The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

New agenda shifts away from public option

- By Jenna Carlesso

A day after the legislativ­e session ended and still reeling from the defeat of a sweeping public option bill, lawmakers and Gov. Ned Lamont vowed in June to revive the health care overhaul next year.

But as the General Assembly gets closer to reconvenin­g, prospects for a resurrecte­d public option measure are looking dim, and the debate around health care reform has shifted to cost containmen­t, prescripti­on drugs and reinsuranc­e proposals that have bipartisan support.

“Any bill runs the risk of a short session. We get in during early February and adjourn the first Wednesday in May. There are so few session days that to get a complicate­d bill through a public hearing, through a committee, maybe more than one committee — and the public option has a fiscal note — it’s difficult,” House Majority Leader Matthew Ritter said. “You’d have to move pretty quickly.”

Along with a limited timeframe in 2020, Ritter said the tension surroundin­g this year’s effort is still lingering, dampening plans for a comeback.

The Democratic cochairs of the legislatur­e’s Insurance and Real Estate Committee last March introduced a proposal that would have opened the state’s health plan to nonprofits and small companies and establishe­d an advisory council to guide the developmen­t of a public option. The bill would have allowed the state to create a program, dubbed “ConnectHea­lth,” that offered lowcost coverage to people who don’t have employersp­onsored insurance.

In May, with less than two weeks left in the legislativ­e session, the lawmakers, joined by Lamont and Comptrolle­r Kevin Lembo, rolled out a new and expanded version of the bill. The updated proposal – called the “Connecticu­t Option” – would have created a statespons­ored health plan for individual­s and small businesses that don’t have employer subsidized coverage, and reestablis­hed an individual mandate to help pay for it.

The measure was dramatical­ly enhanced to also include a tax on opioid manufactur­ers; a cap on rising costs imposed by providers, insurers and others; drug importatio­n; and the reversal of a major cutback in the state’s Medicaid program for working poor adults.

Proponents said the aim of the Connecticu­t Option was to guarantee a 20 percent premium savings compared to plan rates in 2020. Lembo’s office would have sought bids and partnered with an insurer to bring the Connecticu­t Option as a publicly sponsored competitor to individual and small group markets.

But hopeful plans were dashed only six days later, when Lembo told The Hartford Courant’s editorial board that a threat by the head of Bloomfield­based Cigna Corp. had effectivel­y killed the proposal.

Lembo said Cigna CEO David Cordani warned he would uproot the company and leave Connecticu­t if a public option passed. And within days, legislator­s gutted the bill, leaving only the piec

es that pertained to drug importatio­n, cost containmen­t and reinsuranc­e.

The watered down version cleared the House but died in the Senate.

Now, lawmakers appear to be using that diluted version of the bill to shape their health care agenda for 2020.

“You’re going to see a lot of work on drugs in 2020. Importatio­n was something that 75 percent of the legislatur­e in the House voted for back in June, and it will remain something that we push for in 2020,” said Sean Scanlon, DGuilford, a cochairman of the Insurance and Real Estate Committee.

The proposal would allow state officials to seek permission from the federal government to import prescripti­on drugs from Canada at deeply discounted prices. Similar laws have passed in Vermont, Florida and Colorado.

The drug effort will also involve addressing the skyrocketi­ng cost of insulin, which has become a crisis in the U.S. as people forgo the medicine or switch to alternativ­es, sometimes with grave consequenc­es.

The Health Care Cost Institute has reported that Type 1 diabetes patients – who generally must inject themselves every day — paid an average of $5,705 for insulin in 2016, nearly double what they paid four years earlier.

Over the last decade, the list prices of some types of insulin have tripled, even though they’re the exact same products offered 10 years ago.

Other initiative­s at the forefront of legislativ­e discussion­s include the pursuit of a reinsuranc­e waiver to mitigate risk from sizable claims. Under last spring’s unsuccessf­ul proposal, insurers and health care centers would have been required to pay an annual fee, and that money would have covered large medical bills to keep premiums down.

The tax on insurance companies will be up for debate again next year. Republican­s in the Senate have opposed it, opting instead to use money from Connecticu­t’s general fund for reinsuranc­e.

Lawmakers also want to set yearly benchmarks to contain the swelling cost of care, and work with providers who exceed that threshold.

Sen. Kevin Kelly, RStratford, had scheduled a forum in September to kick off discussion on those ideas. But his event was postponed after Democrats in both chambers said they wanted more consensus and private debate around the issues.

“The challenge is always trying to get it right. You want to get the policy that works the best for the most people,” he said. “The challenge is getting the political will and then getting the stakeholde­rs around the table to try to move something forward.”

Kelly said many Republican­s are supportive of an agenda that includes drug importatio­n, reinsuranc­e and cost containmen­t. But the details of those plans are still being ironed out. He remains opposed to placing a tax on insurers. States that rely on premium assessment­s in connection with a reinsuranc­e program receive fewer federal dollars than those who use money from the general fund, he said.

Democrats have not yet offered specifics on what the health bills might look like. Sen. Matthew Lesser, a cochairman of the insurance committee, said the goal is still to lower the cost of care by 20 percent or more.

“There’s no lack of appetite on that,” he said. “We have not solved the issue of health care, and there’s going to be mounting pressure on the General Assembly and on the governor to show that Connecticu­t could lead the country in figuring out what smart reform looks like. … How we get there is TBD.”

Scanlon and Lesser haven’t abandoned hopes for a revival of the public option, but both acknowledg­ed the difficult road ahead. State lawmakers are up for reelection next year, making controvers­ial legislatio­n even more arduous. On top of that, the regular session will run for only three months in 2020, instead of five.

“I don’t think public option is going to happen in this state,” Senate Minority Leader Len Fasano said. “I’m not speaking for the governor’s office, but certainly my understand­ing is that they’re not enamored with the idea either. I really don’t think it has legs.”

Through a spokesman, Lamont dodged questions about his support for a new push on the public option. A day after the General Assembly adjourned in June, Lamont called the bill “a big, important reform,” and said it would be revisited, perhaps “in pieces.”

“The governor is working with both parties in the legislatur­e to explore options to address the significan­t challenges that the high and rising cost of health care poses to Connecticu­t families and businesses,” the spokesman, Max Reiss, said. He did not elaborate.

Representa­tives for the insurance industry say the companies remain firmly opposed to a public option. Meetings between legislator­s and insurance executives in the offsession have produced no agreements, and company leaders are watching the General Assembly’s next moves closely, said Susan Halpin, executive director for the Connecticu­t Associatio­n of Health Plans, which lobbies on behalf of insurers.

“We’re resolute in our opposition to any expansion of government­run health care,” she said. “We’re happy to look at the exchange, identify specific issues and work to address those. But in terms of expanding any government­run type health care programs, we remain opposed.”

“As one of the largest employers in the state, we’re always going to continue to have a dialogue with policymake­rs,” Halpin said. “But at present, that does not include any contemplat­ion of our support for an expanded role of government­run health care.”

Halpin declined to comment on the push for reinsuranc­e, drug importatio­n or other initiative­s, saying it was too early.

“People are paying very close attention to what happens in Connecticu­t,” she said. “It’s a bellwether state for the rest of the country. As the insurance capital of the world, it’s incredibly important what happens here.”

 ?? Contribute­d Photo ?? House Majority Leader Matt Ritter, DHartford
Contribute­d Photo House Majority Leader Matt Ritter, DHartford

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