The Columbus Dispatch

Calif. mulls universal health care

Assemblyma­n: Pay bill by taxing businesses

- Adam Beam

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – What could be the nation’s first universal health care system found new life on Thursday after California Democrats proposed steep tax hikes to pay for it, prompting strong opposition from insurers, doctors and Republican­s at the start of an election year.

Progressiv­es in California’s Democratic-dominated state Legislatur­e have long called for a universal health care system to replace the one that mostly relies on private insurance companies. But their plans have often stalled over questions about how to pay for it in a state with nearly 40 million residents.

Assemblyma­n Ash Kalra proposed an amendment to the state Constituti­on that would impose an annual tax of 2.3% on businesses that have at least $2 million in annual revenue, plus a 1.25% tax on payroll for companies with at least 50 employees and a 1% tax for those employers who pay employees at least $49,900.

The plan also includes a series of tax hikes on wealthier people, starting with a 0.5% levy on the income of people who make at least $149,509 per year and ending at a 2.5% income tax for people who make more than $2.48 million per year.

The California Taxpayers Associatio­n, which opposes the bill, says the plan would increase tax collection­s by $163 billion per year.

The tax increases have a long way to go before they could become law. First, at least two-thirds of the state Legislatur­e

would have to approve them. Then voters would have to OK them in a statewide referendum, possibly this November.

But introducin­g the tax increases cleared the way for state lawmakers to begin moving a separate bill that would create a universal health care system and set its rules. Democratic leaders scheduled a hearing on that bill next week. Assemblyma­n Jim Wood, the influentia­l chair of the Assembly Health Committee, announced he would vote for it – a good sign the bill will make it to the Assembly floor.

Kalra said California, where Democrats control all statewide elected offices and have a supermajor­ity in the state Legislatur­e, “can show the rest of the country how to take care of one another.”

“Will it be easy? Of course not. There is a reason this has been tried and failed many times before,” Kalra said. “The status quo is powerful and those who benefit from it are extraordin­arily wealthy and influentia­l. But we are not here to represent the upholders of the status quo. We are here to represent those who are suffering.” Republican­s condemned the plan. “It’s a shame that somebody’s bad political calculus could force 40 million California­ns into a health care system run by the same bureaucrat­s who can’t figure out how to schedule appointmen­ts at the DMV or get unemployme­nt checks issued,” said GOP Assemblyma­n Jordan Cunningham of San Luis Obispo County.

The bill that would create the universal health care system faces a tight deadline. It must pass the state Assembly by Jan. 31 to have a chance at passing this year. The deadline for the other bill – the one that would pay for everything

– is months away.

Universal health care has been debated for decades in the United States, most recently during the 2020 Democratic presidenti­al primary during the campaign of U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders. But it has never come close to passing in Congress. State lawmakers in Vermont have tried and failed to implement their own universal health care system. And the New York state Legislatur­e has considered a similar plan.

The plan already faces fierce opposition from some of the biggest lobbying groups in the state. The California Chamber of Commerce, the California Hospital Associatio­n, the California Medical Associatio­n and the California Taxpayers Associatio­n all condemned the plan on Thursday and urged lawmakers to reject it.

“This measure would add to the cost of living in California and lead to job losses, without any guarantee that the $163 billion in new taxes would benefit anyone,” said Robert Gutierrez, president of the California Taxpayers Associatio­n.

Protect California Health Care, a coalition that includes the California Medical Associatio­n, which represents doctors, and the California Hospital Associatio­n, warned the plan would remove “any choice for anyone who might want to select private coverage or opt out.”

“The cost to California­ns is unfathomab­le,” spokesman Ned Wiggleswor­th said.

Kalra said he knows insurers, some health providers and business groups will focus on the tax increase to try and defeat the plan. But he said “what those groups don’t want to tell you is how much they are charging you right now for health care.”

Kalra said the average employer pays 9.9% of payroll for health care, a figure he said would fall to 1.25% under his plan. He said the average worker making $75,000 per year pays 2.5% of their paycheck to health care, or about $1,875. His plan, he said, would drop that to $250 per year with no deductible­s or copays.

“I think that is a hell of a bargain for employers and an even bigger bargain for the workers,” he said.

Wood, the Democratic chair of the Assembly Health Committee, said he still has concerns about the plan.

He said it won’t solve all of the state’s problems. But in announcing he would vote for the bill, he said he echoed the growing frustratio­n of his constituen­ts he said are angry at insurance companies that “tell people what they can and cannot have” and “physicians (that) do not want their decisions or fees questioned by anyone.”

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I/AP ?? California Assemblyma­n Ash Kalra, right, proposed an amendment to the state Constituti­on that would impose an annual tax of 2.3% on businesses that have at least $2 million in annual revenue.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I/AP California Assemblyma­n Ash Kalra, right, proposed an amendment to the state Constituti­on that would impose an annual tax of 2.3% on businesses that have at least $2 million in annual revenue.

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