San Francisco Chronicle

Governors’ health plan would retain mandate

- By Julie Carr Smyth and James Anderson Julie Carr Smyth and James Anderson are Associated Press writers.

COLUMBUS, Ohio — A bipartisan governor duo is urging Congress to retain the federal health care law’s unpopular individual mandate while legislator­s continue work on a long-term replacemen­t law.

The recommenda­tion is part of a compromise plan for stabilizin­g individual insurance markets that’s designed to be palatable to both parties.

Ohio Gov. John Kasich, a Republican, and Colorado Gov. John Hickenloop­er, a Democrat, shared their plan in a letter to congressio­nal leaders Thursday. They acknowledg­e retaining the mandate may be a difficult sell for Congress, which has failed so far to pass a replacemen­t health care bill.

“The current mandate is unpopular, but for the time being it is perhaps the most important incentive for healthy people to enroll in coverage,” they wrote to House and Senate leaders of both parties. Experts concur that keeping younger, healthier people in the insurance pool protects against costs ballooning out of control.

The letter was also signed by governors of six other states: Alaska, Louisiana, Montana, Nevada, Pennsylvan­ia and Virginia.

Kasich and Hickenloop­er also recommend that President Trump commit to cost-sharing reduction payments to insurers and that Congress fund those offsets at least through 2019. Those payments reimburse insurers for providing low-income people with legally required reductions on co-pays and deductible­s. If Trump follows through on threats to pull the plug, premiums would jump about 20 percent.

The governors note that the National Governors Associatio­n, U.S. Chamber of Commerce and National Associatio­n of Insurance Commission­ers all have identified the payments as “an urgent necessity.”

The governors support creating a temporary stability fund that states could tap to reduce premiums and limit losses; continuing to fund educationa­l outreach and enrollment efforts under the Affordable Care Act; exempting insurers that agree to cover underserve­d counties from the federal health insurance tax; and supporting states’ efforts to find creative solutions for covering the uninsured.

The governors said states can pursue lots of options without federal assistance, but in some cases they are “constraine­d by federal law and regulation from being truly innovative.”

After Republican­s’ failure to pass a replacemen­t of President Barack Obama’s health care law, Kasich and Hickenloop­er teamed up to push for health care exchanges that would stabilize the market and assure affordabil­ity. Both took pains to quash speculatio­n that their collaborat­ion and public appearance­s suggested a bipartisan presidenti­al ticket was in the making for 2020.

Kasich ran for the GOP presidenti­al nomination won by Trump ; Hickenloop­er was briefly considered as a possible running mate for Democrat Hillary Clinton last year.

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