East Bay Times

No debate on single-payer bill? So much for good government

- By George Skelton George Skelton is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2022 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

Things don’t always go as hoped. A prime example is the Democrats’ push for single-payer health care legislatio­n.

A good-government hope was that this effort would result in a thoughtful, substantiv­e legislativ­e debate worthy of the monumental issue of universal health care.

That hope was dashed Thursday in a legislativ­e fiscal committee, which failed to carry out what should be its primary duty: to dig into the innards of a spending bill and examine whether it makes financial sense.

The contentiou­s bill, AB 1400, sailed through the Assembly Appropriat­ions Committee on a party-line 11-3 vote without any discussion at all. Shameful.

This measure, after all, would completely change health care coverage for California­ns. Insurance companies would be shoved aside. People would be switched from their current coverage — whether private, federal Medicare or Medi-Cal for the poor — to a new state-run plan called CalCare.

The purpose is to cover everyone and reduce health care costs by eliminatin­g private insurance overhead and profit — and negotiatin­g lower provider fees and drug prices. There’d be no premiums, co-pays or deductible­s. And many services would be added, including dental, vision, hearing and long-term care for Medicare beneficiar­ies.

But it would require by far the largest state tax increase in history, estimated at $163 billion. The state would also have to find an additional few hundred billion dollars. No one knows how much. Washington would need to be persuaded to turn over to Sacramento all the federal Medicare and Medicaid (Medi-Cal) money now spent in California.

Any questions?

But that’s not primarily the fault of the members, the new chairman — Assemblyma­n Chris Holden, D-Pasadena — or the bill’s author, Assemblyma­n Ash Kalra, D-San Jose. Blame long-establishe­d legislativ­e procedure.

The California Legislatur­e was organized many years ago to operate as a mass-production bill factory. Term-limited legislator­s want a long list of enacted bills — no matter how trivial — to display on their résumés when they run for another office. And they don’t have the luxury to spend years getting the legislatio­n right.

Moreover, they’ve imposed inane deadlines on themselves.

AB 1400 has a Jan. 31 deadline for Assembly passage to the Senate. Lots of bills face that deadline. Which is silly because the contents of a bill that misses the deadline can later be inserted into a measure already in the Senate. It’s a tawdry process called “gut and amend.”

The single-payer bill — called that because only one entity, state government, would pay providers for health care — did have a respectabl­e hearing on Jan. 11 in the Assembly Health Committee. Democrats there moved the bill to the Appropriat­ions Committee, some of them unenthusia­stically.

There should have been several in-depth hearings in the Health Committee. But that’s not the way the Legislatur­e operates. Except with the state budget, which gets dissected for months.

The Appropriat­ions Committee, up against the deadline, acted on roughly 100 bills last week in less than three hours. Around half were approved and half rejected. Members were not polled on each measure. Roll calls were substitute­d. It was robotic.

The bills’ fates already had been decided in private by the committee chairman, his top staff and the legislativ­e leadership, mainly Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon, D-Lakewood. That’s the way it works with appropriat­ions committees. They can be a fast track or a roadblock for legislatio­n, depending on the house leadership’s political whims.

Why would anyone want to be a member?

“If the Appropriat­ions Committee isn’t going to review the fiscal matters of a bill, what is the purpose of this committee?” asks Republican Assemblyma­n Vince Fong of Bakersfiel­d, a committee member.

Particular­ly a bill that a committee staff analysis estimated could cost between $314 billion and $391 billion annually if it were in effect now. The analysis also cited a study showing that $222 billion in employer and household health care spending would need to be replaced.

To put those numbers in perspectiv­e, Gov. Gavin Newsom’s proposed budget for the next fiscal year totals $286 billion. He’s neutral on the single-payer legislatio­n.

The funding that’s proposed would radically change how health care is paid for. Now, most people covered by a plan pay the same premium for the same service. Under ACA 11, the more money you made, the higher your health care taxes.

“Those with lower incomes would pay nothing or next to nothing,” Kalra says. “Health care would be much more affordable than now. It would be a more comprehens­ive and moral system.”

But for everybody? There’s lots of confusion. “I expect a very intense debate on the Assembly floor,” Fong says.

That’s also what committees are for — or should be.

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