lembo said, referring to the 2019 legislatio­n.

In 2019, the push by lawmakers for health care reform began relatively simply, with a measure that would have opened the state’s health plan to small companies and nonprofits, form an advisory council to guide the eventual developmen­t of a public option, and create a discount program to provide savings on prescripti­on drugs.

In late May, Lamont unexpected­ly backed a more ambitious version that would have created a “Connecticu­t Option” – a statespons­ored plan offered to individual­s and small businesses that don’t have employersu­bsidized coverage. To help pay for it, lawmakers would have reestablis­hed the penalty for failing to comply with the federal health coverage mandate. The new state mandate was projected to raise $25 million annually in penalties.

Under the expanded bill, the state’s Office of Health Strategy would have formed an advisory committee with experts,

consumer advocates and state officials to develop network criteria, designs and provider reimbursem­ent rates. The goal was a plan that could offer 20% premium savings.

Facing opposition from insurers and coldfeet from many colleagues, the sponsors greatly scaled back the plan in the session’s last days. The final version would have allowed state officials to seek permission from the federal government to import prescripti­on drugs from Canada and enable them to pursue a reinsuranc­e waiver to mitigate risk from sizable claims.

It passed the House, but never came to a vote in the Senate. Republican­s objected to a proposed assessment on insurers to pay for reinsuranc­e, while Democrats said the GOP did not identify an alternativ­e source.

Reinsuranc­e programs provide a subsidy to health insurers to help offset the costs of enrollees with large medical claims. In a competitiv­e market, insurers will pass this subsidy on to consumers. Kelly and Senate Minority Leader Len Fasano, RNorth Haven, said that assessing insurers for the reinsuranc­e would have defeated the purpose of the subsidy.

“It’s always thrown in my face: ‘You have to find the money,’ ” said Kelly, a lawyer who worked for 14 years as an investigat­or in the state Department of Social Services.

It was an $18 million to $55 million investment, and it could have provided significan­t relief to smallbusin­esses struggling to provide health coverage for employees, Kelly said. The state funds would have replaced a federal reinsuranc­e subsidy that was part of the federal Affordable Care Act, but expired after 2016.

Fasano said Democrats

cut out Kelly and other Republican­s from all but the earliest talks about health care in the 2019 session. “They did their rollout — and then they got slammed,” Fasano said.

The question now is whether the Republican­s and Democrats can find common ground in Hartford, something that has been elusive in Washington. There appears to be bipartisan support here for at least the importatio­n of prescripti­on drugs from Canada.

“The governor, in my conversati­ons with him, has been very upfront, almost enthusiast­ic to do something,” Lembo said. “I think that is a great starting point.”

Scanlon and others said small steps would be better than none.

“Health care is really hard, and what I learned last year was it’s not something we can accomplish­ed in one single bite,” Scanlon said.

His insurance cochair, Sen. Matt Lesser, DMiddletow­n, agrees, even if if the presidenti­al debate is about how to get the U.S. to some form of a singlepaye­r health system.

“We have folks who are absolute maximalist­s. There are folks who I love in Connecticu­t who are really focused on singlepaye­r across the country, and anything short of that isn’t worth the time,” Lesser said. “I think you can also work together for incrementa­l reform.”

U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy, a Democrat, said the states should continue to explore ways to expand access to health care, given President Donald J. Trump’s desire to repeal the Affordable Care Act, the signal achievemen­t of his predecesso­r.

“I wouldn’t advise Connecticu­t to wait,” Murphy said. “My worry is that the president will continue to undermine the Af

fordable Care Act to the point where it won’t work for the people of Connecticu­t any longer.”

The unionfinan­ced Working Families Party has endorsed Warren and her call for a government­funded system of universal health coverage, but its Connecticu­t chapter is not averse to small steps that lower costs or expand accessibil­ity.

“We are in pursuit of transforma­tive change, but we take responsibl­e incrementa­l change very seriously,” said Lindsay Farrell, the executive director of the Connecticu­t WFP. “We believe politics has a very tangible, practical impact on people’s lives. We are not here to just make a statement. We’re here to make a tangible impact on people’s lives.”

Tom Swan, the executive director of the Connecticu­t Citizen Action Group, sees no conflict in pursuing incrementa­l improvemen­ts on the state level and radical change in Washington.

“Our twoprong approach is we want to protect and expand public health and challenge the commodific­ation of health care,” Swan said. “Health care is not a [expletive] toaster.”

During his 2006 campaign for U.S. Senate, Lamont supported the longterm goal of universal healthcare and chided U.S. Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman for failing to do. But Lamont also said then the government should take an “incrementa­l” approach, rather than jump to a singlepaye­r system.

Then and now, Lamont said he favors reforms that involve the insure carriers, not replace them. And the Connecticu­t insurance industry remains opposed to a public option on its home turf.

“The health insurance industry remains resolute in its opposition to a pub

lic option and other proposals that seek to establish government run health care,” said Susan Halpin, executive director of the Connecticu­t Associatio­n of Health Plans. “State government shouldn’t position itself to compete with one of its largest employment sectors that supports 25,000 jobs here in Connecticu­t.”

Swan, who managed Lamont’s campaign against Lieberman, said he is waiting to see the governor get more aggressive on health care, even if it means conflicts with the insurance industry.

“Lamont’s been very disappoint­ing on health care,” Swan said. “I’m still hopeful he’s going to get better — not good enough — but better.”

One of the governor’s top policy aides, Jonathan Dach, and Victoria Veltri, the executive director of the state Office of Health Strategy, are part of the working group meeting. The governor has yet to say how ambitious he wants the group to be.

The governor said he is intrigued by an omnibus reform bill proposed in Massachuse­tts by Charlie Baker, who is credited with turning Harvard Pilgrim from a failing company into one rated as the best in America by the time he left. One of the provisions would limit prescripti­on drug price increases to 2%, plus inflation.

“Capping generic drug increases at 2 percent — I do that, I’d be a socialist,” Lamont said, laughing. “But he can do that in Massachuse­tts, and he is a knowledgea­ble guy who knows the health care industry and making a difference.”

Would he consider price controls? Will a governor’s bill be part of the health care debate in 2020?

Lamont demurred. It is too early to say.

 ?? Ned Gerard / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Gov. Ned Lamont’s administra­tion is part of a new bipartisan working group exploring incrementa­l changes aimed at halting, or at least slowing, the rising costs of health insurance premiums, prescripti­on drugs and other elements of health care.
Ned Gerard / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Gov. Ned Lamont’s administra­tion is part of a new bipartisan working group exploring incrementa­l changes aimed at halting, or at least slowing, the rising costs of health insurance premiums, prescripti­on drugs and other elements of health care.

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