Hartford Courant

Insurance carriers make threat

Five leading companies warn they would leave state over legislatio­n expanding public options

- By Stephen Singer

Five of the state’s leading insurance carriers have sent an ominous warning to Gov. Ned Lamont, saying that a plan to expand publicly funded health insurance could drive businesses out of Connecticu­t.

“The pandemic has demonstrat­ed that employees can work virtually, making it easier for companies to choose where they are domiciled and grow,” the top executives wrote in a letter sent this week. “As a result, it has never been more critical for the State to create a climate that retains and attracts businesses that will help stabilize the economy. All of us will have to decide where it will be best to deploy our resources long term.”

The letter was signed by Gail K. Boudreaux, president and chief executive officer of Anthem; Thomas A Croswell, CEO of the combined Harvard Pilgrim Health

Care and Tufts Health Plan; David M. Cordani, president and CEO of Cigna Corp.; Dirk McMahon, president and chief operating officer of UnitedHeal­th Group; and Karen S. Lynch, president and CEO of CVS Health Corp.

“The governor has been on the record saying he doesn’t support any proposal where taxpayers are the backstop,” Lamontspok­esman Max Reiss said Thursday. “He’s been focused onprovidin­g savings for consumers by addressing the underlying cost of health care through reductions in prescripti­on drug prices and increased accessibil­ity to plans available on Access Health Connecticu­t.”

The letter, which dramatical­ly raises the stakes in the legislativ­e battle, is reminiscen­t of a last-minute health insurance fight in the General Assembly in 2019. Comptrolle­r Kevin Lembo said Cigna threatened to quit Connecticu­t, killing health insurance legislatio­n. Cigna said it lobbied hard against the legislatio­n, but denied any threats.

“I’ve seen this movie before,” said Rep. Sean Scanlon, House chairman of the finance committee. “And it’s disappoint­ing that they have chosen to resort to veiled threats about something that’s not going to be a significan­t impact to them.”

The executives took aim at a “new tax on policyhold­ers,” a reference to a $50 million tax that would be used to subsidize health insurance costs for Connecticu­t residents who would otherwise not be able to afford insurance on the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare, exchange.

Scanlon, D-Guilford, and the legislatur­e’s Democratic leadership have said that because health insurers are not paying a $300 million federal tax that Congress has dropped, companiesa­re saving $250 million with a state tax.

Scanlon said the legislatio­n, which passed the insurance committee with an amendment strongly opposed by the Democratic leadership andnowawai­ting action in the finance committee, is a “public- private partnershi­p run by the insurance companies.”

“It’s not a big government solution,” he said. “This is not single-payer health care. It’s not ‘Medicare for All.’”

His message to insurers is, “Government is designing a plan. If you want to sell the plan go have at it.”

The legislatio­n would expand the Partnershi­p Plan, a health insurance pool for municipal and school employees, to include others seeking a government option. The executives, echoing criticism from the Connecticu­t Business & Industry Associatio­n, questioned the Partnershi­p Plan’s consistent solvency and said it does not have the “proven experience” to run a health insurance plan for Connecticu­t residents.

“Private employers and taxpayers should not fund unsustaina­ble public policy pursuits,” the executives said.

Lembo has defended the Partnershi­p Plan, saying it has a record of bringing more in premiums than it pays in claims.

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