The News-Times

Lamont to revisit health reform

Governor ‘disappoint­ed’ Senate failed to pass bill to help small businesses lower cost of insurance

- By Christine Stuart

HARTFORD — The Senate’s inability to pass a health reform bill that would help small businesses lower the cost of health insurance was “not a success” Gov. Ned Lamont admitted Thursday, but he said he’ll keep working on it.

The bill Lamont and Democratic legislativ­e leaders pinned their hopes on passed the House on Monday, but never got raised for a vote in the Senate.

“I was disappoint­ed,” Lamont said.

He said as a former small business owner he was paying a lot more in health insurance costs for his employees than the big guys he was competing against. He said small business is the engine of economic growth and they want to bring down the costs, but they started the discussion­s much too late.

He said even the “skinnied-up bill” would have been beneficial. It included federal waivers for reinsuranc­e, which would allow the federal government to cover the costs of some of the most expensive claims; a measure to allow Connecticu­t to import drugs from Canada, which would require federal approval; and it would have created a “cost containmen­t commission” to monitor price changes by health care providers and prod lower prices.

Lamont blamed opponents of the legislatio­n for threatenin­g to talk it to death. At the same time, he admitted they should have started this conversati­on much sooner.

“I don’t think we tried to do too much, but we tried to do it too late,”

Lamont said. “It’s a big important reform and you want to get it right.”

The deal for a state-run health insurance pool unraveled on May 29 when state Comptrolle­r Kevin Lembo walked into a Hartford Courant editorial board meeting and told the newspaper that Cigna’s CEO David Cordani threatened to leave Connecticu­t if the legislatio­n was approved.

A spokesman for Cigna denied any such threat.

“The only option this proposal gives to the public is to pay more to get less from the health care system,” Brian Henry, a Cigna spokesman, said. “This option does not work for the public, for the state, or for the private sector.”

Lamont said given more time they might have been able to reach a deal.

Why was Cigna at the table?

It didn’t have any Connecticu­t customers in 2019 in the individual or small group marketplac­e that would have been impacted by the legislatio­n.

Lamont said everybody deserves a seat at the table.

“I want the very best ideas so that we can come up with the very best solution,” Lamont said.

Lamont called Cordani a “good Connecticu­t citizen,” who deserves a seat at the table like the advocates and small businesses.

Frances Padilla, president of the Universal Health Care Foundation, said the foundation worked hard to pass a bold public option this session

but their efforts “were blocked at every turn by vested interests who prefer the status quo to offering residents access to quality, affordable health care choices.”

She said the goal was to offer meaningful relief to small businesses and the 500,000 people who work for them.

“The insurance lobby threw its weight around and won — facing meaningful competitio­n was just too much for them,” Padilla said.

“Despite removal of the public option, important reforms to help tackle costs and expand coverage remained: allowing importatio­n of prescripti­on drugs from Canada; and establishi­ng a new process for limiting cost increases by hospitals and other industry players. These measures would have made a real difference for many,” Padilla added. “But they, too, fell victim to powerful interests.”

Senate Republican Leader Len Fasano, R-North Haven, said Republican­s like the idea of a reinsuranc­e waiver, but the Democrats wanted to fund it with a tax on premiums.

He said his caucus couldn’t understand how premiums were going to go down on one hand if you’re taxing them on the other hand. He said his caucus was also concerned about the amount of power being given to the Office of Health Strategy.

However, now that Republican­s seem to have a seat at the table in these discussion­s moving forward he’s hopeful next year something will get done.

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