Porterville Recorder

State Senate backs longshot single-payer care bill

- By JONATHAN J. COOPER

SACRAMENTO, — The California Senate voted Thursday to advance a longshot singlepaye­r health care plan that would replace insurance companies with government-funded health care for everyone in the state.

The move came even as proponents acknowledg­ed they don’t know how to pay its huge $400 billion price tag.

The measure would have died if it failed to clear the Senate this week. Democrats said they wanted to keep it alive as the Assembly tries to work out a massive overhaul of the state health care system.

“With President Trump’s promise to abandon the Affordable Care Act as we know it, it leaves millions without access to care and California is once again tasked to lead,” said Sen. Ricardo Lara, a Democrat from Bell Gardens who wrote the singlepaye­r bill with Sen. Toni Atkins, a San Diego Democrat.

Universal government­funded health care could give the state extraordin­ary bargaining power to negotiate favorable rates with drug makers, hospitals, doctors and other health care providers while eliminatin­g costs associated with billing insurance companies, Lara said.

Critics, however, warned that the measure would require massive tax hikes and lead to long waits for health care.

Two analyses said the state would need to raise $400 billion a year. While much of it could come from redirectin­g existing state and federal spending on health care, the program would still require as much as $100 billion in new taxes.

“I can’t think of a more effective way to cripple the state financiall­y than to charge ahead with what seems to be a reckless plan,” said Sen. Ted Gaines, a Republican from El Dorado Hills near Sacramento.

In a study commission­ed by the California Nurses Associatio­n, which is promoting the bill, researcher­s at the University of Massachuse­tts-amherst suggested a sales tax and gross receipts tax on corporate revenue to raise the money.

Because the plan would eliminate out-ofpocket health care costs for consumers, like copays and deductible­s, the study said overall health care spending would decrease for the middle class while rising for people with higher incomes.

“This bill idealistic­ally assumes California can deliver on its promise to 40 million people,” said Sen. Janet Nguyen, a Fountain Valley Republican. “Yet ... the state is failing to sustain the current government-funded system, Medi-cal, that only serves 14 million people.”

Many patients on the state Medicaid program, which covers people with low incomes, have trouble finding a doctor who accepts their insurance, she said.

The bill, SB562, still faces significan­t hurdles. It must clear the more moderate Assembly and secure the signature of Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown, who has expressed skepticism about the costs.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY RICH PEDRONCELL­I ?? State Sen. Ricardo Lara, D-bell Gardens, right, is congratula­ted by Senate President Pro Tem Kevin deleon after his single-payer health care plan was approved by the Senate, Thursday, in Sacramento.
AP PHOTO BY RICH PEDRONCELL­I State Sen. Ricardo Lara, D-bell Gardens, right, is congratula­ted by Senate President Pro Tem Kevin deleon after his single-payer health care plan was approved by the Senate, Thursday, in Sacramento.

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