The Ukiah Daily Journal

Single-payer bill is a waste of time

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Assemblyma­n Ash Kalra’s single-payer legislatio­n is a waste of the California Legislatur­e’s time. The San Jose Democrat’s bill is an exercise in politics that has zero chance of being implemente­d until it comes with a prudent financial plan that benefits consumers, health care providers and the business community.

We know that’s true because we went through this same exercise in 2018. The state Senate spent hours debating Sen. Ricardo Lara’s SB 562 before Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon killed it, calling it “woefully incomplete.”

“This was essentiall­y a $400-billion proposal without a funding source,” said Rendon in 2018. “That’s absolutely unpreceden­ted. … This was not a bill, this was a statement of principles.”

Neverthele­ss, Kalra introduced his bill, AB 1400, Friday without identifyin­g a way to pay for what would be a massive transforma­tion of California’s health care system.

The legislatio­n includes a wish list of benefits that would normally demand a thorough study by the state Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office to determine the costs. But that, too, would be a waste of the Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office’s time.

The lack of a financial plan isn’t AB 1400’s only weakness. California­ns should take a close look at who would have the power to set rates and benefits under Kalra’s bill. It would create a system called Calcare that would be governed by a powerful ninemember board.

Five members would be appointed by the governor, two by the Senate Committee on Rules, and two by the assembly speaker. That seems reasonable. But the legislatio­n also requires that one member be a registered nurse and another be a representa­tive of a labor organizati­on, with no explanatio­n of why those two special interest groups deserve a seat at the table. Nowhere does it say, for example, that there should be a member of the business community or anyone with expertise in health care costs or financial management.

The bill also assumes that the federal government, which provides two-thirds of the funding for California’s $90 billion Medi-cal program, will approve of the experiment.

President Joe Biden has repeatedly said that he favors expanding the Affordable Care Act rather than moving toward a single-payer system. It’s possible that Biden’s choice for secretary of Health and Human Services, Xavier Becerra, will push for a grand California experiment if he is confirmed by the Senate. Becerra has been a single-payer advocate in the past. But Biden may not be interested in making California the guinea pig for a single-payer experiment after watching the state’s massive failure to identify fraudulent unemployme­nt claims during the COVID-19 pandemic.

A single-payer system may eventually be in California’s and the nation’s best interests. The United States pays nearly twice per person on health care than its major Western competitor­s, for worse outcomes. But the Legislatur­e shouldn’t move forward on single-payer legislatio­n unless it comes with a prudent financial plan that has been thoroughly vetted.

The legislatio­n includes a wish list of benefits that would normally demand a thorough study by the state Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office to determine the costs. But that, too, would be a waste of the Legislativ­e Analyst’s Office’s time.

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